The nauseating truth: The pretense laid out at
the beginning of Obama’s speech was that the US government is engaged in “the
pursuit of peace in an imperfect world.”
By Bill Van Auken
September 23, 2011
President
Obama delivered an empty and arrogant sermon to the United Nations Wednesday,
laced with platitudes about “peace” that were designed to mask Washington’s
predatory policies.
The American president
received a tepid response from the assembled heads of state, foreign ministers
and UN delegates. Not a single line in his speech evoked applause. The novelty
of two years ago, when Obama made his first appearance before the body posing
as the champion of multilateral-ism in contrast to Bush, has long since worn
off.
As the world quickly
learned, changing the occupant of the White House did little to shift the
direction of American foreign policy or curb the spread of American militarism.
The immediate purpose of Obama’s 47-minute address was to supplement a behind-the-scenes campaign of bullying and intimidation aimed at forcing the Palestinian Authority to drop its plan to seek a UN Security Council vote on recognition of Palestine as a sovereign member state.
Washington has vowed to
veto any bid for Palestinian statehood if it comes to the Security Council, a
move that would only underscore the real character of US imperialist policy in
the Middle East and the hypocrisy of its claims to identify with the
revolutionary upheavals of the Arab masses.
The speech and Obama’s defense of the veto threat served to accomplish the same purpose, further diminishing the US president’s popularity in the Arab world. According to a recent poll, his favorable rating in the region has fallen from roughly 50 percent when he took office to barely 10 percent, even lower than George W. Bush in his second term.
Obama rushed from the
podium at the General Assembly hall to a meeting and joint appearance with
Benyamin Netanyahu.
The Israeli prime
minister praised Obama’s remarks and made it clear that the two are working on
a joint strategy to muscle Palestine Authority head Mahmoud Abbas into dropping
the statehood bid. It was reported Thursday that there were efforts to get the
Palestinian delegation to make an entirely symbolic plea for recognition, while
agreeing to postpone any vote until after the resumption of US-brokered
negotiations with Israel.
There have been two
decades of such talks, which have achieved nothing, while Israel has
relentlessly expanded Zionist settlements in the occupied West Bank and
Jerusalem. Since the onset of negotiations in 1991, the number of settlers has
more than doubled, while the West Bank has been internally divided by
settlements, security roads and checkpoints as well as the apartheid security
wall separating it from Israel.
Obama’s remarks in the UN
speech represented an even further accommodation to Israel compared to his
proposal in May for a resumption of talks, which he then said should be based
upon pre-1967 borders with “mutually agreed swaps.”
That statement, which implicitly supported Israel’s demand to retain existing settlements, merely reiterated the official policy of the US government since the Clinton administration. Nonetheless, the mere reference to borders provoked a storm of criticism from Netanyahu, the Israeli right, and the Republican Party.
In his speech to the UN,
Obama mentioned neither the 1967 borders nor any proposal to halt the expansion
of settlements on the West Bank. Instead, he presented the basis for proposed
negotiations as:
“Israelis must know that any agreement provides assurances for their security. Palestinians deserve to know the territorial basis of their state.”
As the rest of the US
president’s remarks made clear, both those conditions are to be dictated by
Israel.
While behind the scenes
US officials are reportedly threatening the Palestinian Authority with cutting
off all US aid if it goes ahead with the request for recognition, in his speech
Obama described a turn to the UN as a “short cut” that would accomplish
nothing.
“Peace will not come through statements and resolutions at the UN ~ if it were that easy, it would have been accomplished by now.”Indeed, scores of UN resolutions on the plight of the Palestinians have been repudiated and ignored by both Israel and Washington. The US has used its veto in the Security Council to kill scores more.
Evidently responding to
the right-wing criticism of Republican presidential hopefuls, who have
denounced him for “throwing Israel under the bus” with his 1967 borders remark
last May, Obama went out of his way to dismiss the historical grievances of the
Palestinian people, while identifying unconditionally with Israel.
Of the Palestinians, he
said only that they deserved a “sovereign state of their own” and they “have
seen that vision delayed for too long.”
This was followed by a
declaration that
“America’s commitment to Israel’s security is unshakable, and our friendship with Israel is deep and enduring.”
He continued by
describing Israel as a country “surrounded by neighbors that have waged
repeated wars against it,” whose “citizens have been killed by rockets fired at
their houses and suicide bombs on their buses.”
He referred to Israel as
a “small country” in a world “where leaders of much larger nations threaten to
wipe it off of the map.” And he wound up by invoking the Holocaust.
ED: I had promised myself to
leave Obama’s idiot comments alone, not respond, but THAT last invocation of
the Holocaust truly made me want to gag. I imagine this unimaginative speech,
full of empty platitudes and lies, was written by Netanyahu’s writers!
“These facts cannot be
denied,” he said. One would never guess from this selection of “facts” that
some 4 million Palestinians live under the oppression and constant violence of
Israeli occupation, and that another 5 million are refugees, driven from their
homeland.
Nor for that matter,
would one have any inkling of the constant wars that “little Israel,” with its
elastic borders, has waged against its neighbors. Among the more recent are the
2006 war against Lebanon, which left 1,200 civilians dead and much of the
country’s infrastructure in ruins, and the 2008 “Operation Cast Lead,” against
Gaza, which claimed the lives of nearly 1,500 Palestinians, compared to 13
Israelis.
