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How the US created a world of endless war

beijingwalker

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How the US created a world of endless war
by Samuel Moyn
Tue 31 Aug 2021 06.00 BST


On 23 May 2013, the peace activist Medea Benjamin attended a speech by President Barack Obama at Fort McNair in Washington DC, where he defended his administration’s use of armed drones in counter-terrorism. During his speech, Benjamin interrupted the president to criticise him for not having closed Guantánamo Bay and for pursuing military solutions over diplomatic ones. She was swiftly ejected by military police and the Secret Service. The Washington Post later dismissed her as a “heckler”. Obama himself had been more reflective at the event, engaging with her criticisms, which led to even deeper self-criticism of his own. It was the moment of greatest moral clarity about war during a presidency that did more than any other to bring its endless and humane American form fully into being.

For all its routine violence, the American way of war is more and more defined by a near complete immunity from harm for the American side and unprecedented care when it comes to killing people on the other. Today, there are more and more legal obligations to make war more humane – meaning, above all, the aim of minimising collateral harm. Countries like the US have agreed to obey those obligations, however permissively they interpret them and inadequately apply them in the field. Absolutely and relatively, fewer captives are mistreated and fewer civilians die than in the past. Yet, at the same time, the US’s military operations have become more expansive in scope and perpetual in time by virtue of these very facts.

The very idea of more humane war may seem a contradiction in terms. The US’s conflicts abroad remain brutal and deadly, but what’s frightening about them is not just the violence they inflict. This new kind of American war is revealing that the most elemental face of war is not death. Instead, it is control by domination and surveillance.

Obama had run as a kind of anti-war candidate in his fairytale 2008 campaign, and when it turned out that he was a hard-bitten pragmatist, in this and other areas, many of his supporters were surprised. Obama expanded the “war on terror” to an awesome extent, while making it sustainable for a domestic audience in a way his predecessor never did – in part because Obama understood the political uses of transforming American warfare in a humane direction.

In just the first few months of 2009, after Obama took the oath of office, the initial metamorphosis of American war into humane form was achieved. As the worst sins of the prior administration were disowned, Obama’s lawyers claimed authority to continue war indefinitely across space and time, devising formal legal frameworks for targeted killings. The rise of the armed drone empire under Obama’s watch was merely the symbol of the extension and expansion of endless war.


 
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Except that the war in Afghanistan just ended. So much for "endless".
Not before the end of US sole superpower status, it's fast declining, US created endless wars around the world in the past, it will no longer be able to do it in the future. This world will become a much better place.
 
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Not before the end of US sole superpower status, it's fast declining, US created endless wars around the world in the past, it will no longer be able to do it in the future. This world will become a much better place.

It is scheduled to happen next Tuesday, isn't it? :D



Let China do what it does, as best as it can. USA will do the same. No problem.
 
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China is not as stupid as US, we are not interested in going around the world for wars. We are business oriented people.

That is great. After all, there is a reason USA and China remain each other's largest trading partners, indicating a similar business orientation on both sides.
 
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China needs to be on its toes , a strong Russian - Chinese alliance should tide over any adventures.
 
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Better endless wars in far away countries than endless virus pandemics in home :enjoy:

Western people will sht their pants if someday China has the power than USA today.
 
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Except that the war in Afghanistan just ended. So much for "endless".
Buddy, I think you are perhaps missing the key point here. When they say "endless" war, they mean their right to bomb/attack anywhere in the world under rights they feel don't contravene international law. The US has done some amazing contortions from a legal perspective to authorize wars where they are not attacked, and authorize military actions across national jurisdictions, that would at face value be a war crime. They did this to stay on the right side of their international treaty obligations, but by doing so they broadened the scope of wars to such a level that there now is no check and balance against the US executive willing and ready to wage war or military actions anywhere in the world (often as a political decision and not a core national security imperative). That makes this an ENDLESS war, something I had written and cautioned on post 9/11 with the Patriot Act, and the AUMF.

BTW the war in Afghanistan has not ended. It has moved into the Biden doctrine that he pushed during Obama years. JSOC and over the horizon assets. US war machine is constantly expanding. See now how its footprint expands into Africa and East Asia. The American war machine is everywhere.
 
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Americans in the past have reflected the pinnacle of socio-techno-economic advancement and they still devolved into battlemaniacs, same with the British, French, Japanese, and cultures prior.

Common denominator: Human nature, pseudo-religious overtones in the definition of morality and overpopulation are all symbiotic with respect to perpetrating violence against perceived weaker people.

Nothing will change, we will either wipe ourselves out or circumstances will nudge it in that direction.
 
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this is so true.

its only bad as long as someone else us doing it.


Exactly. But I am the hated one on PDF for saying the truth as it is, not as we wish it to be. No problem. :D

Anyone who thinks that the Chinese would be any more benevolent than any of their superpower predecessors, going back as far as one knows in history, is going to be sadly mistaken, wars and exploitation included.
 
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