
WE OWN THE WORLD
BY nOAM
cHOMSKY
http://www.chomsky.info/articles/20080101.htm
ZNet, January 1, 2008
You all know, of course, there
was an election -- what is called "an election"
in the United States -- last November. There was really
one issue in the election, what to do about U.S. forces
in Iraq and there was, by U.S. standards, an overwhelming
vote calling for a withdrawal of U.S. forces on a firm
timetable.
As few people know, a couple of
months earlier there were extensive polls in Iraq,
U.S.-run polls, with interesting results. They were not
secret here. If you really looked you could find
references to them, so it's not that they were concealed.
This poll found that two-thirds of the people in Baghdad
wanted the U.S. troops out immediately; the rest of the
country -- a large majority -- wanted a firm timetable
for withdrawal, most of them within a year or less.
The figures are higher for Arab Iraq
in the areas where troops were actually deployed. A very
large majority felt that the presence of U.S. forces
increased the level of violence and a remarkable 60
percent for all of Iraq, meaning higher in the areas
where the troops are deployed, felt that U.S. forces were
legitimate targets of attack. So there was a considerable
consensus between Iraqis and Americans on what should be
done in Iraq, namely troops should be withdrawn either
immediately or with a firm timetable.
Well, the reaction in the
post-election U.S. government to that consensus was to
violate public opinion and increase the troop presence by
maybe 30,000 to 50,000. Predictably, there was a pretext
announced. It was pretty obvious what it was going to be.
"There is outside interference in Iraq, which we
have to defend the Iraqis against. The Iranians are
interfering in Iraq." Then came the alleged evidence
about finding IEDs, roadside bombs with Iranian markings,
as well as Iranian forces in Iraq. "What can we do?
We have to escalate to defend Iraq from the outside
intervention."
Then came the "debate." We
are a free and open society, after all, so we have
"lively" debates. On the one side were the
hawks who said, "The Iranians are interfering, we
have to bomb them." On the other side were the doves
who said, "We cannot be sure the evidence is
correct, maybe you misread the serial numbers or maybe it
is just the revolutionary guards and not the
government."
So we had the usual kind of debate
going on, which illustrates a very important and
pervasive distinction between several types of propaganda
systems. To take the ideal types, exaggerating a little:
totalitarian states' propaganda is that you better accept
it, or else. And "or else" can be of various
consequences, depending on the nature of the state.
People can actually believe whatever they want as long as
they obey. Democratic societies use a different method:
they don't articulate the party line. That's a mistake.
What they do is presuppose it, then encourage vigorous
debate within the framework of the party line. This
serves two purposes. For one thing it gives the
impression of a free and open society because, after all,
we have lively debate. It also instills a propaganda line
that becomes something you presuppose, like the air you
breathe.
That was the case here. This is a
classic illustration. The whole debate about the Iranian
"interference" in Iraq makes sense only on one
assumption, namely, that "we own the world." If
we own the world, then the only question that can arise
is that someone else is interfering in a country we have
invaded and occupied.
So if you look over the debate that
took place and is still taking place about Iranian
interference, no one points out this is insane. How can Iran
be interfering in a country that we invaded and occupied?
It's only appropriate on the presupposition that we own
the world. Once you have that established in your head,
the discussion is perfectly sensible.
You read a lot of comparisons now
about Vietnam and Iraq. For the most part they are
totally incomparable; the nature and purpose of the war,
almost everything is totally different except in one
respect: how they are perceived in the United States. In
both cases there is what is now sometimes called the
"Q" word, quagmire. Is it a quagmire? In Vietnam
it is now recognized that it was a quagmire. There is a
debate of whether Iraq, too, is a quagmire. In other
words, is it costing us too much? That is the question
you can debate.
So in the case of Vietnam, there was
a debate. Not at the beginning -- in fact, there was so
little discussion in the beginning that nobody even
remembers when the war began -- 1962, if you're
interested. That's when the U.S. attacked Vietnam. But
there was no discussion, no debate, nothing.
