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KoKo

(84,711 posts)
Thu May 1, 2014, 06:46 PM May 2014

Does Our Zeal to Support American Exceptionalism--Lead Us to View Other Countries as Dispensable?

BTW...sorry like I barged into this "CLPPF Group" here...but was torn between posting in PMRG or in a DU Religion Group. I opted first for PMRG...but, thought McGovern's Snip in his article at the end was something I remember in my Episcopalian Heritage before they sort of opted out for awhile.
so...I took a chance and thought some here might find this interesting. If you feel I've intruded I will delete the post. I am so horrified by the Lack of Morality in our Foreign Policy that McGovern's Post hit home.. Check out his BIO at end of the Snip that I posted. A pragmatic Religious former CIA Analyst.. We should hope for more.....

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This was at the end of an article Ray McGovern wrote about Kerry, RT and Propaganda. But at the bottom of the article he makes some points that I thought were intriguing about the moral question American 'Exceptionalism,' in action, raises. And the hypocrisy that follows when a compliant, group think and often propagandist US Media whips up controversy into more calls for endless sanctions, confrontation and war under the guise that we are bringing 'Democracy/Freedom of Opportunity' to others outside our borders.
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By Ray McGovern-- (former CIA Analyst) April 30, 2014

The Antonym of ‘Indispensable’

Proclaiming that the U.S. is the sole “indispensable” country in the world renders other countries, by definition, dispensable. Putin himself, at the end of his extraordinary op-ed in the New York Times on Sept. 11, 2013, included this unusual admonition: “It is extremely dangerous to encourage people to see themselves as exceptional. There are big countries and small countries, rich and poor. … We are all different, but when we ask for the Lord’s blessings, we must not forget that God created us equal.”

Have U.S. policymakers become so callous as not to care what happens to those with the bad luck to live in “dispensable” countries? It does appear so – and that arrogance about U.S. “indispensability” and “exceptionalism” has caused Official Washington to lose its moral compass.

In 1995, the United Nations reported that U.S. economic sanctions against Iraq had brought death to 500,000 Iraqi children below the age of five. Asked about that by Lesley Stahl on CBS’s “60 Minutes” on May 12, 1996, U.S. Ambassador to the UN Madeleine Albright answered, “We think the price is worth it.”

Apparently that was the correct answer, at least for Official Washington. A few months later, President Bill Clinton nominated Albright to be Secretary of State and she was confirmed unanimously by the full Senate. No one asked about the children.

“There’s only one rule, that I know of, babies – god damnit! you’ve got to be kind,” said Kurt Vonnegut writer and prominent humanist/agnostic/athiest. What has become of us? There is no requirement to believe in what George W. Bush calls “The Almighty” in order to know in your bones that some things are plain wrong – that human beings do not do such things to other human beings, and especially not to children.

Let Them Come to Fallujah

When one lacks any personal experience with innocent suffering, it is very difficult to empathize – much less to take action to end it. I suspect that Anne-Marie Slaughter, current head of the New America Foundation who served for two years under Secretary Clinton, lacks such experience. How else would she think it is okay to slaughter Syrians in order to “change Putin’s calculations?”

In a think piece that she published a week ago, she argues cavalierly that the United States should respond to the crisis in Ukraine by mounting a bombing campaign against Syria: “The US, together with as many countries as will cooperate, could use force to eliminate Syria’s fixed-wing aircraft as a first step toward enforcing Resolution 2139. … After the strike, the US, France, and Britain should ask for the Security Council’s approval of the action taken, as they did after NATO’s intervention in Kosovo in 1999. Equally important, shots fired by the US in Syria will echo loudly in Russia.”

Though Slaughter’s plan sounds so antiseptic, Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, acknowledged to a Senate hearing last September that the U.S. bombing campaign against Syria – then on the table – would have inflicted civilian casualties. He demurred on stating publicly the number of Syrian civilians who would be killed, saying the Pentagon’s classified estimate could be shared with the senators only in closed session.

Do Professor Slaughter and other protégés of Madeleine Albright care about children and other humans in “dispensable” countries? If so, they should visit the rubble in Fallujah, human as well as material, left behind by U.S. troops ordered to mount reprisal attacks of the kind labeled war crimes at the post-WWII Nuremburg Tribunal. Nuremberg took great care to emphasize the lack of any distinction between indispensable and dispensable countries before the law.

Buildings can always be rebuilt; children not so much. Following the U.S. military assaults of April and November 2004 on Fallujah, the hospitals there were overwhelmed with severe trauma cases. As time went by, physicians in Fallujah gradually became aware of apparent increases in the incidence of cancer, especially childhood leukemia, as well as a broad spectrum of birth defects like congenital heart disease, spina bifida and hydrocephalus (water on the brain).

The causes of the health crises in Fallujah are not yet firmly established but uranium is the prime suspect. Some three years ago, a credible report found elevated amounts of uranium in soil, water and human hair samples from Fallujah. This was not depleted uranium (DU); the U-238/U-235 ratios were consistent with natural uranium or very slightly enriched uranium. Many studies in animals confirm that uranium is not only a strong teratogen (inducer of birth defects), but also a carcinogen and mutagen. Uranyl ions bind to DNA with high affinity and can cause DNA damage and DNA mutations.

