Running With the Barbarians
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
Green Zoning
It All the Way
As every political
junky in the country now knows, just before finding himself not
indicted by Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, Karl Rove
went to a fundraiser in New Hampshire and launched the Republican
campaign for the 2006 midterm elections. Its simple goal was to
keep a Democratic majority (and so the power to investigate) out
of either house of Congress. He promptly
attacked Rep. John Murtha and other Democrats for their "cut
and run" attitudes on Iraq. ("They may be with you for the first
shots, but they're not going... to be with you for the tough battles.")
He swore that the administration had been right to take out Saddam
Hussein ("We have no excuses to make for it...") and proposed a
new version of the administration's most successful post-9/11 ploy
the constant linking of Saddam Hussein to the al-Qaeda attacks.
Now, he would link the wreckage of administration policy in Iraq
to future terrorist attacks. If we "cut and run," he pointed out
in a fabulous Möbius strip of political logic, "It would provide
a launching pad for the terrorists to strike the United States and
the West."
His President
had only recently announced the turning
of "the tide" in Iraq with the killing of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
and the installation of a new Iraqi government in Baghdad's Green
Zone. Vice President Cheney would soon answer a question about whether
we were still in the "last
throes" of the Iraqi insurgency by insisting that the Democrats
wanted to "bail out" just as we were "making
very significant progress" in Iraq. The Congressional Republicans,
whatever their private hesitations, were brought into line with
the Rove plan and launched the sort of offensive that, in the past,
has proven so ineffective in Iraq and so
effective at home.
Given the
disaster that Iraq actually is, some alterations of argument were
obviously in order. Put in terms of Colin Powell's infamous "Pottery
Barn rule" ("If you break it, you own it"), this particular
formulation would go something like: You've barged into Pottery
Barn, an invading bull in a China shop and you've been breaking
things right and left ever since; management, employees, and other
customers are enraged, so what choice do you have but to stay and
keep breaking things? Bail out now and all those angry folks will
be heading for your house to break your things.
Once upon
a time, this administration's top officials and associated neocons
dreamed of shock-and-awing the Middle East into the shape they wanted,
settling into Iraq for the long haul, dominating the planet in geopolitical
and energy terms, ensuring that no nation or bloc of nations would
ever again challenge the U.S. and, in the bargain, installing the
Republicans as the dominant domestic party for at least a generation.
Now, forced to hitch their fates to the President's disastrous war,
they simply hope to squeak through the mid-term elections and, two
years later, hand ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan off to another
president. Joshua Marshall of the Talking
Points Memo website recently described the President as "like
an owner of a business that's slowly going under… And he won't just
liquidate and save what he can, because then he'd have to come to
grips with the fact that he's failed. So his policy is denial and
slow failure. Here of course the analogy to President Bush is rather
precise since he only has to hold out until 2009 when he can give
the problem to someone else, just as he did in his past life with
other businesses he drove into the ground."
In fact, whether
it works or not, Rove's political gamble is breathtakingly bold
in its simplicity. He's throwing the dice on a single proposition:
That, in the end, Americans will prefer the illusion of living in
a Green-Zone world all the way and so will swallow the Green-Zone
fictions that go with it.
Let's consider,
then, a few small pieces of the Green-Zone world our President has
created:
George
in the Green Zone: On his Potemkin travels, the President has
long taken a portable Green Zone with him. On the campaign trail,
he almost never met an audience that hadn't been carefully vetted
and so seldom found himself face to face with a questioner who wasn't
beyond friendly, outright obsequious, or absolutely fawningly admiring.
Put another way, with rare exceptions, his world is regularly cleared
of reality as he approaches. On his foreign travels, this happens
with clocklike regularity. Major metropolises are simply shut down
or cleared of humanity, so that, like the USS Abraham Lincoln
for his infamous "Mission Accomplished" tailhook landing, they become
but movie sets on which he can tell his Green-Zone stories about
how the world works without fear of complaint or contradiction.
Last week,
George and his entourage landed in Vienna for a brief yearly confab
with European Union leaders on a continent that views him with ever-increasing
alarm and hostility. According to the
latest Pew poll, for instance, two-thirds of Austrians now have
a negative view of the U.S. (even though Desperate Housewives
is the TV hit of the year there). "A
Harris Interactive/Financial Times survey released Monday
found that 36 percent of Europeans view the United States as the
world's greatest threat to 'global stability.' By comparison, 30
percent of those polled named Iran as the biggest threat, while
18 percent named China." When a European reporter actually confronted
Bush with this at a press conference, it angered
the President greatly and he responded not only with irritation,
but with a Green Zone-style description of our American world: "We're
a transparent democracy," he insisted. "People know exactly what's
on our mind. We debate things in the open. We've got a legislative
process that's active."
