The Saline Courier Weekend

Before the bombs come the platitudes

- By Robert C. Koehler Guest Columnist

What is democracy but platitudes and dog whistles? The national direction is quietly predetermi­ned — it’s not up for debate. The president’s role is to sell it to the public; you might say he’s the public-relations director in chief:

“. . . my Administra­tion will seize this decisive decade to advance America’s vital interests, position the United States to outmaneuve­r our geopolitic­al competitor­s, tackle shared challenges, and set our world firmly on a path toward a brighter and more hopeful tomorrow . . . . We will not leave our future vulnerable to the whims of those who do not share our vision for a world that is free, open, prosperous, and secure.”

These are the words of President Biden, in his introducti­on to the National Security Strategy, which lays out America’s geopolitic­al plans for the coming decade. Sounds almost plausible, until you ponder the stuff that isn’t up for public discussion, such as, for instance:

The national defense budget, recently set for 2023 at $858 billion and, as ever, larger than most of the rest of the world’s military budget combined. And, oh yeah, the modernizat­ion — the rebuilding — of the nation’s nuclear weapons over the next three decades at an estimated cost of nearly $2 trillion. As Nuclear Watch put it: “It is, in short, a program of nuclear weapons forever.”

And the latter, of course, will go forward despite the fact that in 2017 the countries of the world — well, most of them (the vote in the United Nations was 122-1) — approved the Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons, which flat-out bans the use, developmen­t and possession of nuclear weapons.

Fifty countries ratified the treaty by January 2021, making it a global reality; two years later, a total of 68 countries have ratified it, with 23 more in the process of doing so.

Not only that, as H. Patricia Hynes points out, the mayors of more than 8,000 cities all across the planet are calling for the abolition of nuclear weapons.

I mention this to put Biden’s words in perspectiv­e. Does “a brighter and more hopeful tomorrow” ignore the demands of most of the world and include the presence of thousands of nuclear weapons, many still on hair-trigger alert?

Does it mean the ever-present possibilit­y of war and the ongoing manufactur­e and sale of every imaginable weapon of war? Is a near-trillion-dollar annual “defense” budget the primary way we intend to “outmaneuve­r our geopolitic­al competitor­s”?

And here’s another flicker of reality that’s missing from Biden’s words: the nonmonetar­y cost of war, which is to say, the “collateral damage.”

For some reason, the president fails to mention how many civilians’ deaths — how many children’s deaths — will be necessary to secure a brighter and more hopeful tomorrow. How many hospitals might it be necessary, for instance, for us to accidental­ly bomb in coming years, as we bombed the hospital in Kunduz, Afghanista­n in 2015, killing 42 people, 24 of whom were patients?

Public relations platitudes do not seem to have room to acknowledg­e videos of U.s.-inflicted carnage, such as Kathy Kelly’s descriptio­n of a video of the Kunduz bombing, which showed the president of Doctors Without Borders (a.k.a., Médecins Sans Frontières) walking through the wreckage a short while later and speaking, with “nearly unutterabl­e sadness,” to the family of a child who had just died.

“Doctors had helped the young girl recover,” Kelly writes, “but because war was raging outside the hospital, administra­tors recommende­d that the family come the next day. ‘She’s safer here,’ they said.

“The child was among those killed by the U.S. attacks, which recurred at fifteen minute intervals, for an hour and a half, even though MSF had already issued desperate pleas begging the United States and NATO forces to stop bombing the hospital.”

Those who believe in the necessity of war — such as the president — may well feel shock and sadness when a child, for instance, is unintentio­nally killed by U.S. military action, but the concept of war comes complete with flowers of regret: It’s the fault of the enemy. And we will not be vulnerable to his whims.

Indeed, the dog whistle in Biden’s brief quote above is the calm acknowledg­ement of U.S. intention to stand up to the dark forces on the planet, the autocrats, who do not share our vision of freedom for all (except little girls in bombed hospitals).

Those who, for whatever reason, believe in the necessity, and even the glory, of war, will feel the pulse of the U.S. military budget coursing through his positive, happy words.

When public relations circumvent­s reality, an honest discussion is impossible.

And Planet Earth is in desperate need of an honest discussion about the eliminatio­n of nuclear weapons and, God help us, ultimately transcendi­ng war.

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