Living in an Expeditionary World
by
Tom
Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
DIGG THIS
Here's what
Howard Zinn says about the newest TomDispatch book (hot off the
presses), The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire:
"TomDispatch is one of the wonders of the electronic age. A touch
of the finger and you get the juiciest, meatiest information and
analysis, so rich a feast of intelligence and insight I often felt
short of breath. Now, Tom Engelhardt has assembled some of the best
of his dispatches, from some of the boldest and most astute commentators
in the country. So take a deep breath and read." Naomi Klein adds:
"These are the traits of a TomDispatch essay: unapologetically intellectual,
relentlessly original, a little bit dangerous. For many of us, these
are the key pieces of analysis that made sense of our post-9/11
world. How odd that many of them have never actually been printed.
Until now." (For more comments on the book from Andrew Bacevich,
Amy and David Goodman, and Susan Faludi, click
here.)
Readers
often ask how they can support TomDispatch. One way is certainly
to get yourself (and maybe a friend) a copy of this book, to send
out to your personal e-lists, urging all those on them to get a
first taste of TomDispatch by dipping into this "best of" volume
filled with your favorite TD authors from Chalmers Johnson, Michael
Klare, and Rebecca Solnit to Noam Chomsky, Bill McKibben, Ruth Rosen,
Juan Cole, Nick Turse, and Michael Schwartz, among many others.
(And then tell them to sign up for more of the same at the main
screen of the site.) Think of The World According to TomDispatch
as a survey of what the mainstream media hasn't covered and
TomDispatch has over these last crazed, craven years (from
the air war in Iraq to the corporate looting of New Orleans). It's
also an instant alternative history of the mad Age of Bush the Younger.
Finally, it's a great way to spread the word about this site, which
promises surprises galore in the months to come.
Without
extra dollars for publicity, TomDispatch has long subsisted on the
kindness of strangers on, specifically, word of mouth. Believe
me, whatever you do for this book (and the site) will be much appreciated
and I can recommend all this with a clear conscience because
I believe the new book really is a stellar reading experience and
a striking example of what one guy and his various pals can do in
a difficult time.
If you
want to view a brief video (by site videographer Brett Story) in
which I discuss the new book and the mega-bases the Pentagon has
built in Iraq, click
here. If you live in New York City, please consider attending
an event
in honor of the book at Book Culture (536 West 112th Street)
on Wednesday, June 11th at 7 pm. Michael Schwartz and I will talk
about the book, what the mainstream media doesn't cover, and the
situation in Iraq. It's also just about the only way to get a signed
copy, if you want one. What follows is an adaptation of the book's
introduction. ~ Tom
"E" for Expeditionary:
One
Man's Online Journey through Bush's Alphabet Soup
The Internet
teaches its own lessons, often painfully quickly. In April 2005,
I followed an urge, as I often did in those days. Our President,
who would soon claim to be spending his spare time absorbing meaty
books like King Leopold's Ghost, Lincoln: A Life of Purpose
and Power, and Mao: The Unknown Story, was then largely
known for reading The Pet Goat to schoolchildren while the
9/11 attacks were taking place and for being fond of The Very
Hungry Caterpillar. So I took a plunge into humor and wrote
a mock children's ABC book that I dubbed
"George's Amazing Alphabet Book of the Contemporary World, or Al-Qaedas
All Around." I claimed that the manuscript, produced by George W.
himself, had been leaked to my TomDispatch.com website by "a senior
official in one of our intelligence agencies."
Maybe
it wasn't Jon-Stewart-worthy, but I posted it anyway as my commentary
of the week and thought no more about it until the first angry emails
began appearing in the TomDispatch mail box. A number of readers
claimed I had been "gulled." I shoulda known! The President could
never have written such a document! It had obviously been
produced by the CIA! No, the Secret Service! No…
A perfectly
sane friend rang up, wondering whether the manuscript could possibly
be genuine or was I pulling a leg or two? Irritated readers
assured me that it was a total fraud and I, a total fool for ever
taking the word of that senior intelligence official.
I was stunned.
