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Taking Exception To Obama’s American Exceptionalism

Obama is right to condemn the Islamic State’s brutality. But ISIS doesn’t have a monopoly on savagery.

Last week, President Obama outlined his strategy for combatting the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria–ISIS. Despite its brevity, there’s plenty to take exception to in the President’s speech.

Obama is right to condemn the Islamic State’s brutality. But ISIS doesn’t have a monopoly on savagery. Thirteen years after the 9/11 attacks, the United States’ brutal, costly, and counter-productive “war on terror” has enveloped the entire Middle East. Doubling down on his predecessor’s war crimes, Obama’s drone campaign has exacted hundreds of civilian casualties. Taking the lives of innocents by remote control doesn’t make killing any less barbaric.

Adding insult to injury, Obama invoked the names of James Foley and Steven Sotloff – the two American journalists beheaded by ISIS – in a cynical effort to promote perpetual war. Obama’s sympathy for the slain journalists belies his administration’s habitual abuse of the Espionage Act to intimidate whistleblowers and wage war on journalists. So much for Obama’s “principled” defense of journalists and press freedom.

Most galling of all, Obama concluded his speech by quoting a civilian, recently “trapped on a distant mountain,” who praised America’s so-called humanitarian intervention in Northern Iraq. Would that Obama, the war hawks in Washington, and the mainstream media actually listened to civilians – from Yemen and Somalia to Pakistan and Afghanistan – who routinely denounce American exceptionalism, and the brutality that so often accompanies it.

For Speak Your Mind, this is Kevin Howley.

Sources:

Downie, L. Jr. & Rafsky, S. (2013, October 10). Leak investigations and surveillance in post-9/11 America. Committee to Protect Journalists.

Ridley, Y. (2012, May 12). Bush convicted of war crimes in absentia. Foreign Policy Journal.

Serle, J. (2014, March 12). Countries must investigate civilian drone death claims, says UN investigator Ben Emmerson. The Bureau of Investigative Journalism.

Solomon, N. (2014, August 4). Journalism groups rally around petition supporting James Risen. Columbia Journalism Review.

Thousands protest US drone war in Pakistan. (2013, November 25). Democracy Now!

Kevin Howley

Kevin Howley (Ph. D. Indiana University) is professor of media studies at DePauw University. His latest book, Media Interventions, was published by Peter Lang in 2013.

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