War on error: that’s what friends are for
One billion dollars,
which is less than 0.35 per cent of the money spent on the war in Afghanistan ,
could pay for 2.5 billion meals for hungry people
No-one trades public relations spin more than the United States of America ,
and our elected representatives are enthusiastic buyers no matter what the
price.
It's been reported that US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton faced questions from an audience chosen by the US State Department.
Very democratic. What else was chosen by the US State Department? The
questions? "You are free to ask what we want you to."
During her televised conversation the Secretary of State said:
".....both Australia and the United States work to advance not
only our own interests as we see them but also to protect friends and allies to
work toward the causes of peace, prosperity and justice for people everywhere.
It's just who we are, it's in our DNA....we know that the relationship and the
treaty alliance between us has really been forged in war but it has been
founded on our shared love of peace. Yes our soldiers have fought side by side
from the trenches of WW1 to the mountains of Afghanistan in defence of democracy
and our common values...."
Remarks like these follow to the letter the "War Made Easy" script (available on youtube). We're
so intoxicated by our "shared love of peace" that we forget how much
"forging our relationship in war" actually costs. During the recent
debate on the war in Afghanistan
Senator Ludlam pointed out that:
....It is estimated that one littoral combat ship costs $613
million. According to World Bank figures, that sum would be enough to educate
6.8 million children in Afghanistan
for nine years - or we could buy one warship. Which investment would do more to
strengthen Afghanistan
and Afghan civil society? The Women's International League for Peace and
Freedom have estimated that $287 billion dollars has been spent on the war in Afghanistan .
Senator Cameron provided us with some of the forward estimates, and they are
breathtaking. This translates to a $300,000 cash payment to everyone in Afghanistan for
the price of the deployment and the war - or, incidentally, a cheque for
$13,400 for every Australian. One billion dollars, which is less than 0.35 per
cent of the money spent on the war in Afghanistan, could pay for 2½ billion
meals for hungry people; 31½ million child immunisations against the six main
childhood diseases of diphtheria, whooping cough, measles, polio, tetanus and
tuberculosis; more than 700,000 family homes; more than 270,000 schools
furnished with desks, chairs and tables; or 53 million children supplied with
schoolbooks for a whole year. This is for $1 billion, around a third of one per
cent of the money that we have spent bombing that country....
The United
States doesn't look at things so rationally.
Instead we get an orchestrated "intimate conversation" with the US
Secretary of State, devoid of detail and substance, aimed at garnering support
from a perceived gullible populace ignorant of or indifferent to the human
costs of drone attacks, corrupt governments and war generally.
But Ms Clinton said she was seeing signs of progress in Afghanistan ,
reaffirmed plans to draw down troops next year and said people on the ground
are telling her that international forces are having an impact despite the
death toll.
What a relief! I'd been concerned that the lives of our fine young
soldiers are being put at risk indefinitely, with no benchmarks set for victory
or defeat in Afghanistan; that after nine years we are not winning the hearts and minds of Afghan
civilians; that Afghan people are calling for the withdrawal of foreign troops;
that Afghans remain deeply
distrustful and resentful of the impact and intent of foreign forces; and that
important concerns raised
by the innocent women and children of Afghanistan are being ignored.
It will be interesting to compare Ms Clinton's assessment with that
of a real "person on the ground" in Afghanistan . Afghan MP Malalai
Joya, who will be speaking at Sydney 's UTS at 5.30 pm next Tuesday, is just
the kind of eye witness, personally and actively involved, who will be able to
corroborate or refute Ms Clinton's sweeping statements.
What she says might also enlighten us about the accuracy and
quality of the arguments sprouted by our elected representatives in the recent
parliamentary "debate" on Afghanistan . They supposedly
justified ongoing bipartisan support for "the mission" (whatever that
actually means: Ms Clinton unfortunately omitted to tell us exactly what it
is). The level of intellectual rigour and honesty in most of our elected
representatives attempts to "get at" the truth during the
"debate" was disappointing to say the least; the average quality was
exemplified by Joanna Gash trotting
out the discredited Bibi
Aisha propaganda from the August 2010 issue of Time Magazine to support our
ongoing involvement. Should we admire "skills" in our pollies like
adroitly "do-se-doing" around questions like the lack of UN Security
Council Resolutions authorising the initial invasion and the fact that other
countries are jumping ship?
We need hard facts about what's happening in Afghanistan , not US
spin or Canberra 's
superficial platitudes. Although she won't be getting a prime time spot with a
hand-picked audience on national TV, Malalai Joya will at least be able to give
us some of those.
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