I hadn't been trying to fool a soul, just make a passing point or
two about our President and his people. Still, I got the message
an instant lesson in Bush-era online reality. You couldn't
out-absurd this administration. You couldn't write a "document"
so extreme that some readers wouldn't mistake it for the real thing.
That was the extremity of our moment thank you, George W!
Actually,
back in November 2001, that very extremity had driven me online
in the first place and into the waiting arms of what became TomDispatch.com
after the assaults of 9/11; after we had been at "war" and
George had become a "wartime" President with an ever-expanding idea
of his own powers; after Americans had engaged in endless 9/11 rites
in which we took all the roles in the global drama (except Ultimate
Evil One); after we had become the planet's greatest victims, survivors,
and dominators; after, with relentless, repetitive vigor, the heartland
had donned hats and t-shirts proclaiming that they "loved" (or hearted)
that former Sodom to Los Angeles's Gomorrah New York
City; after the Patriot Act was reality; after the money
to "support our troops" was already pouring into the Pentagon
and allied private corporations; after a budding second Defense
Department, the Office of Homeland Security, was a reality (it would
be turned into a full-scale Department of Homeland Security in November
2002); after the Bush administration had begun planning for a detention
camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, that would become the jewel in the
crown of an offshore Bermuda Triangle of injustice; after Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and other top officials had made clear
their urge to "take off the gloves" and commit just about any act
imaginable, from kidnapping to torture, against anyone anywhere
they believed to be a "terrorist"; after the newspapers I normally
read in the still commanding world of print had narrowed their coverage,
upped their "patriotism," and were beating the drums for George
Bush's Global War on Terror.
TomDispatch
was a happenstance, the unplanned creation of a man too old by half
for the medium he stumbled into. It came into existence out of a
simple urge not to sit still, not to continue my life as it had
been while our already shaky world was being ravaged. Between November
2001 and 2004, it went from a private, no-name group email for perhaps
12 friends and relatives to an official site in cyberspace, backed
by the Nation Institute, and featuring a range of provocative writers
and thinkers.
Sometime in
2004, the year after the site gained its name, I went out to lunch
with a Mexican political cartoonist. In what still passed for real
life, I was working, as I had been for almost 30 years, as a book
editor in the publishing business and we were discussing a project
we planned to do together. At one point, trying to explain his life
and world to me, he said: "You know, for Mexicans, the PRI years"
he was talking about the one-party-state era in his country
"were shameful times…" He paused and then leaned across the
table confidentially, "…but we political cartoonists," he said,
"we were like pigs in slop."
In the same
confessional mode, what were indisputably the worst years of most
of our lives turned out to be a small, late-in-life odyssey for
me. Call it "A" for adventure.
TomDispatch
is as I often write inquisitive readers the sideline
that ate my life. Being in my late fifties and remarkably ignorant
of the Internet world when it began, I brought some older print
habits online with me. These included a liking for the well-made,
well-edited essay, an aversion to the endless yak and insult that
seemed to fill whole realms of cyberspace, and a willingness to
go against, or beyond, every byte-sized truth of the online world
where, it was believed, brevity was all and attention spans virtually
nonexistent. TomDispatch pieces invariably ran long. They were,
after all, meant to reframe a familiar, if shook-up, world that
was being presented in a particularly limited way by the mainstream
media.
Finding myself
on a mad, unipolar imperial planet, I simply took the plunge into
an alphabet soup of mayhem and chaos. Let me try, now, to offer
you my shorthand version of the world according to TomDispatch.
An Expeditionary
Service in an Expeditionary World
In late October
2007, when top-level volunteers for duty in Iraq from the U.S. State
Department had long since thinned out, Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice threatened to assign diplomats to posts in Baghdad and the
provinces, whether they wanted to go or not. This had not happened
since the days of the Vietnam War. At an angry "town hall" meeting
of career diplomats, a foreign service officer named Jack Croddy
denounced
the plan. He called it a "potential death sentence." "It's one thing,"
he said, "if someone believes in what's going on over there and
volunteers, but it's another thing to send someone over there on
a forced assignment."
David Satterfield,
Rice's deputy, responded:
"I certainly understand very much that this is extremely difficult
for people who have not contemplated this kind of service." Then
he reportedly added, "This is an expeditionary world. For better
or worse, it requires an expeditionary service."
