Lest the Winds of Circumstance . . .
by
William Buppert
by William Buppert
"My will had gone and I feared to be alone, lest
the winds of circumstance blow my empty soul away."
~ T.E. Lawrence,
Seven
Pillars of Wisdom
This quote has a haunting quality of despair that even a Russian
novelist would be hard pressed to elucidate better. While Lawrence
was a "guest" of the Turks in 1916, he was subject to
interrogation techniques most indelicate. The current prison/torture
scandals and the Bush
regime’s disdain for the Geneva Convention and international
law have further reinforced the idea that America is a rogue nation.
Plenty of Middle Americans are asking how could our armed forces
do this? Like my colleagues Karen Kwiatkowski and Michael Pierce,
I served in the US armed forces for most of my adult life and witnessed
the reasons they can do what they do. Others have considered the
famous student experiments in captor/prisoner relationships and
the good German hypotheses but the crux of the matter for uniformed
soldiers is the value of recognized ordinances of civilized warfare.
This is not an oxymoron. I think the peace mankind experiences is
merely a pause between conflicts generated the lion’s share of the
time by government. These formalized protocols are what separate
the soldier from the serial killer. Now we have the US armed forces
pushing the edge of the legal envelope as it were at the behest
of their civilian masters. It
turns out that the intelligence organizations in the Army may be
the catalyst for the prison abuse scandal. These are the "mandarins"
of the intellectual caste. The Military Intelligence Corps prides
itself as the "smart" branch of the US Army steeped in
a culture of intellectual ferment and the ability to think like
the enemy. Nothing could be further from the truth but I discussed
that in an earlier
essay. They share the same dysfunctions as the rest of the US
intelligence apparatchiks: a signal inability to think outside the
box, an absolutely ironclad lack of deference to different cultural
norms and a rudimentary hostility to any other intelligence agency
or branch.
The Cold War honed a system of intelligence which faced a monolithic
threat and relied on a static empirical model of counting weapons,
soldiers and materiel and trying to divine intent on the part of
the enemy. An enviably simple task on reflection given the inputs
from satellite data, observation and technical extrapolation of
means and ability, although
even that was flawed. Inevitably, the same qualities which animate
most journalists – being stupid, venal and lazy – managed to permeate
the bureaucratic rat’s nests of the US government. Intelligence
at its distillate is the ability to reliably predict how other national
actors will behave to stimulus whether it is a provocation from
us or a response to weaker or stronger opponents. Match this with
the bureaucratic imperative to risk aversion and the cultivation
of a culture of obedience to political masters and you have a recipe
for disaster. The CIA and the alphabet soup of other bunglers that
comprise the pantheon of entrails readers for the Feds stumble all
over themselves NOT to seize bold and innovative conclusions to
intelligence puzzles. The intelligence products made for the National
Command Authority will inevitably make sure their conclusions please
the expectations of their masters at the top no matter the logical
contortions necessary. As I’ve stated before, the
US intelligence apparatus cannot conduct human intelligence
(the coordination and maintenance of clandestine agent networks)
because we are culturally and institutionally incapable of it; so
we rely primarily on technical means that do not fare well against
the relatively low-tech host of adversaries we’re now facing. Do
you suppose Joe Q. Citizen, untrained in intelligence arcana, would
purposefully sign off on destroying religious structures (with the
worshipers inside), use Israeli-style helicopter gunship methods
to "surgically" remove hostiles in urban areas or go medieval
on prison inmates to soften them up? None of this took place without
a finding or thumbs up from the associated intelligence activity.
It never ceases to amaze me how the American brand of bureaucracy
can sometimes out-Soviet the Soviet system when it comes to a penchant
for micromanagement of details that in the end don’t matter but
still manage to make things worse in the aggregate....
The intelligence system suffers from the same problem the rest
of the Federal government suffers from: a consistent reward for
failure and a perverse incentive to ensure a solution is not found
and if it is, it remains well hidden. Additionally, a tendency to
centralized decision-making, administrative bloat and sheer incompetence.
One clear example is the abysmal lack of analysts’ language capabilities
in their areas of expertise. Can you read translated reports or
newspapers from a targeted country and get a true feel for the culture
and driving factors in behavior? Does the frisking of Iraqi women
and children at checkpoints and mass disarmament of the Arab male
culture betray sensitivity to cultural hot buttons? I could go on
with legions of examples but you get the picture – the US intelligence
agencies are like a blind and naked man batting at a piñata,
which is actually a hornet’s nest. Our pasty-faced, well-fed and
squeaky clean analysts (are we sure they don’t have a labor union?)
comfortably ensconced in Central Intelligence Agency or Defense
Intelligence Agency cubicles will spend hours perfecting typos in
full-color PowerPoint presentations for their bosses and maybe mere
moments on the substance of the intelligence puzzles they are working
on. Of course, much like the scene in the brilliant "Life
of Brian," the Judean People’s Front and the People’s Front
of Judea are mortal enemies bent more on each other’s destruction
than the common threat. There is no more fit analogy for America’s
current intelligence woes.
Is it true the Abu Ghraib prison scandals were as bad as is now
claimed? I suspect the worst
is yet to come. You combine the sheer obsequious idiocy of contemporary
intelligence, the institutional proclivity of cops to dehumanize
their assigned targets and the natural barbarity of prison confinement.
I happen to think American prisons are much the same, given the
number of political
prisoners (unconstitutional laws), non-violent offenders (Drug
War) and the overlooked pathology of prison
rape (a wink and a nod by the corrections industry). The lethal
combination of the feminization of the military, American exceptionalism
to the Law
of Land Warfare, the Israelization of American military tactics
in Iraq, dehumanization of Iraqi civilians and sheer exhaustion
of the only
combat organizations the US can field in the world is setting
the stage for a US debacle in which if we don’t leave soon, we will
revisit the march of Xenophon
but with much more unpleasant results. Remember what Lawrence
achieved after he escaped the Turks? I wonder how many of the Abu
Ghraib prisoners who are paroled alive will return with a vengeance.
May
24, 2004
William
Buppert [send him mail],
a retired Army officer, lives on a ranch in the Inland Northwest
with his wife and their three homeschooled children.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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Buppert Archives
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