American Grand Delusions
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
DIGG THIS
Why the
Testimony of General Petraeus Will Be Delusional
Yes, their
defensive zone is the planet and they patrol it regularly. As ever,
their planes and drones have been in the skies these last weeks.
They struck a village in Somalia,
tribal areas in Pakistan,
rural areas in Afghanistan, and urban
neighborhoods in Iraq. Their troops are training and advising
the Iraqi army and police as well as the new Afghan army, while
their Special Operations forces are planning
to train Pakistan's paramilitary Frontier Corps in that country's
wild, mountainous borderlands.
Their Vice
President arrived in Baghdad not long before the government of Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki launched its recent (failed) offensive
against cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia in the southern
oil city of Basra. To "discuss" their needs in their President's
eternal War on Terror, two of their top diplomats, a deputy secretary
of state and an assistant secretary of state for South Asian affairs,
arrived
in Pakistan to the helpless outrage of the local press
on the very day newly elected Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani
was being given the oath of office. ("I don't think it is a good
idea for them to be here on this particular day… right here in Islamabad,
meeting with senior politicians in the new government, trying to
dictate terms..." was the way Zaffar
Abbas, editor of the newspaper Dawn, put it.)
At home, their
politicians have nationally
televised debates in which they fervently discuss just how quickly
they would launch air assaults against Pakistan's tribal areas,
without permission from the Pakistani government but based on "actionable
intelligence" on terrorists. Their drones cruise the skies of the
world looking for terrorist suspects to in the phrase of
the hour "take
out." Agents from their intelligence services have, these last
years, roamed the planet, kidnapping terrorist suspects directly
off
the streets of major cities and transporting them to their own
secret prisons, or those of other countries willing to employ torture
methods. Their spy satellites circle the globe listening in on conversations
wherever they please, while their military has divided the whole
planet into "commands," the last of which, Africom,
was just formed.
As far as
they are concerned, nowhere do their interests not come into play;
nowhere, in fact, are they not paramount. As their President put
it recently, "If [our] strategic interests are not in Iraq
the convergence point for the twin threats of al Qaeda and Iran,
the nation Osama bin Laden's deputy has called 'the place for the
greatest battle,' the country at the heart of the most volatile
region on Earth then where are they?" (And you could easily
substitute the names of other countries for Iraq.)
Their President
makes a habit of regularly telling
other countries what they "must" do. "At the same time," he said
recently, "the regimes in Iran and Syria must stop supporting
violence and terror in Iraq." It's especially important to him and
his officials that other nations not "interfere" in situations where,
as in Iraq, they are so obviously "foreigners" and have no business;
no fingers, that is, are to be caught in other people's cookie jars.
Their Vice President made this point strikingly in an exchange
with a TV interviewer:
"Q:
So what message are you sending to Iran, and how tough are you prepared
to get?
"Vice President:
I think the message that the president sent clearly is that we
do not want them doing what they can to try to destabilize the
situation inside Iraq. We think it's very important that they
keep their folks at home."
A range of
other countries, all with a natural bent for "interference" or "meddling,"
must regularly be warned or threatened. After all, what needs to
be prevented, according to a typical formulation
of their President, is "foreign interference in the internal affairs
of Iraq."
None of this
advice do they apply to themselves for reasons far too obvious to
explain. Wherever they go sometimes in huge numbers, usually
well-armed, and, after a while, deeply entrenched in bases the size
of small towns that they love to build they feel comfortable.
They are, after all, defending their liberties by defending those
of others elsewhere. Though there are natives of one brand or another
everywhere, they consider themselves the planet's only true natives.
Their motto might be: Wherever we hang our hats (or helmets) is
home.
Others, who
choose to fight them, automatically become aliens, intent as they
are on destroying the stability of that planetary "home." So, for
years, their military spokespeople referred to the Sunni insurgents
they were battling in Iraq as "anti-Iraqi
forces." It mattered little that almost all of them were, in
fact, Iraqis; for the enemy is, by nature, so beyond the pale as
to be a stranger to his or her own country or, just as likely, a
cat's-paw of foreign forces and powers. Only when the very same
"anti-Iraqi forces" suddenly decided to become allies were they
suddenly granted the title, "concerned
citizens," or even, more gloriously, "Sons
of Iraq."
When off duty,
their luckier soldiers have the option of taking "rest and recreation"
in "the homeland" at places like the Hale Koa ("House of the Warrior")
Hotel in Honolulu, Hawaii, or in the extended homeland at, say,
the
Edelweiss Lodge and Resort in the Bavarian Alps or the
Dragon Hill Lodge near thrilling downtown Seoul, South Korea
all part of their global system of Armed Forces Recreation
Centers.
This is their
world and welcome to it.
It's not exactly
a mystery what country I'm talking about. You knew from the beginning.
Since the Soviet Union vanished in 1991, only one nation has made
itself at home everywhere on Earth; only one nation has felt that
the planet's interests and its own interests were essentially one;
only one nation's military garrisons and patrols our world from
Greenland to the tropics, from the sea bed to the edge of space;
only one nation's military talks about its vast
array of bases as its "footprint" on the planet; only one nation
judges its essential and exceptional goodness, in motivation if
nothing else, as justification for any act it may take.