An expeditionary
world. An expeditionary service. How typical of those muscled-up,
faintly un-American phrases think "homeland," "regime change,"
"enhanced interrogation techniques," "extraordinary rendition"
that the Bush administration has made part of our vocabulary. These
were years when American men (and a few women) put on the pith helmets
they had last seen in imperial adventure films in the movie theaters
of their childhoods, imagined themselves as the imperial masters
of a global Pax Americana (as well as a domestic Pax Republicana),
and managed to sound as if they were surging across the planet with
Rudyard Kipling at their side.
In the good
old days of 20022003, before a ragtag insurgency in Iraq managed
to lay low the plans of the leaders of the Earth's "sole superpower,"
the administration's neoconservative followers and assorted pundits
openly touted empire (and, incongruously enough, "freedom"). They
spoke glowingly of the United States as a new Rome or a new imperial
Britain. The U.S. was to be the last great power on which the sun
could never in fact, would never dare to set. Commentator
Max Boot was typical when he wrote
of the U.S. military in 2002, that, in its "full-spectrum dominance,"
it "far surpasses the capabilities of such previous would-be hegemons
as Rome, Britain, and Napoleonic France." Of course, back then,
a barrel of crude oil was still in the $20 price range.
By that time,
the leftover American internationalists, whose weak last hurrah
was the Clinton interregnum, had been ousted. Clinton's eight years
had, of course, taken place in the midst of a quarter century-long
Republican "revolution" that, in the name of "small government,"
had ramped up the powers of the national security state and the
profile of the Pentagon, while slowly strangling services to the
populace. From George W. Bush on down, the officials of the new
administration would, however, prove extreme, even by the standards
of that right-wing revolution. They arrived triumphantly in Washington
as armed, aggressive isolationists who couldn't swallow the concept
of partnership either in Washington or in the world.
The phrase
du jour was "unipolarity." In the wake of the Soviet Union's
collapse, there was, it was said, only one Great Power "pole" left
on the planet and it was firmly embedded in Washington D.C. The
job of the rest of the world was to accept that reality and bend
a knee to it. Anything else would be considered a form of terrorism
or, as the administration put it in one of its Ur-documents,
the National Defense Strategy of the United States of America: "Our
strength as a nation-state will continue to be challenged by those
who employ a strategy of the weak using international fora,
judicial processes and terrorism." There was an unholy troika
for you, a genuine axis of evil.
When Bush's
people sallied forth into the world, they did so without equals,
and less as classic imperialists than as
imperial looters (in conjunction with crony corporations like
Halliburton, Bechtel, and Blackwater USA, to whom they slipped their
no-bid contracts). Arm-in-arm with a mob of K-street lobbyists,
Congressional power brokers, and assorted right-wing think-tanks
and media pundits, they were itching to take the world by storm.
These were people who imagined no problems that couldn't be overcome
by a shock-and-awe-style military strike abroad. They saw their
toughest enemies, however, not overseas, but in Washington. As a
result, they first seized the Pentagon, then Kiplinged the military
and the intelligence services, sent the State Department into purdah,
and set up the most secretive, yet leak-ridden, administration in
American memory.
Unlike any
previous administration, they arrived in office with a full-scale
allied right-wing media network already firmly in place their
own publishing houses, newspapers, talk-radio shows, and "fair and
balanced" TV news. They felt no need to jolly up to, or interact
with, the rest of the media. As Bill Keller, executive editor of
the New York Times, put
it in 2007, "We have endured nearly seven years of the most
press-phobic government in a couple of generations."
In the
phrase of critic Jay Rosen, the intent of the Bush administration
was to "roll back" the media, pacifying and sidelining the major
papers and TV networks; and, with the help of the assaults of 9/11,
they were more than successful in doing so for a time. Never,
in fact, had an administration released less news to those covering
them. (Most newspapers and the TV news, for instance, gave up even
assigning a reporter to cover Vice President Dick Cheney, a man
so averse to providing information that his daily schedule was regularly
unavailable, while reporters couldn't
even find out the full roster of people working in his "office.")
