subscribe Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Subscribe now
Picture: REUTERS/ADRIANO MACHADO
Picture: REUTERS/ADRIANO MACHADO

Writers including Howard Zinn, Chalmers Johnson, Noam Chomsky and John Pilger have for decades warned that American militarist obsessions with wars to impose the US empire upon the world would end in disaster. 

The chaotic US departure from Afghanistan confirms that it is long past time to disband Nato and the estimated 1,000 US military bases around the globe. Prisoners of conscience and whistle-blowers including Julian Assange must be released immediately, plus those hostages still held in barbaric circumstances at Guantanamo.  

The US has more than enough problems at home, but does not have the ingenuity to reinvent itself.  Your editorial “US abandoning Afghans sends a terrible message” (August 15) is, however, predicated on the false assumption that the Taliban ignored an ultimatum to hand over Osama bin Laden. In fact, and per a Guardian newspaper report dated October 14 2001 and headlined “Bush rejects Taliban offer to hand Bin Laden over”, the US was determined to inflict wars throughout the Muslim world.  It was the key aspect of the neo-con Plan for the New American Century, of which Christian Zionists including Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and John Bolton were prime signatories.

Let’s not forget the Bush and Tony Blair lies in 2003 that Saddam Hussein’s Iraq held “weapons of mass destruction”, a false accusation now still parroted by the Israeli lobby against Iran.    Not only has the world’s most sophisticated military been routed by the Taliban, but the US military is also by far the world’s worst contributor to the environmental and climatic catastrophes facing humanity. The US and its Nato allies annually spend $2-trillion on war preparations.

Reallocation of military spending away from wars  to socially and economically productive purposes is urgent and imperative. SA could set an example by abolishing the SA National Defence Force (SANDF) and redefining  defence in terms of section 198 (a) of the constitution that defines national security as: “National security must reflect the resolve of South Africans, as individuals and as a nation, to live as equals, to live in peace and harmony, to be free from fear and want and to seek a better life.”

Your editorial “Mapisa-Nqakula rewarded for being ‘caught napping’” (August 17) ironically also confirms that the SANDF has yet again proved useless. The SANDF frequently compounds the problems SA faces — not least being corruption. Nor should the SANDF attempt any more peacekeeping disasters in Africa, per the Central African Republic and now Mozambique. The purpose of armies is war, not peace.   

The eight-year-long French and American military interventions in Mali and Niger in the Sahel, like the madness in Afghanistan, have only succeeded in millions of refugees trying to escape to Europe. It is also time for the US and Nato to confront the sponsor of Boko Haram, Islamic State, al-Qaeda, the Taliban and other Islamic extremists, namely their Saudi Arabian proxy that funds covert destabilisation of resource-rich countries in Asia and Africa (including SA).

The message is quite simple: if you don’t want refugees, don’t instigate wars through the proliferation of weapons and corrupt dictatorships.

Terry Crawford-Browne,World Beyond War — South Africa

JOIN THE DISCUSSION: Send us an email with your comments. Letters of more than 300 words will be edited for length. Send your letter by email to letters@businesslive.co.za. Anonymous correspondence will not be published. Writers should include a daytime telephone number.

subscribe Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Subscribe now

Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.