Putting
an Iraqi Face on Iraq
Soon, U.S.
surge commander General David Petraeus will return to Washington
to report
to Congress on our "progress" in Iraq and he'll do
so with the worst crisis in that country in almost a year still
unresolved. He'll do so, in fact, shrouded in yet another strategic
disaster for the Bush administration. With that in mind, let's take
a moment to look back at just how, militarily at least, the Bush
administration first made itself at home in Iraq.
In the U.S.,
the administration's lack
of planning for the occupation of Iraq starting with
the wholesale looting
of Baghdad after American troops had taken the capital has
been the subject of much debate and discussion in Congress and the
media. While it's usually noted in passing that, amid the chaos,
orders had in fact been issued to American troops to guard
the Oil Ministry, little is made of that. In fact, orders for U.S.
troops to guard that ministry and the Interior Ministry, and nothing
else, were indeed given, which simply indicates that administration
planning was extremely focused on oil and the secret police
(and perhaps Saddam Hussein's secret archives).
In addition,
we know that the administration ignored the 13-volume
"Future of Iraq" project put together by the State Department
to guide an occupation largely because its neocon officials
were so intent on sidelining the State Department more generally.
On the other hand, the Pentagon did plan for what it thought would
matter. Specifically, from a front-page
April 19, 2003 New York Times article, we know that, by the
time the invasion began, the Pentagon already had on the drawing
boards plans for building four permanent mega-bases in Iraq. (They
were meant to replace our bases in Saudi Arabia.) And these were
indeed built (along with others and the largest
embassy on the planet) in more or less the locations originally
described. From the beginning, whatever planning it didn't do, the
Bush administration was certainly planning to make itself at home
in Iraq in a big way for a long, long time.
Much has also
been made of the disastrous, seat-of-the-pants decision by the administration,
in the person of L. Paul Bremer III, head of the Coalition Provisional
Authority (CPA) then ruling Baghdad, to disband the Iraqi army.
But few now recall what the administration, the CPA, and the Pentagon
had in mind (and leaked to the press soon after the invasion) for
a future Iraqi military of their dreams.
They had,
in fact, reconceived the Iraqi army as a force of perhaps 40,000
lightly armed, largely border-guarding troops. Keep in mind that
Saddam Hussein had a military of 400,000 heavily armed troops and
until the First Gulf War in 1990 a powerful air force
(as well as copious supplies of chemical weapons). In the Middle
East, for a country to have only a 40,000 man military without tanks,
artillery, or an air force to call on meant but one thing: that
the U.S. military and the U.S. Air Force, from bases in Iraq and
in the region, were to be Iraq's real fighting force in any crisis.
This was the true planning message of the Bush administration and
it indicated just how "at home" its officials thought they would
be in occupied Iraq.
By the time
it became obvious that such thinking was fantastical and George
Bush was starting to repeat the mantra,
"As Iraqis stand up, Americans will stand down," the idea of a 40,000-man
force had been long forgotten. By then, the U.S. military was at
work creating a large Iraqi army and national police force. But
the effects of such planning remain debilitatingly present, even
today.
After all,
the "crack" Iraqi units sent into Basra by Prime Minister Maliki
were still relatively lightly armed. (Hence, their complaints that
the Sadrist militia they came up against were often better armed
than they were.) They still had no significant Iraqi air force to
call on, because as yet it hardly
exists. When they got desperate, they had to call on U.S. and
British air support as well as U.S. Special
Forces units. And, of course, in the fighting in Basra, as in
Baghdad where American units quickly
entered the fray, they showed no particular flare for "standing
up." In fact, according to the Associated Press's fine reporter
Charles J. Hanley, the chief American trainer of Iraqi forces, Lt.
Gen. James Dubik, now
estimates that Iraq's military will not be able to guard the
country's borders effectively until, at the earliest, 2018.
There was
a period, back in 2004-05, when the Bush administration regularly
wielded a telling image. They talked often about the importance
of putting "an Iraqi face" on various aspects of the situation in
that country. Here's a typical
passage from the New York Times from that period: "By
insisting that they not be identified, the three officers based
in Baghdad were following a Pentagon policy requiring American commanders
in Baghdad to put 'an Iraqi face' on the war, meaning that Iraqi
commanders should be the ones talking to reporters, not Americans."
This caught something of the strangeness of that moment, a strangeness
that has yet to disappear. After all, as an image, to put a "face"
on anything actually means to put a mask over an already present
face, which was (and, even today, in military terms largely remains)
American power in Iraq.
The presentation
of the recent Maliki government offensive, launched on the eve of
Petraeus's return, also represented, in part, an attempt to put
an Iraqi face on American at-homeness in that country. The fictional
story put out as the "Iraqi" offensive was launched printed
up quite
seriously in our media was that Maliki had only informed
the American high command (and the British in Basra) of his prospective
move in the
hours just before it was launched. This was, on the face of
it, ludicrous. The "Iraqi" army has been stood up trained,
that is by U.S. advisors; some of its units have U.S. advisors
embedded in them; it is almost totally reliant on the logistical
support of the U.S. military. It could not move far offensively
without the significant prior knowledge of U.S. commanders (and
this was later admitted
by the President's National Security Council Advisor Stephen J.