Here, then,
is a description of Vienna as he entered it by Charles
Bremner, a British reporter who has covered summits all the
way back to Jimmy Carter's administration and finds the present
security arrangements to have reached "absurd proportions." He writes:
"The
centre of Vienna has been locked down since Bush's arrival on Air
Force One last night. Streets are closed to traffic and parks and
squares are locked shut. Bomb disposal squads are checking suitcases.
The unusual quiet makes it feel like a prettier version of Soviet
Moscow on the morning of the old November parades. Military helicopters
are hovering over the Hofburg, the old Imperial Palace… We are working
alongside in the usual vast press centre inside a cordon of about
2,000 police. To enter means penetrating three cordons, with the
right credentials. At two of them, they searched all my bags and
asked me to show that my computer and mobile phone were real. Dogs
then sniffed them, along with the laundry in my overnight bag."
Oh, and while
humanity is cleared from the general area, the
dogs are usually flown in from the U.S. along with snipers,
hordes of security personal, a bevy of escort cars, masses of aides,
even cooks.
Two weeks
earlier, the President made his secret escape from Washington and
flew into Baghdad international airport wearing 25 pounds of body
armor, helicoptered into the capital's heavily fortified American-controlled
Green Zone, met with the new Iraqi prime minister (on five-minute's
notice lest word get out and something terrible happen),
dramatically looked him "in the eyes," and a few hours later left
the U.S. version of "Iraq" for the administration's stage-set version
of Washington to offer the American people yet another round of
Green-Zone tales of turning tides, progress, and future Iraqi successes.
Incident
in the Red Zone: But what about anyone who has to leave Baghdad's
Green Zone for even a brief visit to the region the Americans on
the spot call the "Red Zone" and most of the rest of us think of
as Iraq? Well, the Australian ambassador had an
interesting experience along these lines lately. As it happens,
not all Iraqi ministries are located inside the Green Zone. The
Ministry of Trade is unlucky in this regard, being in one of Baghdad's
many embattled neighborhoods, which made the Australian ambassador
no less unlucky. Last week, he had to visit Abdul-Falah al-Sudani,
the Iraqi trade minister, in hopes of negotiating a multimillion-dollar
deal for Australian wheat. Naturally, he took along his "security
guards." (Who in Baghdad would go anywhere without them?) In the
ministry's parking lot they evidently ran into a set of armed Iraqis
the trade minister's bodyguards, as it turned out
and evidently fearing themselves in danger, simply opened fire,
killing one and wounding several. They then seem to have leapt into
their vehicles and hightailed it back to the safety of the Green
Zone (apologies
to follow later). Amid security guards, bodyguards, militias, insurgents,
armed criminals of all sorts, private mercenaries, jihadis, and
armed, terrified citizens, shoot on sight is increasingly the operative
phrase. Call it the Wild East or maybe the world that George made.
Life between
the Zones: While George and Karl and Dick and Don and Condi
and Zalmay "Zarqawi's
death will not by itself end the violence in Iraq. But [it]
is an important step in the right direction. It is a good omen for
Iraq, for Prime Minister Maliki's new government, and our overall
efforts in the Global War on Terror..." were spinning a cotton-candy
confection out of post-Zarqawi, don't-cut-and-run Iraq, our Green-Zone
ambassador, the very same Zalmay Khalilzad, sent a
cable marked "sensitive" to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
that just happened to end up in the hands of the Washington Post.
All the Post would say was that it was "obtained" by the
paper though assumedly it was leaked by someone, Iraqi or
American, who wanted the world to know what life in Iraq was actually
like, even for those working in the Green Zone.
