Cold War and the War on Terror
The Cold War (CW) and the War against Terror (WAT) were similar in several ways and different in other important aspects. Each is situated in its own particular political and social era. The CW emerged in the post-WW2 years and was inextricably linked with a number of dynamic variables then shaping the global geopolitical spectrum: these variables included the rise of the Military-Industrial Complex, identified by Eisenhower as a threat to global peace and American security/prosperity in his outgoing speech on the eve of his departure from the White House (Stone, Kuznick); also included was the propaganda campaign regarding the containment of Communism (even though this was not an issue in WW2, as the U.S. was allied with the leader of the largest Communist nation in the world, Stalin of the Soviet Union -- and together they fought one of the only countries in Europe actually waging war against the Communists -- Germany); a third variable was the rise of the neo-conservative agenda manifested under the Ford Administration, who brought men like Cheney, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz (the neo-con war haws of the more recent WAT disaster) into the political fold; a fourth variable was the role of Israel in the modern geopolitical discourse, which occupied the last days of the Kennedy presidency, as JFK attempted to keep Israel from getting nuclear weapons (just prior to his assassination), and which would later become a major political hammer in the WAT (as more and more AIPAC-sponsored Congressman sought to represent Israel as an "ally" and one that should be protected in the WAT in the Middle East).
These variables intertwined with the WAT era (with the same neo-con representatives exerting influence in the White House to pursue a WAT in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, etc.), and similarities could easily be drawn between the use of bogus evidence to incite the public against the "enemy" -- Gulf of Tonkin for Vietnam during the Cold War and yellow cake uranium from Niger for the Iraq invasion in the War against Terror. Thus the two Wars can be compared and contrasted in these terms -- but also in strategic warfare terms, such as how the wars in Vietnam and in the Middle East were conducted, how insurgents reacted, how locals were trained and armed, whether crimes against humanity were committed, etc. This paper will examine these aspects of the two Wars and discuss their relation.
CW: Profit and Geopolitical Imperialism
The desire of the American Presidents Johnson and Bush (II) to appear "tough" to their opponent was evident in both wars. Immediately, following the Gulf of Tonkin incident -- which was never fully validated, as Hunt points out (84-85), Johnson had launched an attack on North Vietnam, asserting, "I didn't just screw Ho Chi Minh ... I cut his pecker off" (Hunt 85). The bravado inherent in that statement was representative of Johnson and the Cold War leaders' overall aggressive attitude toward their foes: America was determined to confront any challenge (no matter how insignificant or weak) with full force. Underlying this display was an imperialistic agenda (Vietnam had been a colony of France prior to the attempt by the U.S. to secure it (from any Soviet advancement) -- but there was also the MIC agenda: war is profitable for the military-industrial complex, and General Smedley Butler said as much in his assessment of America's neo-colonial wars prior to the 1930s during his public lecture circuit which culminated in the publication of his talk "War is a Racket."
At the same time, Johnson had no problem backing down from an Israeli attack on the U.S.S. Liberty in 1967 during Israel's Six-Day War with its neighbors in the Middle East. Perhaps the reason is found in the fact that Johnson was good friends with Zionists like Mathilde Krim (ex-member of the Irgun, who spent time with Johnson in the White House during the war) (Segev 383). Or perhaps it was that America had no geopolitical interests in the Middle East at that time other than to facilitate the agenda of Israel in its territorial pursuits/conquests by providing behind the scenes support. In Asia, it was a different matter altogether. The Vietnam War was a protracted engagement that became interminable and the purpose of which became blurred as protestors at home were shot and killed (students at Kent State University in Ohio, for example) and the MIC continued its weapons production, selling helicopters and the like to the government at a rate that...
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