An excellent article. ― Molly
By Paul
Street
It’s no
wonder that most Americans are clueless about why “their” country is feared and
hated the world over. It remains unthinkable to this day, for example, that any
respectable “mainstream” U.S. media outlet would tell the truth about why the
United States atom-bombed the civilian populations of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
As Gar Alperovitz and other historians have shown, Washington knew that Japan was defeated and ready to
surrender at the end of World War II. The ghastly atomic attacks were meant to
send a signal to Soviet Russia about the post-WWII world: “We run the world.
What we say goes.”
However,
as far as most Americans who even care to remember Hiroshima and Nagasaki know,
the Japanese cities were nuked to save American lives certain to be lost in a
U.S. invasion required to force Japan’s surrender. This false rationalization
was reproduced in the “The
War,” the widely viewed 2007 PBS miniseries
on World War II from celebrated liberal documentarians Ken Burns and Lynn
Novick.
An
early challenge to Uncle Sam’s purported right to manage postwar world affairs
from the banks of the Potomac came in 1950. Korean forces, joined by Chinese
troops, pushed back against the United States’ invasion of North Korea. Washington
responded with a merciless bombing campaign that flattened all of North Korea’s
cities and towns. U.S. Air Force Gen. Curtis LeMay boasted that “we burned down
every town in North Korea” and proudly guessed that Uncle Sam’s gruesome air
campaign, replete with napalm and chemical weapons, murdered 20 percent of
North Korea’s population. This and more was recounted without a hint of
shame—with pride, in fact—in the leading public U.S. military journals of the
time. As Noam Chomsky,
the world’s leading intellectual, explained five years ago, the U.S. was not
content just to demolish the country’s urban zones:
Since everything in North Korea had been destroyed, the
air force was then sent to destroy North Korea’s dams, huge dams that
controlled the nation’s water supply—a war crime for which people had been
hanged in Nuremberg. And these official journals … talk[ed] excitedly about how
wonderful it was to see the water pouring down, digging out the valleys and the
‘Asians’ scurrying around trying to survive. The journals exulted in what this
meant to those Asians—horrors beyond our imagination. It meant the destruction
of their rice crop, which in turn meant starvation. How magnificent!
The
United States’ monstrous massive crimes against North Korea during the early
1950s went down George Orwell’s “memory hole”
even as they took place. To the American public they never occurred—and
therefore hold no relevance to current U.S.-North Korean tensions and
negotiations as far as most good Americans know.
Things
are different in North Korea, where every schoolchild learns about the epic, mass-murderous
wrongdoings of the U.S. “imperialist aggressor” from the early 1950s.
“Just
imagine ourselves in their position,” Chomsky writes. “Imagine what it meant …
for your country to be totally levelled—everything destroyed by a huge
superpower, which furthermore was gloating about what it was doing. Imagine the
imprint that would leave behind.”
That
ugly history rarely makes its way into the “mainstream” U.S. understanding of
why North Korea behaves in “bizarre” and “paranoid” ways toward the U.S.
Outside
the “radical” margins where people read left critics and chroniclers of “U.S.
foreign policy” (a mild euphemism for American imperialism), Americans still
can’t grapple with the monumental and arch-imperialist crime that was “the U.S.
crucifixion of Southeast Asia” (Chomsky’s term at
the time) between 1962 and 1975.
Contrary
to the conventional U.S. wisdom, there was no “Vietnam War.” What really
occurred was a U.S. War on Vietnam,
Laos and Cambodia—a giant and prolonged, multi-pronged and imperial assault
that murdered 5 million southeast Asians along with 58,000 U.S. soldiers. Just
one U.S. torture program alone—the CIA’s Operation
Phoenix—killed more than two-thirds as many Vietnamese as the total U.S.
body count. Unbeknownst to most Americans, the widely publicized My Lai
atrocity was just one of countless mass
racist killings of Vietnamese villagers carried out by U.S. troops
during the crucifixion. Vietnam struggles with an epidemic of birth
defects created by U.S. chemical warfare to this day.
Please
continue this article here: https://www.truthdig.com/articles/the-chomsky-challenge-for-americans-in-understanding-our-dangerous-world/
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