24 January 2022

Untangling Ourselves from the Dark Side

Yin/Yang

[Photo: ‘Dark Side’ by Soul Riser, Deviant Art.]

By Robert C. Koehler
Source:  CommonWonders

Editor's Note
We stand on the brink of war with Russia. Be not fooled by the soft-peddling out of Washington. Nor discount it because you think the corporate media is bloviating to get eyes on screens. I believe the threat of a major conflagration with Russia should they (Putin) decide to up the ante and invade Ukraine. I might add that Russia plays with multiple decks, aka “hybrid warfare”, and has already engaged against the U.S. directly in multiple venues — the 2016 and 2020 elections, and possibly the cyberattacks on the power grid and businesses. We are now hearing the question of whether Putin is willing to return to a “cold war” footing. It seems to me that we have never gotten out of that relationship.

It seems to me that we (and the rest of the world) really need to reframe our approach to dealing with other nations. The broad application of capitalism has us on an inherently conflict-oriented path. On the one hand, we commodify everything, and treating certain things as precious or in limited supply raises the value/price of something. On the other hand, massive consumption equals profit and is based on the assumption of limitless supply. However, we live in a closed environment, and when many natural resources are gone (or degraded beyond safe use). War ideology is based upon a scarcity mentality, capitalism upon an abundance mentality. Neither is appropriate, nor safe for humanity. But what has happened in the U.S. anyway is that war has been capitalized in numerous ways making war profitable for military-related industries (including construction companies that rebuild after conflict), and very profitable for financiers.

Politicians are caught in a bind between deep-pocketed M-I (military-industrial) corporations and desperate constituents. M-I corporations have broken up manufacturing of military items (planes, bombs, bullets, etc) across the 50 states making them significant employers virtually everywhere in the U.S. Threats to close these facilities are a significant motivator to continue to both fund the Pentagon at an ever-increasing level and support endless military intervention and war.

To break this cycle, leaders across the globe need to seek common ground and common good. In a world where we are hitting the limits of our resources and ecosystems are in decline, we cannot survive long-term using the existing patterns. We cannot afford the cost, waste, and destructiveness of war.  How we as a nation, as well as other peoples across the globe, come to this new perspective has me stumped, but we must find a way forward.

Robert C. Koehler

Guess what? I direct the following insight to, among others, the U.S. Congress, which annually and without comment, with only a few objectors, passes a trillion-dollar (and growing) military budget, by far the largest such budget on Planet Earth.

“You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war.”

The words are those of Albert Einstein, in a letter to a congressman 75 years ago. He adds, pointing out a truth that is still waiting to resonate culturally and politically: “The very prevention of war requires more faith, courage and resolution than are needed to prepare for war.”

These words take a while to sink in, but as they do, some crucial — crucially ignored — realities emerge. The first is that waging war, or not, is a choice. Mainstream geopolitical reporting pretty much ignores this miniscule reality and covers the ever-simmering possibility of war — here, there and everywhere — as though it’s beyond human control, like a hurricane or a flood or a volcanic eruption. It’s certainly beyond the control of ordinary folks like you and me, who are spectators in the process and nothing more.

Robert Farley, for instance, writing at Business Insider about the planet’s vulnerable geopolitical future, discusses what he calls the “most dangerous flashpoints for the eruption of World War III” — disputed and problematic sites such as Ukraine, Taiwan, Iran and North Korea — where the big powers . . . Russia, China, the USA . . . might lose it with one another.

I’m not criticizing his political analysis, simply noting his portrayal of the planet’s dominant nations as smugly objective forces. For instance: “The pandemic isn’t over,” he writes, “but it is becoming part of the background noise of international politics, and great powers are recalibrating and reasserting their interests.”

What “interests” is he talking about? The unaddressed assumption here is that there is nothing more than a simplistic military-political will operating at the national level across Planet Earth, a will that is only capable of asserting itself through violence, including nuclear violence, and with seriously limited capacity for self-reflection and no complex understanding even of its own interests. And this is our future: We’re probably going to blow ourselves up.

And, my God, there is indeed way too much truth to this, but if the mainstream coverage surrenders to this partial truth and leaves Einstein out — leaves out the fact that war is never inevitable and always a choice — the truth threatens to become absolute. This is what I truly fear.

The interest of power, when it reaches a certain level of dominance, is more power. Period. And confronting this interest requires the courage Einstein spoke of. Here’s an example of the difficulty involved in doing so, even if you are, let us say, president of the United States, and happen to believe in the U.N. Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, which became international law in 1970. Article VI of the treaty reads:

“Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control.”

Uh . . . that was half a century ago.

Kim Petersen, addressing the matter, noted that Barack Obama — the guy who, before he took office, promised to do such things as close the Guantanamo Bay detention camp — also expressed commitment to a reduction in the country’s stock of nuclear weapons. What he wound up doing instead, Peterson writes, is “authorizing a $1 trillion nuclear modernization.”

So what’s going on? “You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war.” Electing a president who promises hope and change obviously isn’t enough. The reality of our government is deep. There is a dark side, much of which is “classified,” and it could well be that the dark side rules, no matter who is president. But acknowledging this doesn’t mean surrendering to the inevitability of World War III — rather, just the opposite. Only by acknowledging that we live in something that isn’t really (or fully) a democracy can we truly start to become players in the planet’s future.

Here’s how Dick Cheney put it when he spoke on “Meet the Press” several days after 9/11: “We also have to work, though, sort of the dark side, if you will. . . . A lot of what needs to be done here will have to be done quietly, without any discussion, using sources and methods that are available to our intelligence agencies, if we’re going to be successful. That’s the world these folks operate in, and so it’s going to be vital for us to use any means at our disposal.”

Now it’s twenty years later. The U.S., operating on the dark side — and with the participation of four presidents — has dropped 337,000 bombs on countries across the Middle East, as well as legitimized torture in its secret prisons, in the process feeding and expanding terrorism, i.e., war itself. Waging war means waging terror. It means operating on the dark side.

This is not how we will survive. This is not our future. This is not our choice. We have enough of a democracy to listen to Einstein.

“The very prevention of war requires more faith, courage and resolution than are needed to prepare for war.”

Robert C. Koehler
Robert C. Koehler

Robert Koehler, syndicated by PeaceVoice, is a Chicago award-winning journalist and editor. His book, Courage Grows Strong at the Wound is available. Contact him at [email protected] or visit his website at commonwonders.com.



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Posted January 24, 2022 by Rowan Wolf in category "History and Patterns", "Robert C. Koehler", "Russia", "Ukraine", "War and Conflict