By the mid-1960s, mainstream debate
began. And it was the usual range of opinions between the
hawks and the doves. The hawks said if we send more
troops, we can win. The doves, well, Arthur Schlesinger,
famous historian, Kennedy's advisor, in his book in 1966
said that we all pray that the hawks will be right and
that the current escalation of troops, which by then was
approaching half a million, will work and bring us
victory. If it does, we will all be praising the wisdom
and statesmanship of the American government for winning
victory -- in a land that we're reducing to ruin and
wreck.
You can translate that word by word
to the doves today. We all pray that the surge will work.
If it does, contrary to our expectations, we will be
praising the wisdom and statesmanship of the Bush
administration in a country, which, if we're honest, is a
total ruin, one of the worst disasters in military
history for the population.
If you get way to the left end of
mainstream discussion, you get somebody like Anthony
Lewis who, at the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, wrote
in retrospect that the war began with benign intensions
to do good; that is true by definition, because it's us,
after all. So it began with benign intentions, but by
1969, he said, it was clear that the war was a mistake.
For us to win a victory would be too costly -- for us --
so it was a mistake and we should withdraw. That was the
most extreme criticism.
Very much like today. We could
withdraw from Vietnam because the U.S. had already
essentially obtained its objective by then. Iraq we can't
because we haven't obtained our objectives.
And for those of you who are old
enough to remember -- or have read about it -- you will
note that the peace movement pretty much bought that
line. Just like the mainstream discussion, the opposition
of the war, including the peace movement, was mostly
focused on the bombing of the North. When the U.S.
started bombing the North regularly in February 1965, it
also escalated the bombing of the South to triple the
scale -- and the South had already been attacked for
three years by then. A couple of hundred thousand South
Vietnamese were killed and thousands, if not tens of the
thousands, had been driven into concentration camps. The U.S.
had been carrying out chemical warfare to destroy food
crops and ground cover. By 1965 South Vietnam was already
a total wreck.
Bombing the South was costless for
the United States because the South had no defense.
Bombing the North was costly -- you bomb the North, you
bomb the harbor, you might hit Russian ships, which
begins to become dangerous. You're bombing an internal
Chinese railroad -- the Chinese railroads from southeast
to southwest China happen to go through North Vietnam --
who knows what they might do.
In fact, the Chinese were accused,
correctly, of sending Chinese forces into Vietnam, namely
to rebuild the railroad that we were bombing. So that was
"interference" with our divine right to bomb North
Vietnam. So most of the focus was on the bombing of the
North. The peace movement slogan, "Stop the
bombing" meant the bombing of the North.
In 1967 the leading specialist on
Vietnam, Bernard Fall, a military historian and the only
specialist on Vietnam respected by the U.S. government --
who was a hawk, incidentally, but who cared about the
Vietnamese -- wrote that it's a question of whether
Vietnam will survive as a cultural and historical entity
under the most severe bombing that has ever been applied
to a country this size. He was talking about the South.
He kept emphasizing it was the South that was being
attacked. But that didn't matter because it was costless,
therefore it's fine to continue. That is the range of
debate, which only makes sense on the assumption that we
own the world.
If you read, say, the Pentagon
Papers, it turns out there was extensive planning about
the bombing of the North -- very detailed, meticulous
planning on just how far it can go, what happens if we go
a little too far, and so on. There is no discussion at
all about the bombing of the South, virtually none. Just
an occasional announcement, okay, we will triple the
bombing, or something like that.
If you read Robert McNamara's
memoirs of the war -- by that time he was considered a
leading dove -- he reviews the meticulous planning about
the bombing of the North, but does not even mention his
decision to sharply escalate the bombing of the South at
the same time that the bombing of the North was begun.
I should say, incidentally, that
with regard to Vietnam what I have been discussing is
articulate opinion, including the leading part of the
peace movement. There is also public opinion, which it
turns out is radically different, and that is of some
significance. By 1969 around 70 percent of the public
felt that the war was not a mistake, but that it was
fundamentally wrong and immoral. That was the wording of
the polls and that figure remains fairly constant up
until the most recent polls just a few years ago. The
figures are pretty remarkable because people who say that
in a poll almost certainly think, I must be the only
person in the world that thinks this. They certainly did
not read it anywhere, they did not hear it anywhere. But
that was popular opinion.
