As some of you may have noticed, (I fear that most did not
even notice) I discontinued my blog postings following my post of "The Silence
is Deafening" when that post did not end that silence.
I
have no desire or intention to discontinue that self-imposed exile, since my
efforts continue to be unrewarding.
However,
when I have an exchange on a topic of interest with a friend and the work of
writing is already largely done, I intent to post for whatever readership may
still remain. And so my exchange follows.
Eric Offner of
Manhasset Hills, NY sent me two e-mails that I quote below:
Sorry about your blog when you could analyze Obama's Tuesday speech and the horror of chemical warfare in Syria and US greatness. You could have explained ten million gallons of Agent Orange, which are killing people to this day. We can include napalm on list of chemicals; depleted uranium munitions can also be included. You know well that one needs clean hands to obtain equitable relief.
Common Dreams: "Halliburton Pleads Guilty to Destroying Evidence in Gulf Disaster."
Another item for your blurb.
$200,000 fine.
I hope this encourages you to resume.
My
response to Offner, who is a Holocaust survivor like me, but first fled to England and then to Brazil before coming to the United States, was:
Your comment makes no sense at all. To savage the country that gave
you and me refuge is a travesty. You particularly had many choices. You could
have made England your home, or Brazil. But you chose the U.S. There must have
been a reason.
Ditto for my relatives who came to the United States after World War I and whose presence here saved my family and me. They chose the U.S. over all other countries, despite the
fact that it always had a lot of warts, not the least of which was its racism
and its anti-Semitism. After all this country was born in slavery and has never
completely shed its past.
But like what Winston Churchill said about Democracy, i.e. "It has been said
that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have
been tried." can also be applied to nations, i.e. the U.S. is the worst country
in the world until we look at the others, most particularly in foreign
policy.
You talk about this country’s sins in Vietnam! Have you looked at the
atrocities committed by the French? I have been to Vietnam, they are bitterer
about the French then about the Americans.
Btu whatever sins we committed more than a half century ago are rather
irrelevant on the question of our role in preventing atrocities in todays
world.
But if you want to go back in history, the most relevant period occurred
almost four score years ago. As Hitler besieged Britain, threatened the whole
world and slaughtered Jews, Gypsies, and countless others, FDR's desire to
assist Britain with arms shipments were opposed by these same isolationist
voices, who wanted us to turn inwards, who proclaimed that our racist policies
at home gave us no warrant to criticize others and besides with unemployment at
record highs we should worry about the home front. Roosevelt had to employ
subterfuge in what he chose to call "lend/lease" to hide the fact
that there was no loan and no lease. He was aiding Britain in its hour of need.
It wasn't enough! Without our entry into the war before it was too late Hitler
would still have prevailed, Russia's heroic defense notwithstanding. But
American isolationism tied Roosevelt's hands, until Japan foolishly solved the
problem for Roosevelt by attacking, followed shortly by a declaration of War by
Germany and Italy. Even then there was little desire to aid the Jews. It
was not our problem.
After the war we declared: "NEVER AGAIN". It was meant not just
to apply to Jews, but to all atrocities against mankind. But the voices of
nationalism, the voices that spoke of "National Interest" domino
theories, and exit strategies, caused us to engage in all the wrong conflicts,
including Vietnam. But even before Vietnam we foolishly arranged for the CIA to overthrow the Democratically elected Prime Minister of Iran, Mohammed Mosaddegh and installed the hated Shah; we overthrew the duly elected government of Chile in 1973 and since Vietnam, we foolishly intervened in Lebanon in
1982, invaded Grenada in 1983, and invaded Panama in 1989.
But when the Rwandan genocide occurred, much to our shame, we sat on our
hands while Tutsi's were slaughtered, but there was no national interest, just
as there was no national interest in preventing the slaughter of Jews and
Gypsies. Much to our credit, we intervened when the breakup of Yugoslavia led
to slaughter in Bosnia and Kosovo. When Clinton with NATO decided on a bombing
campaign that eventually led to a breakup of the country and the end of the
slaughter, we heard "where is the exit strategy", where is the
"National Interest." But it was our finest hour! No boots on the
ground, no American casualties, but mission accomplished!! Not the phony
"Mission Accomplished" of Bush after the fall of Saddam Hussein. Libya too, despite its warts, stopped the slaughter and belongs in the success column.
Obama is up in arms about the use of chemical weapons in Syria. He is right
to be up in arms, because better late than never. But where were we when Saddam
Hussein used chemical weapons against the Kurds in his own country. Where were
we when Saddam used chemical weapons in his war against Iran? Where were we
when Hafez al-Assad, the father of Bashar al-Assad, massacred 20,000
of his own people in Hama in 1982? To quote from The Guardian, "The 1982
massacre is regarded as the single bloodiest assault by an Arab ruler against
his own people in modern times and remains a pivotal event in Syrian
history."
We are told that Syria is a civil war that we should not get caught up in.
But so was Spain a Civil War in the 1930's. Had we taken sides there or when
Mussolini invaded Abyssinia, or when Hitler occupied the Rhineland, the whole
history of the Holocaust and WWII might never have happened.
But is it a Civil War? Have we forgotten its beginnings? How people
peacefully demonstrated, and Bashar al Assad mowed them down just like his
father did 30 years ago. We fight the wrong wars and then use that as an excuse
not to fight the right ones. Bush I was right to fight Iraq for invading a
peaceful neighboring country. Clinton was right to enforce a no-fly zone over
Iraq and sanction them for their treatment of the Kurds. Bush II and the
Congress were even right when they decided that unless Saddam gave up weapons of
mass destruction we would do it for him. And the build up of weapons was
successful in forcing Saddam to let the inspectors in. But when the UN
inspectors found that there were no such weapons the raison
d'être was gone, but Bush didn't care. He wanted the war, and all else was
pretense.
And so because we fought a wrong war, nobody wants to help a people being
slaughtered. When the Left and the Right agree something is wrong. Syria is not
a civil war. It is a revolution. Our failure to arm the secular revolutionaries
has empowered and strengthened the fanatics. Arming the rebels and enforcing a no
fly zone was and is the right thing to do.
It is late, but not too late.
Why should the U.S. be the policeman of the world? Because we can and no one
else can. The world desperately needs a policeman.
As for your comment about laches, you well know that laches applies to a
party seeking relief. The U.S. is not seeking any relief from any judicial body
or from anyone.
Even though I have discontinued my commentaries, Comments,
questions, or corrections, are welcome and will be responded to and distributed
with attribution, unless the writer requests that he/she not be identified.
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