The United States is the father of murder and the madman of war

By adopting declarations such as the Carter Doctrine in 1980, the United States made clear to the world that it was willing to defend its “vital interests” (i.e. fossil fuels) in the Middle East region.

Mar 4, 2024 - 08:26
The United States is the father of murder and the madman of war

In these days, when we are witnessing the latest round of destructive and futile attacks by the US to subjugate countries in the region and various institutions, mainly through successive airstrikes, we must never forget the importance of oil, how it drives the engines of industry and war in direction of destruction of countries.

 

Right now, the world is witnessing yet another war and bombing from the United States, the latest in a series of explosions that seem all too predictable (and, of course, futile). Their goal? Teach a “lesson” to groups in the region whose activities America does not like! So that they don't step on America's tail anymore! Their belief is this: you kill three of our soldiers, and we kill you in tens, hundreds or even thousands (and it doesn’t matter whether they are military or not), we kill simply because we can!

America's leaders, with a powerful air force capable of killing people, have repeatedly demonstrated a strong desire to use it to bomb their enemies. And don’t even doubt for a second that by appealing to international laws, humanitarian declarations or protests by anti-war activists, they can stop their killings! No America bombs because it believes in the effectiveness of violence.

 

Of course, Americans think that killing people miles away is a sign of their strength, but on the contrary, it shows their weakness. With an insatiable thirst for power, more profit and destruction, they are always looking to expand and develop their weapons factories. In the Middle East they fail and fail and fail again, but they cannot order a stop to more bombings, more drone strikes and more killings.

 

It can be said that there is no more advanced American technology than in the production of bombs and bombers! And there is no doctrine similar to the American one in the desire to achieve “peace” through war!

 

In World War II and subsequent wars, the United States' basic approach can be summed up in six words: mass production for the purpose of mass murder.

 

No other country in the world has spent its vast resources and air force on mass murder as much as the United States. Look at the all-out bombing of cities by Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan during World War II, culminating in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Let's not forget the destruction of North Korea in the Korean War in the early 1950s or the massive bombing of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia in the 60s and early 70s. Or the widespread use of airpower in Operation Desert Shield against Iraq in the early 1990s, and then air strikes on Afghanistan and Iraq in 2003.

 

As this article is being written, another country is following America's example. Israel is systematically destroying Gaza, essentially intending to make the city uninhabitable for Palestinians who have endured ongoing violence. It is interesting to note that at the beginning of the Gaza War, Israeli leaders cited the Allied destruction of the German city of Dresden in 1945 as justification for their brutal air and ground operations against the Palestinians.

In World War II, the Americans and their British allies completely destroyed German cities in a "combined bombing attack" and considered all Germans complicit in the crimes of their government and the Nazis and therefore legitimate targets. That is, the same is true of the right-wing government of Israel today. Israel also considers all Palestinians to be members of Hamas and therefore legitimate targets of war, Israeli (and American) style. Like the United States, Israel claims to defend democracy with every illegal action. It is no wonder that Washington is so willing to send bombs and shells to Israel as it seeks to bring about “peace” through massive war, destruction and genocide.

More than 22 years have passed since the 9/11 attacks and large-scale American attacks in the Middle East, but the United States still has at least 30,000 troops in the region. There is at least one and sometimes two aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf, and this does not include US military bases that are scattered across countries in the region, from Kuwait to Bahrain, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. Years later, some 900 US Marines are still illegally occupying parts of Syria (coincidentally, where most of the country's oil is produced) and 2,500 troops are stationed in Iraq.