The same is true with regard to many
other issues. But for articulate opinion it's pretty much
the way I've described -- largely vigorous debate between
the hawks and the doves, all on the unexpressed
assumption that we own the world. So the only thing that
matters is how much is it costing us, or maybe for some
more humane types, are we harming too many of them?
Getting back to the election, there
was a lot of disappointment among anti-war people -- the
majority of the population -- that Congress did not pass
any withdrawal legislation. There was a Democratic
resolution that was vetoed, but if you look at the
resolution closely it was not a withdrawal resolution.
There was a good analysis of it by General Kevin Ryan,
who was a fellow at the Kennedy School at Harvard. He
went through it and he said it really should be called a
re-missioning proposal. It leaves about the same number
of American troops, but they have a slightly different
mission.
He said, first of all it allows for
a national security exception. If the president says
there is a national security issue, he can do whatever he
wants -- end of resolution. The second gap is it allows
for anti-terrorist activities. Okay, that is whatever you
like. Third, it allows for training Iraqi forces. Again,
anything you like.
Next it says troops have to remain
for protection of U.S. forces and facilities. What are U.S.
forces? Well, U.S. forces are those embedded in Iraqi
armed units where 60 percent of their fellow soldiers
think that they -- U.S. troops, that is -- are legitimate
targets of attack. Incidentally, those figures keep going
up, so they are probably higher by now. Well, okay, that
is plenty of force protection. What facilities need
protection was not explained in the Democratic
resolution, but facilities include what is called
"the embassy." The U.S. embassy in Iraq is
nothing like any embassy that has ever existed in
history. It's a city inside the green zone, the protected
region of Iraq, that the U.S. runs. It's got everything
from missiles to McDonalds, anything you want. They
didn't build that huge facility because they intend to
leave.
That is one facility, but there are
others. There are "semi-permanent military
bases," which are being built around the country.
"Semi-permanent" means permanent, as long as we
want.
General Ryan omitted a lot of
things. He omitted the fact that the U.S. is maintaining
control of logistics and logistics is the core of a
modern Army. Right now about 80 percent of the supply is
coming in though the south, from Kuwait, and it's going
through guerilla territory, easily subject to attack,
which means you have to have plenty of troops to maintain
that supply line. Plus, of course, it keeps control over
the Iraqi Army.
The Democratic resolution excludes
the Air Force. The Air Force does whatever it wants. It
is bombing pretty regularly and it can bomb more
intensively. The resolution also excludes mercenaries,
which is no small number -- sources such as the Wall
Street Journal estimate the number of mercenaries at
about 130,000, approximately the same as the number of
troops, which makes some sense. The traditional way to
fight a colonial war is with mercenaries, not with your
own soldiers -- that is the French Foreign Legion, the
British Ghurkas, or the Hessians in the Revolutionary
War. That is part of the main reason the draft was
dropped -- so you get professional soldiers, not people
you pick off the streets.
So, yes, it is re-missioning, but
the resolution was vetoed because it was too strong, so
we don't even have that. And, yes, that did disappoint a
lot of people. However, it would be too strong to say
that no high official in Washington called for immediate
withdrawal. There were some. The strongest one I know of
-- when asked what is the solution to the problem in Iraq
-- said it's quite obvious, "Withdraw all foreign
forces and withdraw all foreign arms." That official
was Condoleeza Rice and she was not referring to U.S.
forces, she was referring to Iranian forces and Iranian
arms. And that makes sense, too, on the assumption that
we own the world because, since we own the world U.S.
forces cannot be foreign forces anywhere. So if we invade
Iraq or Canada, say, we are the indigenous forces. It's
the Iranians that are foreign forces.
I waited for a while to see if
anyone, at least in the press or journals, would point
out that there was something funny about this. I could
not find a word. I think everyone regarded that as a
perfectly sensible comment. But I could not see a word
from anyone who said, wait a second, there are foreign
forces there, 150,000 American troops, plenty of American
arms.