Hadley).
While Maliki
had his own reasons for launching his forces (and allied militias)
against Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army in Basra, the Americans certainly
imagined a triumphant moment for Petraeus in his upcoming hearings,
thanks to new evidence that the Iraqi government was finally, in
George Bush's words,
"in the lead" and its military shaping up well. As Leila Fadel of
the McClatchy Newspapers reported,
"Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said the Iraqi operation was a
'byproduct of the success' of the year-old U.S. troop surge." This
was a fantasy, of course. And the result was the
success of Sadr's forces from Basra to Baghdad and ongoing
American attempts to disavow
any real involvement in the planning of the offensive.
Grand Delusions
The United
States is hardly the first empire whose representatives have felt
at home anywhere in its world (if not, in past times, in the
world). When you are at the peak of your imperial powers, you can
ignore the problems and contradictions that such a feeling, such
an attitude, naturally calls up. This is no longer the situation
for the United States and so the contradictions ripen, the problems
only grow, and the plunge into delusional thinking deepens.
Take just
the seeming conundrum of the recent battle in Basra. On one side,
you have an Iraqi army, trained for years by the Americans, to the
tune of approximately $22 billion in U.S. funds. On the other side,
you have an (at best) partially trained "militia" an "army"
in name only. It may be that the Iranians have put some effort or
money into equipping the Mahdi Army though the evidence for
this is slim indeed but, if so, this would be minor by comparison.
When the two
forces clashed, what was the result? Some Iraqi soldiers and policemen
simply put down their weapons and, in certain cases, surrendered
or went over to the other side, or deserted, or fought half-heartedly;
while the Mahdis fought fiercely, cleverly, and, in the end, successfully,
until called off in triumph by their leader. They "stood
up" (just as they had against the full might of the American
military in the southern holy city of Najaf back in 2004). Could
there, then, be two different races of Iraqis, one set willing to
fight with or without training or outside help, the other unwilling,
no matter the support?
The American
military faced a similar situation four decades ago in Vietnam,
where American advisors training the South Vietnamese military regularly
swore that they would turn in their brigades of Vietnamese troops
for just a few platoons of Vietcong, who would stand and fight as
if their lives depended on it.
Of course,
the answer here is anything but mysterious. On the one hand, you
have a foreign-trained, foreign-advised, foreign-supplied force
with confused and divided loyalties that is only partially an "Iraqi"
army; on the other, you have a local force, fighting in a community,
for the safety and wellbeing of its own sons and wives, friends
and relatives. The Mahdi Army members know why they fight and who
they fight for. They have "faith," and not just in the religious
sense. They are, in a word, at home.
The history
of the last 200 years has regularly piled up evidence that this
matters far more than firepower. Human beings, that is, regularly
"stand up" for something other than shiny weapons or the interests
of a foreign power, no matter how at home its leaders may think
they are in your country. The inability to see this obvious point
repeatedly and over decades represents delusional
thinking stemming, at least in part, from an inability of Americans
to imagine their own foreignness in the world.
In such cases,
you misperceive who is on your side, why they are there, and what,
exactly, they are capable of. You misunderstand what the actual
natives of a place think of you. You don't grasp that, whatever
the brute force and finances at your command, you, as a foreigner,
may never understand the situation you believe you should control.
Even the Maliki government itself, after all, is only "on our side"
thanks to its abysmal weakness. (Otherwise, it would be far more
closely allied with that other foreign power, Iran.) Sooner or later
usually sooner you simply delude yourself. You mistake
your trained army for an "Iraqi" or a "Vietnamese" one and so come
to believe that, if only you adjust your counterinsurgency tactics
correctly, it will fight like one. Then you act accordingly, which
is, of course, disastrous.
Whatever General
Petraeus says before Congress next week, however sane and pragmatic
he sounds, however impressive looking his charts and graphs, it's
worth keeping in mind that his testimony cannot help but be delusional,
because it stems from delusional premises and it can lead only to
further disaster for Americans and Iraqis.
Yes, of course,
American planes and drones will continue to cruise the skies of
the globe "taking out" enemies (or missing them and taking out citizens
elsewhere whom we could care less about); American diplomats and
high military officials will continue to travel the planet in packs,
indicating, however politely, what politicians, military men, and
diplomats elsewhere "must" do; and American military men will continue
to train the Iraqi army in the hopes that, in 2018 if not sooner,
it will stand up.
And
yet, as long as we mistake ourselves for "the natives," as long
as we are convinced that our interests are paramount everywhere,
and feel that we must be part of the solution to every problem,
our problems and the world's will only multiply.
Note to
Readers: A recent Noam Chomsky piece, "We
Own the World," took up an allied set of topics to those in
this essay. It's a fascinating read and I urge you to check it out.
April
4, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com,
is the co-founder of the American
Empire Project. 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 blog is The
Notion.
Copyright
© 2008 Tom Engelhardt
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