9 May 2015

Islamophobia: Israel’s Blessing; Israel’s Curse

ANDREW LEVINE

Islamophobia and anti-Semitism have a great deal in common.
Except that one targets Jews and the other Muslims, the two seem almost the same, even allowing for differences in the affected populations. To produce an Islamophobic diatribe, take a typical anti-Semitic rant, substitute “Muslim” for “Jew,” and voilĂ .
Both Islamophobia and anti-Semitism call on deeply entrenched cultural stereotypes, and both have roots in Christianity’s longstanding, theologically driven, animosity-ridden opposition to rival “Abrahamic” faiths.
But neither Islamophobia nor anti-Semitism is about religion per se; they are forms of racism.
As such, they are modern phenomena.
And they are both creatures of Western civilization.
Yet, despite their similarities, the two follow very different trajectories.
For one, they emerged at different historical moments. Anti-Semitism is nearly two centuries old; the Islamophobia that is rampant in the West today hardly existed a decade or two before the turn of the present century.
For another, Islamophobia is currently on the rise; anti-Semitism is in decline; indeed, it is barely hanging on.
The difference is reflected in conventional understandings of the relations between Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
Long before Islamophobia became a factor in the political culture of Western countries, there were scholars and religious leaders who spoke of a “Judeo-Christian tradition.”
Sometimes, the idea was to make a philosophical point. For example, the political theorist Leo Strauss claimed that the Western philosophical tradition had roots in both Athens and Jerusalem — in Greek philosophy, and Judeo-Christian theology.
There is some merit in this contention, though it is not a particularly useful or insightful claim.
Strauss, who died in 1973, enjoyed his fifteen minutes of fame a decade ago, when some leading neoconservatives who had studied under him at the University of Chicago claimed him as an intellectual inspiration.
Their intent in linking his name with theirs was not malicious, but this was nevertheless a cruel trick to play on an old teacher, who, flawed as his views may be, deserved better.
Outside academic circles, the aim of those who spoke of a Judeo-Christian tradition was mainly to promote good relations between Christians and Jews.
Islam was excluded because, until recently, hardly anyone in Western countries knew or cared much about it.
From time to time, intellectual historians would point out that it makes more sense to speak of an Abrahamic tradition – comprised of Islam as well as Judaism and Christianity – than of a Judeo-Christian tradition that excludes the last of these sister faiths. Their suggestions hardly registered in the public’s awareness.
It is different now that Islamophobia is rife, the Western public these days does care about Islam. Therefore, when it is read out of an imagined Judeo-Christian tradition, the exclusion is usually deliberate.
Amity has largely replaced enmity in Jewish-Christian relations, partly because religious fervor has declined, but also because anti-Semitism is everywhere on the wane. For enhancing good relations, it also helps to have Islam as a common enemy; in-group solidarity works that way.
And so, throughout the Western world, Judaism and Christianity are “us,” while Islam is the faith of the other, of “them.” Islamophobia has become the new anti-Semitism.
Nevertheless, the old anti-Semitism is not yet just an historical memory. It still plays a role in world affairs and in the domestic politics of many countries, including the United States.
The role is plays, however, is not the role that it used to play; these days, Islamophobia fills that space.
Anti-Semitism’s role – or rather its purported role — today is to help Israel’s leaders and its supporters abroad maintain a status quo from which the self-described “nation state of the Jewish people” benefits unjustly and egregiously. Zionists are now the ones keeping the specter of anti-Semitism alive.
At the same time and for much the same reasons and in many of the same ways, they are also helping to foster and shape the Islamophobia that is rampant in the world today.
This puts them in an odd spot — demonstrating, yet again, how important it is to be careful what one wishes for.
* * *
For Christianity to emerge as a religion in its own right, it had to break away from the religion of the Jews of ancient Israel.
Around the time of Jesus, Palestine was home to a number of Jewish sects, joined together by a Temple cult. The religion practiced there was governed by a complex structure of commandments and laws, administered by a priestly caste.
When the Romans destroyed the Second Temple in the year 70 CE, the religion – or religions – it sustained had to be transformed to survive. The dominant Jewish sect, the Pharisees, led the way.
Within their ranks, a series of teachers, rabbis, building on strains of thought in formation for centuries, developed the belief systems and practices upon which Judaism, as we now know it, stands.
Christianity emerged out of this caldron too.
Its defining contention, almost from the beginning, was that Jesus Christ was not just the promised Messiah, but also a divine being, whose death and resurrection inaugurated a new epoch in human and sacred history – one in which, among other things, Jewish law was finally and definitively superseded.
Jewish-Christians proselytized actively throughout the Roman world. Other Jewish sects did too, but, despite persecution, the Jewish-Christians were especially successful.
Meanwhile, their conflicts with mainstream Judaism intensified. They were expressed on many levels: theologically, ritualistically, legalistically and, when it became expedient for the Roman Empire to make Christianity an official religion, politically as well.
Long before that, however, it had become clear that Christianity was on track for breaking away from Judaism altogether, and that Christianity’s legitimacy depended on Judaism’s illegitimacy. It has been this way ever since.
Ever since too, Jews and Christians have been at odds. The difference was that the Christians had all the power. As heirs to a declining but still potent Roman Empire, they turned their erstwhile co-religionists into a despised and persecuted subaltern population.
This did not change, even as Rome fell.
Neither did it change much as faith subsided in the modern era, diminishing the relevance of theologically grounded anti-Judaism.
Modernity never quite ended Christian anti-Judaism, though it did diminish or eliminate its appeal to wide sectors of the population. However, the attitudes anti-Judaism generated survived throughout the Western world, creating a space for modern, secular anti-Semitism to emerge.
From the beginning, anti-Semites hardly cared about the Jewish religion or its relation to Christianity.
They reviled Jews for their purported racial or ethnic characteristics or for no discernible reason at all.
In a word, Jews were despised for being what Muslims now are – “the other.”
*  *  *
Christian opposition to Islam has always been more political than theological — though, of course, in pre-modern times, politics, or rather geo-politics, took on theological overtones.
For the Christians of Byzantium and, to a lesser extent, of the Catholic West, the peoples who would become Muslims as Islam took shape were the enemy at the gate.
By Mohammed’s time, Christians had learned how to deal with, and absorb, adherents of the pre-Christian religions of the Roman world. They no longer felt threatened by religions whose gods were dead or dying.
Their intolerance therefore focused more on heretics and schismatics within the Christian fold than on residual manifestations of defunct pagan faiths.
Muslims were another story. Not only were they monotheists – more straightforwardly than Christians were – but also adherents, like Christians and Jews, of a Scripture based religion.
They accorded their own Scriptural writings pride of place, of course; but they also accepted the Scriptures of the other Abrahamic religions.
In these and other respects, Muslims, like Jews, challenged Christianity’s legitimacy merely by being there.
For them, Jesus was a prophet, not a Messiah and certainly not a God. He was not the final prophet, either; that was Mohammad’s role.
In the Muslim view, Islam superseded Christianity because it is based upon a later, more authoritative revelation.
And so, even before the time of the Crusades — when opposition to Islam became a religious mission for Christians everywhere – anti-Islamic animosities ran high throughout the Christian world.
* * *
Needless to say, there was also enmity running in the opposite direction; Jews and Muslims hated Christians too.
And while Jewish-Muslim relations have generally been friendlier than Jewish-Christian relations, they have seldom been harmonious.
It would be fair to say that all three Abrahamic religions have been at each other’s throats for all the time that they have coexisted.   Intolerance is in their nature.
But, for understanding anti-Semitism and Islamophobia, Christianity’s animosities are crucial. These forms of racism are creatures of the Western world, of a form of civilization that Christianity shaped.
In The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1905), a classic of modern social theory, Max Weber argued that capitalism flourished more in Protestant than in Catholic regions of Europe thanks to what he called a “Protestant ethic,” a this-worldly asceticism, incorporating aspects of traditional Christian (Catholic) monasticism, but applying them to ordinary, workaday, market-driven economic pursuits.
Weber attributed the rise of this historically distinctive and psychologically improbable way of being and acting to elements of Protestant theology.
And he went on to argue that the Protestant ethic affected the culture of Protestant regions of Europe so profoundly that centuries after the Reformation and the wars of religion that ensued, and notwithstanding a profound diminution of faith, the Protestant ethic survived well into his own day.
Some of its most ardent exponents, Weber pointed out, were no longer even Protestants – but deists or agnostics or outright atheists.
It is much the same with Christian anti-Judaism and anti-Islam. The original reasons for these ways of thinking have lapsed, but the animosities remain.
In taking on a secular form, they may even have intensified.
* * *
With the defeat of Nazism and other expressly anti-Semitic movements during and after the Second World War, anti-Semitism very nearly became a dead letter.
For Zionists, this is an intolerable state of affairs, an “existential threat.”
Anti-Semitism, after all, was Zionism’s raison d’ĂȘtre. Its guiding idea, from Day One, was that only a Jewish state could protect European Jewry from the gentiles among whom they had been living since the dawn of the Christian age.
In short order, Zionism became a national movement; not long after that, its goal came to be the colonization of Palestine, “a land,” Zionists claimed, “without a people.”
But, even as the movement took on its present form, the driving force behind the Zionist idea was still its founding concern: a Jewish state is necessary because, in the end, only a Jewish state can protect Jews.
Therefore, for Zionists, if anti-Semitism would no longer exist, it would have to be invented.
In recent decades, Zionists have been working overtime to that end.
Their strategy is simple: identify anti-Semitism with anti-Zionism — or even, whenever possible, with all but the mildest opposition to actions undertaken by Israeli governments.
Then, since there is plenty to oppose, there is all the anti-Semitism anyone could want.
Needless to say, the premise upon which this strategy rests, that anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism are one and the same, is illogical and wrong-headed. But, as with other Great Lies, if it is repeated often enough, it comes to be widely believed.
Ultimately, though, the conflict with reality is too obvious for the lie to be sustained. However, events are not there yet.
On the assumption that anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism are one and the same, organizations, like the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), have plenty of “anti-Semitic” incidents to crow over. They mostly involve actions undertaken out of frustration by Muslim youth living in desperate straits on the outskirts of European cities with large immigrant populations.
But there is remarkably little genuine anti-Semitism for them to report on.