So it is reasonable that when
British sailors were captured in the Gulf by Iranian
forces, there was debate, "Were they in Iranian
borders or in Iraqi borders? Actually there is no answer
to this because there is no territorial boundary, and
that was pointed out. It was taken for granted that if
the British sailors were in Iraqi waters, then Iran was
guilty of a crime by intervening in foreign territory.
But Britain is not guilty of a crime by being in Iraqi
territory, because Britain is a U.S. client state, and we
own the world, so they are there by right.
What about the possible next war, Iran?
There have been very credible threats by the U.S. and Israel
-- essentially a U.S. client -- to attack Iran. There
happens to be something called the UN Charter which says
that -- in Article 2 -- the threat or use of force in
international affairs is a crime. "Threat or use of
force."
Does anybody care? No, because we're
an outlaw state by definition, or to be more precise, our
threats and use of force are not foreign, they're
indigenous because we own the world. Therefore, it's
fine. So there are threats to bomb Iran -- maybe we will
and maybe we won't. That is the debate that goes on. Is
it legitimate if we decide to do it? People might argue
it's a mistake. But does anyone say it would be
illegitimate? For example, the Democrats in Congress
refuse to put in an amendment that would require the
Executive to inform Congress if it intends to bomb Iran
-- to consult, inform. Even that was not accepted.
The whole world is aghast at this
possibility. It would be monstrous. A leading British
military historian, Correlli Barnett, wrote recently that
if the U.S. does attack, or Israel does attack, it would
be World War III. The attack on Iraq has been horrendous
enough. Apart from devastating Iraq, the UN High
Commission on Refugees reviewed the number of displaced
people -- they estimate 4.2 million, over 2 million fled
the country, another 2 million fleeing within the
country. That is in addition to the numbers killed, which
if you extrapolate from the last studies, are probably
approaching a million.
It was anticipated by U.S.
intelligence and other intelligence agencies and
independent experts that an attack on Iraq would probably
increase the threat of terror and nuclear proliferation.
But that went way beyond what anyone expected. Well known
terrorism specialists Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank
estimated -- using mostly government statistics -- that
what they call "the Iraq effect" increased
terror by a factor of seven, and that is pretty serious.
And that gives you an indication of the ranking of
protection of the population in the priority list of
leaders. It's very low.
So what would the Iran effect be?
Well, that is incalculable. It could be World War III.
Very likely a massive increase in terror, who knows what
else. Even in the states right around Iraq, which don't
like Iran -- Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey -- even
there the large majority would prefer to see a nuclear
armed Iran to any U.S. military action, and they are
right, military action could be devastating. It doesn't
mean we won't do it. There is very little discussion here
of the illegitimacy of doing it, again on the assumption
that anything we do is legitimate, it just might cost too
much.
Is there a possible solution to the
U.S./Iran crisis? Well, there are some plausible
solutions. One possibility would be an agreement that
allows Iran to have nuclear energy, like every signer of
the non-proliferation treaty, but not to have nuclear
weapons. In addition, it would call for a nuclear weapons
free zone in the Middle East. That would include Iran, Israel,
which has hundreds of nuclear weapons, and any U.S. or
British forces deployed in the region. A third element of
a solution would be for the United States and other
nuclear states to obey their legal obligation, by
unanimous agreement of the World Court, to make
good-faith moves to eliminate nuclear weapons entirely.
Is this feasible? Well, it's
feasible on one assumption, that the United States and Iran
become functioning democratic societies, because what I
have just quoted happens to be the opinion of the
overwhelming majority of the populations in Iran and the United
States. On everything that I mentioned there is an
overwhelming majority. So, yes, there would be a very
feasible solution if these two countries were functioning
democratic societies, meaning societies in which public
opinion has some kind of effect on policy. The problem in
the United States is the inability of organizers to do
something in a population that overwhelmingly agrees with
them and to make that current policy. Of course, it can
be done. Peasants in Bolivia can do it, we can obviously
do it here.
