What will be the casus belli for war with China?
From the sinking of Maine to Saddam’s WMDs,
there’s usually a ginned-up event behind every destructive US war.
DECEMBER 9, 2021
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2021/12/09/what-will-be-the-casus-belli-for-war-with-china/
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In one of the great scenes in the movie Citizen
Kane, newspaper publisher Charles Kane, in desperate need of headlines to
boost circulation, decides a patriotic war would be just the thing. When his
reporters fail to find evidence of imminent hostilities, Kane famously bellows
“I’ll supply the war, you supply the pictures!”
Kane is directly modeled after the real-life William
Randolph Hearst, who generously fanned the flames of the Spanish-American war,
making the sinking of Maine, a U.S. warship, by the Spanish, into a casus
belli. It was all a lie — Maine exploded internally, on its own. No matter, a war was needed, and so with
that decision made, a cause was created.
The real reasons for the war included a U.S. desire to
take control of Cuba and to become a Pacific power by seizing the Spanish colony
in the Philippines. Theodore Roosevelt, who was the Assistant Secretary of the
Navy at this time, advocated for
the war as a rally-round-the-flag event to heal the lingering wounds of the
American Civil War, and as an excuse to increase the Navy’s budget. After all,
they sank our ship! The press would wait until WMDs were not created to ever be
that compliant again.
It was very much the same story in Vietnam.
Washington, imagining a global communist conspiracy rising from the ashes of
WWII, began its war in Vietnam by proxy in 1945, soon funding the French
struggle for years. By 1950 the first American military personnel was
stationed in Saigon. When
American advisors and casualties began to come to the public’s attention, and
successes by the other side began to pile up, the real American war got
underway.
But with a
more overt war, a more overt reason had to be found. That took the form of the
1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident: a claim that two American warships came under
unprovoked attack by North Vietnam. What really happened was far from
that, but it didn’t matter. Congress passed an enabling resolution and the war
escalated as needed. They hurt our ships!
In the late
1990s, The Project for the New American Century think tank developed what
neoconservatives were calling a compelling vision for American foreign policy
based on a “benevolent
global hegemony.” They had nothing less in mind than a global war of
occupation and regime change, focused on the Middle East. The war was set, but
the problem lay in convincing the American people to support it. “The process
of transformation,” PNAC charged in its manifesto, “even if it brings
revolutionary change, is likely to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and
catalyzing event – like a new Pearl Harbor.”
The new
Pearl Harbor fell into its laps on 9/11. Even then, though, another made-up
reason was needed to justify the invasion of Iraq, the jewel in the neocon
planning. The Bush administration made a few attempts to link Saddam to 9/11
directly, then to terrorism generically, but none of it stuck with the public,
correctly confused about why an attack largely planned, funded, and executed by
Saudis, required war in Iraq.
In the end, the decision to stress the threat posed by Iraq’s supposed weapons of mass
destruction above all others was made for “bureaucratic” reasons, then-Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said.
“It was the one reason everyone could agree on.” It really did not matter that
it wasn’t true.
This was
followed by years of conflict under four presidents. Along the way
mini-versions of the same game — war decided on first, reasons ginned up later
— were run to justify invasions in Libya, Yemen, and Syria. It does not matter
what is true because the incidents, real or imaginary, are just like buses;
miss one and another will be along soon enough.
These wars,
from Maine to Iraq, had no Pearl Harbor. America was not attacked, it
wanted to initiate the war itself, and created a false pretext for doing so.
Unlike with the WMDs, there was no question the Japanese bombed Pearl and that
this was an actual, unambiguous act of aggression. It did not require a lie or
an explanation or some 1940s version of Colin Powell at the UN.
This brings
us to China, which appears to be the next war now searching for a reason.
“The Fight
for Taiwan Could Come Soon,” warns the
Wall Street Journal, alongside nearly every other publication of note.
President Biden has begun the propaganda spadework, declaring, “on my
watch China will not achieve its goal to become the leading country in the
world, the wealthiest country in the world, and the most powerful country in
the world.” Is war imminent? Will it begin in Taiwan?
The reasons
China has no reason to invade Taiwan are lengthy and cover the economic, military,
and political spheres.
There is no rational, risk vs. gain, the reason for hostilities. But that is not
what the historical playbook says matters. It may be the United States has
already decided a bench-clearing, superpower showdown is needed, eagle vs.
dragon, for control of the Pacific. We just need to find a reason, given that
China is unlikely to be a sport and invade Taiwan for us. You can lie about
Iraq possessing weapons of mass destruction long enough to get a war started,
but an actual Chinese invasion is a bridge too far for straight-up fabrication.
Now it is
possible the war fever over China is just a con inside a con. It is possible
the military-industrial complex knows it will never fight an actual war, but is
simply using the threat as a way to run up its budget. They remember how the
lies about the “missile gap” with the Soviet Union exploded the military-industrial complex budget following WWII. A Chinese threat requires endless
spending on the good stuff — big carriers, submarines, and space forces —
upping the ante even beyond the decades of spending in Afghanistan.
And then boom! Ascertain as the sun rising in the
east is red, last week Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said the
U.S. was in an “arms race” with China over the development of hypersonic
weapons that can evade missile defenses. His boss Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin lambasted China over its pursuit of hypersonic weapons, saying the
activity “increases tensions in the region.” America faces a hypersonic weapons
gap.
An arms race would be the best case scenario to come
out of all the saber-rattling over China. If that’s all this is, it is well
underway. But what if the U.S. has its mindset on a real war and needs a
palatable reason?
So, a challenge to all readers. On a postcard
addressed to the White House, what would be the declared justification for the
U.S. going to war with China?
You can have
fun with this — Beijing kidnaps Taylor Swift and a rescue mission escalates
into full-on war? Or China is caught releasing a virus that disables global
trade? Or geopolitically serious stuff about a struggle for rare earth
minerals? No cheating with statements pretending to be reasons, like China is
an “imminent threat,” or declarations like “clear and present danger.” Imagine
you’re a modern-day Paul Wolfowitz, handed the fait accompli of
war and tasked with ginning up a reason Americans will buy. But no “they sunk
our ship” scenarios. Been there, done that.
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