Article Image

IPFS News Link • Foreign Policy

Is Venezuela Really a Threat to US National Security?

• antiwar.com

In The Mouse That Roared, a 1955 satirical novel by Leonard Wibberly, the Duchy of Grand Fenwick – a mythical three-by-five mile nation between Switzerland and France – declares war against the United States. This is done not because Princess Gloriana, the absolute ruler, and Tully Bascomb, commander of its "army" outfitted with the latest in crossbows – expects to defeat the mighty superpower, but precisely because they expect to lose. While this may seem odd, the logic behind Grand Fenwick's war aims is impeccable, given the history of World War II and its aftermath, in which the US rebuilt the defeated Axis powers and poured in foreign aid via the Marshall Plan. The Duchy is broke, largely because its single export, Grand Fenwick wine, has been duplicated by an American winery that markets its product under the name "Grand Enwick." The US State Department ignores the Duchy's protests, and so the "invasion" is launched with the hope that Grand Fenwick's defeat will be both imminent and profitable.


Agorist Hosting