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Reports

On His Way Out, Gates Talks About ‘Access’ to Asia

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Posted on Jun 7, 2011

By William Pfaff

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates was in Kabul at the start of June talking about withdrawal—or non-withdrawal—from Afghanistan, but before he went home he stopped in Singapore to talk about an enlarged American military engagement in Asia. That was a speech to an International Institute for Strategic Studies meeting, in support of “a robust [U.S.] military presence in Asia.” He said that one of the “principal security challenges” for the United States is that some nation will try to keep it out of Asia.

He said that for some time American Navy and Air Force chiefs “have been concerned about anti-access and area-denial scenarios,” and have been planning how to overcome any effort to block American free movement and deployment “in defense of our allies and vital interests.” This was despite “myopic souls” at home, isolationist spirits and daunted citizens, who doubt the American nation’s strength and determination, and might not support America’s place as a “21st century Asia-Pacific nation,” imposing itself wherever it will, whatever the obstacles.

He ended the Singapore talk by telling a questioner who doubted the permanence of quasi-proprietary U.S. oversight of the South China Sea and other Chinese foreign preoccupations in the region, including the Taiwan relationship and the North Korean problem, that he would wager 100 dollars that the United States’ influence in Asia would be stronger five years from now than it is today.

Now 100 dollars is not a great deal of money, especially to Mr. Gates, who is accustomed to spending trillions of dollars connected with the global U.S military base system, as well as running three simultaneously ongoing wars, or less-than-ended wars, or prospective wars, in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan.

Perhaps that bet should not be taken too seriously; Gates is well paid and can afford to lose. Yet he could win. Five years is a short period in the life of an empire, and the United States is now a militarized and militarist empire of benevolent intention in the minds of the people who have been running it, under both Democrats and Republicans, since the end of the Cold War. Before that it was a fortress nation focused on a big single threat and a few auxiliary troublemakers. Now it goes in for civilization wars, globally utopian ideologies and altruistic dominion.

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The permanence of this undertaking depends upon the American people, who have shown that they can suddenly change their majority minds. This was an isolated and isolationist society from soon after its founding. Despite minor episodes of aggression in Mexico and the splendid little war with Spain, the latter seen in Washington, as well as in Iowa and Oregon, as an exercise in political clarification of the incomprehensible Caribbean and of naval coaling stations and Christian missionaries in the western Pacific, the American nation took until 1917 to really want to go to war again. Woodrow Wilson held the presidency in 1916 on the slogan “He Kept Us Out of War,” but he and the people immediately afterward decided that getting into the war would actually be rather glamorous.

The Second World War left the public determined to bring the troops home in a heedless rush, reversed just as quickly when the Soviet Union posed a menace. Vietnam ended in a shameless precipitation and lies, the conscripts who fought there getting punished by their elders for having done so. Creation of an all-volunteer army afterward guaranteed that such sunshine patriots and parasitic careerists as Richard Cheney would never again be personally inconvenienced by a national priority.

Now America’s perpetual wars can be conducted by profitable corporations mostly behind the public’s back, while members of Congress conduct their private affairs and pick up their envelopes at K Street addresses. But what if the people awakened from their torpor and realized what was going on?

This is not impossible. The secretary of defense’s Singapore press conference last week was alive with questions of a single tenor: Will you protect us if China threatens us? That is why Secretary Gates and the service chiefs make so much of “access” and scenarios of “area denial.” They are thinking of going to war against China. What would those Asian reporters in Singapore think of that? What would an awakened American public think of it? Gen. Douglas MacArthur, a man of greater experience than Mr. Gates, advised against it, but then again Mr. Gates is about to leave the government.

Visit William Pfaff’s website for more on his latest book, “The Irony of Manifest Destiny: The Tragedy of America’s Foreign Policy” (Walker & Co., $25), at www.williampfaff.com.

© 2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


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LocalHero's avatar

By LocalHero, July 1, 2011 at 2:38 am Link to this comment

Holy smokes “rollzone,” - ever seen a war you didn’t like? I guess they’re not bloody enough for arm-chair, psychopaths like yourself.

