It was the
highest-tech military of its moment and its invasion of the Arab
land was overwhelming. Enemy forces were smashed, the oppressive
ruling regime overthrown, the enemy capital occupied, and the
country declared liberated… then the first acts of insurgency
began…
George
W. Bush's invasion of Iraq in 2003? No, Napoleon Bonaparte's invasion
of Egypt in June 1798. There are times when the resonances of
history are positively eerie. This happens to be one of them.
We all deserve a history lesson about the Napoleonic beginnings
of our present catastrophe. (Too bad you-know-who didn't get one
before ordering that March 2003 invasion.) I got mine from a man
whose blog, Informed Comment,
I read every morning without fail and whose flow of commentary
on Bush's war in Iraq has been invaluable. I'm talking, of course,
about Juan Cole who (evidently in his spare moments) has completed
a history of the Napoleonic moment of "spreading democracy" to
Arab lands, just published as Napoleon's
Egypt: Invading the Middle East.
Some of
the parallels are enough to make you jump out of your chair (if
not your skin). For instance, Napoleon wrote a letter to one of
his generals, well into the occupation, forbidding the beating
of insurgents to extract information: "It has been recognized
at all times that this manner of interrogating human beings, of
putting them under torture, produces nothing good." Okay, at least
Napoleon could learn from experience, an ability our President
seems to lack, but the issue, put that way, rings a terrible bell
200 years later.
Napoleon's
Egyptian moment lasted a mere three years. We are already into
our fifth year in devolving Iraq with no obvious end in sight.
Last Sunday, the New York Times printed
a remarkable op-ed by an Army specialist, four sergeants, and
two staff sergeants of the 82nd Airborne Division, now on duty
in Iraq (one of whom was shot in the head while the piece was
being prepared). In it, they wrote, "Viewed from Iraq at the tail
end of a 15-month deployment, the political debate in Washington
is indeed surreal… [W]e are skeptical of recent press coverage
portraying the conflict as increasingly manageable and feel it
has neglected the mounting civil, political and social unrest
we see every day." Of the military mission of which they are a
part they wrote: "In the end, we need to recognize that our presence
may have released Iraqis from the grip of a tyrant, but that it
has also robbed them of their self-respect. They will soon realize
that the best way to regain dignity is to call us what we are
an army of occupation and force our withdrawal."
Whether
these soldiers know the history of Bonaparte in Egypt or not,
they have grasped the essence of what lurks behind the fine liberatory
words of the leaders of the republic militant. Let's hope it's
not too late to learn the lesson of Napoleon and slip out of "Egypt,"
while it's still possible. Though it hardly scatches the surface
of his new book, here is a little taste from the Napoleonic lesson
plan of Juan Cole. ~ Tom
Bonaparte
and Bush on Deck
By Juan
Cole
French Egypt
and American Iraq can be considered bookends on the history of
modern imperialism in the Middle East. The Bush administration's
already failed version of the conquest of Iraq is, of course,
on everyone's mind; while the French conquest of Egypt, now more
than two centuries past, is all too little remembered, despite
having been led by Napoleon Bonaparte, whose career has otherwise
hardly languished in obscurity. There are many eerily familiar
resonances between the two misadventures, not least among them
that both began with supreme arrogance and ended as fiascoes.
Above all, the leaders of both occupations employed the same basic
political vocabulary and rhetorical flimflammery, invoking the
spirit of liberty, security, and democracy while largely ignoring
the substance of these concepts.
The French
general and the American president do not much resemble one another
except perhaps in the way the prospect of conquest in the
Middle East appears to have put fire in their veins and in their
unappealing tendency to believe their own propaganda (or at least
to keep repeating it long after it became completely implausible).
Both leaders invaded and occupied a major Arabic-speaking Muslim
country; both harbored dreams of a "Greater Middle East"; both
were surprised to find themselves enmeshed in long, bitter, debilitating
guerrilla wars. Neither genuinely cared about grassroots democracy,
but both found its symbols easy to invoke for gullible domestic
publics. Substantial numbers of their new subjects quickly saw,
however, that they faced occupations, not liberations.
My own work
on Bonaparte's lost year in Egypt began in the mid-1990s, and
I had completed about half of Napoleon's
Egypt: Invading the Middle East before September 11, 2001.
