United States President Theodore Roosevelt never had much time for peace, seeing its returns as distinctly less than those of war. Despite his love of military conflict and its touted benefits, he was rewarded with the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in brokering peace in the Russo-Japanese War. But for old Teddy peaceniks were sissies, degenerates, and probably sexually dubious.
The intoxicant that is war tends to besot its promoters, however balanced they might claim to be. Australia鈥檚 public broadcaster, the ABC, seemed to embrace a subliminal message in its programming on February 21, notably on the issue of war. The standard reference? The outbreak of World War II. September 1939. Poor Poland, and benighted British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain.
The blind, the daft and the reality television viewer may have missed the programming point, but others could not have.聽 Russian forces are posed on the borders of Ukraine. In the presses of Australasia, Europe and the United States, there is more talk of war than that of diplomacy.聽 There is the prospect of much death and many body bags. Instead of running documentaries, statements or messages on how war might be averted, thereby yielding the floor to diplomacy, the message of conflict has become inexorably clear.
This is perhaps the most visibly sickening feature of the enterprise. It is a reminder that war has a seductiveness, acts as a paralytic agent, dulling sensibility whilst arousing other senses.聽 The opposite is never as inspiring because it is always constructively dull: negotiations, peace, averting death and the cracking of skulls. Best encourage powers to shred a few people, slaughter the residents of a village or two, and crow about the evils of the enemy. Add some political garnish: they died in the name of democracy; they were killed because they needed to be enlightened by the rules-based order.
The message of war was promoted with unbending consistency when it came to the certifiably criminal invasion of Iraq in 2003 by US-led forces. It was very much in keeping with the rules-based order according to President George W Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, and Australia鈥檚 own yappy John Howard.聽 War would take place, whatever the evidence of Saddam Hussein鈥檚 weapons capabilities.
Having decided that invading Iraq would be good copy, the Murdoch Press Empire went to work softening minds and adding Viagra to war adventurism. Of the stable of papers run by Rupert Murdoch, of the 175 鈥 the Hobart Mercury 鈥 supported the war. The project certainly bore rewards in terms of moving opinion. A Gallup International survey鈥檚 released on February 4, 2003 revealed that 68% of Australians backed military action against Iraq. Of those Australians surveyed, 89% expected war to be imminent.This was, pure and simple, an incitement to conflict, a hardening of the resolve.
While it is not NATO, or the US, that is contemplating an invasion of Ukraine, a country meshed with Russian history and influence, the language of predictability, the undeviating lingo of war, has come to heavily shade the workings of diplomacy. In London, Washington and Canberra, we are already seeing the position that war will take place.
Speaking to CBS, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was as good that 鈥減rovocations created by the Russian or separatist forces over the weekend, false flag operations鈥 suggested a state of advanced preparedness for invasion.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, in his address to the Munich Security Conference, to not fully knowing 鈥渨hat President [Vladimir] Putin intends but the omens are grim and that is why we must stand strong together.鈥 Should Russia invade, Johnson promised, Russian individuals would be sanctioned, along with 鈥渃ompanies of strategic importance to the Russian state鈥.聽 Raising capital on London capital markets would be made all but impossible 鈥渁nd we will open up the matryoshka dolls of Russian-owned companies and Russian-owned entities to find the ultimate beneficiaries within.鈥
Western press outlets are also aiding in this, using, for the most part, images and material of moving tanks and personnel supplied by the Russian Ministry of Defence. Even by the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy about the 鈥渋nvasion date鈥 have been spun as tangible proofs of coming war.
As New Lines Magazine , 鈥渢he West is doing such an eloquent job of broadcasting the reality of Russian military might鈥 for the Putin regime. In a conversation with one of the magazine鈥檚 authors, the editor of a British 鈥渕id-market tabloid鈥 thought that 鈥渢his invasion stuff is probably all nonsense.鈥 But no matter. 鈥淏oris needs this to run and run.鈥
The headlines and titles of various papers are all too drearily reminiscent of 2003. 鈥淲e may be just hours away from war in Europe,鈥 Mark Almond on February 15 in the Daily Mail. Some hours have passed since then, but there is no sign of the journalist being held accountable for this nakedly hysterical effusion.
The Scottish Sun was even more , with its February 13 issue trumpeting that there was 鈥48 hours to war.鈥 Moscow鈥檚 鈥渂ombing blitz may be early as Tuesday after Prez talks deadlock.鈥 That same day, The Sunday Telegraph insisted that Russia was plotting an imminent 鈥溾榝alse flag attack to provoke war.鈥
The script for invasion, in other words, has already been written, and not necessarily or entirely from the pen of the Russian leader. The pieces are all in place: the assumption of invasion, the promised implementation of sanctions and limits on raising finance, and strong condemnation. A fever has taken old, and it promises to carry away much life and sensibility.聽
[Dr Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He currently lectures at RMIT University. Email: bkampmark@gmail.com.]