South Korea cannot choose to
make peace with North Korea without the consent of a foreign power that keeps
thirty thousand troops in South Korea, makes South Korea pay much of the cost
of housing them, commands the South Korean military in war, holds veto power at
the United Nations, and is not accountable to the International Criminal Court
or the International Court of Justice.
The same foreign power has
troops in almost every nation on earth, significant bases in about half the
nations on earth, and the earth itself divided up into command zones for
control and domination. It dominates outerspace for military purposes, and
global finances for the purpose of extracting wealth from places with high
levels of poverty. It builds bases where it wants, and installs weapons where
it wants — including illegally placing nuclear weapons in various countries.
For that matter, it violates laws when and where it wants.
Supposedly neutral nations
like Ireland, nonetheless, allow the U.S. military to use their airports, and —
for that matter — allow U.S. police to search everyone in Dublin airport before
they fly to the United States. Many things can be questioned and condemned in
Irish corporate media, but not the U.S. military and its use of Ireland. Some
of the relevant corporations, such as those controlling billboards near Shannon
Airport, are actually based in the United States.
This contemporary reality is
a seamless part of a history to the earlier parts of which we’re supposed to apply
the term “colonial.” Prior to “settling” the United States, some of the early
settlers had previously “settled” Ireland, where the British had paid rewards
for Irish heads and body parts, just as they later would for Native American
scalps. The United States for many years sought out immigrants who could
“settle” on native land. Genocide in North America was a part of U.S. culture
from before the United States up through the 1890s. Colonists fought a war,
still very much glorified, in which the French defeated the British, but in
which the colonists did not cease to be colonists. Rather, they gained the
opportunity to attack the nations to their west.
The United States wasted no
time in attacking Canada to its north, the Spanish to its south, nations across
the western expanse, and eventually Mexico as well. The exhaustion of North
American land altered U.S. colonization, but hardly slowed it down.
Colonization moved on to Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam, Hawaii, Alaska, the
Philippines, Latin America, and ever farther afield. “Indian Country,” in the
dialect of the U.S. military today, refers to distant lands to be attacked with
dozens of weapons named for Native American nations.
The banning of military
conquest also altered U.S. colonization, but actually sped it up rather than
impeding it. The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 ended the practice of treating the
conquest of territory as legal. This meant that colonized nations could break
free and not be immediately conquered by a different aggressor. The United Nations
General Assembly building was designed with 20 extra seats beyond the 51 for
existing nations. By the time it was built, there were 75 nations, by 1960
there were 107. The total shot upward from there to quickly reach 200 and fill
the seats that had been intended for a public audience.
Nations became formally
independent, but they did not cease being colonized. The conquest of territory
was still permitted for certain exceptional cases, such as Israel, and in
particular for U.S. military bases, which would exist within supposedly
independent states.
During World War II the U.S.
Navy seized the small Hawaiian island of Koho’alawe for a weapons testing range
and ordered its inhabitants to leave. The island has been devastated. In 1942, the U.S. Navy displaced Aleutian Islanders.
Those practices did not end in 1928 or in 1945 for the United States, as for
most others. President Harry Truman made up his mind that the 170 native
inhabitants of Bikini Atoll had no right to their island in 1946. He had them
evicted in February and March of 1946, and dumped as refugees on other islands
without means of support or a social structure in place. In the coming years,
the United States would remove 147 people from Enewetak Atoll and all the
people on Lib Island. U.S. atomic and hydrogen bomb testing rendered various
depopulated and still-populated islands uninhabitable, leading to further
displacements. Up through the 1960s, the U.S. military displaced hundreds of
people from Kwajalein Atoll. A super-densely populated ghetto was created on
Ebeye.
On Vieques,
off Puerto Rico, the U.S. Navy displaced thousands of inhabitants between 1941
and 1947, announced plans to evict the remaining 8,000 in 1961, but was forced
to back off and — in 2003 — to stop bombing the island. On nearby Culebra, the
Navy displaced thousands between 1948 and 1950 and attempted to remove those
remaining up through the 1970s. The Navy is right now looking at the island
of Pagan as a possible replacement for Vieques, the
population already having been removed by a volcanic eruption. Of course, any
possibility of return would be greatly diminished.
Beginning during World War
II but continuing right through the 1950s, the U.S. military displaced a
quarter million Okinawans, or half the population, from their land, forcing
people into refugee camps and shipping thousands of them off to Bolivia — where
land and money were promised but not delivered.
In 1953, the United States
made a deal with Denmark to remove 150 Inughuit people from Thule, Greenland,
giving them four days to get out or face bulldozers. They are being denied the
right to return. People are rightly offended when Donald Trump proposes to
purchase Greenland, but for the most part oblivious to the U.S. military
presence there and the history of how it got there.
Between 1968 and 1973, the
United States and Great Britain exiled all 1,500 to 2,000 inhabitants of Diego
Garcia, rounding people up and forcing them onto boats while killing their dogs
in a gas chamber and seizing possession of their entire land for the use of the
U.S. military.
The South Korean government,
which evicted people for U.S. base expansion on the mainland in 2006, has, at
the behest of the U.S. Navy, in recent years devastated a village, its coast,
and 130 acres of farmland on Jeju Island in order to provide the United States
with another massive military base.
Virtually every new base, in
Italy or Niger or anywhere else, displaces people, albeit within the nation
occupied. And every new base displaces sovereignty, independence, and the rule
of law. Persian Gulf kingdoms resist democracy with the help of U.S. bases, but
they give up independence in the process and contribute to the status of the
United States as a nation above the rule of law. At the same time, U.S. bases
fuel popular hostility toward the United States and toward local governments.
U.S. bases are intended to
be permanent, and so apparently are some of the wars they’re engaged in. The
U.S. media writes about Trump’s “opposition” to endless wars, even while
completely smothering any possibility of actually ending any of them. Permanent
wars for effective control of a handful of places still lying somewhat outside
U.S. influence that have been continued in the past three years by the U.S.
government include wars in Afghanistan, Yemen, Syria, Iraq, Libya, and Somalia.
The United States is not the
only colonizer, but it does possess some 95 percent of the world’s foreign
military bases. And it does operate on the basis of a belief in its own unique
superiority. At World BEYOND War, we believe that a step toward holding the
U.S. government to the rule of law, and a step toward abolishing war, is the
closure of foreign bases. So, we are working to
oppose new bases and close old ones around the world. This can be done.
Numerous bases have been stopped or shut down.
Approaches we are taking
include public education and nonviolent activism directed against bases and
militarism in general. We also try to use the environmental damage of military
bases against them. U.S. bases have poisoned ground water in numerous nations
with “forever chemicals,” yet those nations and the relevant localities have
been denied all right to compensation or control over their land.
We’re also trying an
approach that could turn U.S. propaganda against itself. A pretense is
generally maintained that having U.S. bases on every speck of land somehow
makes the United States safer. A measure we supported was recently passed by the U.S.
House and then scrapped to please the Senate. It would have required the
Pentagon to explain how each foreign base makes the United States safer, rather
than endangering it or having no effect on its “security.” Research would show
that in fact — among many other disastrous impacts — foreign bases make the
colonizers less safe than they could be without them.
The immediate opportunity,
of course, is to close the U.S. bases in Iraq as demanded by Iraq. The world
and the U.S. public need to join Iraq in that demand.
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