The cable
focused on the Iraqi staff of nine in the Public Affairs section
of our gargantuan embassy and, though it got some media attention,
few of us really read such long documents beginning to end, so let
me summarize. It dealt with Iraqis who have to leave the Green Zone
each night for Red-Zone Iraq and return each work-day morning. In
their Red-Zone neighborhoods, the employees often got but an hour
of power for every six hours without (one area lacked city power
for "over a month"); spent endless hours in gas lines (12 hours
on a day off for one employee); were taunted by Iraqi guards, who
seem to belong to (assumedly Shiite) militias, at Green-Zone checkpoints;
could not tell family members where they actually worked; faced
mounting criticisms of the U.S. at home; experienced sectarian strains
in homes and neighborhoods; could not protect their own children;
did not take home their American cell phones (fearing these might
ID them for death); are in some cases "planning for their own possible
abduction" by entering code names for friends and colleagues into
their Iraqi cell phones; cannot be called by the embassy on holidays
or weekends without having their "cover" blown; regularly know of
people dying and often attend funerals ("every evening" in one case);
if female, are being intimidated and harassed for not "covering
up" and for using cell phones (a "suspected channel to licentious
relationships with men"); have to regularly modify behavior, language,
and dress as they pass into different neighborhoods controlled by
different militias; and find that in their neighborhoods "the central
government… is not relevant."
The memo concludes,
"Although our staff retain[s] a professional demeanor, strains are
apparent. We see that their personal fears are reinforcing divisive
sectarian or ethnic channels, despite talk of reconciliation by
officials." In other words, even inside the heavily guarded American
embassy, signs of incipient civil war can be observed.
But perhaps
all you need to know is this: According to Khalilzad's cable, "More
recently, we have begun shredding documents printed out that show
local staff surnames." In other words as with the President's
five-minute notification time for the Iraqi prime minister
the embassy is not reliably secure.
Whoever wrote
this cable for the ambassador notes that "in March, a few staff
members approached us to ask what provisions would we make for them
if we evacuate." In Iraqi minds, then, already the shades of Saigon,
1975 are arising.
At the very
moment Bush and Co. were painting a picture of progress in Iraq,
the ambassador's memo bluntly notes that "even upscale [Baghdad]
neighborhoods such as Mansur have visibly deteriorated." The splendid
New York Times reporter Sabrina Tavernise had a piece on
this in the Saturday paper, Fear
Invades a Once-Comfortable Iraqi Enclave. She writes: "[Once]
Baghdad's Upper East Side… but… no longer the address everyone wants…
[n]ow Mansour, a religiously mixed area just three miles from the
fortified Green Zone, feels more like wartime Beirut than Park Avenue,
and its affluent residents worry that the wave of violence that
has devoured large swaths of Baghdad has begun encroaching on them."
As you read on, it only gets grimmer. For instance, the owner of
a well-known, upscale "Sweet Shop" that was satchel-bombed, she
writes, "blamed the Americans for the security troubles, an opinion
expressed by many in Mansour Shiite and Sunni alike."
And none of
this includes the mayhem that followed that turning "tide"
the murder
of one of Saddam Hussein's lead lawyers, the
small spike in American troop deaths, the steady stream of sectarian
killings, or the
gun battles that broke out between Sunni insurgents and the
Sadrist militia (and came to include American troops) on Haifa street,
one of the capital's main thoroughfares, once
known as "Death Street," and a notorious hotbed of insurgent
activity that was long ago supposedly reclaimed by Iraqi troops.
Green Zones
inside Green Zones: In good times and bad, the Bush administration
has always had a Green-Zone strategy in Iraq, but never an "exit
strategy" because they never planned to depart (and still don't).
From the beginning, they expected to hunker down in a
series of permanent bases, largely away from major population
centers, and these, to the tune of billions of dollars, have since
been built. The biggest of them is Balad
Air Base, north of Baghdad, "a small American town smack in
the middle of the most hostile part of Iraq," with 20,000 American
troops, most of whom never leave the base, a Subway, a Pizza Hut,
a Popeye's, "an ersatz Starbucks," a 24-hour Burger King, two post
exchanges, four mess halls, as well as extensive bus routes
and it's still being upgraded. Bases like Balad were meant to be
little islands of well-fortified and well-guarded American irreality
at the heart of the planet's "arc of instability" (think: its oil
lands).
When the administration
was received in Iraq so much more poorly than any of its officials
ever dreamed, they simply fortified more heavily and settled into
the chaotic ruins of the country for the long haul. Nothing more
clearly illustrates this than the new American embassy rising inside
the Green Zone, a massive citadel inside what's already our citadel.