With a tone of
exasperation, Obama acknowledged that “for many in this hall,” the Palestinian
question was the issue that “stands as a test” for Washington’s claims to
champion human rights and democracy.
In reality, however, the
rest of the speech proved just as revealing in terms of the hypocrisy and
imperialist interests that pervade Washington’s policies all over the world.
The pretense laid out at the beginning of Obama’s speech was that the US government is engaged in “the pursuit of peace in an imperfect world.” The address included a trite refrain, repeated three times: “peace is hard.”
Fleshing out this theme,
Obama pointed to the partial troop withdrawals from the
eight-and-a-half-year-old war and occupation in Iraq and the decade-old war in
Afghanistan. He bragged that by the end of the year, only 90,000 US troops will
be deployed in these wars.
ED: But did he mention
drones or private mercenaries? I doubt this.
Washington’s aim, he said, was to forge an “equal partnership” with Iraq “strengthened by our support for Iraq ~ for its government and its security forces,” and an “enduring partnership” with “the people of Afghanistan.” He claimed that these changes proved that “the tide of war is receding.”
The rhetoric about
“partnership”, however, refers to the plans being pursued by the White House
and the Pentagon to keep US troops, CIA operatives and American bases in both
countries, long past the dates set for US withdrawal.
US imperialism is
determined to continue pursuing the goals that underlay the wars from the
outset: hegemonic control over the strategic energy reserves of the Caspian
Basin and the Persian Gulf.
Obama then proceeded to
extol the “Arab Spring,” declaring: “One year ago, the hopes of the people of
Tunisia were suppressed…One year ago, Egypt had known one president for nearly
thirty years.”
ED: Dear lord the man has learned gutless chutzpah at the feet of the best liars, obviously!
Needless to say, the
American president made no reference as to whose support had kept the dictators
Ben Ali and Mubarak in power for so long, nor to the current attempts by
Washington to salvage the regimes they headed and suppress the mass popular
movements that forced their ouster.
From there, he proceeded
to praise the NATO war in Libya, declaring that, by authorizing this
imperialist intervention, “the United Nations lived up to its charter.”
ED: Totally disgusting.
In reality, the war
represented a fundamental violation of the tenets of this charter, which
proclaimed the “sovereign equality” of all member states, demanded that all
disputes be settled peacefully and insisted that member states
“refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.”
ED: Doublespeak anyone?
In the case of Libya, the
US and its NATO allies, proclaiming the threat of an imminent massacre in
Benghazi, procured a resolution authorizing “all necessary measures” to protect
civilians. It utilized this resolution as a cover for a war of regime change.
The NATO powers carried out thousands of air strikes and sent in special forces
troops to organize, train and arm a “rebel” force for a war that has claimed
the lives of tens of thousands of Libyans.
The aim of this war, like
those in Afghanistan and Iraq before it, is domination of strategic energy
reserves ~ as well as inserting Western military power in the midst of a region
facing revolutionary turmoil.
“This is how the
international community is supposed to work,” Obama declared in relation to the
Libyan operation, calling to mind Lenin’s description of the League of Nations,
the UN’s predecessor, as a “thieves’ kitchen.”
Turning to uncompleted business and potential imperialist interventions yet to come, Obama condemned Iran for failing “to recognize the rights of its own people” and calling for the UN impose new sanctions against Syria. “Will we stand with the Syrian people, or with their oppressors?” he demanded.
Given the bloody events
in Yemen, where over 100 civilians have been massacred over the past three
days, Obama could not completely ignore the upheavals against US-backed regimes
in the region. In Yemen, however, there was no invocation to stand against
oppressors, merely a call to “seek a path that allows for a peaceful
transition.”
ED: Using drones? Dear lord
above!
Even more tepid was his
reference to Bahrain, the headquarters of the US 5th Fleet.
“America is a close friend of Bahrain,” he declared. Here, where thousands have been killed, tortured, imprisoned, beaten and fired from their jobs for demanding democratic rights, he proposed merely a “meaningful dialogue,” while justifying the repression by suggesting that Bahrainis were confronting “sectarian forces that would tear them apart.”
The rest of the speech
consisted of a hollow and unconvincing recitation of the usual platitudes.
These included the elimination of nuclear weapons ~ with Washington, sitting on
the greatest nuclear arsenal in the world and the only state ever to use such
weapons lecturing North Korea and Iran.
He inveighed against
poverty and disease and insisted on the need “not to put off action that a
changing climate demands.” Thrown in were calls for the rights of women as well
as gays and lesbians.
On the decisive issue
facing millions of working people in the US and across the globe, Obama
acknowledged that economic “recovery is fragile”, that “too many people are out
of work” and that “too many are struggling to get by.”
Referring to the
multi-trillion-dollar bailout of the banks, he boasted,
“We acted together to avert a depression in 2009” and insisted that “We must take urgent and coordinated action once more.”
But as with all the other
issues raised in the speech, the American president had no “coordinated
action,” no program, and no policy to propose.
In the final analysis,
Obama’s empty rhetoric is a direct expression of the profound crisis gripping
American capitalism and its ruling financial elite as it confronts economic
collapse and the threat of revolutionary upheaval.
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