The war has a neatly framed villain (Vladimir Putin) and -- thanks to both the U.S. and NATO -- a great many good people containing him.
What could possibly go wrong?
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 August 29, 2023[Note for TomDispatch Readers:
With today's piece, TomDispatch will be taking a few days off. The next TD post will be on the Tuesday morning after Labor Day. See you then! And if you're in a giving mood, do visit our donation page and think about offering us a (brief) vacation donation. Tom] The old anti-Vietnam War song that began, "War, what Is It good for? Absolutely nothing!" couldn't be more on the mark these days. Just imagine that you live on a planet where the truest "war" may be the one we're waging against nature -- and that nature is increasingly waging on us. That "war" could, in the end, simply broil us all. - As we broil and sweat, as communities are burned down or flooded out, who even notices the latest casualty figures from that other war?
- Yes, the New York Times recently reported that, based on the estimates of American officials, an almost unimaginable 500,000 Ukrainians and Russians have already been killed or wounded in that conflict which, despite recent lame peace efforts, shows not the faintest sign of resolving itself any time soon.
In fact, escalation continues to be the rule of the... well, under the circumstances, let's not say "game." - Russian bombardments of Ukrainian ports and grain storage facilities have worsened recently, while the Ukrainians have begun using -- god save us all -- American cluster bombs in quantity on the front lines of the war. (The Russians had already been doing so.)
- And the latest news is that the Biden administration has once again (as with those cluster munitions and before them Abrams tanks, among other weapons systems) decided to up the ante on the Ukrainian side by allowing Denmark and the Netherlands to provide that country with F-16 fighter planes. And so it seems to go... and go and go and go some more.
As TomDispatch regular David Bromwich suggests all too vividly today, we now find ourselves on a war planet -- and whether that war is among humans or with nature, it only seems to be escalating by the month. Tom |
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Living on a War PlanetAnd Managing Not to NoticeBy David BromwichA new war, a new alibi. When we think about our latest war -- the one that began with the Russian invasion of Ukraine, just six months after our Afghan War ended so catastrophically -- there is a hidden benefit. As long as American minds are on Ukraine, we are not thinking about planetary climate disruption. This technique of distraction obeys the familiar mechanism that psychologists have called displacement. An apparently new thought and feeling becomes the substitute for harder thoughts and feelings you very much want to avoid. Every news story about Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s latest demand for American or European weaponry also serves another function: the displacement of a story about, say, the Canadian fires which this summer destroyed a forest wilderness the size of the state of Alabama and 1,000 of which are still burning as this article goes to press. Of course, there is always the horrific possibility that Ukraine could pass from a “contained” to a nuclear war, as out of control as those Canadian fires. Yet we are regularly assured that the conflict, close to the heart of Europe, is under careful supervision. The war has a neatly framed villain (Vladimir Putin) and -- thanks to both the U.S. and NATO -- a great many good people containing him. What could possibly go wrong?
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