From: Former Congressman Rom Paul via lewrockwell.com
William Kristol
knows what is wrong with the United States. As he wrote
recently in the flagship magazine of the neo-conservatives, the
Weekly Standard, the problem with the US is that we seem
to have lost our appetite for war. According to Kristol, the troubles
that have befallen us in the 20th century have all been the result
of these periodic bouts of war-weariness, a kind of virus that we
catch from time to time.
He claims because
of the US “drawdown” in Europe after World War II, Stalin subjugated
Eastern Europe. Because of war weariness the United States stopped
bombing Southeast Asia in the 1970s, snatching defeat from the jaws
of victory. War weariness through the 1990s led to Rwanda, Milosevic,
and the rise of the Taliban. It was our fault for not fighting on!
According to Kristol, our failure to act as the policeman of the
world is why we were attacked on September 11, 2001. Of the 1990s,
he wrote, “[t]hat decade of not policing the world ended with 9/11.”
That revisionism
is too much even for fellow neo-conservatives like Paul Wolfowitz
to swallow. In a 2003 interview,
Wolfowitz admitted that it was the presence of US troops in Saudi
Arabia that led to the growth of al-Qaeda:
"(W)e can now remove almost all of our forces from Saudi Arabia. Their presence there over the last 12 years has been a source of enormous difficulty for a friendly government. It's been a huge recruiting device for al Qaeda. In fact if you look at bin Laden, one of his principle grievances was the presence of so-called crusader forces on the holy land, Mecca and Medina.”
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But for Kristol
and his allies there is never enough war. According to a new study
by Brown University, the US invasion of Iraq cost some 190,000 lives,
most of them non-combatants. It has cost more than $1.7 trillion,
and when all is said and done including interest the cost may well
be $6 trillion. Some $212 billion was spent on Iraqi reconstruction
with nothing to show for it. Total deaths from US war on Iraq, Afghanistan,
and Pakistan have been at least 329, 000. None of this is enough
for Kristol.
The neo-con
ideology promotes endless war, but neo-cons fight their battles
with the blood of others. From the comfortable, subsidized offices
of magazines like the Weekly Standard, the neo-conservatives
urge the United States to engage in endless war – to be fought by
the victims of the “poverty
draft” from states where there are few jobs. Ironically, these
young people cannot find more productive work because the Federal
Reserve’s endless money printing to keep the war machine turning
has destroyed our economy. The six trillion dollars that will be
spent on the Iraq war are merely pieces of printed paper that further
erode the dollar’s purchasing power now and well into the future.
It is the inflation tax, which is the most regressive and cruel
of all.
Yes,
Americans are war weary, concedes Kristol. But he does not blame
the average American. The real problem is that the president has
dropped the ball on terrifying Americans with the lies and imaginary
threats that led to the invasion of Iraq. Writes Kristol: “One can’t,
for example, be surprised at the ebbing support of the American
public for the war in Afghanistan years after the president stopped
trying to mobilize their support, stopped heralding the successes
of the troops he’d sent there, and stopped explaining the importance
of their mission.”
If only we
had more war propaganda from the highest levels of government we
could be cured of this war-weariness. Ten years ago the US invaded
Iraq under the influence of neo-conservative lies. Those lies continued
to promote US military action in places like Libya, and next on
their agenda is Syria and then on to Iran. It is time for the American
people to shout “enough!”
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