Nemesis on the Imperial Premises
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Chalmers Johnson
by Tom Engelhardt and
Chalmers Johnson
DIGG THIS
The dream of
the Bush administration – eternal global domination abroad with
no other superpower or bloc of powers on the military horizon and
a Republican Party dominant at home for at least a generation
long ago evaporated in Iraq. A midterm election and subsequent devastating
polling figures tell the tale. The days when neocons, their supporters,
and attending pundits talked about the U.S. as the "new Rome" of
planet Earth now seem to exist on the other side of some Startrekkian
wormhole.
And
yet the imperial damage remains everywhere around us. Give the Bush
administration credit. They moved the goalposts. They created the
sort of dystopian imperial reality (as well as a mess of future-busting
proportions) that a generation of relative sanity might not be able
to fully reverse. The
facts on the ground the vastness of the Pentagon, the
power of the military-industrial complex, the inept but already
bloated Homeland Security Department (and the vast security interests
coalescing around it), the staggering alphabet (or acronym) soup
of the "Intelligence
Community" all of this militates against real change,
which is why we need Chalmers Johnson.
Nemesis:
The Last Days of the American Republic, the final volume
of his Blowback Trilogy, is about to storm your local bookstore
(and can be pre-ordered
at Amazon now). It is a reminder of just how far we've moved
from the sort of democratic America that the President is always
holding up as a model to the rest of the world. As with Blowback
and The
Sorrows of Empire before it, Nemesis, Johnson's grand,
if grim, conclusion to our American tragedy, is simply a must-read.
While you're waiting for the book to arrive in your hands, you can
get a little preview of its themes below. ~ Tom
Empire
v. Democracy: Why Nemesis Is at Our Door
By Chalmers
Johnson
History
tells us that one of the most unstable political combinations
is a country like the United States today that tries
to be a domestic democracy and a foreign imperialist. Why
this is so can be a very abstract subject. Perhaps the best way
to offer my thoughts on this is to say a few words about my new
book, Nemesis,
and explain why I gave it the subtitle, "The Last Days of the
American Republic." Nemesis is the third book to have grown
out of my research over the past eight years. I never set out
to write a trilogy on our increasingly endangered democracy, but
as I kept stumbling on ever more evidence of the legacy of the
imperialist pressures we put on many other countries as well as
the nature and size of our military empire, one book led to another.
Professionally,
I am a specialist in the history and politics of East Asia. In
2000, I published Blowback:
The Costs and Consequences of American Empire, because
my research on China, Japan, and the two Koreas persuaded me that
our policies there would have serious future consequences. The
book was noticed at the time, but only after 9/11 did the CIA
term I adapted for the title "blowback" become a
household word and my volume a bestseller.
I had set
out to explain how exactly our government came to be so hated
around the world. As a CIA term of tradecraft, "blowback" does
not just mean retaliation for things our government has done to,
and in, foreign countries. It refers specifically to retaliation
for illegal operations carried out abroad that were kept totally
secret from the American public. These operations have included
the clandestine overthrow of governments various administrations
did not like, the training of foreign militaries in the techniques
of state terrorism, the rigging of elections in foreign countries,
interference with the economic viability of countries that seemed
to threaten the interests of influential American corporations,
as well as the torture or assassination of selected foreigners.
The fact that these actions were, at least originally, secret
meant that when retaliation does come as it did so spectacularly
on September 11, 2001 the American public is incapable
of putting the events in context. Not surprisingly, then, Americans
tend to support speedy acts of revenge intended to punish the
actual, or alleged, perpetrators. These moments of lashing out,
of course, only prepare the ground for yet another cycle of blowback.
A World
of Bases
As a continuation
of my own analytical odyssey, I then began doing research on the
network of 737 American military bases we maintained around the
world (according to the Pentagon's own 2005 official inventory).
Not including the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, we now station
over half a million U.S. troops, spies, contractors, dependents,
and others on military bases located in more than 130 countries,
many of them presided over by dictatorial regimes that have given
their citizens no say in the decision to let us in.
