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War, War, War See other War, War, War Articles Title: War as domestic distraction Progressive writer Randolph Bourne once wrote that war is the health of the state. This is true in the sense that the government can use war to distract citizens from domestic problems and conflicts by uniting subjects in common support and admiration of the government and its supposedly necessary or noble military activity. At a 2002 anti-war rally in Chicago, President Obama made just this point in reference to Bushs war in Iraq: What I am opposed to is the attempt by political hacks like Karl Rove to distract us from a rise in the uninsured, a rise in the poverty rate, a drop in the median income, to distract us from corporate scandals and a stock market that has just gone through the worst month since the Great Depression. Thats what Im opposed to. A dumb war. Now the Obama administration seems to be taking a page out of Roves playbookdrawing attention away from the flaws in Obamas foreign policy and diverting it toward his domestic goals. The administrations historic domestic projects and administration officials public condemnations of oil and insurance executives excite the public. Obamas War on Terror, for some reason, does not. The media have also failed to scrutinize Obamas foreign policy. In a recent address from the Oval Office, Obama misleadingly announced the so-called end of Americas combat mission in Iraq. Major TV networks discussed the event for an hour or two and then, mysteriously, a war that provoked years of controversy went out of fashion, taking a backseat to the latest round of Israel-Palestine peace talks. In his address, as in his campaign promises, President Obama took advantage of the ambiguity of the military distinction between combat and non-combat forces. All remaining U.S. troops are entitled to take pre-emptive action against any perceived threat. Furthermore, plenty of so-called non-combat soldiers have fought on a regular basis, and many supposedly non-combat missions like training and advising Iraqi police are in practice indistinguishable from combat missions. Even as the U.S. military withdraws two-thirds of its forces, the State Department is doubling the use of private contractors (a.k.a. mercenaries) in Iraq, a trend that we can reasonably expect to continue past the Dec. 2011 withdrawal deadline. We should not be surprised if such sophisticated, government-speak half-truths are used to shroud the total withdrawal timeline. President Obama chose this particular date to demonstrate American compliance with the 2008 U.S.-Iraq Status of Forces Agreement. The agreement, however, makes this deadline highly negotiable, and the Obama administration is likely to view it that way too, especially considering the permanent presence of a handful of military bases in Iraq and the apparent instability of Iraqs current political arrangement. And what about the forgotten war in Afghanistan? When WikiLeaks recently received a batch of secret military documents documenting various military scandals in Afghanistan, the New York Times front-page article on the event focused on the evidence of Pakistan sabotaging the American war effort. The more significant revelation, in my opinion, was a list of hundreds of publicly unrecorded civilian deaths. One would think that such a revelation would remind the media and the general public that things like random, pointless civilian deaths have marred Obamas handling of the war in Afghanistanjust as repeated drone strikes in neighboring Pakistan have done similar damage. And what happened to the Guantánamo Bay controversy? Overnight, liberals went from posing as the defenders of civil liberties, wildly protesting Bushs brazen wartime government, to mindlessly acquiescing to Obamas extension of the previous administrations Guantánamo policy. On the basis of the language of the Iraq War Resolution, Obama has defended the right of the federal government to detain perceived terrorists indefinitely and without due process. He has used this legal interpretation to justify the detention of many Guantánamo inmates and the continued existence of the Bagram Air Base detention center in Afghanistan. Obamas foreign policy, at least by the standards applied by liberals to George W. Bush, is outrageous. Nevertheless, because Democratic politicians and Obama supporters refrain from criticizing the current administrations foreign policy, because the only opposition party is generally unsympathetic to the anti-war position, and because of the preoccupation of American citizens with domestic economic problems, Obamas foreign policy threatens to remain free from substantive public criticism.
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In terms of war as a distraction the key paragraph "missing" from the above opinion piece is that the Afghan and Iraq wars were instigated by Israeli duals in the US administration, in "Zionist" think tanks and the media to detract world attention from Israel's theft by armed force of land from Palestinians.
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