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Chomsky on hardening the empire



To: Retort
Via: PB
                                         
Militarizing Latin America
Noam Chomsky 
Orinoco International
10. iii.10


The United States was founded as an "infant empire," in George
Washington's words.  The conquest of the national territory was a grand
imperial venture, much like the vast expansion of the Grand Duchy of
Moscow.  From the earliest days, control over the Western Hemisphere was
a critical goal.  Ambitions expanded during World War II, as the US
displaced Britain and lesser imperial powers.  High-level planners
concluded that the US should "hold unquestioned power" in a world system
including not only the Western Hemisphere, but also the former British
Empire and the Far East, and later, as much of Eurasia as possible.  A
primary goal of NATO was to block moves towards European independence,
along Gaullist lines.  That became still more clear when the USSR
collapsed, and with it the Russian threat that was the formal
justification of NATO.  NATO was not disbanded, but rather expanded, in
violation of promises to Mikhail Gorbachev that NATO would not even
fully extend to East Germany, let alone beyond, and that "NATO would be
transforming itself into a more political organization."  By now it is
virtually an international intervention force under US command, its
self-defined jurisdiction reaching to control energy sources, pipelines,
and sea lanes.  And Europe is a well-disciplined junior partner.

Throughout the expansion of US Empire, Latin America retained its
primacy in global planning.  As Washington was considering the overthrow
of the Allende government in Chile in 1971, Nixon's National Security
Council observed that if the US couldn't control Latin America, how
could it expect "to achieve a successful order elsewhere in the world?"
That policy has become more severe with recent South American moves
towards integration, a prerequisite for independence, and establishment
of more varied international ties, while also beginning to address
severe internal disorders, most importantly, the traditional rule of a
rich Europeanized minority over a sea of misery and suffering.

In July 2009, the US and Colombia concluded a secret deal to permit the
US to use seven military bases in Colombia.  The official purpose is to
counter narcotrafficking and terrorism, "but senior Colombian military
and civilian officials familiar with negotiations told The Associated
Press that the idea is to make Colombia a regional hub for Pentagon
operations." There are reports that the agreement provides Colombia with
privileged access to US military supplies.  Colombia had already become
the leading recipient of US military aid.  Colombia has had by far the
worst human rights record in the hemisphere since the Central American
wars of the 1980s wound down.  The correlation between US aid and human
rights violationshas long been noted by scholarship.

AP also cited an April 2009 document of the US Air Mobility Command,
which proposed that the Palanquero base in Colombia could become a
"cooperative security location" (CSL) from which "mobility operations
could be executed."  The report noted that from Palanquero, "Nearly half
the continent can be covered by a C-17 (military transport) without
refueling."  This could form part of "a global en route strategy," which
"helps achieve the regional engagement strategy and assists with the
mobility routing to Africa."  For the present, "the strategy to place a
CSL at Palanquero should be sufficient for air mobility reach on the
South American continent," the document concludes, but it goes on to
explore options for extending the routing to Africa with additional bases.

Establishing US military bases in Colombia is only one part of a much
broader effort to restore Washington's capacity for military
intervention.  There has been a sharp increase in US military aid and
training of Latin American officers, focusing on light infantry tactics
to combat "radical populism" - a concept that sends shivers up the
spine in the Latin American context.  Military training is being shifted
from the State Department to the Pentagon, eliminating human rights and
democracy conditionalities under congressional supervision, which has
always been weak, but was at least a deterrent to some of the worst
abuses.  The US Fourth Fleet, disbanded in 1950, was reactivated in
2008, shortly after Colombia's invasion of Ecuador, with responsibility
for the Caribbean, Central and South America, and the surrounding
waters. The official announcement defines its "various operations" to
"include counter-illicit trafficking, theater security cooperation,
military-to-military interaction and bilateral and multinational training."

Militarization of South America is a component of much broader global
programs, as the "global en route strategy" indicates.  In Iraq, there
is virtually no information about the fate of the huge US military
bases, so they are presumably being maintained for force projection.
The immense city-within-a-city US embassy in Baghdad not only remains
but its cost is to rise to $1.8 billion USD this year, from an estimated
$1.5 billion USD last year.  The Obama administration is also
constructing mega embassies that are completely without precedent in
Pakistan and Afghanistan.

In short, moves towards "a world of peace" do not fall within the
"change you can believe in," to borrow Obama's campaign slogan.


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