Wednesday, April 11, 2012

"Also on the panel were such influential international relations scholars as John Mearsheimer who shared with me the view that the evidence in Goldstein’s book did not establish that, as Mearsheimer put it, ‘war had been burned out of the system,’ or that even such a trend meaningfully could be inferred from recent experience. Mearsheimer widely known for his powerful realist critique of the Israeli Lobby (in collaboration with Stephen Walt) did make the important point that the United States suffers from ‘an addiction to war.’ Mearsheimer did not seem responsive to my insistence on the panel that part of this American addiction to war arose from role being played by entrenched domestic militarism a byproduct of the permanent war economy that disposed policy makers and politicians in Washington to treat most security issues as worthy of resolution only by considering the options offered by thinking within militarist box of violence and sanctions, a viewpoint utterly resistant to learning from past militarist failures (as in Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and now Iran). In my view the war addiction is real, but can only be treated significantly if understood to be a consequence of this blinkering of policy choice by a militarized bureaucracy in nation’s capital that is daily reinforced by a compliant media and a misguided hard power realist worldview sustained by high paid private sector lobbyists and the lure of corporate profits, and continuously rationalized by well funded subsidized think tanks such as The Hoover Institution, The Heritage Foundation, and The American Enterprise Institute. Dwight Eisenhower in his presidential farewell speech famously drew attention to the problem that has grown far worse through the years when he warned the country about ‘the military-industrial complex’ back in 1961."
...
"Aside from the U.S. being addicted to war I heard no references in the course of the panel and discussion to the new hierarchies in the world being resurrected by indirect forms of violence and intervention after the collapse of colonialism, or of structural violence that shortens life by poverty, disease, and human insecurity. I cannot help but wonder whether some subtle corruption has seeped into the academy over the years, especially at elite universities whose faculty received invitations to work as prestigious consultants by the Washington security establishment, or in extreme cases, were hosts to lucrative arrangements that included giving weapons labs a university home and many faculty members a salary surge. Princeton, where I taught for 40 years, was in many respects during the Cold War an academic extension of the military-industrial complex, with humanists advising the CIA, a dean recruiting on behalf of the CIA, a branch of the Institute for Defense Analysis on campus doing secret contract work on counterinsurgency warfare, and a variety of activities grouped under the anodyne heading of ‘security studies’ being sponsored by outside financing."
(Richard Falk, 10 April 2012)

3 comments:

anan said...

Iraq is increasingly successful. And there is increasingly little the English can do to stop it.

Look at what a success the Iraqi Army, the Government of Iraq and PM Maliki were in Basrah in 2008. Compare this to how royally the English screwed things up before this.

Today, friends in Basrah describe a booming city. One where international business people and tourists visit in significant growing numbers.

Many English try to portray Iraqis as failures to hide their own insecurities.

PM Maliki was kind and honest enough to speak frankly about the English and how the English could improve themselves in 2008. Why don't more English learn from PM Maliki? [He is not by any means anti English.]

To the rest of this atrocious article, the left is thoroughly discredited and unpopular in every country on earth. When people around the world rail at the "ugly westerner" or "ugly American" a majority though by no means all of what they are railing against is leftist ideology in the West.

The left is arguably larger as a percentage of the population in England than anywhere else, but even in England, they are a minority. Most English are deeply embarrassed and ashamed of their large harmful leftist minority.

The empire is over. Let it go. Learn from wise foreigners, such as Malaysians, Iraqis, Hong Kong, Singaporeans, Indians, Australians, Americans, Canadians, Irish, Palestinians, Israelis, and other former English colonies. They can help you.

Jemmy Hope said...

Oh, I know I said I wouldn't let any more of this clown's comments through, but this is so off the wall I had to share it.
I'm treating it as satire.

Flem said...

Anan, you sound like a raving lunatic. How many "English" do you know personally?

Learn from foreigners? I'm curious. Why are all these foreigners living in moe? So they can "teach" them how to run their country? Odd, seeing as their own countries are even more messed up.....

It seems you are still bitter about English colonial days. Did the English give dad or grandad the shaft ? I think it's you who need to get over it