The administration's
method of ruling revolved around injecting regular doses of fear
into the public bloodstream, while dominating an increasingly powerless
Congress. If conquering Washington had been the only thing that
mattered, the Republicans might have been titans for decades, though
it's worth remembering that to do so they still needed a little
help from their enemies even ones they didn't deign to pay
the slightest attention to on occupying the Oval Office. After all,
they were only conquerors after September 11, 2001. On September
10th of that year, the media was
still describing the administration as "adrift"; its Secretary
of Defense was believed to have "cratered"; and the President's
polling figures were visibly sagging, thanks to a public which viewed
him "not as decisive but as tentative and perhaps overly scripted."
The President,
who had just returned from an overlong, much-criticized vacation
at his "ranch" in Crawford, Texas, was then being charged by figures
in his own party and Republicans in Congress with being "out of
touch" and out of ideas. Wielding, in Mike Davis's vivid
phrase, hijacked "car bombs with wings," al-Qaeda solved that
one fast. As the towers fell and that giant cloud of dust and ash
rose toward the heavens, the Bush administration found itself swept
along by the perfect storm toward its conquest of Washington.
When it came
to conquering the world, however, the President's top officials
would turn out to have an excess of faith and not a clue.
A Faith-based
Administration
Let's start
with that faith. Much has been made of the Christian fundamentalist
beliefs of George W. Bush and the religious foot soldiers of the
Right whom his administration mobilized in the election campaigns
of 2000 and 2004. But consider the possibility that the most fundamental
belief of the top officials of his administration was, in fact,
in the efficacy of force.
If the Republicans
emerged from 9/11 as a fundamentalist regime, it wasn't really as
a fundamentalist Christian one. After all, political strategist
Karl Rove, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, and the Vice President
were not Christian fundamentalists, any more than were key Pentagon
officials Paul Wolfowitz and Douglas Feith, for example. The administration's
top officials may not, in fact, have agreed among themselves on
when (or whether) End Times would arrive, but they all had a singular
faith in the U.S. military as the most awesome power projector in
history.
They tended
to hold individual American military commanders in contempt
unless they had a very big "Yessir" stamped on their foreheads
but when it came to the ability of the U.S. Armed Forces to accomplish
anything, romantics would be a mild word for what they were. They
believed themselves uniquely in possession of an ability to project
force in ways no other country ever had; and so, despite much talk
of "democracy" and "liberty," a Hellfire-missile-armed Predator
drone would perhaps be the truest hallmark of the early twenty-first
century American civilization they presided over.
They were
in awe of the military at their President's command, armed to the
teeth as it was with techno-toys; already garrisoning much of the
globe (and about to garrison more of it); already on the receiving
end of vast inflows of taxpayer dollars (and about to receive more
of them); and already embedded in a sprawling network of corporate
interests (and about to cede further control to such corporations).
By the time the Bush administration took the helm of the warship
of state, most of the globe had already been divided into U.S. military
"commands" essentially imperial viceroyships but they
would finish the job, creating a command for the "homeland," Northcom,
in 2002, and for the previously forgotten, suddenly energy-hot,
continent of Africa, Africom,
in 2007.
The President
and his top officials put the lean, mean, high-tech, all-volunteer
military on a pedestal and worshipped it as the most shock-and-awesome
institution around. Speaking of his war in Iraq in 2007, in a statement
typical of his administration's military hyperbole, Bush said:
"I'm confident we'll prevail because we have the greatest force
for human liberation the world has ever known the men and
women of the United States Armed Forces." The greatest force
for human liberation the world has ever known. This was a claim
unimaginable from any past president. Then again, all the President's
men had similar warm and fuzzy visions of achieving planetary dominion
of a sort that had once, in American parlance, been the goal only
of the most evil of foreign powers the Nazis, Imperial Japan,
or Stalin's Russia.
When it came
to unleashing that force to achieve their aims, they turned out
to be fervent utopians and blind believers. They were firmly convinced
that, with it, they could reshape the Middle East, establish an
unassailable position in the oil heartlands of the planet, roll
back the Russians (yet further), and cow the Chinese.
