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Biden’s new military activism.

“Diplomacy is back”, President Joe Biden said shortly after becoming president. But then in the middle of a delicate diplomatic dance with Iran he went and bombed a small, politically inconsequential, Iranian surrogate in Syria, in retaliation for the killing of one American soldier.


This seemed to go against everything he said during his presidential campaign on moving towards fashioning a quick agreement with Iran so that the deal made by President Barack Obama that froze Iran’s nuclear activities could be resuscitated after Donald Trump’s decision to blow it up. Biden’s bombing made the chance of simultaneous choreographed

moves by both sides to get back to the deal made by Obama more

difficult. Why should Iran, its politicians say, have to take the

first step when it was the US who broke the china in the shop? It

makes no sense. After this incident it made even less sense, say

Iran’s hard-liners. Indeed, it is odd.


Perhaps it is an American thing. It appears no president is sure of

his self-worth until he has bombed someone, somewhere. Jimmy Carter has been the only exception in post war times, although he did order the traffic of guns to the Taliban and other insurgents who were then fighting the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.


As vice-president, Biden has a record of peace-making tendencies,

according to Obama, writing in his memoirs, usually being the lone advocate in the inner circle who argued against military intervention. Now he is president, does he think he has to win his military spurs to make his reputation somewhat more fearful? Does this explain why his senior foreign policy appointments are more hawkish than he has been in his pre-presidential political life?


Didn’t we have enough fighting to secure America’s “credibility” in Vietnam, Cambodia, Central America, Iraq and Afghanistan, all of which ended in defeat?


It is not only Iran. There is Biden’s decision to halt the supply of

offensive weapons for use by Saudi Arabia in its devastating,

child-killing, war in Yemen. Only defensive weapons will be sold, said the White House. But who can tell the difference when weapons are used in a Saudi attack? What is the difference between an attacking and defensive bomber? When the Saudis fudged it, as they have, what did Biden do? Almost nothing.


We are still waiting to see what Biden will do about the

under-reported war he has inherited in Somalia. The US has been

intervening in Somalia for decades. First in the name of fighting

communism and Soviet influence. Then in the early 1990s in the name of humanitarianism which led to the American forces fleeing Somalia after a savage attack on American helicopter gunships- the so-called “Black Hawk down” incident.


This left behind a lone body of UN soldiers on whom President Bill Clinton heaped blame for not doing a better job. Then when it came to George W. Bush in the White House the US fought in the country in the name of the War on Terror. The US upped its funding to brutal atheistic warlord groups which fought against terrorist Islamic insurgents. In fact, it merely strengthened the hand of the terrorists. Whatever the reason du jour, the successive US’s interventions have further destabilized and devastated Somalia.


The last few years have been an unmitigated disaster for the people of Somalia. Obama and Trump continued their predecessors’ policies and now, without mention of Somalia publicly, Biden appears to be doing the same. Chris Albin-Lackey, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, reports that “the conflict pits US forces and Somalia’s ineffectual, internationally backed, transitional government against a powerful but fragmented insurgency.” He adds that all sides have

committed war crimes.


The result of years of upheaval are over a million displaced from

their homes, thousands of civilians killed and millions teetering on the edge of famine. Aid workers are targeted and killed.


The dominant terrorist group is Al-Shababb whose tentacles spread as far as West Africa. The US uses its Special Forces, planes and drones in its attempt to roll them back. Trump, although he claims to have started no new wars, intensified this.


The cumulative effect of US intervention far outnumbers and outweighs the damage done by Al-Shababb.


When will the US learn the message of the defeat in Vietnam- that it cannot bring stability, the observance of human rights and democracy by bombing? Biden must stop this stupidity and instead concentrate resources on humanitarian aid and long-term economic development. That is the way to defeat the circumstances that reinforce Al-Shababb. Fighting is counterproductive. As Vietnam showed, the two cannot be

done hand in hand.


But it is not just US policy in Somalia, Saudi Arabia and Iran we

should question.  The last few years the US has built military base

upon base across Africa, at least two dozen in all. China has a single base, in Djibouti. Russia has none. American commandos operate in 22 African nations. It is the largest concentration of US troops in the world, with the exception of the Middle East.


Some of the US missions in Africa are aimed at training local forces while others involve direct combat. Some of the deployments in effect prop up dictatorial governments. For their part, the European Union, China, India, Russia and Turkey (but not France), the other major Africa-interested powers, only give economic and social aid.


Africa managed reasonably well before American troops landed on its soil. When there was instability or a coup a country had to sort it out itself. (The French too have a bad habit of intervening but usually, like the Americans, they get their fingers burnt.)


Finally, we come to Gaza. Almost unbelievably the US still supplies Israel with weapons that have devastating power while chiding Israel for being tight-fisted with the small amount of aid it allows into Gaza. From time-to-time Biden criticises the way that the Israeli army operates but compared with the Israeli arms scorched earth tactics all one hears is a whimper.


Biden needs to stop and think before he goes any further. For reasons of his own he is doing the very things he criticized during hiscampaign.

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