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Actually, I'm not sure that the drone war capability has changed America.

As you point out, the US has been involved in various forms of shooting wars on pretty much a perpetual basis for at least the last 60 years. Not just the hot wars of WWII, Korea etc, but also the dirty wars where "advisers", both official and shadowy, would find themselves involved at the sharp end.

The British call it "gunboat diplomacy", but I think everyone knows that the 800-odd military bases scattered around the globe aren't just for sightseeing.

The US is, to outside eyes at least, an excessively militarised society. It may not rise to the laughably homo-erotic military fetishism of a N Korea or Soviet Union, but rather assigns to itself a "duty" of protecting the world from threats to the peaceful status quo. A status quo which has evolved over time to align with the economic well being of Corporate America. It is impossible now to imagine the US going to war where Government policy and Corporate advantage are not inextricably interdependent.

This has lead to it throwing its weight around the world on a perpetual basis. And those soldiers involved go home on leave, or finish their tour and head back to civvie street.

From all these wars there must now be an accumulation of tens of millions of people walking around with various levels of PTSD; some diagnosed but most are not. And all of them projecting their damage onto the society around them. Relatively few end up in homeless shelters while, conversely, one or two make it to the Senate. But they are there all the same.

A few drone pilots won't make any material difference to the carnage already in existence. It isn't the method of war that creates the harm, it's the belief that war is justifiable.

War isn't an extension of foreign policy, it's a failure of foreign policy. War shouldn't be easy, it shouldn't be painless. it's supposed to be hard and it's supposed to hurt to remind us why we shouldn't do it. The drones are just another step to making war easy, but the more the hurt is hidden, the deeper the wound

keep to the Fen Causeway

by Helen (lareinagal at yahoo dot co dot uk) on Mon Nov 28th, 2011 at 09:22:49 AM EST
One of the bigger changes is that the Obama administration's position is that Congress does not need to be notified under the War Powers act about the remote-controlled wars America is involved in because no one is in immediate danger of being harmed or killed on the battlefield. Granted this is only moderately different than previous covert wars, but still Congress (and thus the people) had token oversight authority. The new position is that they (we Americans) have none.

The other significant change is for American civilians. In the past, the soldiers actively engaged in combat were in theater. Now, they can be stateside.

Perhaps these changes are too subtle to make any real difference. They are, of course, a progression of the larger militarization transformation that has been happening in the United States since the country's entry into the WW2 at the end of 1941.

by Magnifico on Mon Nov 28th, 2011 at 01:04:41 PM EST
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Congress does not need to be notified under the War Powers act about the remote-controlled wars America is involved in because no one is in immediate danger of being harmed or killed on the battlefield.

I love this 'no one', as it implies at a minimum that non US citizen people are no one.


res humą m'és alič

by Antoni Jaume on Mon Nov 28th, 2011 at 02:48:33 PM EST
[ Parent ]
And on Monday, the new head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told Congress that the US faces more military threats worldwide than ever before: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/28/us-more-threats-military-dempsey

Really, General? What a surprise.

by Mnemosyne on Mon Nov 28th, 2011 at 11:38:15 PM EST
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Sorry, the general wasn't speaking to the Congress, which is much too busy these days trying to pass legislation to subvert the Constitution.

He was, instead, in London, where the Guardian says he

told an audience . . . on Monday that meeting the new challenges in a time of austerity would require a transformation in military thinking.

Riiiight.

by Mnemosyne on Mon Nov 28th, 2011 at 11:47:59 PM EST
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The US appears to be an excessively militarized society to some Americans.  We seem to be in the minority.

Military technology is causing a shift from mass armies, which must be "civilian based," to smaller, highly trained, and more lethal "professional" - which includes mercenaries - armies.  In the past this shift has led to the rise of authoritarian regimes dominating and controlling Empires.  This process can be observed in the US as secret police powers and the militarization of the "cop on the street" have grown.  

The "Pepper-Spray Cop" is more than an Internet meme.

She believed in nothing; only her skepticism kept her from being an atheist. -- Jean-Paul Sartre

by ATinNM on Mon Nov 28th, 2011 at 01:48:06 PM EST
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Following just after the pepper spray cop, James Fallows, writing at The Atlantic, is shocked to find the police have been militarized — Turning Patrolmen Into Soldiers: How Did We Let This Happen?. It points to the article from early November, How the War on Terror Has Militarized the Police:

Ever since September 14, 2001, when President Bush declared war on terrorism, there has been a crucial, yet often unrecognized, shift in United States policy. Before 9/11, law enforcement possessed the primary responsibility for combating terrorism in the United States. Today, the military is at the tip of the anti-terrorism spear. This shift appears to be permanent...

In an effort to remedy their relative inadequacy in dealing with terrorism on U.S. soil, police forces throughout the country have purchased military equipment, adopted military training, and sought to inculcate a "soldier's mentality" among their ranks.

Fallows has a brief follow up too, Tanks in Small Towns, where he adds "the militarization of the police perversely ignores the way the real military is evolving".

by Magnifico on Mon Nov 28th, 2011 at 02:22:31 PM EST
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You butchered the author's name.  Emphasis added to indicate full, and proper, credit:

Following just after the pepper spray cop, James (Oblivious) Fallows, writing at The Atlantic, is shocked to find the police have been militarized ...


She believed in nothing; only her skepticism kept her from being an atheist. -- Jean-Paul Sartre
by ATinNM on Mon Nov 28th, 2011 at 02:29:59 PM EST
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So it seems, the UK applied laws against terrorism to Iceland to extort them the payments to British citizen due to Icesave, and others, bankruptcy.

res humą m'és alič
by Antoni Jaume on Mon Nov 28th, 2011 at 02:41:34 PM EST
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