As but one
striking example of imperial basing policy: For the past sixty-one
years, the U.S. military has garrisoned the small Japanese island
of Okinawa with 37 bases. Smaller than Kauai in the Hawaiian Islands,
Okinawa is home to 1.3 million people who live cheek-by-jowl with
17,000 Marines of the 3rd Marine Division and the largest U.S.
installation in East Asia Kadena Air Force Base. There
have been many Okinawan protests against the rapes, crimes, accidents,
and pollution caused by this sort of concentration of American
troops and weaponry, but so far the U. S. military in collusion
with the Japanese government has ignored them. My research
into our base world resulted in The
Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic,
written during the run-up to the Iraq invasion.
As our occupations
of Afghanistan and Iraq turned into major fiascoes, discrediting
our military leadership, ruining our public finances, and bringing
death and destruction to hundreds of thousands of civilians in
those countries, I continued to ponder the issue of empire. In
these years, it became ever clearer that George W. Bush, Dick
Cheney, and their supporters were claiming, and actively assuming,
powers specifically denied to a president by our Constitution.
It became no less clear that Congress had almost completely abdicated
its responsibilities to balance the power of the executive branch.
Despite the Democratic sweep in the 2006 election, it remains
to be seen whether these tendencies can, in the long run, be controlled,
let alone reversed.
Until the
2004 presidential election, ordinary citizens of the United States
could at least claim that our foreign policy, including our illegal
invasion of Iraq, was the work of George Bush's administration
and that we had not put him in office. After all, in 2000, Bush
lost the popular vote and was appointed president thanks to the
intervention of the Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision. But in November
2004, regardless of claims about voter fraud, Bush actually won
the popular vote by over 3.5 million ballots, making his regime
and his wars ours.
Whether
Americans intended it or not, we are now seen around the world
as approving the torture of captives at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq,
at Bagram Air Base in Kabul, at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and at a
global network of secret CIA prisons, as well as having endorsed
Bush's claim that, as commander-in-chief in "wartime," he is beyond
all constraints of the Constitution or international law. We are
now saddled with a rigged economy based on record-setting trade
and fiscal deficits, the most secretive and intrusive government
in our country's memory, and the pursuit of "preventive" war as
a basis for foreign policy. Don't forget as well the potential
epidemic of nuclear proliferation as other nations attempt to
adjust to and defend themselves against Bush's preventive wars,
while our own already staggering nuclear arsenal expands toward
first-strike primacy and we expend unimaginable billions on futuristic
ideas for warfare in outer space.
The Choice
Ahead
By the time
I came to write Nemesis, I no longer doubted that maintaining
our empire abroad required resources and commitments that would
inevitably undercut, or simply skirt, what was left of our domestic
democracy and that might, in the end, produce a military dictatorship
or far more likely its civilian equivalent. The combination
of huge standing armies, almost continuous wars, an ever-growing
economic dependence on the military-industrial complex and the making
of weaponry, and ruinous military expenses as well as a vast, bloated
"defense" budget, not to speak of the creation of a whole second
Defense Department (known as the Department of Homeland Security)
has been destroying our republican structure of governing in favor
of an imperial presidency. By republican structure, of course, I
mean the separation of powers and the elaborate checks and balances
that the founders of our country wrote into the Constitution as
the main bulwarks against dictatorship and tyranny, which they greatly
feared.
We are on
the brink of losing our democracy for the sake of keeping our
empire. Once a nation starts down that path, the dynamics that
apply to all empires come into play isolation, overstretch,
the uniting of local and global forces opposed to imperialism,
and in the end bankruptcy.
History
is instructive on this dilemma. If we choose to keep our empire,
as the Roman republic did, we will certainly lose our democracy
and grimly await the eventual blowback that imperialism generates.
There is an alternative, however. We could, like the British Empire
after World War II, keep our democracy by giving up our empire.
The British did not do a particularly brilliant job of liquidating
their empire and there were several clear cases where British
imperialists defied their nation's commitment to democracy in
order to hang on to foreign privileges. The war against the Kikuyu
in Kenya in the 1950s and the Anglo-French-Israeli invasion of
Egypt in 1956 are particularly savage examples of that. But the
overall thrust of postwar British history is clear: the people
of the British Isles chose democracy over imperialism.