While these health problems appear most severe in Fallujah, increases in cancer, leukemia and birth defects have also been reported in many other Iraqi cities. Fortunately, the existence of a sister-university relationship between the University of Basra in Iraq and the University of Washington enabled a reliable statistical analysis of a registry of leukemia cases.

Trends in leukemia since 1993 in children aged 0 to 14 years were evaluated, and the researchers concluded that childhood leukemia rates in Basra more than doubled over a 15-year period; Basra’s rate compared unfavorably with neighboring Kuwait and nearby Oman, as well as with the U.S. and European countries.

As for the country of Iraq at large, precise measurement of changes in cancer incidence in Iraq today, compared with the incidence before the shock-and-awe years of 1991 and 2003, is hampered by two main factors: (1) the general lack of comprehensive cancer registries for Iraq in the years prior to those dates (with Basra the exception), and (2) the determination of the U.S., U.K. and Iraqi governments to cover up post-war health crises in Iraq. The first factor is regrettable but understandable; the second is, in my view, unconscionable.

Another factor hindering such studies, of course, is the bedlam that continues to exist in and around Fallujah and other Iraqi areas. So, let those savants who glibly advocate for more war, whether with Syria or Russia, come to Fallujah and try to tell the parents of Fallujah that it was worth it.

It would be a fool’s errand to depend on the mainstream U.S. media for such inconvenient truth. And if RT should do an investigative report on the moral depravity of inflicting leukemia and other ills on so many Iraqi children, you can bet it would be criticized as stemming from Russia’s anti-American “propaganda bullhorn.”

We need to find some way to poke holes in the mainstream media, so our fellow citizens can be more fully informed before they are persuaded, a la Iraq, by intelligence “fixed around the policy,” to risk war with Russia. To borrow from a common Chinese expression: This would come to a no-good end.

We need to stop it now.

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http://consortiumnews.com/2014/04/30/kerrys-propaganda-war-on-russias-rt/

Ray McGovern works for Tell the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington. He is a student of Russian history, has led CIA’s Soviet Foreign Policy Branch, and is now on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).

7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Does Our Zeal to Support American Exceptionalism--Lead Us to View Other Countries as Dispensable? (Original Post) KoKo May 2014 OP
Good article. Granny M May 2014 #1
Thank You...for replying ...and not thinking it is out of place here. KoKo May 2014 #2
Thank you for posting this! ColesCountyDem May 2014 #3
I also thank you for posting this. Fortinbras Armstrong May 2014 #4
I think the memory of "war crimes" seems to be vanishing with new generations. KoKo May 2014 #6
Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it. Thav Jul 2014 #7
I suggest that you post this in PMRG Fortinbras Armstrong May 2014 #5

Granny M

(1,395 posts)
1. Good article.
Thu May 1, 2014, 07:08 PM
May 2014

I agree that it's dangerous to believe in American exceptionalism. And I agree with the last paragraph you posted, about finding a way to poke holes in the mainstream media, so citizens can become informed before being persuaded.

I don't think this is out of place here. Thanks for posting.

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
2. Thank You...for replying ...and not thinking it is out of place here.
Thu May 1, 2014, 07:17 PM
May 2014

Hope some will find it interesting.

Fortinbras Armstrong

(4,473 posts)
4. I also thank you for posting this.
Fri May 2, 2014, 10:16 AM
May 2014

During the Iraq war, I had an on-line argument on a now-defunct talkboard with a man who believed in American exceptionalism. And not only that, he was probably the only man I have personally come across who actually advocated Schrecklichkeit as a policy. He advocated that all the imams in Fallujah be rounded up with their families, and if there was an act of resistance to the American occupation, the imam of the nearest mosque should be publicly executed along with all members of his family.

I pointed out to him that this was a war crime, and he did not care. I also pointed out that Al Qaeda said that the US was waging war against Islam, and his proposal would prove that they were right! I mentioned the Nazi destruction of the village of Lidice, Czechoslovakia in retaliation for the assassination of SS-Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich in 1942, and his sole response was, "Did it work?" I ended by saying that taking Heinrich Himmler as a moral exemplar said nasty things about his own morals or lack thereof.

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
6. I think the memory of "war crimes" seems to be vanishing with new generations.
Fri May 2, 2014, 11:16 AM
May 2014

There's so much violence in our society revealed today for all to see it numbs the mind and spirit. I think the little kids learn to tune it out early. So what shocked an older generation with WWII and even to an extent the Vietnam atrocities pale in comparison when one is inundated with violence from birth.

I don't know how we deal with it, though. Our communications and entertainment media is expanding and certainly censorship isn't a solution. Maybe attitudes will change and people will have had enough with viewing unnecessary violence as entertainment and opt out of it. And, maybe enough disillusioned veterans returning from our failed overseas enterprises in those countries outside of our borders will begin to rise up and speak out about the atrocities they have witnessed.

Thav

(948 posts)
7. Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it.
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 07:00 PM
Jul 2014

It's surprising that it's taken only two generations to forget the events that happened during WWII.

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