It is, as Nicholas
von Hoffman pointed out recently in the Nation magazine,
the most permanent of bases. Known to Iraqis as "George W's Palace"
(a sly reference to Saddam's elaborate former palaces), it is to
be the biggest, most expensive "embassy" on the planet to the tune
of at least $592 million (and probably more) a mini-state
within a fortified city-state with 8,000 employees, "twenty-one
buildings, 619 apartments with very fancy digs for the big shots,
restaurants, shops, gym facilities, a swimming pool, a food court,
a beauty salon, a movie theater... and, as the Times of London
reports, ‘a swish club for evening functions.'" When it comes to
electricity and water, it will operate independently of the rest
of Baghdad. With its own missile defense system, it will be the
global bunker of bunkers.
(Not surprisingly,
a not-so-mini-version of this embassy is being built in Afghanistan
for our other failing war on terror. In 2003, it was already being
constructed under a
$100 million contract with Halliburton which specializes
in bases, prisons, and now fortress embassies for the Bush administration.
Much of it is now finished, though little has been written about
it, and it too, as someone who has seen it tells me, is an enormous
fortress-like compound with very few windows (all probably easily
convertible into gun emplacements), guarded by Nepalis wouldn't
want to let the locals too close and well supplied from the
U.S. right down to the heads of lettuce.
Of course,
as the early post-9/11 adventures of our Vice President indicated,
the Bush administration has long been hunkered down with a bunker's-eye
view of the world through those gun-emplacement windows. For its
top officials, the rest of the planet exists outside Green Zone
walls, a place you never venture without your full contingent of
security guards who shoot first, ask questions later, and never,
never (unlike the Australians) apologize. Beyond those walls, it
should never be surprising to find mayhem and horror on some version
of the old American frontier (where you take people "dead
or alive"), because out there is where you find the savages
and barbarians.
The Green
Zoning of History: One of the things you need to do when telling
Green-Zone stories to the American people is "Green Zone" history.
Historical memory (if you're not remembering the glories of World
War II "'The
president understands people's impatience…,' [Tony] Snow said
on CNN. 'He understands that. If somebody had taken a poll in the
Battle of the Bulge, I dare say people would have said, "Wow, my
goodness, what are we doing here?" But you cannot conduct a war
based
on polls.'") is generally to be avoided. For instance, the history
of American support for Saddam Hussein in
the 1980s would, in the pre-invasion period, play no part in
all those stories about Saddam's "killing fields" and his acts of
horror.
When our enemies
(even if once our friends or allies) commit horrors, they are, of
course, the brutes, the barbarians. In telling any such story, if
the enemy is barbaric that automatically makes you "civilization."
Saddam was a barbarian, big time (but skip the years when
our satellites were helping him pinpoint Iranian troop concentrations
to gas). Only last week, out in the Red Zone, two American soldiers
were brutally slain, their bodies mutilated and evidently burned
beyond recognition, and one of them was beheaded (probably after
death); the bodies were then booby-trapped with IEDS.
As New
York Times correspondent John
Burns put it, "The story really takes us back into the 8th century,
a truly barbaric world." National
Security Advisor Stephen Hadley offered the following version
of the same: "I think it's a reminder that this is a brutal enemy
that does not follow any of the rules. It attacks civilians for
political gain, it provokes sectarian violence, and it really follows
no rules of warfare. It's a very brutal enemy, and it's a reminder
to all of us about what we're up against." And those were typical
comments in our world.
Mind you,
in Red-Zone Iraq, mutilated bodies including
many with holes from power drills (very twenty-first century),
often tortured, it seems, by militias connected to our Shiite "allies"
have been pouring into the morgues for god knows how long.
However, when a largely Green-Zoned American public is suddenly
shocked by the horrific deaths of American troops and wonders what
century the brutes we're up against are really in, it helps enormously
to lack all historical memory. I don't mean memory of eighth century
or even "medieval" brutality, but simply of the last decades of
the previous century when the CIA ran the largest covert operation
in its history, aimed at turning Afghanistan into the Soviet Union's
Vietnam.
To accomplish
this, the Agency entered into an alliance with Pakistani intelligence
and the Saudis to fund a range of extreme Islamic jihadists, including
one by the name of Osama bin Laden. They were to take guerrilla
war to the USSR by any means imaginable and make them pay
and that they did. Back then, hailed
as "freedom fighters" by President Ronald Reagan and as a "resistance
movement" in our press, our jihadis committed a wide range of terrorist
acts (including using car bombs, bike bombs, wheelbarrow bombs,
even "camel bombs," as well as roadside IEDs) and were hailed
for it. Moreover, when they captured Russian soldiers, they made
a point of torturing,
mutilating, and beheading them. (Soviet atrocities were also legion.)
