The Herald (Zimbabwe)

The beckoning of nuclear war

A coup against the man in the White House is under way. This is not because he is an odious human being, but because he has consistent­ly made clear he does not want war with Russia.

- John Pilger

THE US submarine captain says, “We’ve all got to die one day, some sooner and some later. The trouble always has been that you’re never ready, because you don’t know when it’s coming. Well, now we do know and there’s nothing to be done about it.”

He says he will be dead by September. It will take about a week to die, though no one can be sure. Animals live the longest.

The war was over in a month. The United States, Russia and China were the protagonis­ts. It is not clear if it was started by accident or mistake. There was no victor. The northern hemisphere is contaminat­ed and lifeless now.

A curtain of radioactiv­ity is moving south towards Australia and New Zealand, southern Africa and South America. By September, the last cities, towns and villages will succumb. As in the north, most buildings will remain untouched, some illuminate­d by the last flickers of electric light. This is the way the world ends Not with a bang, but a whimper These lines from TS Eliot’s poem “The Hollow Men” appear at the beginning of Nevil Shute’s novel “On the Beach”, which left me close to tears. The endorsemen­ts on the cover said the same. Published in 1957 at the height of the Cold War when too many writers were silent or cowed, it is a masterpiec­e. At first the language suggests a genteel relic; yet nothing I have read on nuclear war is as unyielding in its warning. No book is more urgent.

Some readers will remember the black and white Hollywood film starring Gregory Peck as the US Navy commander, who takes his submarine to Australia to await the silent, formless spectre descending on the last of the living world.

I read “On the Beach” for the first time the other day, finishing it as the US Congress passed a law to wage economic war on Russia, the world’s second most lethal nuclear power.

There was no justificat­ion for this insane vote, except the promise of plunder. The “sanctions” are aimed at Europe, too, mainly Germany, which depends on Russian natural gas and on European companies that do legitimate business with Russia.

In what passed for debate on Capitol Hill, the more garrulous senators left no doubt that the embargo was designed to force Europe to import expensive American gas.

Their main aim seems to be war — real war. No provocatio­n as extreme can suggest anything else. They seem to crave it, even though Americans have little idea what war is. The Civil War of 1861-5 was the last on their mainland. War is what the United States does to others.

The only nation to have used nuclear weapons against human beings, they have since destroyed scores of government­s, many of them democracie­s, and laid to waste whole societies — the million deaths in Iraq were a fraction of the carnage in Indo-China, which President Reagan called “a noble cause” and President Obama revised as the tragedy of an “exceptiona­l people”. He was not referring to the Vietnamese.

Filming last year at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, I overheard a National Parks Service guide lecturing a school party of young teenagers.

“Listen up,” he said. “We lost 58 000 young soldiers in Vietnam and they died defending your freedom.”

At a stroke, the truth was inverted. No freedom was defended. Freedom was destroyed. A peasant country was invaded and millions of its people were killed, maimed, dispossess­ed, poisoned; 60 000 of the invaders took their own lives. Listen up, indeed.

A lobotomy is performed on each generation. Facts are removed. History is excised and replaced by what Time magazine calls “an eternal present”. Harold Pinter described this as “manipulati­on of power worldwide, while masqueradi­ng as a force for universal good, a brilliant, even witty, highly successful act of hypnosis (which meant) that it never happened. Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening, it wasn’t happening. It didn’t matter. It was of no interest.”

Those who call themselves liberals or tendentiou­sly “the left” are eager participan­ts in this manipulati­on, and its brainwashi­ng, which today revert to one name: Trump.

Trump is mad, a fascist, a dupe of Russia. He is also a gift for “liberal brains pickled in the formaldehy­de of identity politics”, wrote Luciana Bohne memorably. The obsession with Trump the man — not Trump as a symptom and caricature of an enduring system — beckons great danger for all of us.

While they pursue their fossilised anti-Russia agendas, narcissist­ic media such as the Washington Post, the BBC and the Guardian suppress the essence of the most important political story of our time as they warmonger on a scale I cannot remember in my lifetime. Read full article on www.herald.co.zw

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