For one thing, while anti-Zionist sentiments run high in Muslim quarters, genuine anti-Semitism is foreign to Muslim culture. Anti-Semitic tropes therefore don’t easily catch on.
A more important reason is that, for the most part, the European Right refuses to take the bait.
It is not just that the hard Right in Europe hates Muslims more than Jews. It is also that it loves Israel. How could it not? Israelis know what to do with the Islamist threat.
And, to the extent that fascisant Europeans still hate Jews while loving “the nation state of the Jewish people,” they realize that anti-Semites and Zionists share a common goal: they both seek to resolve “the Jewish Question” by ridding Europe of its Jews.
In the United States and other Western countries where anti-immigrant sentiment is less focused on Muslims than on other oppressed populations, genuine anti-Semitism’s decline is even more complete.
To cite just one particularly flagrant example: Sheldon Adelson, the plutocrat casino boss, is a character out of central casting for The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. And yet, when he summons them, every Republican political aspirant with national ambitions harkens to his call.
Even in America, where money talks more loudly than anywhere else in the developed world, genuine anti-Semites, were there any, would pounce on the Adelson phenomenon. There is hardly a peep.
Could there be any more graphic proof that an ADL that was true to its mission, rather than to the Zionist cause, would no longer have much of anything to do?
* *  *
Oddly, though, in the United States, a remnant of traditional anti-Judaism survives in rear-guard Anglo-Protestant enclaves.
The first Zionists would have been appalled, but, since the late seventies, when Menachem Begin was Israel’s Prime Minister, Israeli governments have taken full advantage of this anachronism.
The Republican Party has as well. Christian Zionists now comprise an important segment of its base.
Indeed, in many retrograde circles, love for Israel runs deep. So too does hatred of Jews – not for reasons of ethnicity, as in classical anti-Semitism, but for reasons of faith, as in the anti-Judaism of old.
But the new anti-Judaism is different from the old. Facts on the ground in the Promised Land are the reason why.
The new wrinkle is that, for Christian Zionists, the realization of the Zionist project – the establishment of a Jewish state throughout all of Mandate Palestine, is part of God’s plan for the End Times.
The theology behind their position predates the Zionist movement. It emerged in Low Church Protestant circles in nineteenth century Britain, winning the sympathy of some of the leading political figures who helped get the Zionist movement going after the First World War – Lord Balfour and Lloyd George are prominent examples.
These Zionist-friendly leaders were, above all, promoters of Britain’s imperial interests. This was their main reason for welcoming Jewish immigration to Palestine and for permitting the development of proto-state institutions within the Jewish community there. Their aim was to establish a European beachhead in the heart of the Middle East.
But some of them also had religious reasons; they thought that the God they believed in wanted Jews to be gathered together in the Promised Land.
This is what Christian Zionists believe today – with a fervor that equals or exceeds that of most Jewish Zionists in Israel and abroad.
Their support for Israel follows from their belief that before they and others among the elect of all nations can be whisked off to Heaven, Jews who refuse to accept Christ’s divinity must be brought to the Promised Land, in accordance with Biblical prophesy, where, at the end of time, the loving God will condemn them to an eternity of torment in Hell.
The Good Book tells them so; or so they believe.
* * *
Meanwhile, with Islamophobia, anti-Semitism for Muslims, on the rise, Christendom’s longstanding opposition to Islam is emerging out of the protracted latency period that began once the de facto boundaries of the Muslim world were effectively settled.
This happened in Eastern and Southern Europe long before the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. In Western Europe, ground zero for Islamophobia today, fear of Islamic encroachment has not been an issue outside the Mediterranean region since before the fall of Muslim Spain.
But, from the time of Napoleon, France began to colonize Northern Africa; not long afterwards, France’s main colonial rival, Great Britain, joined the assault on the Muslim world. Other European powers followed suit.
Then, in short order, peoples that were formerly considered exotics, when thought of at all, came to be despised in the ways that masters despise underlings. As neo-colonial forms of domination replaced direct colonial rule, the contempt continued unabated.
At first, it was different in the United States, where there was no colonial history with Muslim lands, and where the comparatively few Muslims who arrived as immigrants kept to themselves, worked hard, caused no trouble, and, for the most part, remained outside public view.
Hispanics were America’s Muslims – at first, in those parts of the United States that were stolen from Mexico and where there was therefore a large indigenous, Spanish-speaking population, but, by now, nearly everywhere, as neoliberal trade policies and the violence spawned by the so-called war on drugs has made life increasingly intolerable in many parts of Central and South America.
But world events sometimes catalyze abrupt and unexpected transformations in relations between dominant and subaltern national and ethnic groups.
Wars have this effect; especially wars prompted by attacks on the United States.
When there are no longstanding cultural biases, the racist eruptions that result are usually short-lived.   Attitudes towards the Japanese, and towards Japanese-Americans, are a case in point.
The first Japanese immigrants to the United States were no more despised than, say, the Chinese who came around the same time. But shortly before and during World War II, the level of racism was staggering. It was so extreme that when Japanese-Americans, many of whom were native born, were gathered into concentration camps, there was little or no public outcry.
The animosity subsided quickly when the war ended; it was already a distant memory by the 1950s.
The Bush-Obama war on terror has already lasted three times longer than World War II. But this is not the only reason why Islamophobia is bound to linger in a way that anti-Japanese racism did not. Its roots in Christian opposition to Islam are a more important factor.
But, like the anti-Japanese racism of the 1940s, Islamophobia too took catalytic events to ignite.
There was, first of all, the mounting blowback against American domination of the Middle East, culminating in the attack on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center in 2001.
And now there is the mounting animosity, reaching into many sectors of formerly placid Muslim communities, caused by the American reaction to the Pentagon and World Trade Center attacks. This causes Muslims, younger ones especially, to want to fight back – no matter how.
In this way, resistance itself exacerbates that fear of the other which, in the final analysis, is what Islamophobia is all about.
* * *
It is a vicious circle. The war on terror, the West’s war on the Muslim world, breeds resistance, which sometimes takes the form of more terror. This reinforces Islamophobia, which, in turn, increases support for the war on terror. It is an endless feedback loop.
For Zionists in search of eternal enemies, this might seem a godsend.
But it is not an unmixed blessing for a country situated in the heart of the Muslim world.
Israel needs enemies close at hand; the weaker they are, the better. But it does not need 2.1 billion enemies from Africa across Eurasia to the Pacific Ocean and now, with Muslim immigration ratcheted up thanks to inequality and war, in all the leading centers of the Western world.
Within that vast array of peoples and landscapes, Israel needs allies too.
And so, the generic, undiscriminating Islamophobia that has emerged in recent years in Western countries is, from Israel’s point of view, too much of a good thing.
It was easier for Zionists when, in a Cold War context, Arab nationalism was the enemy. Then Arabs could be the vilified group, not Muslims generally.
And while the Arabs at Israel’s throat were lodged mainly in frontline states, not within Israel’s borders, the Israeli juggernaut could do as it pleased without damaging its reputation in the West as “the sole democracy” in the Middle East.
Back then, in Western public opinion, Arabs in Israel were more of a notional threat than an actual one.
If anything, they were a boon to the tourist trade, adding local color – in much the way that native peoples in the United States do in the eyes of state and regional tourist bureaus.
In those days, in the larger scheme of things, the villains were Arabs, not Muslims as such.
Indeed, from Day One, Israel befriended non-Arab Muslim nations — Iran, above all, but also Turkey and, whenever the opportunity would arise, countries in East Africa with large Muslim populations.
The Iranian case was exemplary. Zionists had contempt for Arabs, but deep respect for Iran and its people. It was part of the Zionist narrative. Connections between Persia and the peoples of ancient Israel extended back to Biblical times, and Persian culture had always been an essential point of reference throughout the ancient world.
Israel’s relations with the Shah’s government were excellent; and even after the Iranian Revolution, as the Ayatollahs unleashed a torrent of anti-Zionist rhetoric in their efforts to gain regional support, the changes were more cosmetic than substantive. Israel and Iraq shared common enemies in the Arab world – Iraq, above all.
Iran did not become the “existential threat” Israel now says it is until the first President Bush’s Iraq War neutralized the Iraqi military, leaving Israel with less need for allies on the Arab world’s peripheries.
Now Israel has lost Iran; and, thanks to the Netanyahu government’s bumbling incompetence, it is losing Turkey too. With the Bush-Obama war on terror, east Africa is a lost cause as well. Israel’s policy of encircling the Arab periphery with comparatively friendly Muslim states, once a mainstay of its diplomacy, is finished.
Nevertheless, Israel is not quite on its own in the region.
Unlikely as it would have seemed only a few years ago, Saudi Arabia, the main financial and spiritual backer of every reactionary tendency within Sunni Islam, has, along with other barely less retrograde Gulf states, become Israel’s de facto ally.
They are united in their determination to enfeeble and humiliate Iran, and in their eagerness to be useful to their American protectors.
From a geopolitical point of view, the emerging Salafi-Zionist alliance makes sense. But for propagandists intent on promoting Islamophobia in order to maintain the idea that Jewish survival depends on keeping the status quo in Israel-Palestine in place, it poses a problem.
The most vile Zionist-inspired Islamophobes in the United States, people like Pam Geller and others of her ilk, either haven’t gotten the word, or else they don’t care.
They respond to Israel’s needs of the moment as best they can, but generalized Islamophobia has become, for them, what genuine anti-Semitism used to be for the true anti-Semites of the not distant past – a freestanding obsession.
* * *
Undiscriminating Islamophobia is emphatically not what defenders of the Zionist project need; it is not even what leaders of the Jewish state want.   But it is what they have brought upon themselves, thanks to their own machinations.
By diminishing the standing of the Zionist project in the eyes of Western public opinion, those misguided machinations are likely, in the long run, to help the Palestinian struggle for justice.
For now, though, all they do is fan the flames of Islamophobia.
The arc of the moral universe that Martin Luther King spoke of so movingly surely does bend towards justice. But, as King remarked, it can take seemingly forever to arrive at its destination. Then, suddenly, everything changes. The demise of anti-Semitism is a case in point.
Someday, justice will come too to the Palestinian people and to the larger Muslim world. Someday, Islamophobia will collapse back into itself, crumbling under the weight of its exponents’ overreaching.
When it does, what began with Christian opposition to rival Abrahamic faiths and what was then made over on secular bases in the modern age will finally be a spent force, never to be revived again.
But before that blessed day arrives, who knows what atrocities lie ahead.