I had no way of knowing then that a book on such a distant, scholarly
subject would prove an allegory for Bush's Iraq War. Nor did I
guess that the United States would give old-style colonialism
in the Middle East one last try, despite clear signs that the
formerly colonized would no longer put up with such acts and had,
in the years since World War II, gained the means to resist them.
The Republic
Militant Goes to War
In June
of 1798, as his enormous flotilla 36,000 soldiers, thousands
of sailors, and hundreds of scientists on 12 ships of the line
swept inexorably toward the Egyptian coast, the young General
Napoleon Bonaparte issued a grandiose communiqué to the bewildered
and seasick troops he was about to march into the desert without
canteens or reasonable supplies of water. He declared, "Soldiers!
You are about to undertake a conquest, the effects of which on
civilization and commerce are incalculable."
The prediction
was as tragically inaccurate in its own way as the pronouncement
George W. Bush issued some two centuries later, on May 1, 2003,
also from the deck of a great ship of the line, the aircraft carrier
the USS Abraham Lincoln. "Today," he said, "we have the
greater power to free a nation by breaking a dangerous and aggressive
regime. With new tactics and precision weapons, we can achieve
military objectives without directing violence against civilians."
Both men
were convinced that their invasions were announcing new epochs
in human history. Of the military vassals of the Ottoman Empire
who then ruled Egypt, Bonaparte predicted:
"The Mameluke Beys who favor exclusively English commerce, whose
extortions oppress our merchants, and who tyrannize over the unfortunate
inhabitants of the Nile, a few days after our arrival will no
longer exist."
Bonaparte's
laundry list of grievances about them consisted of three charges.
First, the beys were, in essence, enablers of France's primary
enemy at that time, the British monarchy which sought to strangle
the young French republic in its cradle. Second, the rulers of
Egypt were damaging France's own commerce by extorting taxes and
bribes from its merchants in Cairo and Alexandria. Third, the
Mamluks ruled tyrannically, having never been elected, and oppressed
their subjects whom Bonaparte intended to liberate.
This holy
trinity of justifications for imperialism that the targeted
state is collaborating with an enemy of the republic, is endangering
the positive interests of the nation, and lacks legitimacy because
its rule is despotic would all be trotted out over the
subsequent two centuries by a succession of European and American
leaders whenever they wanted to go on the attack. One implication
of these familiar rhetorical turns of phrase has all along been
that democracies have a license to invade any country they please,
assuming it has the misfortune to have an authoritarian regime.
George W.
Bush, of course, hit the same highlights in his "mission accomplished"
speech, while announcing on the Abraham Lincoln that "major
combat operations" in Iraq "had ended." "The liberation of Iraq,"
he proclaimed, "is a crucial advance in the campaign against terror.
We've removed an ally of al Qaeda, and cut off a source of terrorist
funding." He put Saddam Hussein's secular, Arab nationalist Baath
regime and the radical Muslim terrorists of al-Qaeda under the
sign of September 11th, insinuating that Iraq was allied with
the primary enemy of the United States and so posed an urgent
menace to its security. (In fact, captured Baath Party documents
show that Saddam's fretting security forces, on hearing that Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi had entered Iraq, put out an all points bulletin
on him, imagining not entirely correctly that he
had al-Qaeda links.) Likewise, Bush promised that Iraq's alleged
"weapons of mass destruction" (which existed only in his own fevered
imagination) would be tracked down, again implying that Iraq posed
a threat to the interests and security of the U.S., just as Bonaparte
had claimed that the Mamluks menaced France.
According
to the president, Saddam's overthrown government had lacked legitimacy,
while the new Iraqi government, to be established by a foreign
power, would truly represent the conquered population. "We're
helping to rebuild Iraq, where the dictator built palaces for
himself, instead of hospitals and schools. And we will stand with
the new leaders of Iraq," Bush pledged, "as they establish a government
of, by, and for the Iraqi people." Bonaparte, too, established
governing councils at the provincial and national level, staffing
them primarily with Sunni clergymen, declaring them more representative
of the Egyptian people than the beys and emirs of the slave soldiery
who had formerly ruled that province of the Ottoman Empire.
