We Are
Not Special, and There Is No Happy Ending: The
Blood-Drenched Darkness of American Exceptionalism
31 July 2010By Arthur Silber
"If
you have ever wondered how a serial murderer -- a
murderer who is sane and fully aware of the acts he
has committed -- can remain steadfastly convinced of
his own moral superiority and show not even the
slightest glimmer of remorse, you should not wonder
any longer.
The United States government is such a murderer. It
conducts its murders in full view of the entire world.
It even boasts of them. Our government, and all our
leading commentators, still maintain that the end
justifies the means -- and that even the slaughter of
hundreds of thousands of innocents is of no moral
consequence, provided a sufficient number of people
can delude themselves into believing the final result
is a "success.""
You may not regard the two propositions in my title as
deserving of any special attention. You may think,
entirely correctly, that if we as Americans are
special, it is only in the way that any human being is
special: that each of us is unique and irreplaceable,
that each of our lives, and the lives of all of us,
demand reverence for the unrepeatable value of a
person's brief passage in this world. And you may
recognize, also correctly, that certain actions lead
to destruction and loss in a manner and on a scale
that forbid correction and amends, that on some
occasions we can only accept the certainty of negative
consequences that cannot be avoided. Human beings may
be capable of remarkable, even wondrous achievement,
but limits are inherent in existence itself. Sometimes
those limits mean that wounds will never heal, that
the pain will never end.
If you view these observations as unremarkable, even
mundane, that is because in certain crucial respects,
you are an adult. Such a healthy perspective --
"healthy" designating that which proceeds from
demonstrable facts -- enables us to see the extreme
nature of the delusions necessitated by an
unquestioned belief in the myth of American
exceptionalism. Despite the events of the last decade,
the myth remains the heart of American culture, of
American politics, and of the American State. Our
politicians still regularly assure us that "America is
the last, best hope of Earth," and that "the American
moment" will extend for the entirety of "this new
century Americans remain "the Good Guys: "The emphasis
is not only on 'Good,' but on 'the': we are the Good
Guys in a way that no one else is, or can ever be."
When we believe that America and Americans are unique
and uniquely good in all of history, we will also
believe that there is no problem we cannot overcome.
Our political leaders tell us this fable time and
again; many Americans are eager to believe it, in the
manner of a damaged child who appeals to mysterious
powers to vanquish the dangers lurking in the shadows
of his room. We witness this mechanism in connection
with a wide range of problems, even when those
problems reach the catastrophic level. Here is Obama
on the continuing catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico:
President Barack Obama struck an optimistic tone over
the ongoing oil disaster Monday afternoon, saying that
"things are going to return to normal" on the stricken
Gulf Coast after much pain and frustration, and that
the polluted waters will eventually be in better shape
than before the leak began.
These are reassurances offered by parents to children
whom they treat as doltish objects fit only to be
manipulated. The parent or other authority figure --
here, Obama -- does not expect his words to be
credited after a process of independent evaluation. He
expects, in fact he demands, that you take his word
for it, that you believe him without question or
challenge. He demands that you obey. This is the way
our political leaders treat their subjects both abroad
and at home. (In addition to rejecting this method of
forcible "persuasion," I also reject such reassurances
for further, more specific and compelling reasons, as
do many others. I recognize that we are provided only
such information about the Gulf catastrophe as the
government and BP, which are one and the same in this
context, wish us to have. We have close to no idea
what is actually going on, or the damage that has
already been inflicted and that may manifest itself in
the future. Moreover, I recognize the dangerous folly
of entrusting any kind of solution to a crisis of this
kind, or to the crisis of climate change however one
may conceive it, to an inherently, fatally corrupted
corporatist State.)
The pace of destruction on the domestic front is
rapidly increasing at present. But the greatest
destruction wrought by the exceptionalist American
State will still be found in the realm of foreign
affairs. The foundation of America's murderous
prescription for large parts of the rest of the world
remains as I have identified it:
In the most extreme (and, one could argue, most
consistent) version of this [exceptionalist] tale,
non-Western parts of the world are less than human --
and they are subhuman by choice. They are immoral, and
sometimes even evil. Since we represent the good and
they represent the evil, we are surely entitled to
improve them, by invasion and bombing if necessary. If
they do not threaten us today, they might at some
indeterminate time in the future. And while we might
kill many innocent civilians in our campaign of
civilization, those who survive will be infinitely
better off than they would have been otherwise.