Splitting Up Iraq

MIKE WHITNEY


“Iraq’s fate was sealed from the moment we invaded: it has no future as a unitary state … Iraq is fated to split apart into at least three separate states…This was the War Party’s real if unexpressed goal from the very beginning: the atomization of Iraq, and indeed the entire Middle East. Their goal, in short, was chaos – and that is precisely what we are seeing today.”
— Justin Raimondo, editor Antiwar.com
A bill that could divide Iraq into three separate entities has passed the US House Armed Services Committee by a vote of  60 to 2.  The controversial draft bill will now be debated in the US House of Representatives where it will be voted on sometime in late May. If approved, President Barack Obama will be free to sidestep Iraq’s central government in Baghdad and provide arms and assistance directly to Sunnis and the Kurds that are fighting ISIS. This, in turn, will lead to the de facto partitioning of the battered country into three parts; Kurdistan, Shiastan, and Sunnistan.
The plan to break up Iraq has a long history dating back to Oded Yinon’s darkly prophetic 1982 article titled  “A Strategy for Israel in the cpradioNineteen Eighties”. Yinon believed that Israel’s survival required that the Jewish state become a imperial regional power that “must effect the division of the whole area into small states by the dissolution of all existing Arab states … The Zionist hope is that sectarian-based states become Israel’s satellites and, ironically, its source of moral legitimation.” (The Zionist Plan for the Middle East, Israel Shahak)
The  GOP-led House Armed Services Committee’s bill embraces Yinon’s vision of a fragmented Iraq. (Note: Under the current bill, which is part of the 2016 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA),  as much as 60% of the proposed funds, or $429m, would flow directly to the “Kurdish Peshmerga, the Sunni tribal security forces with a national security mission, and the Iraqi Sunni National Guard”.) Providing weapons to Sunni militias and the Kurdish Peshmerga will inevitably lead to the disintegration of the country,  the ramping up of sectarian hostilities,  and the strengthening of extremist groups operating in the region.  It’s a prescription for disaster.  Here’s a brief excerpt from Yinon’s piece on Iraq:
“Iraq, rich in oil on the one hand and internally torn on the other, is guaranteed as a candidate for Israel’s targets. Its dissolution is even more important for us than that of Syria. Iraq is stronger than Syria. In the short run it is Iraqi power which constitutes the greatest threat to Israel … Every kind of inter-Arab confrontation will assist us in the short run and will shorten the way to the more important aim of breaking up Iraq into denominations as in Syria and in Lebanon. In Iraq, a division into provinces along ethnic/religious lines as in Syria during Ottoman times is possible. So, three (or more) states will exist around the three major cities: Basra, Baghdad and Mosul, and Shi’ite areas in the south will separate from the Sunni and Kurdish north.”  ( “A Strategy for Israel in the Nineteen Eighties”, Oded Yinon)
The fact that US and Israeli strategic objectives match up so closely calls into question the ISIS invasion of Iraq in 2014 when a two mile-long column of white land rovers loaded with 15,000 jihadis barreled across the open desert from Syria spewing clouds of dust into the atmosphere without being detected by US AWACs or state-of-the-art spy satellites. The logical explanation for this so called “intelligence failure” is that it was not a failure at all, but that Washington wanted the operation to go forward as it coincided with US-Israeli strategic aims. As it happens, the areas now controlled by the Kurds, the Sunnis and the Shia are very close to those projected by Yinon suggesting that the ISIS invasion was part of a broader plan from the very beginning.  That’s not to say that ISIS leaders take orders directly from Langley or the Pentagon. No. It merely implies that Washington uses the marauding horde for their own purposes.  In this case, ISIS provides the pretext for arming the Sunnis and Kurds, imposing new borders within the existing state,  creating easier access to vital resources, and eliminating a potential rival to US-Israel regional hegemony. The US needs an enemy to justify its constant meddling. ISIS provides that justification. Check this out from the Daily Star:
“The present ISIS lightning war in Iraq is the creation of an illusion to initiate the fulfillment of a pre-planned agenda of the West in close alliance with Israel to redraw the map of the entire region as the “New Middle East…..The chaos, destruction and devastation caused by the ISIS in its process of establishing the Sunni Islamic Caliphate in Iraqi and Syrian territories is the realisation of the intended policy of the US and the West to change public perception that the “War on Terror” was never a war waged by the West against Islam but a “war within Islam” along religious, ethnic and sectarian lines in the Islamic world…
The division of Iraq into three separate entities had also been strongly advocated by US Vice-President Joe Biden. Biden’s heritage and an analysis of his electoral constituents will help understand better his support for the fragmentation of Iraq under the Yinon Plan.” (The Yinon Plan and the role of ISISThe Daily Star)
The Biden-Gelb plan, which was proposed in an op-ed in the New York Times in May 2006, called for the establishment of  “three largely autonomous regions” with Baghdad becoming a “federal zone.”  In other words, the powers of the Iraqi central government would be greatly reduced. The authors tried to soft-peddle their radical scheme as “decentralization” which is a milder term than the more accurate “partition”.  The authors, both of who are members of the powerful Council on Foreign Relations, obscure the real aims of the plan which is to weaken the country through dismemberment and to leave it in “a permanent state of colonial dependency.” (Chomsky)
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has denounced the proposed bill as an attempt to undermine his authority and rip the country apart.   In a recent phone conversation with Vice President Biden, Abadi expressed his opposition to the bill insisting that “only the Iraqi people can decide  the future of their country.”
Also, according to Press TV, Iraqi cleric, Muqtada al-Sadr,  warned that if congress passed the bill, he would order his Mahdi Army to resume hostilities against the US targets in Iraq.
“We are obliged to lift the freeze on our military wing … and begin hitting US interests in Iraq and outside it,” said Sadr, who once led the powerful Mahdi Army and still enjoys huge influence among the Shia population.
Although Obama doesn’t approve of the new bill’s wording,  his opposition is far from convincing.  Here’s what State Department spokesperson Marie Harf said on the matter at a recent briefing: “The policy of this Administration is clear and consistent in support of a unified Iraq. We’ve always said a unified Iraq is stronger, and it’s important to the stability of the region as well.”
“Clear and consistent”?  When has US policy in the Middle East ever been clear and consistent?  Is it clear and consistent in Libya, Syria, or Yemen where jihadi militias are armed and supported either directly or indirectly by Washington or its allies?  Is US policy clear and consistent in Ukraine where far-right neo-Nazi extremists are trained and given logistical support by the US to fight a proxy war against Russia?
Sure, Obama wants to make it look like he opposes the bill, but how much of that is just public relations?  In truth, the administration is on the same page as the Congress, they just want to be more discreet about it.  Here’s  Harf again: “We look forward to working with Congress on language that we could support on this important issue.”
Indeed, the administration wants to tweak the wording for the sake of diplomacy, but that’s the extent of their opposition.  In fact,  the House Armed Services Committee has already complied with this request and removed the offending clause from the bill (asking for recognition of the Peshmerga and Sunni tribal militias as “countries”)  while, at the same time,  “maintaining that some of the military aid should go directly to the two forces fighting ISIS….”
So they deleted a couple words from the text but meaning remains the same. Also, according to Huffington Post:
“Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) said Sunday he wants to identify “a way to streamline the process of getting the weapons to both the Sunni tribes and the [Kurds] … while at the same time not undermining the government of Iraq in Baghdad.”
There’s no way to “streamline the process” because the two things are mutually exclusive, Abadi has already said so. If Obama gives weapons to the Sunnis and the Kurds, the country is going to split up. It’s that simple.
So how has Obama responded to these latest developments?
Last week he met with Kurdish president Masoud Barzani in Washington. Here’s what happened:
“Asked by Kurdish outlet Rudaw whether he had secured any commitments on a change to the policy from President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden when he met with them Tuesday, Barzani responded, “Both the vice president and the president want the peshmerga to get the right weapons and ammunition. … The important point here is that the peshmerga get weapons. How they will come, in which way, that’s not as important as the fact that peshmerga need weapons to be in their hands.”  (Kurdish Leader Aligns With White House Over Congress On ISIS Strategy, Huffington Post)
So Obama basically told Barzani he’d get the weapons he wanted. (wink, wink)
Can you see what a sham this is?   Iraq’s fate is sealed. As soon as Congress approves the new defense bill, Obama’s going to start rushing weapons off to his new buddies in the Kurdish north and the so called Sunni triangle.  That’s going to trigger another vicious wave of sectarian bloodletting that will rip the country to shreds.
And that’s the goal, isn’t it: To split the country into three parts, to improve access to vital resources,  and to eliminate a potential rival to US-Israel regional hegemony?
You know it is.