Liberty
as Tyranny
For a democracy
to conduct a brutal military occupation against another country
in the name of liberty seems, on the face of it, too contradictory
to elicit more than hoots of derision at the hypocrisy of it all.
Yet, the militant republic, ready to launch aggressive war in
the name of "democracy," is everywhere in modern history, despite
the myth that democracies do not typically wage wars of aggression.
Ironically, some absolutist regimes, like those of modern Iran,
were remarkably peaceable, if left alone by their neighbors. In
contrast, republican France invaded Belgium, Holland, Spain, Germany,
Italy, and Egypt in its first decade (though it went on the offensive
in part in response to Austrian and Prussian moves to invade France).
The United States attacked Mexico, the Seminoles and other Native
polities, Hawaii, the Spanish Empire, the Philippines, Haiti,
and the Dominican Republic in just the seven-plus decades from
1845 to the eve of the U.S. entry into World War I.
Freedom
and authoritarianism are nowadays taken to be stark antonyms,
the provinces of heroes and monsters. Those closer to the birth
of modern republics were comforted by no such moral clarity. In
Danton's
Death, the young Romantic playwright Georg Büchner depicted
the radical French revolutionary and proponent of executing enemies
of the Republic, Maximilien Robespierre, whipping up a Parisian
crowd with the phrase, "The revolutionary regime is the despotism
of liberty against tyranny." And nowhere has liberty proved more
oppressive than when deployed against a dictatorship abroad; for,
as Büchner also had that famed "incorruptible" devotee of state
terror observe, "In a Republic only republicans are citizens;
Royalists and foreigners are enemies."
That sunlit
May afternoon on the USS Abraham Lincoln, President Bush
seconded Büchner's Robespierre. "Because of you," he exhorted
the listening sailors of an aircraft carrier whose planes had
just dropped 1.6 million pounds of ordnance on Iraq, "our nation
is more secure. Because of you, the tyrant has fallen, and Iraq
is free."
Security
for the republic had already proved ample justification to launch
a war the previous March, even though Iraq was a poor, weak, ramshackle
Third World country, debilitated by a decade of sanctions imposed
by the United Nations and the United States, without so much as
potable drinking water or an air force. Similarly, the Mamluks
of Egypt despite the sky-high taxes and bribes they demanded
of some French merchants hardly constituted a threat to
French security.
The overthrow
of a tyrannical regime and the liberation of an oppressed people
were constant refrains in the shipboard addresses of both the
general and the president, who felt that the liberated owed them
a debt of gratitude. Bonaparte lamented that the beys "tyrannize
over the unfortunate inhabitants of the Nile"; or, as one of his
officers, Captain Horace Say, opined, "The people of Egypt were
most wretched. How will they not cherish the liberty we are bringing
them?" Similarly, Bush insisted, "Men and women in every culture
need liberty like they need food and water and air. Everywhere
that freedom arrives, humanity rejoices; and everywhere that freedom
stirs, let tyrants fear."
Not surprisingly,
expectations that the newly conquered would exhibit gratitude
to their foreign occupiers cropped up repeatedly in the dispatches
and letters of men on the spot who advocated a colonial forward
policy. President Bush put
this dramatically in 2007, long after matters had not proceeded
as expected: "We liberated that country from a tyrant. I think
the Iraqi people owe the American people a huge debt of gratitude.
That's the problem here in America: They wonder whether or not
there is a gratitude level that's significant enough in Iraq."
Liberty
in this two-century old rhetorical tradition, moreover, was more
than just a matter of rights and the rule of law. Proponents of
various forms of liberal imperialism saw tyranny as a source of
poverty, since arbitrary rulers could just usurp property at will
and so make economic activity risky, as well as opening the public
to crushing and arbitrary taxes that held back commerce. The French
quartermaster Francois Bernoyer wrote of the Egyptian peasantry:
"Their dwellings are adobe huts, which prosperity, the daughter
of liberty, will now allow them to abandon." Bush took up the
same theme on the Abraham Lincoln: "Where freedom takes
hold, hatred gives way to hope. When freedom takes hold, men and
women turn to the peaceful pursuit of a better life."
