In Memoriam, 2016

This article was first posted last year on Straight Line Logic. It will be published every Memorial Day for as long as Straight Line Logic continues as a website.

Guest Post by Robert Gore at Straight Line Logic

You don’t fight for your country, you fight for your government.

The Golden Pinnacle, by Robert Gore

On Memorial Day, America remembers and honors those who died while serving in the military. It is altogether fitting and proper to ask: for what did they die? Do the rationales offered by the military and government officials who decide when and how the US will go to war, and embraced by the public, particularly those who lose loved ones, stand up to scrutiny and analysis? Some will recoil, claiming it inappropriate on a day devoted to honoring the dead. However, it is because war is a matter of life and death, for members of the military and, inevitably, civilians, that its putative justifications be subject to the strictest tests of truth and the most probing of analyses.

Millions have marched off to war believing they were defending the US, which implies the US was under attack. Yet, setting aside for a moment Pearl Harbor and 9/11, US territory hasn’t been invaded by a foreign power since the Mexican-American War (arguably—Mexico claimed the territory it “invaded” was part of Mexico), or, if the Confederacy is considered a foreign power, the Civil War. That war ended a century-and-a-half ago, yet every US military involvement since has been justified as a defense of the US. That has gradually attenuated, in a little noted slide, to a defense of US “interests,” which is something far different.

Only one of those involvements could, arguably, have been said to have forestalled not an invasion, but a possible threat of invasion: World War II. Watching newsreel graphics of Germany’s drives across Europe, Northern Africa, and the USSR, and Japan’s across Asia and the Pacific, it was perhaps understandable that Americans believed the Axis powers would eventually come for them, especially after Pearl Harbor. However, that was a one-off attack by the Japanese to disable the US’s Pacific Fleet. To launch an invasion of the US, Japan, a smaller, less populated nation whose economy depended on imports of vital raw materials, including oil, would have had to cross the Pacific and fight the US, and undoubtedly Canada, on their home territories. The Pearl Harbor attack, provoking America’s entry into the war, proved a strategic blunder for the Japanese. An invasion would have been ludicrous. Similarly, Germany, up to its eyeballs in a two-front war, couldn’t conquer Russian winters or Great Britain across the English Channel. How was it supposed to either cross the Atlantic, or the USSR and hostile guerrillas, then the Pacific, and attack the US? That, too, would have been ludicrous.

The 9/11 attack was also a one-off. A majority of the attackers came not from a US enemy but rather a supposed ally, Saudi Arabia. They received funding and other support from people in that country and perhaps its government. A conventional war against a “state sponsor of terrorism” might have required war against Saudi Arabia; it is still not clear how involved its government was. That option was never considered. Rather, the Bush administration performed metaphysical gymnastics and launched the first war in history against a tactic: terrorism. Although the jihadists who perpetrated 9/11 were self-evidently not the vanguard of an invasion, the terrorism they employed was deemed a threat to US interests in the Middle East, and to life and property in the US. However, none of our subsequent involvements in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Egypt, and Yemen have been necessary to maintain US citizens’ freedoms, the nation’s territorial integrity, or its lives and property.

There are undoubtedly many epitaphs on tombstones in this country to the effect: Here lies the deceased, who died defending America, and not one that reads: Here lies the deceased, who died defending American interests. However, the latter is in most cases more accurate than the former. Who decides the interests for which members of America’s military will die? Those considering entering the military today must look beyond the slogans, contemplate the risks of being killed, wounded, dismembered, paralyzed, or psychologically traumatized, and ask themselves: why and for whom are these risks being borne? “You don’t fight for your country, you fight for your government.” Is it worth risking one’s life for the US government?

In 1821, John Quincy Adams said America had not gone “abroad in search of monsters to destroy,” and while we wished those seeking liberty well, theirs was not our fight (see “In Search of Monsters,” SLL, 4/11/15). Since then, America has searched for monsters, found, and in some cases, destroyed them. However, as the poison of power has worked its evil on the minds and souls of those who possess it, the monsters have become more ethereal, apparitions conjured like creatures in the closet by children when they go to bed. The war on terrorism creates more terrorists, the monsters of choice since 9/11. The government still pays occasional lip service to “democratic values” and “civil liberties,” but allies itself with regimes which have no more fealty to those values and liberties than the “tyrants” the government opposes. “Defending America” and “Promoting Our Way of Life” have become transparent pretexts for American power and domination unbounded. As Adams so presciently warned, the search for monsters has turned the government itself into a monster, the biggest threat to Americans’ “inextinguishable rights of human nature.”