Drug Trafficking and the Politics of Vengeance

Ben Debney

Melbourne, Australia.
‘Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly,’ says a quote variously attributed to Plato and Benjamin Franklin, ‘while bad people will find a way around them.’ If this quote applies to anything, it applies as much to the Indonesian state’s execution of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran as it does to the practice of trafficking in illegal drugs of addiction.
Despite high-level advice provided to the Australian government that the executions were illegal under international law, the execution of Chan and Sukumaran has nevertheless inflamed in Australia the types of passions apparently sought in Indonesia by President Joko Widodo, whose popularity has slumped in the wake of his election last year.
The executions are manna from heaven politically for Widodo. Opinion polling in Indonesia shows execution of drug traffickers is a popular policy, with 86% of respondents to one poll pre-executions agreeing that the Indonesian government should ignore protests from the Australian government and proceed regardless. To them, official killing is an expression of strength.
State sanctioned murder is also a popular policy here at home. One notable Facebook post comes from a page entitled ‘Fair Suck Of The Sav, Mate,’ whose byline reads ‘We will defend Australia against the ideology of Islam; If you are not with us, you are helping the enemy.’ In this post, which has over 30,000 shares, an unnamed Australian police officer weighs in against ‘hype around the Bali executions.’ It is worth quoting at some length.
‘I can’t believe the mentality of people,’ it begins, invoking offence at the outset:
I have been in law enforcement for 34 years and have worked in many areas within the force. After 9 years in, I spent nearly 5 years working as a UC. (Undercover) attempting to infiltrate traffickers of all types of drugs including amphets right down to simple choof. What a world of pain and misery. I was encased by the filth and self-destruction where I witnessed numerous deaths by either ODs or in a lot of cases suicides. Young girls selling their bodies for 10 bucks a go just to get their hands on their next fix.
The unnamed officer goes from these general comments to discussion of a particular case he a teenage girl with whom he was acquainted, who was hooked by the age of 14 and prostituting herself by 15. ‘Her body was so ripped and torn by drug and sexual abuse,’ he writes, ‘she hariscreamhad intestines falling out of her rectum as a result of numerous rapes and sexual encounters where she tried to get payment.’ He describes the girl as having a baby who was taken away from her by Human Services at 15, who could do nothing for her but supply treatment when they could’ until she died at 19, ‘alone in a back street.’
After weighing in against do-gooders (also unnamed) who would ‘pass her on the street and avoid her all the time’ while he would ‘give her
food but she preferred to starve and get some smack rather than eat,’ the officer describes becoming depressed and having to move to another area. This is an experience he seems to feel might only be understood by his fellow police officers, as to this way of thinking the police apparently have a monopoly on compassion and empathy.
Less understood the unnamed police officer feels is the refusal ‘to call on the PM to “bring our boys home,”’ something he would never do as ‘no boy of mine would do this.’ Again who exactly is referring to Chan and Sukumaran as ‘our boys’ is not mentioned, though it does serve well to validate the author’s general sense of pious ire. ‘But,’ as he continues, apparently rallying against those who oppose the death penalty, ‘all I see is you fucking wanna be Samaritans who treat these two drug kings as heroes.’ While he accept that do-gooding Samaritans don’t believe in the death penalty,’ he claims not to like it either — “but.” The “but” is not long in coming:
The media and the solicitors have played you people for the fools you are. You have never lived in the world of drug, crime and despair. You have been protected from it so much you live in the fantasy world where you believe you can hug everyone and all will be better. You are not qualified to even comment as to whether these guys should get parole or not.
One can hardly argue with the idea that the mass media spend a lot of time playing people for fools, but nowhere in this piece does this unnamed officer state which section of the media he imagines has been trying to make Chan and Sukumaran out to be heroes. One does not imagine he means the Murdoch media, for example. Nor does he state which solicitors think the problem of drug trafficking and abuse of drugs of addition is going to be fixed with a group hug, though despite claiming to have been affected by the experience of meeting with one addict, this does not seem to translate into anything much in the way of compassion for slaves of drugs of addiction as a group, which he insolently equates with the belief that ‘you can hug everyone and all will be better.’
This fact in particular would seem to give us some insight into the logic the unnamed writer of this online rant is following. The problem as he sees it apparently has something to do with the culture of permissiveness that resulted in the paroling of Adrian Bayley, currently serving a life sentence for the rape and murder of Jill Meagher in 2012. ‘You paroled him,’ he says angrily. ‘You say the parole board stuffed up and parole him.’ But, he insists, the parole board is full of people just like those who oppose the death penalty and would have had Chan and Sukumaran repatriated to Australia, ‘with your opinions and beliefs.’
Which opinions and beliefs in particular he does not say, nor does he explain what makes his own unqualified opinions any more valid than anyone elses, though he does point out correctly enough the obvious fact that that the paroling of Bayley, whose tally of victims stands at around 20, ‘was a complete and utter failure.’
This piece of shit was a career rapist and the only ones we can blame for what he did is all of us. Not the judge. Not the Parole board or the police. Us. The decisions like this that are being made are by people who never have to deal with these shitheads when they are in street mode committing crimes. You see them all clean shaven and in their court suits or white shirts becoming born again etc. You poor misguided fools. You don’t even care about the effects of what they have done to our society.
In a sense of course, the unnamed police officer is perfectly correct. Bayley was paroled despite being a serial rapist and future murderer because of the actual culture of permissiveness surrounding misogyny and rape, particularly where the tendency to victim blame is concerned. The perceived culture of permissiveness informing a principled defense of civil liberties no more played a part than did the basic moral principle infants are taught to understand in kindergarten that two wrongs don’t make a right.
The confusion, whether accidental or intended, functions as it happens to shift the blame away from the former; while claiming an overarching insight into the nature of crime by virtue of policing it (as opposed to being a victim), the unnamed writer who is presumably white and male accuses civil libertarians of being ignorant of the consequences of crime. At the same time he neglects to refer to the arguments of women writers critical of the paroling of Bayley in the aftermath of his murder of Jill Meagher as if these were at all hard to come by.
Presumably at least some of those who oppose the actual culture of permissiveness surrounding the apportioning of blame onto the victim rather than the perpetrator are themselves victims of rape. This would appear to belie the author’s pretense to having special insight into the nature of victimhood.
Not that this appears to make a great deal of difference. In the face of what the officer seems to see as the casual indifference of do-gooder Samaritans such as those who oppose the culture of permissiveness surrounding misogyny and rape toward the reality on the street, he argues for tougher penalties such as those he claims were in force 34 years ago when he joined the police force. ‘We called it “Marijuana,”’ he says. ‘It was the biggest thing on the street,’ claiming that, as against the drug importing of the present and suspended sentences he claims are the norm in the present, crime back then was not rampant.
‘Now,’ says the unnamed officer says, ‘here we are,’ enjoying the rotten fruits of a system apparently based on permissiveness. ‘Your system has worked hasn’t it,’ he bitterly laments. Not only are those who oppose the death penalty for drug crimes guilty of opposing the death penalty, which this writer seems to equate with raising Chan and Sukumaran to the level of heroes, they are also infamously wont to ‘voice how much you hate police’ while ‘ring[ing] us and run[ing]’ inside and hide whilst we come out and deal with the shit you don’t have the fucking guts to deal with yourself.’
In this way does a piece that apparently begins as an attempt at least to make a disinterested defense of helpless victims against unnamed permissive do-gooders degenerate into a self-righteous screed against critics of the police. ‘But you are right up there on your keyboards bravely shit canning the police for excessive force and filming it on your cameras,’ the writer inveighs, as if it is not those who use excessive force who shit can themselves.