In her book
The
Origins of Totalitarianism, the political philosopher Hannah
Arendt offered the following summary of British imperialism and
its fate:
"On
the whole it was a failure because of the dichotomy between the
nation-state's legal principles and the methods needed to oppress
other people permanently. This failure was neither necessary nor
due to ignorance or incompetence. British imperialists knew very
well that 'administrative massacres' could keep India in bondage,
but they also knew that public opinion at home would not stand
for such measures. Imperialism could have been a success if the
nation-state had been willing to pay the price, to commit suicide
and transform itself into a tyranny. It is one of the glories
of Europe, and especially of Great Britain, that she preferred
to liquidate the empire."
I agree
with this judgment. When one looks at Prime Minister Tony Blair's
unnecessary and futile support of Bush's invasion and occupation
of Iraq, one can only conclude that it was an atavistic response,
that it represented a British longing to relive the glories
and cruelties of a past that should have been ancient history.
As a form
of government, imperialism does not seek or require the consent
of the governed. It is a pure form of tyranny. The American attempt
to combine domestic democracy with such tyrannical control over
foreigners is hopelessly contradictory and hypocritical. A country
can be democratic or it can be imperialistic, but it cannot be
both.
The Road
to Imperial Bankruptcy
The American
political system failed to prevent this combination from developing
and may now be incapable of correcting it. The evidence
strongly suggests that the legislative and judicial branches of
our government have become so servile in the presence of the imperial
Presidency that they have largely lost the ability to respond
in a principled and independent manner. Even in the present moment
of congressional stirring, there seems to be a deep sense of helplessness.
Various members of Congress have already attempted to explain
how the one clear power they retain to cut off funds for
a disastrous program is not one they are currently prepared
to use.
So the question
becomes, if not Congress, could the people themselves restore
Constitutional government? A grass-roots movement to abolish secret
government, to bring the CIA and other illegal spying operations
and private armies out of the closet of imperial power and into
the light, to break the hold of the military-industrial complex,
and to establish genuine public financing of elections may be
at least theoretically conceivable. But given the conglomerate
control of our mass media and the difficulties of mobilizing our
large and diverse population, such an opting for popular democracy,
as we remember it from our past, seems unlikely.
It is possible
that, at some future moment, the U.S. military could actually
take over the government and declare a dictatorship (though its
commanders would undoubtedly find a gentler, more user-friendly
name for it). That is, after all, how the Roman republic ended
by being turned over to a populist general, Julius Caesar,
who had just been declared dictator for life. After his assassination
and a short interregnum, it was his grandnephew Octavian who succeeded
him and became the first Roman emperor, Augustus Caesar. The American
military is unlikely to go that route. But one cannot ignore the
fact that professional military officers seem to have played a
considerable role in getting rid of their civilian overlord, Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. The new directors of the CIA, its
main internal branches, the National Security Agency, and many
other key organs of the "defense establishment" are now military
(or ex-military) officers, strongly suggesting that the military
does not need to take over the government in order to control
it. Meanwhile, the all-volunteer army has emerged as an ever more
separate institution in our society, its profile less and less
like that of the general populace.
Nonetheless,
military coups, however decorous, are not part of the American
tradition, nor that of the officer corps, which might well worry
about how the citizenry would react to a move toward open military
dictatorship. Moreover, prosecutions of low-level military torturers
from Abu Ghraib prison and killers of civilians in Iraq have demonstrated
to enlisted troops that obedience to illegal orders can result
in dire punishment in a situation where those of higher rank go
free. No one knows whether ordinary soldiers, even from what is
no longer in any normal sense a citizen army, would obey clearly
illegal orders to oust an elected government or whether the officer
corps would ever have sufficient confidence to issue such orders.
In addition, the present system already offers the military high
command so much in funds, prestige, and future employment
via the famed "revolving door" of the military-industrial complex
that a perilous transition to anything like direct military
rule would make little sense under reasonably normal conditions.
Whatever future
developments may prove to be, my best guess is that the U.S. will
continue to maintain a façade of Constitutional government and drift
along until financial bankruptcy overtakes it. Of course, bankruptcy
will not mean the literal end of the U.S. any more than it did for
Germany in 1923, China in 1948, or Argentina in 20012002.
It might, in fact, open the way for an unexpected restoration of
the American system or for military rule, revolution, or
simply some new development we cannot yet imagine.