These were
the well-funded predecessors of the jihadis (or in some cases, like
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar in Afghanistan, they were the very same jihadis)
fighting us today. Now, they are the barbarians.
As a point
of comparison, the same week those American bodies were mutilated
in a barbaric fashion, reporter Ron Suskind came out with a new
book, The
One Percent Doctrine in which, according to Barton
Gellman of the Washington Post, he describes the President's
special interest in a captured al-Qaeda operative, Abu Zubaydah,
who turned out not to be a leading terrorist but a complete nonentity
and literal madman.
"'I
said [Zubaydah] was important,' Bush reportedly told [CIA director
George] Tenet at one of their daily meetings. ‘You're not going
to let me lose face on this, are you?' ‘No sir, Mr. President,'
Tenet replied. Bush ‘was fixated on how to get Zubaydah to tell
us the truth,' Suskind writes, and he asked one briefer, ‘Do some
of these harsh methods really work?' Interrogators did their best
to find out, Suskind reports. They strapped Abu Zubaydah to a water-board,
which reproduces the agony of drowning. They threatened him with
certain death. They withheld medication. They bombarded him with
deafening noise and harsh lights, depriving him of sleep. Under
that duress, he began to speak of plots of every variety
against shopping malls, banks, supermarkets, water systems, nuclear
plants, apartment buildings, the Brooklyn Bridge, the Statue of
Liberty. With each new tale, ‘thousands of uniformed men and women
raced in a panic to each . . . target.' And so, Suskind writes,
‘the United States would torture a mentally disturbed man and then
leap, screaming, at every word he uttered.'"
Of course,
this administration never admits to torturing, but if you're going
by "medieval" standards, water-boarding was once upon a time simply
known as "the
water torture." Such American actions and they have been
legion in recent years have taken place outside the walls
of the Bush administration's Green Zone, out there in a world of
barbarians where "the
gloves must come off" and hands must be preemptively dirtied
to make us all safer back here.
Running
with the Barbarians: So let's return to those ridiculous Europeans
who think that the Bush administration is a greater destabilizing
force than Iran or North Korea in our world. Despite the President's
outrage, here's the odd thing: If you stop to think about it for
a moment, the Bush administration's Iraqi argument and the recent
full-scale charge of the Republicans in Congress is now implicitly
based on little but the destabilizing qualities of the President's
war-on-terror policies; on the thought that, if those policies are
not pursued to their unimaginable endpoint, the destabilizing happening
elsewhere, the turning of Iraq into a lawless, devolving Red Zone,
of Afghanistan into a lawless, rebellious narco-state, the potential
unsettling of the whole "arc of instability," will arrive on our
shores.
The globally
disastrous results of Bush administration policy are now the explanation
for continuing that policy. We must stay in Iraq because otherwise
the Zarqawis will come to us. Who even remembers when, before the
invasion of Iraq, Zarqawi was a nonentity, a small-time thug and
crude jihadist, a would-be whatever with little hope of becoming
that "whatever." Now, he's in the pantheon of whatevers and he and
his successors are being transformed in the White House Rose Garden
from the dismal results of what this administration has done into
the justification for everything they still plan to do.
In
the meantime, we have now passed the Nth tidal shift, the umpteenth
turning point moments which invariably allow the Bush administration
to retell the same inane Green-Zone stories that the media always
takes up with a strange kind of hope as if some slate had just been
wiped clean until, soon after, they are drowned in new waves of
blood and chaos.
How
many more Green Zone stories are Americans capable of taking? For
how long will Americans mistake safety for hunkering down in the
ruins of occupied Iraq and Afghanistan, with the embassy lights
on and the water running and that fabulous little club in full swing,
and everything else going to hell? As long as we do, matters will
only worsen. And sooner or later, whether the jihadis arrive on
our shores or not, our empire will come home. It already has. Don't
for a second think that you can keep the torturers, their methods,
and their mentalities those classic "dirty hands"
off in the shadows, beyond the walls forever. Indeed, the barbarians
are already inside the gates. Soon enough, they may be impossible
to tell from us.
June
26, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture.
Copyright
© 2006 Tom Engelhardt
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