This comment becomes the foundation for the unnamed writer’s final burst of righteous fury, in which he castigates the permissive do-gooders for having no knowledge or interest in Henry Chinn, ‘on death row in China for trying to smuggle 270 grams of meth into our lovely country in 2004.’ The problem in this case appears to be that ‘the media hasn’t spoon fed you the crap to hype you up.’ The same seems to go for Davis and Gardiner, ‘the two Aussies who were caught in China in last year trying to cart 75kg of ice to here? Davis and Gardiner.’ Pointing out that China has executed in excess of 1000 people in a 12 month period, the author lashes his critics for hypocrisy: ‘But you still buy their shit every day.’
These two Australians will be executed and you will still buy their product. Second chance you say. You think these people have no prior convictions. You think this is their first attempt. Wake up fools. Stop hugging yourselves. Two men died today because they broke a law in a country where they knew they faced death if caught. Had they have got away with it, there would be a countless number of 19 year old girls laying in the gutter dead. Quick run inside and tell yourself what a great person you are.
In the face of the author’s obvious anger, it is on first reading not an easy task to rejoinder. On the second, it seems obvious that neither any of the examples cited by the writer, nor the high profile arrest of Schapelle Corby in Bali seven months before the Bali Nine, had much deterrent effect on them, much less to say others executed for heroin trafficking such as Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers in Malaysia in 1983, nor Michael McAuliffe again in Malaysia in 1985.
The 2002 arrest and conviction in Singapore for drug trafficking offenses of Van Tuong Nguyen from Melbourne appeared to have little effect on any of the Bali Nine, even though that charge carried the death penalty which the Singaporean state carried out in December 2005. Nor do they appear to have any effect on the aforementioned Australians presently languishing in Chinese prisons.
On the face of these examples, it appears that the unnamed police officer writing on Facebook is actually blaming civil libertarians for the shortcomings of the deterrence approach to policing. If deterrence worked the way those who rally against do-gooder Samaritans seem to imagine it does, one would imagine there would be little or no crime.
By the unnamed writer’s own admission, however, if the Indonesian state had not followed through on its policy of executing drug traffickers for the sake of President Joko Widodo, ‘there would be a countless number of 19 year old girls laying in the gutter dead.’ If that is true, as the anonymous author certainly appears to believe it is, then that would appear to be either the consequence of a failed policy, or as good as having no policy, or both.
This being the case, in addition to raising questions about the logic driving apologia for handing the power of life and death to the state, a power freely exercised by tyrants throughout history in the name of defending society, conflated with itself, from any manner of evils, it also brings us back our original question of what to do about those who flout drug trafficking laws in light of the obvious shortcomings cum failure of the policy of deterrence on the one hand, and the puerile attempt to appear strong to those who identify strength with cruelty, malice and vengeance — especially where this is a politically expedient method of boosting political popularity and one’s standing in opinion polls.
If the anonymous Facebook writer who believes the Samaritan do-gooders are to blame for the failures of received policing strategies to deter people from drug trafficking and thus to prevent people from taking drugs of addition, scientists exploring the causes of addiction empirically in laboratories and publishing in peer-reviewed journals perhaps unsurprisingly come up with different arguments — and ones supported by evidence at that.
Reviewing one particularly significant series of experiments, Johann Hari, a Cambridge politics graduate and author of Chasing the Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs reveals that the traditional tendency to blame the drug problem on the individual addict as per the received wisdom on social media reviewed above is actually at odds the discoveries made therein. He notes:
This theory was first established is through rat experiments, — ones that were injected into the American psyche in the 1980s, in a famous advert by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America. Put a rat in a cage, alone, with two water bottles. One is just water. The other is water laced with heroin or cocaine. Almost every time you run this experiment, the rat will become obsessed with the drugged water, and keep coming back for more and more, until it kills itself. The advert explains: “Only one drug is so addictive, nine out of ten laboratory rats will use it. And use it. And use it. Until dead. It’s called cocaine. And it can do the same thing to you.”
Problematic for this experiment as an explanation for the condition of the addict, Bruce Alexander felt, was that the rat was in the case with nothing to do all day but take drugs. Wondering what would happen if he tried the altered the parameters of the experiment, he built Rat Park, as Hari puts it, ‘a lush cage where the rats would have colored balls and the best rat-food and tunnels to scamper down and plenty of friends: everything a rat about town could want.’
In Rat Park, all the rats obviously tried both water bottles, because they didn’t know what was in them. But what happened next was startling . . . The rats with good lives didn’t like the drugged water. They mostly shunned it, consuming less than a quarter of the drugs the isolated rats used. None of them died. While all the rats who were alone and unhappy became heavy users, none of the rats who had a happy environment did.
As Hari notes, Alexander had a useful human situation to compare to the rat experiment, for anyone given to the thought that the behavior demonstrated in this experiment was ‘merely a quirk of rats.’ This example was the Vietnam War, where ‘Time magazine reported using heroin was “as common as chewing gum” among U.S. soldiers’; Hari notes that a study published in the Archives of General Psychiatryfound that ‘some 20 percent of U.S. soldiers had become addicted to heroin there,’ prompting fears that ‘a huge number of addicts were about to head home when the war ended.’ Fortunately for everyone, and
. . . some 95 percent of the addicted soldiers — according to the same study — simply stopped. Very few had rehab. They shifted from a terrifying cage back to a pleasant one, so didn’t want the drug any more.
The parallel Alexander was able to draw with his rats was revelatory; as Hari points out it was clear to him then that ‘addiction is an adaptation… It’s not you. It’s your cage.’ In other words, it was and is primarily a social problem rather than an individual one — to the extent that we assume that we are all responsible for society at least, though some famous proponents of the Drug War have been known to proclaim that no such thing exists.
In addition to being a ‘profound challenge both to the right-wing view that addiction is a moral failing caused by too much hedonistic partying, and the liberal view that addiction is a disease taking place in a chemically hijacked brain,’ this is likewise a profound challenge to Hari’s eponymous Drug War and the national and international policing strategies associated with it, particularly to the extent that the problem tends to be blamed on individuals rather than being treated as the collective one that it appears to be in reality.
On the one hand then is the lack of evidence to suggest the strategy of deterrence behind the execution of drug traffickers is an effective one, much less to say the tortured logic of some of those who seek to shift the blame for its shortcomings onto civil libertarians. On the other is explicit evidence to suggest that social factors not easy explained away by the belief that the number of people of people who believe an idea determines whether it is true or not are to blame.
In the face of these, one might argue then that, on balance, the continuance of Drug War policies, if not to say the pretense that you practically have to lust for blood to oppose the personal social effects of drugs of addiction, merely up the ante for those who are going to break anti-trafficking laws regardless. They would also appear to provide the crime industry with a never ending supply of deviants requiring social control, and thus never ending reasons to invest more and more heavily in instruments of social repression — music to the ears no doubt of investors in companies operating in the ever-expanding security industry.
Preying on the weak by getting them hooked on drugs of addiction for which they have to pay endlessly is indefensible; purveyors of booze and cigarettes combined kill hundreds of thousands every year. This is no less true of heroin. Why this justifies giving the state the right to kill remains to be explained. In the long run, dealing with the causes of addition might be a better approach than the old two wrongs make a right routine. While shooting traffickers may be immensely gratifying to some in the short term, beyond that it virtually guarantees the continuation of the drug problem as a social ill.
Worse, the use of state power to exact vengeance sets a dangerous precedent; states have throughout history, do and will continue to kill in numbers far outweighing traffickers of heroin, heroin itself or together with all other drugs combined. This is a fact invisible to those whose slander of civil libertarians appears to constitute their means of finding a way around international laws against summary execution for which they don’t feel like exercising responsibility and respect for the rights of the individual in general.