Certainly,
such a bankruptcy would mean a drastic lowering of our standard
of living, a further loss of control over international affairs,
a sudden need to adjust to the rise of other powers, including China
and India, and a further discrediting of the notion that the United
States is somehow exceptional compared to other nations. We will
have to learn what it means to be a far poorer country and
the attitudes and manners that go with it. As Anatol
Lieven, author of America
Right or Wrong: An Anatomy of American Nationalism, observes:
"U.S.
global power, as presently conceived by the overwhelming majority
of the U.S. establishment, is unsustainable. . . The empire can
no longer raise enough taxes or soldiers, it is increasingly indebted,
and key vassal states are no longer reliable. . . The result is
that the empire can no longer pay for enough of the professional
troops it needs to fulfill its self-assumed imperial tasks."
In February
2006, the Bush administration submitted to Congress a $439 billion
defense appropriation budget for fiscal year 2007. As the country
enters 2007, the administration is about to present a nearly $100
billion supplementary request to Congress just for the Iraq and
Afghan wars. At the same time, the deficit in the country's current
account the imbalance in the trading of goods and services
as well as the shortfall in all other cross-border payments from
interest income and rents to dividends and profits on direct investments
underwent its fastest ever quarterly deterioration. For
2005, the current account deficit was $805 billion, 6.4% of national
income. In 2005, the U.S. trade deficit, the largest component
of the current account deficit, soared to an all-time high of
$725.8 billion, the fourth consecutive year that America's trade
debts set records. The trade deficit with China alone rose to
$201.6 billion, the highest imbalance ever recorded with any country.
Meanwhile, since mid-2000, the country has lost nearly three million
manufacturing jobs.
To try to
cope with these imbalances, on March 16, 2006, Congress raised
the national debt limit from $8.2 trillion to $8.96 trillion.
This was the fourth time since George W. Bush took office that
it had to be raised. The national debt is the total amount owed
by the government and should not be confused with the federal
budget deficit, the annual amount by which federal spending exceeds
revenue. Had Congress not raised the debt limit, the U.S. government
would not have been able to borrow more money and would have had
to default on its massive debts.
Among the
creditors that finance these unprecedented sums, the two largest
are the central banks of China (with $853.7 billion in reserves)
and Japan (with $831.58 billion in reserves), both of which are
the managers of the huge trade surpluses these countries enjoy
with the United States. This helps explain why our debt burden
has not yet triggered what standard economic theory would dictate:
a steep decline in the value of the U.S. dollar followed by a
severe contraction of the American economy when we found we could
no longer afford the foreign goods we like so much. So far, both
the Chinese and Japanese governments continue to be willing to
be paid in dollars in order to sustain American purchases of their
exports.
For the
sake of their own domestic employment, both countries lend huge
amounts to the American treasury, but there is no guarantee of
how long they will want to, or be able to do so. Marshall Auerback,
an international financial strategist, says we have become a "Blanche
Dubois economy" (so named after the leading character in the Tennessee
Williams play A Streetcar Named Desire) heavily dependent
on "the kindness of strangers." Unfortunately, in our case, as
in Blanche's, there are ever fewer strangers willing to support
our illusions.
So
my own hope is that if the American people do not find a
way to choose democracy over empire at least our imperial
venture will end not with a nuclear bang but a financial whimper.
From the present vantage point, it certainly seems a daunting challenge
for any President (or Congress) from either party even to begin
the task of dismantling the military-industrial complex, ending
the pall of "national security" secrecy and the "black budgets"
that make public oversight of what our government does impossible,
and bringing the president's secret army, the CIA, under democratic
control. It's evident that Nemesis in Greek mythology the
goddess of vengeance, the punisher of hubris and arrogance
is already a visitor in our country, simply biding her time before
she makes her presence known.
February
1, 2007
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, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Chalmers Johnson is a retired professor of Asian Studies
at the University of California, San Diego. From 1968 until 1972
he served as a consultant to the Office of National Estimates of
the Central Intelligence Agency. Nemesis:
The Last Days of the American Republic, the final volume
in his Blowback Trilogy, is just now being published. In
2006 he appeared in the prize-winning documentary film Why
We Fight.
Copyright
© 2007 Chalmers Johnson
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
|