Can we do anything to make Iran a
more democratic society? Not directly, but indirectly we
can. We can pay attention to the dissidents and the
reformists in Iran who are struggling courageously to
turn Iran into a more democratic society. And we know
exactly what they are saying, they are very outspoken
about it. They are pleading with the United States to
withdraw the threats against Iran. The more we threaten Iran,
the more we give a gift to the reactionary, religious
fanatics in the government. You make threats, you
strengthen them. That is exactly what is happening. The
threats have lead to repression, predictably.
Now the Americans claim they are
outraged by the repression, which we should protest, but
we should recognize that the repression is the direct and
predictable consequence of the actions that the U.S.
government is taking. So if you take actions, and then
they have predictable consequences, condemning the
consequences is total hypocrisy.
Incidentally, in the case of Cuba
about two-thirds of Americans think we ought to end the
embargo and all threats and enter into diplomatic
relations. And that has been true ever since polls have
been taken -- for about 30 years. The figure varies, but
it's roughly there. Zero effect on policy, in Iran, Cuba,
and elsewhere.
So there is a problem and that
problem is that the United States is just not a
functioning democracy. Public opinion does not matter and
among articulate and elite opinion that is a principle --
it shouldn't matter. The only principle that matters is
we own the world and the rest of you shut up, you know,
whether you're abroad or at home.
So, yes, there is a potential
solution to the very dangerous problem, it's essentially
the same solution: do something to turn our own country
into a functioning democracy. But that is in radical
opposition to the fundamental presupposition of all elite
discussions, mainly that we own the world and that these
questions don't arise and the public should have no
opinion on foreign policy, or any policy.
Once, when I was driving to work, I
was listening to NPR. NPR is supposed to be the kind of
extreme radical end of the spectrum. I read a statement
somewhere, I don't know if it's true, but it was a quote
from Obama, who is the hope of the liberal doves, in
which he allegedly said that the spectrum of discussion
in the United States extends between two crazy extremes,
Rush Limbaugh and NPR. The truth, he said, is in the
middle and that is where he is going to be, in the
middle, between the crazies.
NPR then had a discussion -- it was
like being at the Harvard faculty club -- serious people,
educated, no grammatical errors, who know what they're
talking about, usually polite. The discussion was about
the so-called missile defense system that the U.S. is
trying to place in Czechoslovakia and Poland -- and the
Russian reaction. The main issue was, "What is going
on with the Russians? Why are they acting so hostile and
irrational? Are they trying to start a new Cold War?
There is something wrong with those guys. Can we calm
them down and make them less paranoid?"
The main specialist they called in,
I think from the Pentagon or somewhere, pointed out,
accurately, that a missile defense system is essentially
a first-strike weapon. That is well known by strategic
analysts on all sides. If you think about it for a
minute, it's obvious why. A missile defense system is
never going to stop a first strike, but it could, in
principle, if it ever worked, stop a retaliatory strike.
If you attack some country with a first strike, and
practically wipe it out, if you have a missile defense
system, and prevent them from retaliating, then you would
be protected, or partially protected. If a country has a
functioning missile defense system it will have more
options for carrying out a first strike. Okay, obvious,
and not a secret. It's known to every strategic analyst.
I can explain it to my grandchildren in two minutes and
they understand it.
So on NPR it is agreed that a
missile defense system is a first-strike weapon. But then
comes the second part of the discussion. Well, say the
pundits, the Russians should not be worried about this.
For one thing because it's not enough of a system to stop
their retaliation, so therefore it's not yet a
first-strike weapon against them. Then they said it is
kind of irrelevant anyway because it is directed against Iran,
not against Russia.
Okay, that was the end of the
discussion. So, point one, missile defense is a
first-strike weapon; second, it's directed against Iran.
Now, you can carry out a small exercise in logic. Does
anything follow from those two assumptions? Yes, what
follows is it's a first-strike weapon against Iran. Since
the U.S. owns the world what could be wrong with having a
first-strike weapon against Iran. So the conclusion is
not mentioned. It is not necessary. It follows from the
fact that we own the world.