Capitalism is the West’s Dominant Religion

Michael Welton


“One can behold in capitalism a religion, that is to say, capitalism essentially serves to satisfy the same worries, anguish, and disquiet formerly answered by so-called religion.”
— Walter Benjamin
“This yellow slave will knit and break religions”
— William Shakespeare, “Timon of Athens”
David R. Loy, a professor of international studies at Bunkyo University in Japan and a Zen Buddhist teacher, offers us a compelling viewpoint on why we ought to understand our present economic system as the West’s dominant religion. In A Buddhist History of the West (2002), Loy argues that, although religion is “notoriously difficult to define,” if we “adopt a functionalist view and understand religion as what grounds us by teaching us what this world is, and what our role in the world is, then it becomes evident that traditional religions are fulfilling this role less and less, because that function is being supplanted by other belief systems and value systems.”
This is a shocking statement for those of conventional religious sensibility. Certainly the monotheistic faith-traditions have not just disappeared into the thin air of modernity. One could make a solid case that Islamic cultures still contain strong currents of resistance to Western consumer individualism (perceived as decadent and nihilistic). But in the West, Christianity in particular, has lost much of its power to resist the new god that has (and is) conquering the old ones (just like Christianity did in its displacement of Roman deities). Although the monotheistic religions contain many different streams and tendencies (including ascetic and contemplative traditions), these minority anti-materialist traditions have not been able to prevent the market from becoming our “first truly world religion, binding all corners of the globe into a worldview and set of values whose religious role we overlook only because we insist on seeing them as secular” (Loy). Economics is the new theology of this global religion of the market; consumerism its highest good; its language of hedge funds and derivatives as incomprehensibly esoteric as Christian teachings about the Trinity. “Accumulate, accumulate! This is Moses and the prophets! Marx cried out in the first volume of Capital.
Loy wonders why we acquiesce in the appalling realities of global inequities and sleep so peacefully at night. He finds his answer in Rodney Dobell’s explanation that “lies largely in our embrace of a peculiarly European or Western [but now global] religion, an individualistic religion of economics and markets, which explains all of these outcomes as the inevitable results of an objective system in which … intervention is counterproductive.” Any intervention in the “world of business” is perceived as a threat to the “natural order of things,” a direct challenge to the “wisdom of the market.” He claims that: “The hegemony achieved by this particular intellectual construct—a ‘European religion’ or economic religion—is remarkable; it has become a dogma of almost universal application, the dominant religion of our time, shoring up and justifying what would appear to be a patently inequitable status quo. It has achieved an immense influence which dominates human activity” (“Environmental degradation and the religion of the market.” In H. Coward (ed.) Population, Consumption, and the Environment [1995]).
We have made fetishes out of commodities as we believe we can derive sensuous pleasure from their magical properties. We sacrifice our time, our families, our children, our forests, our seas and our land on the altar of the market, the god to whom we owe our deepest allegiance. Forsaking the consumer paradise for a life of
weltonjustpoverty, wandering with an empty begging bowl or devoting one’s life to alleviating the plight of others is scarcely an option for most faith-community members.
Today we can scarcely find a moral perspective resident in the old world religions to challenge the hegemony of the religion of the market. The latter is ascendant; the old religions shunted to the sidelines. Indeed, globalizing capitalism seems the perfect fit with our human nature as essentially greedy and self-interested beings continually at war with one another over scarce resources. But economic historians (Weber,From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology [1946]; Tawney, Religion and the Rise of Capitalism [1926]; Polyani, The Great Transformation[1944]) inform us that in pre-modern societies pre-capitalist man valued material goods only as long as they served moral ends (such as enhancing social status and reinforcing social obligations).
Beginning in the late middle ages and reaching its first plateau in the late eighteenth century, the capitalist market began to assume an autonomous, god-like existence. As Max Weber understood so well (The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism [1946]), gradually the inner world ascetic impulse to know and serve God, who would reveal himself in the silence of the prayer chamber, evaporated. Protestant believers began to measure God’s favour by their economic success. Economic success was the means to achieve the end of God’s favor and eternal salvation. But this fragile link could not abide centuries of unrelenting capitalist achievement and success. Eventually, the means, economic blessings, displaced God himself. God was now The Market–the Source of all Hopes. Who disputes the gospel of sustained economic development? Even Jesus would drive an S.U.V, we can believe the late Rev. Jerry Fallwell, the once formidable American leader of the Christian Right.
Eighteenth-century Scottish Enlightenment thinker Adam Smith warned us over two centuries ago (in his Theory of moral sentiments [1759]) that the market was a “dangerous system because it corrodes the shared common values it needs to restrain its excesses” (Loy). Two hundred years later, Polyani inveighed against a system that annihilated “the human and natural substance of society.” These are prescient words that echo in Habermas’s raging against the “colonization of the lifeworld.” Doesn’t everyone know that the god we serve requires clear cut forests, depleted oceans, empty oil wells, toxics dumped into the biosphere? “A direct line,” Loy observes sadly, “runs from the commodification of land, life, and patrimony during the eighteenth century to the ozone holes and global warming of today.”
Everyone also knows, deep down, in their heart of hearts, that the god we serve actually has no life of its own. In Capital, volume 1, Marx imagined that the god of the market was like a vampire who “lives only by sucking living labor, and lives the more, the more labor it sucks.” This monster feeds on the life force of the natural and human worlds. It needs men and women as slaves who have energy and the motivation to work endlessly with others to produce the goods. Even prolonging the working day, says Marx, “only slightly quenches the vampire thirst for the living blood of labor.”
Serving this monster (capitalism produces lots of them!) generates endless sickness amongst the workers and eternal problems for the biosphere and human lifeworlds, which it depletes of life shamelessly. The money-code is at war with the life-code (John McMurtry, The Cancer Stage of Capitalism [1999]. Ironically, if the money-code (another name for the religion of the market) wins out in the end, that, indeed, is the end. As David McNally expresses it in Monsters of the Market: zombies, vampires, and global capitalism (2011), “If vampires are the dreaded beings who might possess us and turn us into their docile servants, zombies represent our haunted self-image, warning us that we might already be lifeless, disempowered alien powers.”
How the religion of the market meets the needs of its devotees
William Leiss (The Limits of Satisfaction: an Essay on the Problem of Needs and Commodities [1976]) provides us with a lucid account of how the religion of the market seeks to meet the needs of its adherents. He argues that the high intensity market setting manipulates people into believing that they can meet their needs and fulfill their desires through purchasing particular commodities. Leiss sees some serious problems with this mode of needs-meeting. For one thing, individuals must have competent craft knowledge of the product that is supposed to meet the specific need. With goods proliferating endlessly and quickly, most people have neither time nor inclination to research the product. We rely on common-sense judgments. But these judgments are usually questioned by some recent scientific report. Ever attuned to what will sell while appearing to be good (or healthy) for you, corporations marketing wares that only yesterday were bad for you, now tell us so assuredly that the product is free of bad fat and is now good for your family’s nutrition. Just believe!
In the high intensity market settings, individuals are taught to “identify states of feelings systematically with the appropriate type of commodities” (Leiss). This is an insidious and dangerous catechetical learning process because individuals are being carefully led away from finding satisfaction in active citizenship, good work and aesthetic self-expression. The job of advertising within the religion of the market is, as journals like Adbusters proclaim, to miseducate us incessantly to image that there is a real link between an impulse and the sacralized (or fetishized) commodity. To illustrate: advertisers prey upon our authentic needs for self-respect and respect for others by decomposing the body into various parts. Then the authentic need for self-respect is channelled towards the consumption of various chemical mixtures that promise a pleasing appearance and recognition from others.
The religion of the market can maintain is grip on its devotees only by constantly destabilizing the categories of human need. Corporations spend billions of dollars on advertising designed only to make us feel dissatisfied, unsettled, and ill at ease, without any deep harmony between our inner and outer worlds. We must be willing to believe there is something fundamentally defective (sinful?) with our bodies, minds and souls. We must also believe that the act of consuming—both simple and exquisitely executed products—will meet our needs, fulfil our heart’s desires and make us happy (at one with our god). But fulfilment channelled through consumption is mainly a delusion. Leiss observes, tellingly, that, “The constant re-division and recombination of need-fragments renders its increasingly difficult, if not impossible, for individuals to develop a coherent set of objectives for their needs and thus to make judgments about the suitability of particular goods for them” (Leiss). Thus, having displaces being as the core value of the religion of the market.
Having and being
The iconoclastic Buddhist scholar Stephen Batchelor offers penetrating commentary on “having and being” in Alone with Others: an Existential Approach to Buddhism (1983). “Having,” he observes, “is characterized by acquisitiveness. Our worldview is dominated by the notion that the aim of personal existence is fulfilled in proportion to what we are able to amass and possess.” Craving, the source of endless suffering for Buddhist teachers, impels men and women to possess material objects that appear to “offer protection, security, and social status through their tangible and starkly present solidity.” The old God of the Hebrews is faint and wispy, a vague cloud-trace in the sky.
We are also impelled to possess people—husbands, wives, children, friends, acquaintances—“all arranged in a circle around us connected to the center by threads of attachment and possessiveness.” We can also crave immaterial things, like thought, acquiring “new possibilities” for further knowledge acquisition. Batchelor argues that “even our bodies and minds are regarded as “things” we “have.” For Batchelor, “having always presupposes a sharply defined dualism between subject and object. The subject thus seeks his or her well-being, as well as his or her sense of meaning and purpose, in the preservation and acquisition of objects for which he or she is necessarily isolated.” “I am what I have” is the way Fromm (1976) puts it in To Have or to Be.
But any “sense of fulfilment will necessarily be illusory, because there is nothing one can have that one cannot fear to lose. Absorption in the horizontal dimension of having is the origin of all states of ontological insecurity.” Buddhist social philosophers like Loy and Batchelor believe that compulsive motivation to have things attempts to fill the lack in people’s lives. In fact, this motivation to fill the lack through possession has penetrated our consciousness so deeply that the traditional sphere of religion—the “receptacle for the traditional symbols of being”—are approached as “another region of having” (Batchelor). One can possess eternal life, immortality, enlightenment, and the kingdom of heaven.

