OBAMA
AND ROMNEY CONCUR ON WAR, ASSASSINATION AND REACTION
By
Bill Van Auken . 23 October 2012
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/oct2012/dabe-o23.shtml
In their debate on foreign policy
Monday night, President Barack Obama and his Republican challenger Mitt Romney
voiced nearly identical positions in support of war, illegal killings and
imperialist intervention across the globe.
With just two weeks until the
election, this third and final presidential debate made it clear that the US
political establishment is laying the groundwork for new military interventions
in the aftermath of November 6, and that the American people will have no means
of expressing at the ballot box their opposition to an escalation of global
militarism.
While both Obama and Romney threw in
empty rhetoric about “nation-building at home” and bringing back “good jobs and
rising take-home pay,” the overwhelming theme of this third debate was US
imperialism’s determination to utilize its military superiority to counter the
decline of American capitalism’s position in the world economy and offset the
deepening crisis that began with the Wall Street meltdown of 2008.
In what can only be described as a
degrading and filthy political spectacle, both the questions posed by the
moderator and the answers provided by the candidates of the two major
capitalist parties began with the premise that US imperialism has the
unassailable right to defend its interests by inflicting death and destruction
on anyone or any country that is deemed an obstacle.
No attempt was made to probe the
broader interests of American capitalism underlying the wars, occupations and
assassination campaigns that have dominated world affairs over the past decade.
The impression was promoted that opposing these policies is beyond the pale of
American politics, at once forbidden and futile.
At times, both men sounded more like
Mafia dons than candidates for high office. In his first statement in the
debate, Romney offered his congratulations to Obama for “taking out Osama bin
Laden,” while lamenting that “we can’t kill our way out of this mess.”
For his part, Obama boasted that his
policy in Libya had included “taking out” the country’s former leader, Col.
Muammar Gaddafi, in order to achieve the goal of regime-change. Chiding Romney
for questioning this policy, Obama insisted that he was determined to “make
sure that Gaddafi didn’t stay there… we were going to make sure that we
finished the job.” The result was the savage lynching of Gaddafi a year ago.
Among the most chilling parts of the
debate were those related to Iran, with both candidates once again putting
forward nearly identical policies of aggression and unconditional support for
Israel in the event it launches an unprovoked war.
Obama boasted that his
administration’s unilateral sanctions were “crippling their economy.” He noted
approvingly: “Their currency has dropped 80 percent. Their oil production has
plunged to the lowest level since they were fighting a war with Iraq 20 years
ago. So their economy is in a shambles.”
That such policies mean suffering
and deprivation for tens of millions of Iranian working people was clearly of
no concern to anyone on the platform. Neither was there any questioning of the
legality of this deliberate economic strangulation of another country, which
represents an act of war and a gross violation of international law.
Obama stressed his readiness to
order direct US military intervention, repeating the threat that his
administration would not “take any options off the table” in dealing with Iran,
and that “the clock is ticking” down to another US war of aggression.
Romney had nothing to add, outside
of his insistence that he would have introduced even more punishing economic
sanctions, and sooner than Obama had.
In the segment of the debate dealing
with Syria, what emerged most clearly from the responses of both candidates is
that, behind the pretense of concern over human rights and democracy,
Washington is engaged in a campaign for regime-change, stoking a bloody
sectarian civil war in order to advance its strategic interests in the region.
Romney stated this clearly,
declaring the bloody conflict in Syria “an opportunity for us because Syria
plays an important role in the Middle East, particularly right now.” He
continued, “Syria is Iran’s only ally in the Arab world… And so seeing Syria
remove Assad is a very high priority for us.”
For his part, Obama insisted that
Washington is playing “the leadership role” in the Syrian events and that
“we’re doing exactly what we should be doing to try to promote a moderate
Syrian leadership and an effective transition so that we get Assad out.”
Needless to say, neither candidate
was asked to clarify how Washington could be allied with Al Qaeda and other
Islamist militias in the wars for regime-change in both Libya and Syria, while
simultaneously claiming that these same forces represent the greatest threat to
national security. Probing this contradiction is impermissible, as it would
explode both the “war on terror” pretext for US global aggression over the past
decade and the current pretense of promoting democracy and human rights in the
Middle East wars for regime-change.
Both candidates were once again in
agreement on the question of drone assassinations, which are now being carried
out on a regular basis in Pakistan, Yemen and elsewhere, and have been used to
carry out the extra-judicial murders of American citizens, such as the New
Mexico-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki and his son.
“I believe that we should use any
and all means necessary to take out people who pose a threat to us and our
friends around the world,” declared Romney, effectively threatening millions
with preemptive assassination. “I support that entirely and feel the president
was right to up the usage of that technology,” he added.
Among the unasked questions in
Monday night’s debate was how Obama, who was swept into office on a wave of
popular anger over the militarist aggression and attacks on democratic rights
under his predecessor, George W. Bush, had come to head an administration that
has continued and deepened these policies.
Posing such a question would have
only underscored the inescapable conclusion flowing from the entire debate: the
impossibility of opposing war and imperialist reaction within the framework of
the capitalist two-party system.
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