Maybe a year ago or so, Germany sold
advanced submarines to Israel, which were equipped to
carry missiles with nuclear weapons. Why does Israel need
submarines with nuclear armed missiles? Well, there is
only one imaginable reason and everyone in Germany with a
brain must have understood that -- certainly their
military system does -- it's a first-strike weapon
against Iran. Israel can use German subs to illustrate to
Iranians that if they respond to an Israeli attack they
will be vaporized.
The fundamental premises of Western
imperialism are extremely deep. The West owns the world
and now the U.S. runs the West, so, of course, they go
along. The fact that they are providing a first-strike
weapon for attacking Iran probably, I'm guessing now,
raised no comment because why should it?
You can forget about history, it
does not matter, it's kind of "old fashioned,"
boring stuff we don't need to know about. But most
countries pay attention to history. So, for example, for
the United States there is no discussion of the history
of U.S./Iranian relations. Well, for the U.S. there is
only one event in Iranian history -- in 1979 Iranians
overthrew the tyrant that the U.S. was backing and took
some hostages for over a year. That happened and they had
to be punished for that.
But for Iranians their history is
that for over 50 years, literally without a break, the U.S.has
been torturing Iranians. In 1953 the U.S. overthrew the
parliamentary government and installed a brutal tyrant,
the Shah, and kept supporting him while he compiled one
of the worst human rights records in the world --
torture, assassination, anything you like. In fact,
President Carter, when he visited Iran in December 1978,
praised the Shah because of the love shown to him by his
people, and so on and so forth, which probably
accelerated the overthrow. Of course, Iranians have this
odd way of remembering what happened to them and who was
behind it. When the Shah was overthrown, the Carter
administration immediately tried to instigate a military
coup by sending arms to Iran through Israel to try to
support military force to overthrow the government. We
immediately turned to supporting Iraq, that is Saddam
Hussein, and his invasion of Iran. Saddam was executed
for crimes he committed in 1982, by his standards not
very serious crimes -- complicity in killing 150 people.
Well, there was something missing in that account -- 1982
is a very important year in U.S./Iraqi relations. That is
the year in which Ronald Reagan removed Iraq from the
list of states supporting terrorism so that the U.S.
could start supplying Iraq with weapons for its invasion
of Iran, including the means to develop weapons of mass
destruction, chemical and nuclear weapons. That is 1982.
A year later Donald Rumsfeld was sent to firm up the
deal. Well, Iranians may very well remember that this led
to a war in which hundreds of thousands of them were
slaughtered with U.S. aid going to Iraq. They may well
remember that the year after the war was over, in 1989,
the U.S. government invited Iraqi nuclear engineers to
come to the United States for advanced training in
developing nuclear weapons.
What about the Russians? They have a
history too. One part of the history is that in the last
century Russia was invaded and practically destroyed
three times through Eastern Europe. You can look back and
ask, when was the last time that the U.S. was invaded and
practically destroyed through Canada or Mexico? That
doesn't happen. We crush others and we are always safe.
But the Russians don't have that luxury. Now, in 1990 a
remarkable event took place. I was kind of shocked,
frankly. Gorbachev agreed to let Germany be unified,
meaning join the West and be militarized within a hostile
military alliance. This is Germany, which twice in that
century practically destroyed Russia. That's a pretty
remarkable agreement.
There was a quid pro quo.
Then-president George Bush I agreed that NATO would not
expand to the East. The Russians also demanded, but did
not receive, an agreement for a nuclear-free zone from
the Artic to the Baltic, which would give them a little
protection from nuclear attack. That was the agreement in
1990. Then Bill Clinton came into office, the so-called
liberal. One of the first things he did was to rescind
the agreement, unilaterally, and expand NATO to the East.
For the Russians that's pretty
serious, if you remember the history. They lost 25
million people in the last World War and over 3 million
in World War I. But since the U.S. owns the world, if we
want to threaten Russia, that is fine. It is all for
freedom and justice, after all, and if they make
unpleasant noises about it we wonder why they are so
paranoid. Why is Putin screaming as if we're somehow
threatening them, since we can't be threatening anyone,
owning the world.
One of the other big issues on the
front pages now is Chinese "aggressiveness."