Trade Wars: Monsanto’s Return to Vietnam

Desiree Hellegers

Ho Chi Minh City.
This past week, as activists gathered in Washington, D.C. for the conference on “Vietnam: the Power of Protest,” in Viet Nam’s Ho Chi Minh City, a delegation led by Veterans for Peace (VFP) Chapter 160 was quietly wrapping up a two week tour. The tour was timed to coincide the VFP’s national “Full Disclosure Campaign”. The VFP initiative, like the D.C.-based conference over the weekend, is geared to counter a Department of Defense (DOD) campaign, funded by the 2008 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), to produce commemorative events and historical accounts, including school curriculum, to mark the 50thanniversary of the Vietnam War.
Set against the backdrop of the Obama administration’s push for fast track authority to conclude the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), this year’s VFP 160 tour raised troubling questions not only about the ongoing effects of the war on Viet Nam, but about Monsanto’s introduction of genetically modified (GMO) seeds onto the Vietnamese market. The text of the TPP, which would be the largest trade deal in history, impacting 40% of the world’s economy, remains shrouded in secrecy. But leaked passages indicate that the TPP will heighten the growing income inequality in both Viet Nam and the United States and override local and national laws and policies geared toward protecting the environment and public health. Monsanto, one of the single largest producers of the estimated 20 million gallons of Agent Orange sprayed in Viet Nam between 1961 and 1971, is among the corporations that stand to garner windfall profits if the TPP is passed.
Widespread contamination from the dioxin-laced defoliant Agent Orange (AO), and a landscape littered with unexploded ordinance (UXO)—including landmines and cluster bombs—are among the legacies of what’s known in Viet Nam as the “American War.” One of many troubling aspects of the Pentagon’s 50th anniversary campaign is its Orwellian spin on a high tech war that bathed Vietnamese jungles and waterways in toxic defoliants in one of the largest, most reckless scientific experiments in human history. Among five objectives outlined in the NDAA is the mandate that the DOD history celebrate “advances in technology, science and medicine related to military research conducted during the Vietnam War”.
The leaders of the VFP tour, including Chapter 160 President Suel Jones, Vice President Chuck Searcy, Don Blackburn, Chuck Palazzo, and David Clark, all served in the American War in Viet Nam and each returned, drawn by their memories of the war and their desire to help support Vietnamese NGOs working to address the suffering engendered by the war. With the leadership VFP Chapter 160 ranging from their late sixties to early seventies, the vets anticipate that, at best, they’ll have another five years to lead the tours, their primary fundraising vehicle to cover their limited administrative expenses and provide support for their partner organizations.
The day after we arrived in Viet Nam, on April 17, a class action lawsuit was filed in France on behalf of millions of Agent Orange affected Vietnamese. The lawsuit was filed against Monsanto and 25 other U.S.-based manufacturers of dioxin-contaminated Agent Orange. After years of legal skirmishes, a 1984 settlement provided limited relief to American GIs suffering from a range of health effects linked to Agent Orange exposure, from prostate and lung cancer, to multiple myeloma, diabetes, Parkinsons and heart disease. But attempts to get legal redress and financial support for the estimated three million Vietnamese suffering from Agent Orange exposure have repeatedly failed.
The U.S. has never made good on the promises Nixon made at the 1973 Paris Peace talks to provide Viet Nam with more than $3 billion in reparations, equivalent in today’s currency to more than $16 billion. The relatively paltry aid that the U.S. has supplied the still war-ravaged country comes with string attached: ongoing pressures to enact various forms of “structural adjustment,” which the TPP seems designed to accelerate.
On the same day the lawsuit was filed in France, we met with U.S. Ambassador Ted Osius, the first ambassador since the “normalization” of US-Viet Nam relations in 1995 to openly acknowledge the lingering effects of Agent Orange on the Vietnamese people. By some accounts, the two-decade embargo that the U.S. imposed on Viet Nam after the war exacted suffering equal to the war itself.
Osius told the gathered delegation and journalists that meaningful political relations between the U.S and Viet Nam necessitate “facing the past.” “If we hadn’t addressed the Agent Orange issue, I don’t think we’d have the credibility to address” other shared concerns, chief among which he numbered climate change, global health, education and trade. Osius vaunted the virtues of the TPP and the “huge benefits” it will provide for Vietnamese workers, while ostensibly strengthening environmental protections and regulations governing food safety. Henoroomofherownacknowledged, however, that alongside the benefits that Viet Nam is enjoying from the liberalization of trade in recent years, the country has witnessed the emergence of a new Vietnamese oligarchy. And he also acknowledged the role that the TPP will play in privatizing state institutions, which under the terms of NAFTA and the WTO, are frequently relegated to the status of unfair trade barriers. Under the TPP, he told us, “non-performing state institutions will,” of course, be subject to elimination. When I challenged Ambassador Osius’ claims about the benefits of the TPP, invoked the secrecy of the document and invited him to print out and share a copy of the trade deal with the delegation to substantiate his claims, he declined diplomatically.
On our way to visit Village, a program situated at the outskirts of Hanoi, serving Agent Orange-affected children and veterans, we saw scenes that have become familiar in U.S. cities bent on attracting global investment at all costs. “Development” in Viet Nam, as in the United States, is increasingly code for housing demolition and displacement. Along the edges of Hanoi, which is now home to one Rolls Royce and four Mercedes Benz dealerships, luxury condominiums are springing up, along with sporadic protests. The tensions between “development” and the revolutionary vision and promises of Ho Chi Minh’s Communist Party, are set in stark relief in Doan Hong Le’s 2010 film Who Owns the LandThe award-winning film documents the struggles of poor farmers confronting displacement by a luxury golf course, along with rationalizations from their local Communist Party leadership.
In each city along the path of the tour—from Hanoi to Hue, to A Luoi, Danang, Na Tranh, and Ho Chi Minh City—we saw evidence of the ongoing suffering engendered by the war. And in each city, we met with members of the Veterans Association of Viet Nam (VAVN) along with local chapters of the Vietnamese Association of Victims of Agent Orange (VAVA) which has long been at the forefront of the struggle for legal and financial redress for Vietnamese disabled by AO-exposure. At a meeting in Hanoi with VAVN, our host Gen. PhĂčng KháșŻc Đăng, invoked the role of American corporations in the production of Agent Orange, taking care to acknowledge that AO has had “very terrible effects not only on Vietnamese but on U.S. soldiers and citizens.” At a meeting in Danang, standing before a bust of Ho Chi Minh, a VAVA representative remembered “seeing the planes come and the foliage die.” Another representative chimed in: “It destroyed anything with leaves. It kills us. It kills the people. It kills all the trees and animals.” But the focus, he reminded us—and himself—must be on “how to rebuild the country, how to develop the country.” Regarding the war and the U.S. use of Agent Orange, he went on to say, “We just turn the page, [but] we don’t delete it.”
“We appreciate the generosity of the Vietnamese people,” responded VFP 160 Vice President Chuck Searcy, “But we also think we should learn the lessons of the past.” Searcy wanted to know why, after the tragic consequences of Agent Orange, the Vietnamese government has allowed Monsanto to return, open offices and trade in Viet Nam, where the company now markets GMO seeds, including corn. In response, the VAVA representative invoked Viet Nam’s entry into the WTO. “When we signed up for the WTO, we had to take them—they have to be here,” he said.
