Niger: Finally, A War John McCain Doesn't Love
Ilana Mercer • October 27, 2017
News
first broke about America’s Niger misadventure on October 4. “The real
news here is that the US has forces in Niger, where they’re conducting
covert operations,” this writer tweeted out. “Hashtag America First.”
Official
media ignored the ambush of the American Special Forces, until the
story gained anti-Trump traction. No word came from John McCain. Three
weeks hence, the senator from Arizona is making history. McCain, who has
never encountered a war he wasn’t eager to prosecute, is questioning
the folly in Niger.
The
senator from Arizona can run but can’t hide from the pollution he has
left along his political path. Republicans wisely rejected war in
Kosovo; McCain jettisoned party loyalty to call for bombs from above and
“more boots on the ground.” At the prospects of war with Iran, McCain
burst into song, “Bomb-bomb-bomb, bomb-bomb-Iran.” The possibility still
makes this war ghoul smile. Before that, McCain promised a 100-year war
in Iraq.
Senator
McCain’s jingoism has encompassed Syria, Georgia, Mali, Nigeria, and
China. Where the US could not effect regime change, as it did fecklessly
in Afghanistan and Libya—McCain would typically call to side with an
imagined local “friend of America” against an imagined “foe of America.”
McCain has many imaginary friends.
Where
his target country was beyond US bullying (Russia), the idea of the
resumption of a cold war was an option McCain liked. He is currently
fulminating over a slight delay in sanctions against Russia. When all
efforts to tame the world militarily fail, McCain is partial to the idea
of UN troops acting as his surrogates, say in Sudan.
No war makes Johnny a sad boy. But now he’s considering a subpoena over Niger.
Global Centralizer
Playing
out in Niger are the permanently entrenched, unchanging, American
foreign-policy interests. Keen observers will detect a familiar pattern.
Once again, the American bias everywhere is toward a powerful,
overweening central state. This conceit has put our forces on a
collision course with the tribal interests America toils to tame.
Indeed,
US foreign policy often flouts local authority. It certainly disavows
separatists and generally discourages any meaningful devolution of
power. Born of a loose confederation of independent states, America now
stands for the strong centralized state. Our interchangeable leaders
strive to see the same in the tribal lands of the Middle East and
Africa.
Meddling in Yemen’s Civil War
In Yemen, America is working to impose a central authority on “bickering sheikdoms.”
In the South alone, Yemen has 14 such principalities. Southern
secessionists are at war with the north, have been for at least 139
years. There, “even the bottled water,” notes the Economist, “is called
‘South.’” There’s no such thing as a united Yemen. Never was.
Into
this fray, the US has waded. So stupid and dangerous is our
foreign-policy colossus that it imagines America is fighting al-Qaida by
backing the Saudi-led coalition to vanquish northern Houthi rebels. The
northern Houthi rebels, however, clearly wear many hats. More so than
the invading coalition, the rebels are of the community and often for the community.
As America’s Emirati partners in Yemen are realizing,
“Motivating recruits to push north is an uphill task even with the
payment of bonuses. Those who were happy to fight for their own homes
seem unenthused about fighting for somebody else’s.”
Would
that the Empire’s military would confine itself to that constitutional
mandate: fight for home and hearth and no more. Alas, our soldiers have
been propagandized to conflate fighting for American freedom with fights
in Niger, Burkina Faso (yeah, I know) and Mali.
Ultimately,
all the spots America chooses to mess with are too complex for the
prosaic American mind to grasp, for we are schooled to see societies
unlike our own through a Disneyfied, angels-and-demons prism.
More
so than the Middle East, Africa is riven by tribal interests and
dynamics. These, McCain or CENTCOM (the United States Central Command)
have no hope of understanding, because they’re wedded to the idea that
their own home (America) is nothing more than an idea, and never a community of flesh-and-blood people with a shared, treasured patrimony.
And Now, Niger
To
their credit, Africans’ fealty is not to deracinated political
propositions—democracy, human rights, gay marriage, and communal
bathrooms—but to each other. They will kill for clan and kin. (And they
kill each other, too.)
Niger
is no different. You’re told that the Americans and the French are
empowering the local forces of Niger against the mythical ISIS.
Poppycock. This is never the case. In Africa, as in Afghanistan or Iraq,
the conflicts are regional, tribal, old, if not ancient.
Tongo-Tongo,
the Niger village that ambushed our unsuspecting Green Berets, had not
been “infiltrated” by hostile forces; that’s the take of Niger’s central
government, itself a very recent development. If past is prologue, it’s
fair to assume that the Niger government is vested in developing as a
French and American client state with all the attendant perks.
Villagers
have likely learned not to wait for any trickle-down from the state.
The Tongo-Tongo villagers enticed our forces to mill about, giving their
homie militant benefactors just enough time to set up an ambush in a
kill zone.
Imagine! Locals don’t particularly relish a visit from the American and French patrolmen and their Nigerien puppets.
Again,
Niger is heavily dependent on bribes from the West (foreign aid, we
call it). We reward Niamey (the capital) to play war games with us. This
is another case of an Islamic, if multi-ethnic, tribal land, whose
people don’t want Americans there. (And even if the people of the region
wanted us there, America has no business being there. Deplorables voted
against the concept of making Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali great
again.)
So,
if John McCain’s hatred of President Trump has driven America’s most
ardent warmonger to question the American intervention in Niger—that’s a
good thing.
Ilana Mercer has been writing a weekly paleolibertarian column since 1999, and is the author of The Trump Revolution: The Donald’s Creative Destruction Deconstructed (June, 2016) & Into the Cannibal’s Pot: Lessons for America From Post-Apartheid South Africa (2011). Follow her on Twitter, Facebook & YouTube.
No comments:
Post a Comment