"Heads
Must Roll"
In both
eighteenth century Egypt and twenty-first century Iraq, the dreary
reality on the ground stood as a reproach to, if not a wicked
satire upon, these high-minded pronouncements. The French landed
at the port of Alexandria on July 1, 1798. Two and a half weeks
later, as the French army advanced along the Nile toward Cairo,
a unit of Gen. Jean Reynier's division met opposition from 1,800
villagers, many armed with muskets. Sgt. Charles Francois recalled
a typical scene. After scaling the village walls and "firing into
those crowds," killing "about 900 men," the French confiscated
the villagers' livestock "camels, donkeys, horses, eggs,
cows, sheep" then "finished burning the rest of the houses,
or rather the huts, so as to provide a terrible object lesson
to these half-savage and barbarous people."
On July
24, Bonaparte's Army of the Orient entered Cairo and he began
reorganizing his new subjects. He grandiosely established an Egyptian
Institute for the advancement of science and gave thought to reforming
police, courts, and law. But terror lurked behind everything he
did. He wrote Gen. Jacques Menou, who commanded the garrison at
the Mediterranean port of Rosetta, saying, "The Turks [Egyptians]
can only be led by the greatest severity. Every day I cut off
five or six heads in the streets of Cairo.... [T]o obey, for them,
is to fear." (Mounting severed heads on poles for viewing by terrified
passers-by was another method the French used in Egypt...)
That August,
the Delta city of Mansura rose up against a small French garrison
of about 120 men, chasing them into the countryside, tracking
the blue coats down, and methodically killing all but two of them.
In early September, the Delta village of Sonbat, inhabited in
part by Bedouin of the western Dirn tribe, also rose up against
the Europeans. Bonaparte instructed one of his generals, "Burn
that village! Make a terrifying example of it." After the French
army had indeed crushed the rebellious peasants and chased away
the Bedouin, Gen. Jean-Antoine Verdier reported back to Bonaparte
with regard to Sonbat, "You ordered me to destroy this lair. Very
well, it no longer exists."
The most
dangerous uprisings confronting the French were, however, in Cairo.
In October, much of the city mobilized to attack the more than
20,000 French troops occupying the capital. The revolt was especially
fierce in the al-Husayn district, where the ancient al-Azhar madrassa
(or seminary) trained 14,000 students, where the city's most sacred
mosque stood, and where wealth was concentrated in the merchants
and guilds of the Khan al-Khalili bazaar. At the same time, the
peasants and Bedouin of the countryside around Cairo rose in rebellion,
attacking the small garrisons that had been deployed to pacify
them.
Bonaparte
put down this Egyptian "revolution" with the utmost brutality,
subjecting urban crowds to artillery barrages. He may have had
as many rebels executed in the aftermath as were killed in the
fighting. In the countryside, his officers' launched concerted
campaigns to decimate insurgent villages. At one point, the French
are said to have brought 900 heads of slain insurgents to Cairo
in bags and ostentatiously dumped them out before a crowd in one
of that city's major squares to instill Cairenes with terror.
(Two centuries later, the American public would come to associate
decapitations by Muslim terrorists in Iraq with the ultimate in
barbarism, but even then hundreds such beheadings were not carried
out at once.)
The American
deployment of terror against the Iraqi population has, of course,
dwarfed anything the French accomplished in Egypt by orders of
magnitude. After four mercenaries, one a South African, were killed
in Falluja in March of 2004 and their bodies desecrated, President
Bush is alleged to have said "heads must roll" in retribution.
An initial
attack on the city faltered when much of the Iraqi government
threatened to resign and it was clear major civilian casualties
would result. The crushing of the city was, however, simply put
off until after the American presidential election in November.
When the assault, involving air power and artillery, came, it
was devastating, damaging two-thirds of the city's buildings and
turning much of its population into refugees. (As a result, thousands
of Fallujans still live in the desert in tent villages with no
access to clean water.)
Bush must
have been satisfied. Heads had rolled. More often, faced with
opposition, the U.S. Air Force simply bombed already-occupied
cities, a technology Bonaparte (mercifully) lacked. The strategy
of ruling by terror and swift, draconian punishment for acts of
resistance was, however, the same in both cases.