If the WTO relegated local and national environmental and health laws to the status of “unfair trade barriers,” Mexico’s experience following the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) ought to serve as another cautionary tale about the likely impacts of the TPP on Viet Nam. Following passage of NAFTA, the U.S. flooded Mexico with cheap American corn, including Monsanto’s GMO strains. The move not only gutted the Mexican corn market, it resulted in widespread GMO contamination of the country’s diverse indigenous corn strains. In Canada, as Naomi Klein has documented, the WTO and NAFTA have been used to challenge, respectively, the development of local renewable energy in Ontario, and a moratorium on fracking in Quebec. Leaked portions of the TPP indicate that the trade agreement will only expand the profits and corporate impunity that Monsanto and other corporations have long enjoyed.
The human health effects caused by the use of dioxin-contaminated Agent Orange during the American war are most dramatically evidenced in the province of Quang Tri, in the area the U.S. demarcated as the demilitarized zone or DMZ. One of an estimated 28 “hot spots” scattered throughout Viet Nam, many of which were the sites of US bases where Agent Orange was transported and stored, Quang Tri was the most heavily sprayed province. An estimated 15,000 people in Quang Tri suffer from Agent Orange exposure. Our first encounter with the nearly unthinkable damage that Agent Orange has wrought in Viet Nam came during a visit to a family that receives support from VFP 160 and its partner organization Project RENEW. Four out of five adult children in the family are severely disabled. Only the second of the couple’s children, born between 1972 and 1985, seems, along with his own children, to have dodged the chemical bullet of Agent Orange. However, as the Vietnamese are increasingly discovering, the effects of Agent Orange may skip one generation, only to emerge in the next. The four disabled adult children are unable to stand upright as a result of a host of congenital health issues. They scurry about on all fours, with puzzled expressions that are markers of the developmental disabilities that frequently result from AO exposure. In Quang Tri Province, we learn, 1300 families have between 3 and 5 children who suffer from the debilitating effects of Agent Orange exposure.
But Agent Orange is far from the only source of misery that remains in Quang Tri Province. If the U.S. dropped more bombs on Viet Nam than were used throughout World War II in both the European and Pacific theaters combined, Quang Tri was the most heavily bombed region in Viet Nam. The range of prosthetic devices on display at the Quang Tri Mine Action Visitor Center reflect Project RENEW’s work to meet the needs of more than 900 individuals province-wide who have received prosthetic devices following injuries from UXO, which is scattered across an estimated 80% of the Province. Another 1,100 amputees are currently awaiting limbs. Also on display at the Center are crayon drawings by Quang Tri children learning in school-based programs to identify unexploded ordinance and notify authorities of the location. More than two million Vietnamese combatants and civilians were killed during the American War, but the more than 60,000 Vietnamese killed by land mines, cluster bombs and other UXO since the war now exceeds the 58,000 American GIs killed during the war. And still the US remains one of only a handful of countries worldwide which have refused to sign on to UN treaties banning landmines and cluster bombs.
In Nha Trang, we visited a woman and her sister who are caring for two adult children, neither of whom registered signs of AO-exposure until their late teens. The older of the two, now 40, lay moaning in a bedroom in the rear of the house. His 36- year-old sister is still cognizant enough to anticipate her own future when she sees his emaciated and contorted limbs.
In Ho Chi Minh City, our final stop on the tour, we visit the Tu Du Hospital/Peace Village, which is home to some sixty AO-affected children, along with a handful of adults who have grown up at the facility. On the ward, a couple of children eagerly demanded to be hugged, while others, some with feeding tubes in their noses, looked at us with uncomprehending gazes. A child at the far end of a room stared blindly in front of him. Like many AO-affected children, one of his eyes was entirely missing, a blank space where a socket might be. In another room, a hydrocephalic child of indeterminate gender with a head the size of a watermelon lay motionless in a crib. Perched in a chair beside the crib, cradling the child’s hand, sat a girl who appeared to be no more than six or seven years old. She glanced up momentarily, a bit annoyed perhaps by the crowd of American spectators trooping through, then returned to the all-consuming work of comforting her friend.
The following day, April 30th, the anniversary in the U.S. of the “fall of Saigon,” we rose early to attend “Liberation Day” festivities in Ho Chi Minh City. The tightly choreographed parade featured male and female veterans in dress uniforms; sunflower-swirling school girls; and a billboard size image of Ho Chi Minh atop a hot pink float–silhouetted like a modern day pop culture saint against a celestial blue backdrop. Entirely absent from the scene was any hint or interest or participation from the rank and file residents of the city named after the revolutionary figure.
The reception that followed in the “Reunification Palace” was presided over by Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, and attended by about 100 people representing organizations from 40 countries and territories around the world. First among the speakers was HĂ©lĂšne Luc. As Phuc noted, Luc “support[ed] and assist[ed] the Vietnamese delegation” at the Peace Talks, while serving as a member of the Paris City Council. In her comments, Luc invoked Ho Chi Minh’s historic 1945 Declaration of Independence, modeled after the founding document of the United States. She lauded the courage and bravery of the revolutionary struggle, and of the activists who took to the streets around the world to stop the war.
Last to speak when the floor opened up was Virginia Foote, President of the U.S.-Vietnam Trade Council and President of the Board of the International Center in Washington, D.C. “As an American–and I think I speak for all of the Americans in the room,” observed Foote,“we pledge to continue to work on the economic development of the country” as well as “on the war legacy issues.”
She spoke of attending the ground-breaking ceremony at the Land Mine Action Center in Hanoi only a few days before and of the “new money [that] is coming in,” to “support and assist Viet Nam.” “At the same time,” she said, “we are working on some very tough trade negotiations and hoping we can finish those this year as well….We will continue to struggle forward with the TPP,” she said, before the Deputy Prime Minister offered a few ceremonial comments to conclude the meeting.
On April 30th in the United States, with little fan fare, California Representative Barbara Lee introduced the Agent Orange Victims Relief Act of 2015. The bill, supported by the U.S.-based Vietnam Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign (http://www.vn-agentorange.org/), would provide funds to substantially mitigate AO contamination throughout Viet Nam, and for health care and direct services for Vietnamese AO sufferers. It would also expand relief for American veterans, and provide new support for their children, who suffer from AO-related congenital health problems.
Amid new initiatives to secure justice for Agent Orange survivors and ongoing negotiations for a trade deal that stands to significantly shape the future of both countries, the corporate controlled media in the U.S. has been only too willing to offer up a steady diet of cinematically compelling footage of South Vietnamese forever scrambling toward helicopters and hanging from rooftops. Leaked passages indicate that, if passed, TPP will expand the impunity and profits of corporations like Monsanto that seem every bit as willing today as they were in the 1960s to profit from the misery of Vietnamese peasants and the working poor in both countries. Meanwhile, in Viet Nam, the work of VFP 160 and its partner organizations continues, and in Ho Chi Minh City’s Peace Village sits a little girl who refuses to be distracted, to loosen her grip or turn her back on the suffering that surrounds her.