mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-27 00:09:39 -05:00
200 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
200 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
PLAYERS AND PAWNS: THE PERSIAN GULF WAR
|
|
|
|
By JACOB G. HORNBERGER
|
|
|
|
For the greater part of this century, the United States
|
|
government has plundered, looted, and terrorized the American
|
|
people through the Internal Revenue Service. It has
|
|
surreptitiously stolen people's income and savings through the
|
|
Federal Reserve System. It has brutally enforced--through
|
|
fines and imprisonment--rules and regulations governing
|
|
people's peaceful economic activities. In a very real sense,
|
|
ours is a government which has been--and is--waging a terribly
|
|
immoral and destructive war against its own people.
|
|
|
|
Yet, Americans continue to delude themselves. Harkening back
|
|
to their high-school civics classes, they continue to believe
|
|
that America is the land of the free--that the welfare-state,
|
|
planned-economy way of life was formed in 1787--and that their
|
|
government is founded on moral and benevolent principles. Like
|
|
the cancer patient who undergoes a denial stage upon being
|
|
told of his disease, Americans refuse to face the truth: that
|
|
they are not free--that they have abandoned the principles of
|
|
limited government, private property, and unhampered markets
|
|
on which this nation was founded--and that our government is
|
|
now based on evil and morally degenerate principles.
|
|
|
|
But many Americans who know the truth have concluded that our
|
|
kakistocracy, through its liberation of Kuwait, miraculously
|
|
reformed itself into a good and honorable government. Let us
|
|
review the record.
|
|
|
|
Among the panoply of reasons given by the U.S. government to
|
|
justify its intervention in the Middle East was its professed
|
|
concern for the Kuwaiti people. But the evidence establishes
|
|
that our government has even less concern for the well-being
|
|
of foreign citizens than it has for its own citizens.
|
|
|
|
For many decades, our government has used money which has been
|
|
plundered and looted from the American people to give foreign
|
|
aid to brutal tyrants--knowing that such money would be used
|
|
to tyrannize the people who lived under such tyrants. Ours is
|
|
a government which delivered millions of dollars to the Shah
|
|
of Iran--despite its knowledge that the money was being used
|
|
to torture and kill the Iranian people . . . which actively
|
|
supported Saddam Hussein--despite its knowledge of his
|
|
aggressive acts against Iranians and his murderous conduct
|
|
against his own people . . . which embraces Mikhail
|
|
Gorbachev--despite its knowledge of his aggressive acts
|
|
against Lithuanians and the murderous acts of this barbaric
|
|
communist against his own people . . . which willingly shakes
|
|
one of the bloodiest hands in the Middle East--that of Hafez
|
|
Assad of Syria--despite its knowledge of his aggression
|
|
against the Lebanese and the brutal killing of thousands of
|
|
his own people . . . and which feels right at home with the
|
|
savage, communist tyrants of China--despite their long-time
|
|
aggression against the Tibetans and their murderous conduct
|
|
against their own citizenry.
|
|
|
|
And Americans have yet to confront another uncomfortable
|
|
reality: that the same evil, immoral, and tyrannical
|
|
government which reigns supreme in our domestic affairs has
|
|
omnipotent power over our lives and fortunes in foreign
|
|
affairs as well. Remember--the President sent hundreds of
|
|
thousands of American troops into war without seeking
|
|
congressional approval. (Many Americans do not realize that a
|
|
military blockade is an act of war.) By the time congressional
|
|
approval was sought, the President had already--by placing
|
|
American troops in harm's way--effectively cornered the
|
|
Congress and the American people into supporting his
|
|
unilateral decision. The subsequent debate concerned only the
|
|
method by which the war was to be waged--not whether or not
|
|
the war would be waged. Moreover, the President made it
|
|
abundantly clear that the congressional vote was, in any
|
|
event, only window dressing--that he would order an attack on
|
|
Iraq regardless of the outcome of the vote.
|
|
|
|
Why is all of this important? Because the American people must
|
|
be made to realize what they have wrought for their children,
|
|
and their children's children, who will probably have to pay
|
|
the price: a nation whose ruler has the same omnipotent powers
|
|
over the lives and fortunes of the citizenry as those
|
|
exercised by the most powerful dictators in history.
|
|
|
|
During the Persian Gulf crisis, the U.S. government preached
|
|
the importance of the rule of law. But our government itself
|
|
violated the rule of law by ignoring the U.S. Constitution,
|
|
not only with respect to waging war without a Congressional
|
|
declaration of war, but also by exercising a power--policing
|
|
the world--that the Constitution does not authorize.
|
|
|
|
And our government also failed to explain how the rule of law
|
|
is supposed to be followed in international affairs. Was the
|
|
U.S. government following the rule of law when it mined
|
|
Nicaraguan harbors? If so, why did the World Court enter a
|
|
monetary judgment against our government for what it adjudged
|
|
to be an illegal act? And if our government does have such a
|
|
principled devotion to the rule of law, why then has it
|
|
refused to comply with the World Court's judgment?
