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THE GREATEST EVIL IS WAR by Chris Hedges

THE GREATEST EVIL IS WAR

by Chris Hedges

Pub Date: Aug. 23rd, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-64421-293-6
Publisher: Seven Stories

A plangent diatribe against war.

In his latest, Hedges argues that “preemptive war is a war crime,” including in the Ukraine, but the West made Russia do it by extending NATO into Eastern Europe, so that “Russia has every right to feel threatened, betrayed, and angry.” And because Russian was the primary language of most Crimeans, why should Russia not have annexed the peninsula? The author’s condition-tinged discussion—which simultaneously damns and excuses the war in Ukraine—soon grows tiresome, especially because Hedges does not extend the same “yes, but” privilege to, say, Germany in its invasion of German-speaking Sudetenland or the U.S. in its invasion of Iraq. While excoriating the Biden administration for being stocked with presumed nationalists such as Anthony Blinken and Kimberly Kagan (the latter’s crime being, apparently, that she founded a think tank that studies war), Hedges writes, “When an enemy can’t be found, an enemy is manufactured. Putin has become…the new Hitler, out to grab Ukraine and the rest of Central and Eastern Europe.” Is Putin an invented foe? That seems a dividing-line question: If you answer in the affirmative, you’ll likely keep reading, and if not, not. A noted leftist critic, Hedges was a contributor to the now-shuttered Russian TV channel RT America, which may explain the rationalizations, against which his concluding prayer that we see “an end to war before we stumble into a nuclear holocaust that devours us all” seems halfhearted—particularly when it’s preceded by a call for a moratorium on arms shipments to Ukraine. Elsewhere, Hedges rehearses the usual charges, few surprising: War is bad because civilians get hurt, soldiers are scarred (“The worst trauma is often caused not by what combat veterans witnessed but by what they did”), corporations become rich, and so on.

A book of predictable hectoring—a far cry from the author’s best work.