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The Question No U.S. Official Dare AskPosted on Jan 7, 2010It is time to ask a question that virtually no one in an official or political position in the United States is willing to contemplate asking. For a person in a responsible public position to pose this question would be to risk exclusion from the realm of “serious” policy discussion. It could be, as they say in the bureaucracies, “a career destroyer.” It would be like declaring that after long analysis you had come to the conclusion that the world is indeed flat, and not round. A round earth is merely an illusion, which everyone has accepted, and adapted to—and fears challenging. My question is the following. Has it been a terrible, and by now all but irreversible, error for the United States to have built a system of more than 700 military bases and stations girdling the world? Does it provoke war rather than provide security? Each of six world regions now has a separate U.S. commander with his staff and intelligence, planning and potential operational capabilities. Central Command, based in Florida, currently is responsible for America’s Middle Eastern and Central Asian wars. The other five commands—Atlantic, Pacific, Southern (for Latin America), Africa and Europe—oversee in detail what goes on in their assigned portions of the world, generating analyses, appreciations, and scenarios of possible reactions to a myriad of perceived or possible threats to the United States. Advertisement Each regional commander controls “main operating bases” abroad, which in turn support fully manned “forward operating sites,” usually including permanently stationed American forces and an air base. Beyond them, “cooperative security locations” are established, shared with the forces of allies or clients. The hegemonic implications and intention of all this, which provides the military structure from which to conduct global interventions (or indeed a third world war), are readily acknowledged in Washington, and motivated by what Washington considers internationally valid and constructive reasons. The unthinkable question with which I began this article was whether all of this has been a ghastly mistake. Many Americans question or oppose this system, but ordinarily with anti-militarist motives, or because they see it as imperialist, or part of an interventionist or aggressive foreign policy outlook that they oppose. My reason for questioning it is that it generates apprehension, hostility and fear of the United States; frequently promotes insecurity; and has already provoked wars—unnecessary wars. It is an obstacle to peaceful long-term relations between the United States and other countries, and with the international community as a whole. Today the United States is involved in two and a half—or even more—wars provoked by this system of global American military engagement. I say “more” than two wars because in addition to the Afghanistan war there still are more than 100,000 American troops in Iraq, in circumstances in which an outbreak of further fighting involving them is perfectly possible. The United States is also taking part in the fight against the Taliban inside Pakistan, and at the same time experiences serious tensions with the Pakistan government and public. Then there is Yemen. The 9/11 attacks on the United States in 2001, according to Osama bin Laden himself, were provoked by the presence of U.S. military bases in what Muslims consider the sacred territories of Saudi Arabia. U.S. forces went there at the time of the Gulf War and were kept in place afterward by the U.S. against the objections of the Saudi Arabian government. (It is noteworthy that immediately following the invasion of Iraq the U.S. announced closure of the Saudi bases.) In the current discussion of a negotiated U.S. disengagement from the war in Afghanistan, one of America’s best experts on the region, Selig S. Harrison, writes that this would be possible only on a regional basis supported by Russia, Iran, China, Pakistan and certain other states. He writes: “All these neighboring countries are disturbed in varying degree by the expansion of U.S bases near their borders; they recognize that no Taliban faction is likely to negotiate peace until the United States and NATO set a timetable that covers both withdrawal of their forces and closure of U.S. bases. “Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s March 2009 proposal for a regional conference, revived recently by Henry Kissinger, has been ignored by potential participants because it assumes the indefinite continuance of a U.S. military presence.” American bases in Japan, an ally for a half-century, are today the subject of tension between Washington and the new Japanese government. What set the scene for Georgia’s attack on South Ossetia and Russian troops in August 2008 was U.S. pressure to bring Georgia into NATO. In Yemen there already are protests over the possibility of U.S. operations there. This evidence is that the U.S. global base system is a system of insecurity for the U.S., and for others as well. But what president would dare dismantle it? Visit William Pfaff’s Web site at www.williampfaff.com. © 2010 Tribune Media Services Inc. New and Improved CommentsWe are launching a major overhaul of our comments section. In addition to more robust spam filtering and moderation, new features include the ability to rate other comments, sort how they are displayed and respond directly via e-mail or in a thread. Unfortunately, commenters will lose their existing Truthdig identities. It's a pain, we know, but on the plus side you will now be able to log in with a plethora of options, including Google, Twitter, Facebook and Disqus accounts. Before launching this system we spent months in discussion with our top commenters. We listened to the feedback and we hope you like what we've come up with. Please direct any problems or concerns to us via our contact page. |
By DieDaily, January 8, 2010 at 2:11 am Link to this comment
EJH thanks for the link, good info. Don`t mind ed_tru_lib, he still thinks that the world is
Report thisdetermined by a persons own opinion of it. Ed, a word
of ad`vice: when your hands are over your eyes YES WE
CAN still see you. Thought you`d want to know.