Besides, how "innocent" can any of them be -- since
they are members of inferior, less than fully human
civilizations, and since they are so by choice?
With this belief system as the unchallengeable
foundation, a vast number of Americans render
themselves completely unable to recognize the
devastating consequences of the American State's
actions abroad. Whenever those consequences threaten
to announce themselves in an unavoidable manner, most
Americans will explicitly deny or avoid them through
an endless variety of stratagems. When all else fails,
their ultimate defense will be the cloaked restatement
of the myth's message: the lives of those other people
are simply not of the same value as our own. Such
recognition must be disguised to a degree, for an
explicit statement to that effect would shock certain
sensibilities (or certain people would at least
pretend to be shocked). But -- and this is the
critical point -- when we consider the relevant facts,
the continuing refusal to acknowledge what the
American State has done and still does today can have
no other meaning.
A terrifyingly awful example of this phenomenon is the
disappearance of the nightmarish tragedy of Iraq from
our national conversation. Remember that Iraq never
posed a serious threat to the United States, and that
our leaders knew that it posed no such threat.
Therefore, the U.S. invasion and occupation represent
an ongoing series of war crimes. This is not an
arguable point in any respect. Since it cannot be
argued, it is ignored altogether.
And it is not just ignored, as malignantly evil as
that would be by itself. The American exceptionalist
myth tells us that the United States is unique and
uniquely good. It is not sufficient to ignore negative
consequences of our actions: we must transform any and
all negative consequences into a positive good. This
process has been rigorously followed for every
American intervention ever undertaken (going back to
the Philippines, then with the American entrance into
World War I, on into many interventions after World
War II, on into Iraq and Afghanistan today), and the
identical process has been well underway for several
years in connection with Iraq in particular.
Chris Floyd identified the operation of this mechanism
in December of last year:
[T]he situation in Iraq is now being held up as a
model, a goal, for Barack Obama's massive expansion of
the war and occupation in Afghanistan. Obama himself
has called the "surge" in Iraq "an extraordinary
achievement," and has at every turn promoted and
propagated the myth that George W. Bush's escalation
of a hideous war of aggression was a resounding
success. This myth is based on one thing only: the
fact that the peak of the ghastly death rate produced
by the American occupation dropped to a somewhat less
horrific level. But as countless experts and analysts
have pointed out, this drop had very little to do with
the addition of some 28,000 American troops.
In that article, Floyd excerpted Patrick Cockburn, who
identified this terrible truth:
The guerrilla war against the US in Iraq ceased
because the Sunni community was being slaughtered by
Shia death squads. "Judging by the body counts at the
time in the Baghdad morgues, three Sunnis died for
every Shia," Dr Michael Izady, who conducted a survey
of the sectarian make-up of Baghdad for Columbia
University's School of International Affairs, is
quoted as saying. "Baghdad, basically a Sunni city
into the 1940s, by the end of 2008 had only a few
hundred thousand Sunni residents left in a population
of over five million." Defeated in this devastating
sectarian civil war, the Sunni ended their attacks on
US troops and instead sought their protection. The
"surge" of 28,000 extra US troops who arrived in the
summer of 2007 had a marginal impact on the outcome of
the fighting.
We must always remember the scope of the horrifying
effects of the U.S. invasion and occupation, including
the murder of over a million innocent people, together
with the all-encompassing devastation of an entire
country as set forth in that same article.
Such is the limitless power of delusion on this scale:
a blood-drenched tragedy of world-historical
proportion becomes "an extraordinary achievement," and
a criminal war of aggression is transmuted by the
alchemy of cultural myth-making into a "success." This
is the evil to be found at the rotted heart of the
myth: whatever the United States does, it will lead to
good and only to good.
And all of it -- all of it -- is a damnable,
unforgivable lie. Patrick Cockburn has written a new
article about Iraq: "The Ruin They'll Leave Behind."
Let us leave aside the fact that the U.S. isn't
leaving, an issue I just recently discussed. In light
of the great value of Cockburn's reporting, this is a
comparatively minor point. I urge you to read all of
Cockburn's piece.
Here are several key passages:
On June 14, this year, an interpreter for the US army
called Hameed al-Daraji was shot dead as he was
sleeping in his house in Samarra, a city 60 miles
north of Baghdad.
