A Manual for Benevolent Bombing

EDITORIAL, 6 Apr 2026

#945 | Raïs Neza Boneza – TRANSCEND Media Service

How to Liberate Your Way into a Rubble Pile

There is something deeply reassuring about a well-structured war.

Not the explosions, of course—those tend to ruin the aesthetic. The smoke, the screaming, the “inconvenient civilians” who insist on living where the bombs land. No, the comfort lies in the narrative. The choreography. The liturgical precision of turning high explosives into high-minded philosophy.

Because in the 21st century, war is no longer mere violence.

It is violence with a press release, a logo, and a marketing budget.

Step 1: We Don’t Bomb Countries. We Bomb “Regimes.”

Somewhere between a Pentagon briefing room and a D.C. public relations firm, a golden rule was carved into stone: you do not attack nations. You liberate them from themselves.

It is a linguistic miracle. You can flatten a capital city, but rest assured—it was not a sovereign country being destroyed. Just a “regime.” The people are merely unfortunate tenants trapped in a building we are demolishing for their own safety. This framing performs a neat magic trick: invasion becomes intervention, missiles become moral gestures, and oil geopolitics become a humanitarian rescue mission.

How could anyone object to freedom… when it’s delivered from 30,000 feet?

Step 2: The Empathy Explosives

We are not imposing power. We are correcting injustice. There is a crucial distinction.

The missiles are not weapons; they are arguments. The airstrikes are not destruction; they are dialogue—just delivered at super speed, with a rather short response window. Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya: each theater came with the same tagline. We are here because we care. We care so deeply that we are willing to smash your infrastructure, redraw your borders, and reorganize your society just to prove it.

It’s not war. It’s empathy. With cluster munitions.

Step 3: The Incoming Catastrophe

No script is complete without the looming, existential threat. Weapons of mass destruction. Long-range missiles. A dictator who is really, truly crazy—crazy enough that we must rationally bomb him back to the Stone Age.

We are told that if we do not act immediately, thousands will die. Regions will collapse. The world will spiral into chaos. So, naturally, to prevent instability, we introduce a whole lot more instability. Preemptively. Because nothing says “calm” like a preemptive shock-and-awe campaign.

Step 4: The Reluctant Podium Man

Every decent war requires a tired president. He stands at the podium, shoulders weighted with righteousness, sighing like a man who tried everything—except, perhaps, staying home.

“We gave them every chance.” “We sought peace.” “They refused.”

You half expect him to ask for a moment of silence for the peace that died. War is never a choice, you see. It is something that happens to the United States, like a hurricane or a sudden spike in defense contractor stock. The bombs are dropped reluctantly. With dignity. And preferably during sweeps week.

Step 5: The Sacred Benediction

And then, the finale. The transformation of foreign policy into theology.

“Our cause is just.” “Our mission is noble.” “We will prevail.” Doubt becomes heresy. Opposition becomes moral confusion. The missiles ascend, and somewhere between takeoff and impact, they acquire a divine seal of approval. It is no longer a campaign; it is a sermon. One hopes the congregation enjoys the light show.

Step 6: The Rebrand (When Subtlety Got a Hangover)

For a long time, wars came wrapped in soft-focus branding: Operation Enduring FreedomIraqi FreedomUnified Protector. They sounded like NGO initiatives or yoga retreats.

But lately, subtlety has been thrown out the window. Welcome to Midnight Hammer. Welcome to Epic Fury.

Washington has apparently decided that pretending to be the world’s social worker is exhausting. Why disguise domination when you can name it like a blockbuster sequel? War, now streaming in high definition, sponsored by the defense industry.

The Honest Conclusion We Keep in the Footnotes

Strip away the language—the regimes, the threats, the reluctant speeches, the hashtags—and something awkward remains. War is not a humanitarian tool. It is not a last resort that keeps recurring like a chronic illness we claim to be curing.

It is power. Raw, naked power, projected, justified, narrated, and—when the focus groups demand it—rebranded.

The tragedy isn’t just that wars keep happening. It’s that they keep showing up dressed as solutions. They arrive as the cure for instability, the remedy for oppression, the final argument for peace.

And after decades of relentless defending, peace remains curiously unavailable.

Perhaps the darkest joke is the one we keep telling ourselves: that next time, the bombing will be benevolent. Next time, the fury will be epic.

We’ll just have to wait for the sequel.

____________________________________________

Raïs Neza Boneza is the author of fiction as well as non-fiction, poetry books and articles. He was born in the Katanga province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (Former Zaïre). He is also an activist and peace practitioner. Raïs is a member of the TRANSCEND Media Service Editorial Committee and a convener of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace Development Environment for Central and African Great Lakes. He uses his work to promote artistic expressions as a means to deal with conflicts and maintaining mental wellbeing, spiritual growth and healing. Raïs has travelled extensively in Africa and around the world as a lecturer, educator and consultant for various NGOs and institutions. His work is premised on art, healing, solidarity, peace, conflict transformation and human dignity issues and works also as freelance journalist. You can reach him at rais.boneza@gmail.comhttp://www.raisnezaboneza.no


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This article originally appeared on Transcend Media Service (TMS) on 6 Apr 2026.

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