On war

02.04.2024

War has always accompanied human events: it is an archetype of the collective unconscious, a pattern that dwells in the depths of the soul. A natural activity that has determined relations between peoples and states, it has altered the course of history in bloody ways, unleashing violence and destruction. The archetype of destruction is present in fairy tales, in the myths of all civilisations, in stories passed down between generations, as a divine sign, noble and cruel.

With war comes the development of technology, fortifications and weapons, but also surgery and first-aid medicine, and like all archetypes it has a dual polarity. Heroism, sacrifice, defence of territory and lineage, violence, overpowering and unnecessary cruelty the characteristics of the two opposites.

In the time of dissolution, war has been removed and cast out into the Shadow, a disturbing and frightening element of strong emotions and unsettling feelings. Warriors, so different from contemporary weak males, are feared and execrated, unconsciously reminding men incapable of fighting of cowardice and frailty. In reality, the warrior is not a madman agitated by violence, but a predator who challenges other predators in a clash of armed men, between men with a code of honour whose first rule is respect for the defenceless. The warrior cancels the spirit of self-preservation, defies fear, overcomes pain, sacrifices himself for his homeland and his people, making himself sacred.

Warriors of weapons and warriors of the Spirit, as in the Little and Great Holy War, where the limits of the human are fought in the enemy. The merchant accumulates to exorcise the fear of death, the warrior disperses energy to overcome it, in the eternal clash between Spirit and matter. War is a collective orgy, a state of psychophysical and spiritual exaltation like the Dionysian ritual, an explosion of madness that breaks the limits of ordinary reality.

The violent irruption into an altered state of consciousness, the opening onto a magical dimension, an explosion of the conflict between Eros and Thanatos, the two vital impulses. In Marxist theory, war arises from deprivation, from economic and social drives, from capitalist prevarication; in reality, war appears in History well before the advent of capitalism. On the contrary, war is born of excess, of the warrior's sacred fury, divine energy that is discharged in the struggle between equals, an initiatory path: heroic asceticism.

Traditional war is a clash between soldiers, not the slaughter of innocent civilians as in modern warfare from the late Middle Ages onwards. With the globalisation of trade, the discovery of the New World, war changes and loses its aura of sacredness to become aggression against those who cannot defend themselves. The model is that of the USA, which has unleashed military attacks against sovereign states around the world, avoiding armed confrontation on their own soil, strong from the air and unprepared for direct confrontation. Destroyers of the medieval abbey of Montecassino and perpetrators of the massacre of children at the Gorla primary school in Milan, perpetrators of carpet-bombing European cities and of nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki after the war was over.

American wars are always wars of aggression, from Iraq to Serbia, for low economic interests, to open new markets not to export democracy as they would have us believe. The technological means used exclude the direct participation of the soldier, one strikes from above by means of a drone as in a video game. The lack of physical contact with the opponent removes the inhibiting brakes of aggression that also regulate animal behaviour. The animal that submits is not attacked, while the operator who kills from a control room does not perceive the signals emitted by the victim and does not stop his action.

Without the screams of pain, the expressions of terror and despair, the smell of burning flesh, the attack does not stop and only ends when the slaughter is over. The values of solidarity and respect among equals of the medieval knights have disappeared to make way for the operational coldness of a computer man. Feelings of human pity, emotions, moral principles, everything is wiped out by the coldness of ruthless killers, trained in indifference, in detachment from reality. Contemporary wars are eminently massacres of innocents, programmed destruction of hospitals, homes, civil infrastructure.

The unarmed enemy cannot defend himself, he succumbs to general indifference, reduced to collateral damage in the world masters' wars of aggression. The fake Left that in the days of the Soviet Union was pacifist and anti-imperialist is now warmongering, militarist with other people's soldiers, fighting from the comfort of its own living room. Cowards who would die of fear at the first shot drive other peoples to war by arming them in the best American style, without any shame for the carnage they finance. Invasions, genocides, coups, fake orange revolutions and Arab springs are unleashed by the US for its geopolitical interests.

The aggressiveness of US imperialism drives peoples with a common history to clash with each other to isolate and weaken rival powers. The unscrupulousness and lack of moral conscience of this state that has appointed itself the world's policeman knows no bounds; it finances and organises bloody conflicts wherever it has economic and strategic interests. After spreading the most demented and destructive fashions among peoples, it has also distorted war, reducing it from a sacred act between warriors to a massacre of innocents. Big capital in its struggle for world conquest has corrupted every principle, broken down every limit, reducing the sacred violence of traditional war to unregulated carnage. The only real war is the romantic war in the shadow of swords, of the last charge on horseback against tanks, the war of blood against gold.

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Translation by Costantino Ceoldo