by
Samuel Francis
"We're at
war," the young waitress, her voice catching, informed me
when I first heard of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon this week. She was hardly the only one.
"America at war," the Washington Times' lead editorial
pronounced the next day. "It's WAR," screamed its editorial
cartoon. A "new kind of war has been declared on the world's
democracies," the Wall Street Journal's editorial
pontificated.
"The War Against America" was the
subject of the New York Times editorial. "A state of war,"
the Washington Post called it. "This is war," pronounced
columnist Charles Krauthammer. "They were acts of war," confirmed
the President of the United States.
Well, it probably is – except that, even as
everyone from waitresses to the president was declaring war or
howling for it, nobody was exactly sure who we were at war with. The
usual suspect was the shadowy Osama bin Laden, though some experts
said the attacks didn't fit his profile, and even if we were sure,
no one seemed able to say how we should wage the war, how we could
win it, or what would constitute victory.
Mainly, what most Americans wanted to do –
entirely understandably – was to blow the hell out of somebody or
something. No doubt, in time, we will.
But the blunt truth is that the United States
has been at war for years – at least a decade, since we launched a
war against Iraq in 1991, even though Iraq had done absolutely
nothing to harm
the United States or any American. Our bombing attacks on Iraq
certainly caused civilian casualties, and if they were not
deliberate, nobody beating the war drums at the time felt much
regret for them. For ten years, we have maintained economic
sanctions on Iraq that have led to the deaths of hundreds of
thousands of civilians, and we have repeatedly bombed it whenever it
failed to abide by standards we imposed on it.
Under Bill Clinton, we again launched bombing
raids against civilians – once against so-called "terrorist training
camps" supposedly under bin Laden's control in Afghanistan and at
the same time against a purported "chemical weapons factory" in
Sudan that almost certainly was no such thing. The attacks just
happened to occur on the same day as Monica Lewinsky's grand jury
testimony that she had engaged in sex with the president. "This is
unfortunately the war of the future," Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright said in justifying the U.S. raids, officially launched in
retaliation for terrorist attacks on American embassies.
Later the same year, Mr. Clinton ordered (but
later countermanded) yet more missile attacks on Iraq – the day
after the Paula Jones sex scandal was settled in court. Later, yet
again, Mr. Clinton ordered more bombings in Iraq the day before
Congress was scheduled to vote on his impeachment. Then there are
the Balkans, where the United States has waddled forth to war for no
compelling reason, and where it has also slaughtered civilians with
its unprovoked bombings.
In all the buckets of media gabble about the
terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, not once have I heard
any journalist ask any expert the simple question, "Why did the
terrorists attack us?"
There is, of course, an implicit answer to the
unasked question: It's because the terrorists are "evil"; they "hate
democracy"; they are "fanatics," "barbarians" and "cowards." Those,
of course, are answers that can satisfy only children. Some day it
might actually dawn on someone in this country that the grown-up but
unwelcome answer is that the terrorists attacked us because they
were paying us back for what we started.
Let us hear no more about how the "terrorists"
have "declared war on America." Any nation that allows a criminal
chief executive to use its military power to slaughter civilians in
unprovoked and legally unauthorized attacks for his own personal
political purposes can expect whatever the "terrorists" dish out to
it. If, as President Bush told us this week, we should make no
distinction between those who harbor terrorists and those who commit
terrorist acts, neither can any distinction be made between those
who tolerate the murderous policies of a criminal in power and the
criminal himself.
The blunt and quite ugly truth is that the
United States has been at war for years – that it started the war in
the name of "spreading democracy," "building nations," "waging
peace," "stopping aggression," "enforcing human rights," and all the
other pious lies that warmongers always invoke to mask the truth,
and that it continued the war simply to save a crook from political
ruin. What is new is merely that this week, for the first time, the
war we started came home – and all of a sudden, Americans don't seem
to care for it so much.
Samuel Francis is a
nationally syndicated columnist. He can be contacted at
Samfrancis.net.