By ed_tru_lib, January 8, 2010 at 1:15 am Link to this comment
Well EJH
the reason they’re there in the first place was that the Japanese murderers attacked us and the only reason they (Japanese) aren’t still here is that we won by liberal, progressive leadership of the military as well as the country. Not by babbling leftyloon garbage like calling Americans murderers.
Report thisBy baluscher, January 7, 2010 at 11:36 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I tend to agree that US military bases abroad tend to
Report thismake for attractive sources of local friction and
terrorist attack. The US military bases have long been
thought to be part of enabling the US to protect its
national interest but one wonders whether acting a the
world’s policeman is really a good idea. In large part
the establishment of bases seems to have been an ad hoc
process driven by the military instead of long term
strategic planning.
By EJH, January 7, 2010 at 8:31 pm Link to this comment
American military has no business in other countries.
Report thisWhy the hell are the American murderers still in Japan?
Please leave. http://theunpeople.blogspot.com/
By DieDaily, January 7, 2010 at 6:47 pm Link to this comment
Yeah, and it costs a few bucks too. Um, aren’t we,
like, broke? Actually, worse than broke? We should
keep seven of those bases. We should put the other
693 up on Craig’s list or eBay.
At least Roman soldiers built roads all over the
Report thisplace and back. Ours just build craters filled with
civilian blood and tears. I think we need to consider
cancelling our credit cards and going out less. We
could stay home and rent videos of shock and awe
instead. Our theaters are overpriced and I’m
underwhelmed by their results.
By gerard, January 7, 2010 at 6:41 pm Link to this comment
Mr. Pfaff, along with your question on bases, you should also ask how the closure of bases affects our economy—numbers of jobs lost by military hardward manufacturers, technologies for research, invention and production, jobs in the Pentagon and its assisting offices elsewhere, jobs in the military heirarchy itself, including soldiers, sailors and marines, and jobs in military surveillance and planning.
Report thisNo doubt I have missed some important agencies, including maintenance and support, food and housing, and maintenance of military prisons. This huge number of military-related jobs points to the fact that our economy is utterly dependent upon the military-industrial complex, which is precisely what Eisenhower warned against. In order to get free of this slavery, we will have to transpose the entire U.S. economy -which needs to be done anyway, because huge civilian needs for schools, hospitals, infrastructure and energy revision are pressingly urgent if civilians are to survive with a decent living standard and hope for the future.
I hope you will face this question more directly the next time you write about it. These latter are the facts that need to be known, but they are largely concealed from ordinary people, for obvious reasons. As it is, you are right that the military machine feeds into war rather than preventing it.
By samosamo, January 7, 2010 at 6:37 pm Link to this comment
““My question is the following. Has it been a terrible, and by
now all but irreversible, error for the United States to have
built a system of more than 700 military bases and stations
girdling the world? Does it provoke war rather than provide
security?”“
************************************************************
Pfaff, you ask and answer these truly unpatriotic greedy
traitors to the United States of America with your questions
and if that ain’t enough, I will fill in the answer now, YES!!!
Actually Chalmers Johnson stated, asked and answered those
Report thisquestions long time ago but it would require reading his
books and for many that is beyond the ability of their
ATTENTION DEFICIT DISORDER TO DO!
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