May 12, 2008
New Buchanan Book: Anglo-American Ascendancy Lost in Unnecessary Wars
By Paul Craig Roberts
In a new book that will infuriate
the fake conservatives who inhabit the Republican Party,
Patrick J. Buchanan documents how British
self-righteousness, delusion, and hubris destroyed both
the British Empire and Western ascendancy in two
unnecessary wars launched by a small cabal of morons
that ruled Britain Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War
shows
that the two world wars that destroyed European
civilization began when England declared war on Germany,
thus dragging in the Empire, Commonwealth, and United
States. This was a strategic blunder unparalleled in
history. Mighty Britain emerged from World War II as an
American dependency.
Buchanan cites such British
notables as F.J.P. Veale, B.H. Liddell Hart, and C.P.
Snow to document that it was Winston Churchill who
committed, in Veale’s words,
"the first deliberate breach of the fundamental rule
of civilized warfare that hostilities must only be waged
against the enemy combatant forces." It was
Churchill, not Hitler, who first targeted civilian
populations in World War II and caused the structure of
civilized warfare to collapse in ruins.
The Americans quickly adopted
Churchill’s criminal policy of attacking civilians,
culminating in the outrageous use of nuclear weapons
against two Japanese cities, the slaughter of Vietnamese
civilians, and the ongoing slaughter of Afghan and Iraqi
civilians.
A popular American myth is that
"the greatest generation" saved the world from Nazi
tyranny. As Buchanan points out, the fact of the matter
is that the Normandy invasion in June 1944 played
little, if any, role in Germany’s defeat. By the end of
1942 Hitler had lost World War II at Stalingrad, long
before any American troops appeared on the scene. What
the Normandy invasion achieved 18 months later was to
keep the Red Army from over-running all of Europe.
Although Buchanan’s book is about
how the British destroyed themselves, Buchanan is
clearly thinking about America. In the closing pages
Buchanan shows how the Bush Regime has broken from the
sound policy of President Reagan and is replicating the
British folly of self-destruction. "There is hardly a
blunder of the British Empire we have not replicated,"
laments Buchanan.
The distinct American hubris that
we are "the indispensable nation" and the
braggadocio that we are an "omnipower" has us
overcommitted in alliances that we cannot fulfill.
Despite 25 percent of the Iraqi population killed,
injured or displaced, the "world’s only superpower"
cannot even control Baghdad. To deal with the pointless
war we started in Afghanistan, we have had to sucker our
NATO allies into a conflict that is no concern of
theirs. Militarily overextended and with a faltering
economy and collapsing currency, the cabal of morons
that rules America still hopes to attack Iran, Syria,
and to drive Hezbollah from Lebanon. American idiots in
think tanks are busy at work drawing up plans about how
the US is going to check China and prevent her emergence
as a power beyond US control. The Republican
presidential candidate has boasted that he will
challenge Russia and bring Putin to heel.
Amazing. The world’s greatest
debtor is going to take on the two powerful countries
with the largest trade surpluses. According to the World
Factbook, an annual publication of the CIA, Russia’s
2007 current account surplus is $465 billion and China’s
is $363 billion. In contrast, the US current account
deficit is $987 billion--an amount larger that the total
deficits of all other countries in the world combined.
The out-of-pocket and already incurred future cost of
Bush’s wars of aggression is between $3 and $5 trillion,
every dollar of which must be borrowed. That comes on
top of the unfunded liabilities of the US government
totaling $53 trillion. By any account the US is the
world’s worst credit risk. The "mighty" US relies
on foreigners to finance its consumption, its wars, and
the daily operations of its government.
When Buchanan looks at the
collection of idiots that comprise America’s ruling
class, he despairs.
In truth, American power is already
broken, and the country is already lost.
The country is lost, because the
brownshirt Bush Regime has destroyed the US
Constitution with the complicity of the opposition party
and the federal courts. There is no organized power that
can restore the Constitution or even much concern that
it has been overthrown.
The country is broken, because
American capitalists have moved offshore so many US
manufacturing, engineering, and research jobs that US
imports now exceed US industrial production. American
dependency on imported manufactured goods, advanced
technology goods, and energy is astounding.
Moreover, the dependency is
escalating dramatically. In March 2002, prior to Bush’s
decision to impose Israel’s will on the Middle East, oil
was $25 a barrel. Today oil is $125 a barrel, a
five-fold increase that has seen our oil import bill
rise from $145 billion in 2006 to $456 billion
presently, a $300 billion addition to a trade deficit
that was already running $700-$800 billion annually.
There is no possibility of the US
closing its trade deficit. The US is able to survive
such enormous deficits only because the US dollar is the
world reserve currency. This role for the dollar is
nearing an end as the world looks for more stable stores
of value. Although oil is still nominally priced in
dollars, in reality it is being priced in euros as oil
producers raise the dollar price with a view to keeping
their oil revenues at a constant purchasing power in
euros.
When the dollar loses its reserve
currency role, foreign financing for US trade and budget
deficits will evaporate. US living standards will
collapse, and the indispensable omnipower will be just
another washed up country.
For a world weary of "American
exceptionalism," this can’t happen too soon.
Paul Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s
first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall
Street Journal. He has held numerous academic
appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies,
Georgetown University, and Senior Research Fellow,
Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded
the Legion of Honor by French President Francois
Mitterrand. He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author
with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.