|
|
|
|
The simple truth is that there is no mechanism by which
|
|
international disputes among non-consenting, independent,
|
|
sovereign nations can be adjudicated. (And the United Nations
|
|
is not a judicial body designed to resolve such disputes; the
|
|
Persian Gulf crisis showed that its votes are delivered in the
|
|
same way as those in the U.S. Congress--to the highest bidder
|
|
for cash or other consideration.) Does the lack of such a
|
|
mechanism justify aggression against another nation-state--
|
|
whether it be our government's invasion of Panama or Iraq's
|
|
invasion of Kuwait? No. But it does show two things: that for
|
|
the foreseeable future, nation-states (including the U.S.)
|
|
will continue to resolve their disputes through military
|
|
force, and, second, that the U.S. government's moralizing
|
|
on the importance of following the rule of law in
|
|
international affairs only evidences its own hypocrisy.
|
|
|
|
The opportunity to serve as the world's policeman is a dream
|
|
come true for the military-industrial complex--that is, those
|
|
who are dependent on military welfare. With the collapse of
|
|
communism in Eastern Europe, the military welfare-recipients
|
|
were in a state of panic. How could they now justify the
|
|
tremendous tax burden associated with a huge, standing
|
|
military force? This concern and panic were best evidenced by
|
|
the Pentagon's eagerness to involve itself in the government's
|
|
"war on drugs"--after years of refusing to do so.
|
|
|
|
But to be able to serve as the world's policeman--especially
|
|
in the Middle East--now guarantees total political and
|
|
bureaucratic control over the lives and fortunes of the
|
|
American people for the indefinite future. Why? Because war
|
|
and the threat of war always and inevitably entail omnipotent
|
|
power over the citizenry. Moreover, brutal foreign tyrants
|
|
against whom such wars can be waged are never in short supply
|
|
--and especially not in the Middle East! And what better place
|
|
(from the standpoint of the military-industrial complex) to
|
|
have the mission of establishing peace and stability than in a
|
|
part of the world which has never known peace and stability?
|
|
|
|
By becoming the world's policeman whose primary beat is the
|
|
Middle East, those who are on the military dole have ensured
|
|
themselves perpetual existence--and perpetual control over the
|
|
lives and property of the American people.
|
|
|
|
And, of course, it is the American people who are the pawns in
|
|
all of this. Innocently believing that their government
|
|
miraculously has become good and moral overnight, they
|
|
ardently support its omnipotent power over their own lives and
|
|
fortunes--the same way they have done in their government's
|
|
futile and destructive wars on poverty, illiteracy, and drugs.
|
|
But Americans ignore two important things: first, their role
|
|
as pawns and, second, that pawns can and will be sacrificed
|
|
whenever the political and bureaucratic chess players in
|
|
Washington deem it necessary for the "international good."
|
|
|
|
Is there an answer to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait based on
|
|
principles of individual freedom and limited government? Yes.
|
|
And it is an answer which is also based on the principle of
|
|
individual responsibility.
|
|
|
|
The power of our government to intervene in both domestic and
|
|
foreign affairs should be strictly constrained through express
|
|
constitutional limitations. In domestic affairs, this means
|
|
the end of the welfare-state, planned-economy way of life. In
|
|
foreign affairs, this means the end of foreign aid, the end of
|
|
our government's ability to wage trade wars, and the end of
|
|
its role as the world's international policeman. The power of
|
|
our government should be constitutionally limited to three
|
|
primary functions: protecting the American people from
|
|
domestic criminals, defending the United States from foreign
|
|
attack, and resolving disputes which arise in this nation.
|
|
|
|
And the American people? They should be free to travel and
|
|
trade all over the world without the permission and
|
|
interference of their own governmental officials . . . and to
|
|
donate their own lives and fortunes to oppose tyranny and
|
|
oppression anywhere in the world. Does this mean that the
|
|
American people would have to take responsibility for their
|
|
beliefs and convictions? Of course--but isn't that the type of
|
|
society which we desire?
|
|
|
|
Freedom for Americans is possible in our lifetime. But it will
|
|
only come when they finally realize that people are not free--
|
|
and can never be free--under either a welfare state or a
|
|
warfare state. And when the American people finally make their
|
|
own freedom their highest political end, they will discover
|
|
what only a select few in history have discovered: that true
|
|
personal pride and self-esteem come from the achievement of
|
|
one's own freedom--not vicariously through the military
|
|
conquests of one's government.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of
|
|
Freedom Foundation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
From the July 1991 issue of FREEDOM DAILY,
|
|
Copyright (c) 1991, The Future of Freedom Foundation,
|
|
PO Box 9752, Denver, Colorado 80209, 303-777-3588.
|
|
Permission granted to reprint; please give appropriate credit
|
|
and send one copy of reprinted material to the Foundation.
|