In some respects there was nothing strange about the
killing, since 26 Iraqi civilians were murdered in
different parts of the country on the same day. As
well as working periodically for the Americans since
2003, Mr Daraji may have recently converted to
Christianity and unwisely taken to wearing a crucifix
around his neck – a gesture quite enough to make him a
target in the Sunni Arab heartlands.
What made Iraqis, inured to violence though they are,
pay particular attention to the murder of Mr Daraji
was the identity of his killer. Arrested soon after
the body was discovered, his son is reported to have
confessed to his father's murder, explaining that his
father's job and change of religion brought such shame
on the family that there was no alternative to
shooting him. A second son and Mr Daraji's nephew are
also wanted for the killing and all three of the young
men are alleged to have links to al-Qa'ida.
The story illustrates the degree to which Iraq remains
an extraordinarily violent place. Without the rest of
the world paying much attention, some 160 Iraqis have
been killed, and hundreds wounded, over the past two
weeks. Civilian casualties in Iraq are still higher
than in Afghanistan, though these days the latter has
a near-monopoly of media attention. But the killing of
Mr Daraji should give pause to those who imagine that
the US occupation of Iraq somehow came right in its
final years......
American troops leave behind a country that is a
barely floating wreck. Baghdad feels like a city under
military occupation, with horrendous traffic jams
caused by the 1,500 checkpoints and streets blocked
off by miles of concrete blast walls that strangle
communications within the city. The situation in Iraq
is in many ways "better" than it was, but it could
hardly be anything else, given that killings at their
peak in 2006-2007 were running at about 3,000 a month.
That said, Baghdad remains one of the most dangerous
cities in the world, riskier to walk around than Kabul
or Kandahar.
...
Corruption explains much in Iraq – but it is not the
only reason why it has been so difficult to create a
functioning government. Saddam Hussein should not be
such a hard act to follow. Part of the problem here is
that the US invasion and the overthrow of Saddam
Hussein had revolutionary consequences because it
shifted power from the Sunni Arab Baathists to the 60
per cent of Iraqis who are Shia and in alliance with
the Kurds. Iraq had a new ruling class rooted in the
rural Shia population and headed by former exiles with
no experience of running anything. In many ways, their
model of government is to recreate Saddam's system,
only this time with the Shia in charge. It used to be
said that Iraq was under the thumb of Sunni Arabs from
Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's home city north of Baghdad,
while these days people in Baghdad complain that a
similar tight-knit gang from the Shia city of
Nasiriyah surrounds the Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
In many ways, Iraq is becoming like Lebanon, its
politics and society irredeemably divided by sect and
communal loyalties. The outcome of the parliamentary
election on March 7 could easily be forecast by
assuming that most Iraqis would vote as Sunni, Shia or
Kurds. Jobs at the top of government and throughout
the bureaucracy are filled unofficially according to
sectarian affiliation. In a crude way, this does give
everybody a share of the cake, but the cake is too
small to satisfy more than a minority of Iraqis.
Government is also weakened because ministers are
representatives of some party, faction or community
and cannot be dismissed because they are crooked or
incompetent.
Going back to Baghdad last month, after being away for
some time, I was struck by how little had changed. The
airport was still among the worst in the world. When I
wanted to fly to Basra, Iraq's second biggest city and
the centre of the oil industry, Iraqi Airways said
they had only one flight during the week and they were
none too certain when that would leave.
Violence may be down, but few of the 2 million Iraqi
refugees in Jordan and Syria think it safe enough to
go home. A further 1.5 million people are Internally
Displaced Persons (IDPs), forced out of their homes by
sectarian pogroms in 2006 and 2007 and too frightened
to return. Of these, some half a million people try to
survive in squatter camps which Refugees International
describes as lacking "basic services, including water,
sanitation and electricity, and built on precarious
places – under bridges, alongside railroad tracks and
amongst garbage dumps". A worrying fact about these
camps is that the number of people in them should be
shrinking as sectarian warfare ebbs, but in fact the
IDP population is growing. These days refugees come to
the camps not because of fear of the death squads but
because of poverty, joblessness or because the
prolonged drought is driving farmers off their land.
Cockburn has much, much more.