The British
sank much of the French fleet on August 1, 1798, marooning Bonaparte
and his troops in their newly conquered land. In the spring of
1799, the French army tried and failed to break
out through Syria; after which Bonaparte himself chose the better
part of valor. He slipped out of Egypt late that summer, returning
to France. There, he would swiftly stage a coup and come to power
as First Consul, giving him the opportunity to hone his practice
of bringing freedom to other countries this time in Europe.
By 1801, joint British-Ottoman forces had defeated the French
in Egypt, who were transported back to their country on British
vessels. This first Western invasion of the Middle East in modern
times had ended in serial disasters that Bonaparte would misrepresent
to the French public as a series of glorious triumphs.
Ending
the Era of Liberal Imperialism
Between
1801 and 2003 stretched endless decades in which colonialism proved
a plausible strategy for European powers in the Middle East, including
the French enterprise in Algeria (18301962) and the British
veiled protectorate over Egypt (18821922). In these years,
European militaries and their weaponry were so advanced, and the
means of resistance to which Arab peasants had access so limited,
that colonial governments could be imposed.
That imperial
moment passed with celerity after World War II, in part because
the masses of the Third World joined political parties, learned
to read, and with how-to-do-it examples all around them
began to mount political resistance to foreign occupations
of every sort. While the twenty-first century American arsenal
has many fancy, exceedingly destructive toys in it, nothing has
changed with regard to the ability of colonized peoples to network
socially and, sooner or later, push any foreign occupying force
out.
Bonaparte
and Bush failed because both launched their operations at moments
when Western military and technological superiority was not assured.
While Bonaparte's army had better artillery and muskets, the Egyptians
had a superb cavalry and their old muskets were serviceable enough
for purposes of sniping at the enemy. They also had an ally with
advanced weaponry and the desire to use it the British
Navy.
In 2007,
the high-tech U.S. military as had been true in Vietnam
in the 1960s and 1970s, as was true for the Soviets in Afghanistan
in the 1980s is still vulnerable to guerrilla tactics and
effective low-tech weapons of resistance such as roadside bombs.
Even more effective has been the guerrillas' social warfare, their
success in making Iraq ungovernable through the promotion of clan
and sectarian feuds, through targeted bombings and other attacks,
and through sabotage of the Iraqi infrastructure.
From the
time of Bonaparte to that of Bush, the use of the rhetoric of
liberty versus tyranny, of uplift versus decadence, appears to
have been a constant among imperialists from republics
and has remained domestically effective in rallying support for
colonial wars. The despotism (but also the weakness) of the Mamluks
and of Saddam Hussein proved sirens practically calling out for
Western interventions. According to the rhetoric of liberal imperialism,
tyrannical regimes are always at least potentially threats to
the Republic, and so can always be fruitfully overthrown in favor
of rule by a Western military. After all, that military is invariably
imagined as closer to liberty since it serves an elected government.
(Intervention is even easier to justify if the despots can be
portrayed, however implausibly, as allied with an enemy of the
republic.)
For both
Bush and Bonaparte, the genteel diction of liberation, rights,
and prosperity served to obscure or justify a major invasion and
occupation of a Middle Eastern land, involving the unleashing
of slaughter and terror against its people. Military action would
leave towns destroyed, families displaced, and countless dead.
Given the ongoing carnage in Iraq, President Bush's boast that,
with "new tactics and precision weapons, we can achieve military
objectives without directing violence against civilians," now
seems not just hollow but macabre. The equation of a foreign military
occupation with liberty and prosperity is, in the cold light of
day, no less bizarre than the promise of war with virtually no
civilian casualties.
It
is no accident that many of the rhetorical strategies employed
by George W. Bush originated with Napoleon Bonaparte, a notorious
spinmeister and confidence man. At least Bonaparte looked to the
future, seeing clearly the coming breakup of the Ottoman Empire
and the likelihood that European Powers would be able to colonize
its provinces. Bonaparte's failure in Egypt did not forestall
decades of French colonial success in Algeria and Indochina, even
if that era of imperial triumph could not, in the end, be sustained
in the face of the political and social awakening of the colonized.
Bush's neocolonialism, on the other hand, swam against the tide
of history, and its failure is all the more criminal for having
been so predictable.