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LocalHero's avatar

By LocalHero, July 1, 2011 at 2:25 am Link to this comment

Why is it that the planes who fly around despicable, arrested-adolescents like Gates never drop out of the sky?

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By frecklefever, June 8, 2011 at 12:55 pm Link to this comment

...THE MILITARY DURING PEACETIME IS BOREDOM AND ADVANCEMENT
SLOW…WAR I GUESS IS PREFERABLE FOR THOSE SUFFERING FROM
ADD..ONLY HALF KIDDING BUT EXCITEMENT AND DANGER ARE DRUGS
THAT ARE CULTIVATED IN THE MILITARY…AND HARD TO SHUT
OFF…WITNESS THE HIGH PEOPLE GOT OFF ON THE DEATH OF BIN
LADEN..FIGHING AND WINNING IS INSPIRING AND ADDICTIVE
EG.GERMANY….WITH THE MEDIA ACTING THE ROLE OF CHEERLEADER
WARS ARE EASY TO START AND HARD TO STOP…USUALLY WHAT STOPS A
BULLYS RAMPAGE IS A DEFINITE ASS KICKING…..

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M Henri Day's avatar

By M Henri Day, June 8, 2011 at 9:46 am Link to this comment

Mr Pfaff would do well to recall that Mr McArthur only counseled against US wars on the Asian mainland after his attempt to take Korea as a prelude to taking China ignominiously failed. Alas, people in the United States have shown themselves prone to, in Arthur Vandenburg’s phrase, getting the hell scared out of them, so that their desire to bring the troops home after WW II was countered by an appeal to the so-called «Communist menace» on the part of the government and, not least, the corporate media, leading to UMT and then to the participation in the anti-colonial conflicts in Korea and Vietnam, none of which were vital to the safety or security of the United States (but extremely important to the profits of the military-industrial complex and its dream of an «American Century», which still persists today). Hopefully, the Chinese leadership will continue to be prudent and not allow themselves to be provoked by continual US prodding, thus saving us all from a global conflagration, but it’s difficult to remain sanguine on this point : Axel Oxenstierna’s observation to his son - «An nescis, mi fili, quantilla prudentia mundus regatur» - is as valid today as it was some 350 years ago….

Henri

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By berniem, June 8, 2011 at 8:37 am Link to this comment

Hey! What else to do with all of this excess human “capital”? Onward christian soldiers!

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By rollzone, June 8, 2011 at 7:46 am Link to this comment

hello. i do not know where we get these pussified
generals from. they fear escalation. they fear
combined engagement. they fear commitment. we go
where we do not belong, but we have to have nearby
permission. there has to be an oil contract somewhere
behind this pussification. he cost effects that his
supply chain must be local, or he eventually will
lose. everything about his strategy and tactics is
profit motivated. that is no way to wage military
human slaughter campaigns. he has been eating too
many female hormones. bring all the troops home now,
and rebuild our defenses from within. begin by
replacing commanders- up to and including the chief.

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By tedmurphy41, June 8, 2011 at 6:42 am Link to this comment

No mention, by Mr. Gates, as to who is going to fund this new adventure, although we all know who will pay for it in the end, and in a commodity that seems to be in plentiful supply, people and blood, mainly foreign people and foreign blood, even though these people are not, and never will be, foreigners in their own Countries.

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By WarrenMetzler, June 8, 2011 at 4:27 am Link to this comment

I see Mr. Pfaff as missing the point. It is sheer insanity for the US to act as if it has
a responsibility to have an “influence” in Asia, or anywhere else in the world. Each
human is unique, and here on the earth to develop as much as possible. And
governments, in terms of beneficial influence, are solely and only to provide an
administrative infrastructure so individuals can achieve their potentials; provide
highways, communication standards, electricity, libraries, embassies, etc..

Any time a government acts in addition to that, which I admit is pretty much all
the time for most governments, all that happens is increased chaos and
complications. We in the US have the greatest capacity to act in this matter. It is
time we resume out leadership role in the world and show them how life can be
lived in a fruitful and rewarding manner; instead or our apparent mission for close
to sixty years now,  to demonstrate how to be a big disruptive bully.

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By Anthony Olanad, June 8, 2011 at 3:29 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

“our very hubris assures our undoing”...Chalmers Johnson

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