As deeply horrifying as these details are, perhaps it
is that these facts are not hidden or completely
inaccessible that is most unsettling. What the U.S.
has done -- death and ongoing suffering on a
monumental scale, that "Iraq remains an
extraordinarily violent place" and "is a barely
floating wreck" -- can easily be known, if we seek to
know the truth. Yet almost none of our leaders will
acknowledge the smallest part of this truth, and most
Americans are unaware of almost all of it. This
reveals a notable danger in what is often held up as
yet another singular virtue of the United States: that
we have a "free" press, and that there is no official
censorship. As a result, people believe that they do
know the truth. After all, no one is being actively
prevented from telling even unpleasant truths.
Such simplistic appeals to what is supposedly another
aspect of American virtue disregard the complex
operations of cultural "truths" that are widely
accepted. It is almost impossible to imagine how
official censorship could more successfully and
comprehensively obliterate the actual truth. And I
repeat: since people delude themselves that their
leaders and media are telling them the truth, they
feel no need to seek further for it. Moreover, facts
such as those set forth by Cockburn, facts that are
accessible to anyone if he wants to find them, have no
reality for those whose identity and self-worth are
critically tied to the myth of American exceptionalism.
It is the myth that is real; facts that conflict with
and undermine the myth rarely penetrate the
consciousness of most Americans. Such facts are never
admitted by those who would lead the American State.
Even after the criminal catastrophe of Iraq, the myth
prevails. Death and devastation become "success" --
and that "success" then becomes another justification
for yet another campaign of death and devastation in
Afghanistan, and Pakistan, and then perhaps in Iran...
Some critics of American interventionism abroad point
to signs that the same critics think indicate a
willingness to more seriously question American
foreign policy: the overextension of the American
military, the serious, possibly irreversible weakening
of the American economy generally, and the like.
Again, however, such facts, indisputable though they
may be, fall into the category of facts that become
non-facts when set against the power of the myth. I
have sometimes remarked that myths which assume
importance in the manner of the exceptionalist myth
constitute life itself. It is crucial to appreciate
that this is how it operates in psychological terms.
In a contest between a belief system which provides
identity and self-worth and facts which threaten that
identity and self-worth, it is frequently the facts
which many people choose to discard.
Occasionally, when the destructive (and
self-destructive) effects of a belief system become
sufficiently overwhelming, a person will decide to
question and eventually dispense with the belief
system. The process can be agonizingly difficult. Many
people prefer to avoid it. Most of us are familiar
with the tragic story of the individual who refuses to
give up the myth that he still believes provides him
consolation and meaning -- even when clinging to the
myth leads to his own death. Countries can behave in
the identical manner; history provides numerous
examples of the same tragedy on a national scale.
For the present, and for the United States, the myth
commands the controlling position. What will dislodge
it? I'm convinced that only widespread devastation
visited on the U.S. itself, through economic collapse,
natural (or unnatural) catastrophe, or a final war of
unspeakably awful consequence, will finally force our
leaders and many Americans to surrender the myth that
has sustained them for so long. And in such a case, it
won't be a choice to acknowledge the truth at long
last. The devastation will be so immense that the myth
will be rendered entirely irrelevant, a kind of
unutterably grisly, sick, pointless joke. I would be
profoundly grateful to be in error on this point; I do
not think I am.
Even now, we could choose differently, but there are
almost no signs that most Americans are willing to
consider the possibility. Certainly, our leaders are
not. And even if we do not make a different choice, we
may have years and even decades before the worst
consequences are felt. It is impossible to know the
details in advance given the huge number of variables
involved.
For the moment, we are left with a nation and a
government that is as I described it close to four
years ago:
If you have ever wondered how a serial murderer -- a
murderer who is sane and fully aware of the acts he
has committed -- can remain steadfastly convinced of
his own moral superiority and show not even the
slightest glimmer of remorse, you should not wonder
any longer.
The United States government is such a murderer. It
conducts its murders in full view of the entire world.
It even boasts of them. Our government, and all our
leading commentators, still maintain that the end
justifies the means -- and that even the slaughter of
hundreds of thousands of innocents is of no moral
consequence, provided a sufficient number of people
can delude themselves into believing the final result
is a "success."
...
We can appeal all we want to "American exceptionalism,"
but any "exceptionalism" that remains ours is that of
a mass murderer without a soul, and without a
conscience. ... It is useless to appeal to any
"American" sense of morality: we have none. It does
not matter how immense the pile of corpses grows: we
will not surrender or even question our delusion that
we are right, and that nothing we do can be
profoundly, unforgivably wrong.
Arthur Silber can be reached at
arthur480@yahoo.com
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