Those who have fought and died to defend America and its freedoms are noble beyond measure. Those who pay self-serving tribute to their valor, but make war and expend lives as means to corrupt ends are evil beyond redemption. Honor the former; expose and oppose the latter.


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13 Comments
Bard of Bumperstickers
Bard of Bumperstickers
May 30, 2016 12:05 pm

You must not act the way you were brought up:

Had no chance to see myself molded day by day:

Career army officer on Memorial Day’s real meaning:

Memorial Day is a Fraud: The True Meaning is Worse by Bill Buppert

Maj. Gen. Smedley D. Butler, USMC: “War Is A Racket”
http://www.ratical.org/ratville/CAH/warisaracket.html

bb
bb
May 30, 2016 12:30 pm

Robert Core , you are right. My Grandfather fought in ( WW2 )and my Dad (Vietnam ) .Both died still very patriotic men.They loved America and thought it was worth fighting for. Nothing disgust me more then finding out the real reasons those Wars were fought and who started those Wars.

I glad my Grandfather and Father never learned the truth.

Muck About
Muck About
May 30, 2016 1:25 pm

@bb: Ok, I’ve done it now. I gave you an upcheck bb, but don’t let it go to your head.. Nice comment.

MA

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
May 30, 2016 1:54 pm

By the bankers and for the bankers. This is what I’m reminded of every Memorial Day. The cocksuckers play their propaganda against the patriotism of the nations youth to make them fight their ginned up wars. May the next war be against the bankers and only the bankers! I’d gladly surrender the balance of my life to achieve that goal.

Nice article and spot on except for one minor quibble. The Japs invaded and occupied parts of Alaska during WWII.

“The Aleutian Islands Campaign was a military campaign conducted by the United States in the Aleutian Islands, part of the Alaska Territory, in the American theater and the Pacific theater of World War II starting on 3 June 1942. A small Japanese force occupied the islands of Attu and Kiska, but the remoteness of the islands and the difficulties of weather and terrain meant that it took nearly a year for a far larger U.S./Canadian force to eject them.”

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
May 30, 2016 2:57 pm
nkit
nkit
May 30, 2016 4:23 pm

“Bad governments are overthrown by internal or external forces. A prosperous, free, and peaceful polity living under a relatively good government—a historical rarity—contains the seeds of its own destruction. There will be those who have more by dint of honest achievement, and they will be envied by those who have less. There are always more of the latter than the former, consequently, government officials can garner political advantage, not to mention divert wealth to themselves, by validating and enforcing the latter’s spurious claims. Such larceny puts a good government on the road to becoming a bad, and ultimately, a failed government.” ~ Robert Gore

Indeed, RG, we never needed to go far to find a monster.

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 31, 2016 8:18 am

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Bob
Bob
May 31, 2016 3:00 pm

Well said, Robert. The sorrow I feel on days like Memorial Day and Veteran’s Day is for the people with high moral purpose, conviction and love for the ideals of America who are used as tools by the political class, many times doing more harm than good with their war-like actions. I say that when America declares war, the sons and daughters of Congress go to the front lines first! Let’s see how many wars they start under such conditions…

VietVet
VietVet
May 31, 2016 8:09 pm

Unlike so many others, I volunteered to serve in 1971. I believed in the America that I knew, I believed that serving was the right thing even when so many young people were running to Canada or refusing to serve.

It sickens me how much I trusted American leadership in this world, to awaken and realize the truth of this nation.

I spent 18 months of my life developing targeting data for B52s to slaughter innocent human beings.

I have no way to reconcile this, I struggle with it every day that I live. I can no longer suggest or support a young man’s charge to die for his government yet I have children that are doing exactly that.

Never again