There is a lot of concern about the fact that the Chinese
are building up their missile forces. Is China planning
to conquer the world? Big debates about it. Well, what is
really going on? For years China has been in the lead in
trying to prevent the militarization of space. If you
look at the debates and the Disarmament Commission of the
UN General Assembly, the votes are 160 to 1 or 2. The U.S.
insists on the militarization of space. It will not
permit the outer space treaty to explicitly bar military
relations in space.
Clinton's position was that the U.S.
should control space for military purposes. The Bush
administration is more extreme. Their position is the U.S.
should own space, their words, We have to own space for
military purposes. So that is the spectrum of discussion
here. The Chinese have been trying to block it and that
is well understood. You read the most respectable journal
in the world, I suppose, the Journal of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences, and you find leading
strategic analysts, John Steinbrunner and Nancy
Gallagher, a couple of years ago, warning that the Bush
administration's aggressive militarization is leading to
what they call "ultimate doom." Of course,
there is going to be a reaction to it. You threaten
people with destruction, they are going to react. These
analysts call on peace-loving nations to counter Bush's
aggressive militarism. They hope that China will lead
peace-loving nations to counter U.S. aggressiveness. It's
a pretty remarkable comment on the impossibility of
achieving democracy in the United States. Again, the
logic is pretty elementary. Steinbrunner and Gallagher
are assuming that the United States cannot be a
democratic society; it's not one of the options, so
therefore we hope that maybe China will do something.
Well, China finally did something.
It signaled to the United States that they noticed that
we were trying to use space for military purposes, so China
shot down one of their satellites. Everyone understands
why -- the mili- tarization and weaponization of space
depends on satellites. While missiles are very difficult
or maybe impossible to stop, satellites are very easy to
shoot down. You know where they are. So China is saying,
"Okay, we understand you are militarizing space.
We're going to counter it not by militarizing space, we
can't compete with you that way, but by shooting down
your satellites." That is what was behind the
satellite shooting. Every military analyst certainly
understood it and every lay person can understand it. But
take a look at the debate. The discussion was about,
"Is China trying it conquer the world by shooting
down one of its own satellites?"
About a year ago there was a new
rash of articles and headlines on the front page about
the "Chinese military build-up." The Pentagon
claimed that China had increased its offensive military
capacity -- with 400 missiles, which could be nuclear
armed. Then we had a debate about whether that proves China
is trying to conquer the world or the numbers are wrong,
or something.
Just a little footnote. How many
offensive nuclear armed missiles does the United States
have? Well, it turns out to be 10,000. China may now have
maybe 400, if you believe the hawks. That proves that
they are trying to conquer the world.
It turns out, if you read the
international press closely, that the reason China is
building up its military capacity is not only because of
U.S. aggressiveness all over the place, but the fact that
the United States has improved its targeting capacities
so it can now destroy missile sites in a much more
sophisticated fashion wherever they are, even if they are
mobile. So who is trying to conquer the world? Well,
obviously the Chinese because since we own it, they are
trying to conquer it.
It's all too easy to continue with
this indefinitely. Just pick your topic. It's a good
exercise to try. This simple principle, "we own the
world," is sufficient to explain a lot of the
discussion about foreign affairs.
I will just finish with a word from
George Orwell. In the introduction to Animal Farm he
said, England is a free society, but it's not very
different from the totalitarian monster I have been
describing. He says in England unpopular ideas can be
suppressed without the use of force. Then he goes on to
give some dubious examples. At the end he turns to a very
brief explanation, actually two sentences, but they are
to the point. He says, one reason is the press is owned
by wealthy men who have every reason not to want certain
ideas to be expressed. And the second reason -- and I
think a more important one -- is a good education. If you
have gone to the best schools and graduated from Oxford
and Cambridge, and so on, you have instilled in you the
understanding that there are certain things it would not
do to say; actually, it would not do to think. That is
the primary way to prevent unpopular ideas from being
expressed.
The ideas of the overwhelming
majority of the population, who don't attend Harvard,
Princeton, Oxford and Cambridge, enable them to react
like human beings, as they often do. There is a lesson
there for activists
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