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05-27-2007, 06:15 AM #1OPSenior Member
Are the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq the Beginning of the End of the American Empire?
By JAMES PETRAS
Washington outlined in explicit language its plans to engage in sequential wars in the Middle East, Southwest and Northeast Asia and the Caribbean. Under the offensive military doctrine of 'Pre-emptive Wars' and the 'Global War against Terrorism', the United States' pursuit of military conquest was backed by Israel, Great Britain and several newly incorporated client states from Eastern Europe. The White House's grandiose scheme of world conquest was orchestrated and pre-maturely celebrated by top Zioncon (Zionist Conservative) officials embedded in the Pentagon, White House and the National Security Council.
The imperial wars of conquest however were stopped literally dead in their tracks at their starting point: Iraq and Afghanistan. Subsequent to the US invasion and occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan, a formidable mass armed resistance emerged from the underground, aided by widespread civilian support. Large majorities of public opinion, major religious communities , trade union militants , small business associations and neighborhood-based community organizations actively and passively opposed the US-led occupation forces at every turn, providing logistical support and intelligence to the armed and non-violent resistance. Similar developments took place at a later stage in Afghanistan. Despite draconian military measures, including the bombing of population centers, systematic mass round-ups of civilians followed by brutal torture, the US military failed to consolidate its rule via puppet regimes. As the resistance grew, Washington's efforts to foment ethnic-religious sectarian warfare and territorial fragmentation failed. By late 2006 it was clear that the imperial army's only territorial conquest was the bunkers in the so-called 'Green Zone'. In 2007 Washington escalated its troop commitments in a desperate effort to fend off impending defeat and to recover massive loss of domestic support.
From a world historical perspective, the Iraqi and Afghan resistance has successfully stymied Washington's pursuit of world domination through a series of offensive wars. The success of the national liberation movements led to the over-extension of the US imperial armed forces * weakening efforts to launch programed ground wars against Iran, Syria and elsewhere. The prolonged resistance led to wholesale domestic opposition in the face of never-ending US casualties and skyrocketing financial costs.
The demoralization of the US infantry and National Guard prevented Washington from following up its failed coup against Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez with a direct military invasion.
The prolonged and deteriorating war in Afghanistan, with the advances of the re-grouped guerrilla fighters especially among the civilian population, has led the US-controlled colonial coalition to engage in indiscriminate bombing of civilians * adding to the growth of the anti-colonial resistance.
The success of the resistance movements in Iraq and Afghanistan and the appeal of their examples has encouraged new formidable anti-colonial struggles, led by Hizbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Palestine, the Islamic Courts Union in Somalia as well as having stiffened the resolve of Iranian leaders to resist US demands to unilaterally suspend their nuclear programs. Further abroad, the weakening of US global military interventionist capacity has taken the heat off of progressive governments in Venezuela and revolutionary Cuba. The consolidation of the Venezuelan nationalist-populist government has had a powerful demonstration impact throughout Latin America, encouraging new anti-imperialist movements and dissident governments in Ecuador and beyond. In an all out battle of ideas, programs, foreign aid and solidarity, Bush is losing out to President Chavez: Unable to launch a full-scale military invasion, to eliminate the Chavez government, Washington has failed to match Venezuela's vast petrol subsidies and promising alternative integration proposals: ALBA has prevailed over ALCA.
The failure of Washington's will to a world empire has led to the shrinking of power relative to its global situation prior to 2001. And in large part that is due to the fighting capacity and organized resistance in Iraq and Afghanistan: Both have demonstrated that despite the great store of modern technological warfare and monopolies of media propaganda, wars are decided on the ground, by the popular majorities directly affected. It is they who set in motion the conversion of enthusiastic domestic majorities for the US war to demoralized minorities; it is they who have given backbone and resiliency to the Middle Eastern governments who vacillate between collaboration with and rejection of the colonial powers.fishman3811 Reviewed by fishman3811 on . Are the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq the Beginning of the End of the American Empire? By JAMES PETRAS Washington outlined in explicit language its plans to engage in sequential wars in the Middle East, Southwest and Northeast Asia and the Caribbean. Under the offensive military doctrine of 'Pre-emptive Wars' and the 'Global War against Terrorism', the United States' pursuit of military conquest was backed by Israel, Great Britain and several newly incorporated client states from Eastern Europe. The White House's grandiose scheme of world conquest was orchestrated and Rating: 5
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05-27-2007, 06:16 AM #2Senior Member
Are the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq the Beginning of the End of the American Empire?
I dont think its the end. Not at all.
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05-27-2007, 06:30 AM #3Senior Member
Are the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq the Beginning of the End of the American Empire?
Whats a good thing? The US ending?
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05-27-2007, 06:37 AM #4Senior Member
Are the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq the Beginning of the End of the American Empire?
LMAO! Empire? We go into countries like this.....spend millions/billions to help rebuild.......leave and watch booming economies. Look at Japan/Germany.....hell, half of Europe as far as that's concerned. IF we were this big "Empire" they would be states!
They talk of poor Venezuela where the state is taking over most anything they want. Seizing businesses, shutting down stations that are anti-goverment.
Japan, Germany created their own constitutions and had their elections and are INDEPENDENT of the U.S.; Iraq and Afghanistan just did the same.
What we have here is a definate anti-American hate rag.
Have a good one!:s4:
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05-27-2007, 06:45 AM #5Senior Member
Are the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq the Beginning of the End of the American Empire?
and its coming from people who dont even live in the US
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05-27-2007, 07:24 AM #6Senior Member
Are the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq the Beginning of the End of the American Empire?
That article is full of as much bullshit as articles written by people who love the Bush administrations every move. There are two evils... being extremely liberal and being extremely conservative. Neither is better!! The only way to go is the way of moderation.
What's the moderate view? Well, its the one most of the world supported us in. Afghanistan was a just war. They were harboring those who not only threatened us, but obviously had the means to knock down buildings in our largest cities and kill thousands. We had to defend ourselves. The world understood.
Iraq was a huge mistake on the part of the idiotic Bush Administration. Saddam was no real threat to us, and we have no business being there... and the rest of the world knows it.
And what sources does this liberal idiot have saying we were about to invade Venezuelan? Even if we did provide support to local opponents of Chavez (which I have no idea whether we did or didn't) that wouldn't mean we were going to invade. We have supported coups of countries before without necessarily invading if it failed.
In short, that article is liberal propaganda bullshit as stupid as the bullshit the conservative propaganda machine puts out.
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05-27-2007, 08:05 AM #7Member
Are the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq the Beginning of the End of the American Empire?
Brilliantly put, Jsn. Hell, I'm not even going to say anything about that middle paragraph.
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05-27-2007, 03:35 PM #8Senior Member
Are the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq the Beginning of the End of the American Empire?
James Petras is not simply a "liberal". He is an avowed Marxist.
James Petras, a retired Bartle Professor (Emeritus) of Sociology at Binghamton University, SUNY, New York, USA, and adjunct professor at Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia,Canada. He describes himself as a "revolutionary and anti-imperialist" activist and writer.
James Petras - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A google search of his name turns up numerous articles pointing to his erroneous facts and figures, as well as others that refute his positions.
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