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Scandal Rocks Washington
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: The
Ghost of China's Grim History
The US has
lost one war and is fast losing a second, yet what really upsets
Americans seems to be a juicy sexual scandal; beautiful female general
groupies; US brass in Tampa, Florida, living like potentates; the
FBI investigating CIA; and the fall of Americas most important
intelligence official, former top general, David Petraeus.
After Americas
ugly, dreary election, its fun seeing the great and good caught
with their pants down. Petreaus slinky paramour, the ambitious
femme fatale, Paula Broadwell, is easy on the eyes. So are voluptuous
Tampa temptresses Jill Kelley and her sister who ignited this scandal
by sending catty emails to the FBI.
What business
has FBI in monitoring extra-marital escapades of the military brass
provided they are not bedding Chinese or Russian agents?
This combined
boudoir farce and inter-governmental feud raises serious questions
about the emergence of Americas surveillance state.
We see the
FBI reading thousands of Petraeus emails and those of another
senior officer dragged into the scandal, Marine Gen. John Allen,
the US commander in Afghanistan. This is the same FBI long locked
in bitter institutional rivalry with CIA.
Meanwhile,
CIA is being transformed from an intelligence gathering and analysis
agency into a militarized outfit with its own fleets of lethal drones
and combat units that will rival that other top secret military
organization, the Joint Special Operations Command Americas
version of Britains elite killers, the SAS.
Thanks to legal
changes made by the Bush administration during the post-9/11 hysteria,
the FBI, CIA and National Security Agency can read emails and text
messages of anyone vaguely termed a threat to national security.
Anyone who has ever sent a message to the person of interest can
also be investigated, and anyone who has sent them email, and so
on.
Welcome the
era of Big Internet Brother.
Theres
an even bigger question. Every war produces generals glorified into
heroes by government, media and their own public relations efforts.
Gen. Petraeus, who commanded US occupation forces in first Iraq,
then Afghanistan, continues to be hailed as a military genius
and war hero.
Look again.
Petraeus and his fellow generals used every weapon in the US arsenal
against Iraqs eleven resistance groups (deceptively misnamed
al-Qaida by Washington), including the mass ethnic cleansing
of two million Sunni Iraqis, death squads, torture, and brutal reprisals.
UN officials
assert that some 500,000 Iraqis, mostly children, died due to the
US-led blockade under Saddam Hussein. At least another half million
died from the US 2003 invasion until 2011. Yet after all this, the
US forces were forced pull out of Iraq at the end of what Saddam
Hussein vowed would be the Mother of All Battles.
Cost of Iraq:
$1.6-2.4 trillion; almost 5,000 US soldiers dead, 35,000 seriously
wounded. Some triumph. America has yet to accept the painful fact
that while it won all the tactical engagements in Iraq, it lost
the bigger war.
Petraeus was
then sent to work his magic in Afghanistan before returning to Washington
to head CIA. There, the brainy general, who had a knack for self-promotion
and public relations, tried again to crush the Pashtun resistance
by massive bombardments, billions in high tech gear, reprisals that
wiped out entire villages, search and destroy missions. Torture
and executions were as common as during the Soviet occupation.
A disgusted
American public now wants out of the endless 11-year conflict, the
longest in US history. Most of the US garrison is supposed to withdraw
by 2014. Petraeus and other senior US commanders had the audacity
to publically criticize President Barack Obamas withdrawal
plans. They should have been dismissed at once, but the president
lacked the nerve to stand up to the ever-more powerful military
establishment. The incoming US commander in Afghanistan just said
he wants to keep US troops there after 2014.
Cost
of Afghan War: $1 trillion and rising. Afghan dead unknown. US military,
some 2,100 dead, 17,000 wounded.
The US military
has clearly been fought to a standstill in Afghanistan by medieval
tribesmen with AK-47s, reconfirming its name - graveyard
of empires.
As for the
military genius of Gen. Petraeus, recall the famous cry of King
Pyrrhus, one more such victory and we are lost.
November
19, 2012
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Eric Margolis
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