And then,
with 9/11, the "Pearl Harbor" of the new century, they suddenly
had a divine wind at their backs, a terrified populace ready to
be led, a supine Congress, and a pacified media. Everything they
believed deeply in seemed just so… well, possible. In faith-based
terms, the attacks of 9/11 were a godsend. Not surprisingly, they
promptly began to prepare to act on behalf of an angry imperial
god by bringing the world particularly its energy heartlands
to heel.
First, however,
they created their sacred texts at the heart of which lay the doctrine
of "preventive war." At the same time, the President began speaking
out about the need to act forcefully to prevent the emergence of
any possible threat to the country. As he put it in his 2002 State
of the Union Address, "We'll be deliberate, yet time is not
on our side. I will not wait on events, while dangers gather. I
will not stand by, as peril draws closer and closer. The United
States of America will not permit the world's most dangerous regimes
to threaten us with the world's most destructive weapons."
Meanwhile,
in the office of the White House Counsel and in the Justice Department,
acolyte
lawyers were creating pretzled
legal memos that essentially redefined torture out of existence,
clearing a path for any agent or interrogator in the field ready
to take off those constraining "gloves." At home, these fundamentalist
believers were also working to free the President from all restraints,
intending to create a Caesarean commander-in-chief presidency as
well as the first imperial vice-presidency in American history.
Because their
faith was of the blind sort, however, they would misread the nature
of what was powerful in our world; and so their fervent unipolarity
would help give premature birth to a newly multipolar planet. Among
other disastrous miscalculations, they would confuse the power that
lay in the threat of loosing the American military with its actual
ability to impose itself on places like Afghanistan and Iraq. They
believed, like the monotheists they were, that a single God, personified
by the military at their command, would sweep all before Him; that,
with a "coalition of the willing" (by which they meant the submissive),
they could take their God of force to the heathen at the point of
a cruise missile, and that victory would be theirs. We now know
just how impossibly wrong this belief would prove to be.
Missing
Stories on a One-Way Planet
At his 2006
confirmation hearings for the post of CIA director Michael V. Hayden,
who absorbed the Bush ethos while running the National Security
Agency, the super-secret electronic spying organization, offered
the following
promise to Congress: "If confirmed as Director, I would reaffirm
the CIA's proud culture of risk-taking and excellence, particularly
through the increased use of non-traditional operational platforms…
and the inculcation of what I would call an expeditionary mentality."
That same year, then-Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte
told the Marine
Corps Intelligence Association, "We are developing an ‘expeditionary'
mentality in the field of science and technology."
That old-fashioned
imperial idea of an "expeditionary mentality" abroad took on a life
of its own in the Bush years. The answer to any problem was that
"expeditionary mentality" and the armed expedition that went with
it. And disaster, of course, ensued. For the adherents of the cult
of force, the world of fantasy took over; the result was an empire
of stupidity. If, for instance, you were to offer a reckoning of
the Bush administration's "Global War on Terror," you might
at least in the world according to TomDispatch sum its achievements
up this way:
With Guantanamo
as the Devil's Island of the twenty-first century; with the extraordinary
renditions, waterboardings, tortures, and abuses (and the perverse
memos and photos that went with them); with the CIA's "ghost prisoners"
and network of secret offshore prisons; with that Delta Force intelligence
agent who, according to journalist Ron Suskind, stepped off a plane
from Afghanistan holding the head of al-Qaeda second-in-command
Ayman al-Zawahiri in a "U.S. Government" metal box (the head, it
turned out, belonged to someone else); with neither Osama bin Laden
nor Zawahiri apprehended; with woebegone terror wannabes, the innocent,
and small fry of every sort turned into Public Enemies numbers 11,000;
with illegal spying and warrantless, limitless surveillance taking
hold in "the Homeland"; with the Taliban rising from the grave and
the original al-Qaeda (as opposed to name-stealing al-Qaedas elsewhere)
finding a "safe haven" in Pakistan's tribal borderlands; the GWOT
(as it so inelegantly came to be known) could easily have been renamed
something like the "misfire on terror" (MOT) or even, with an eye
to what developed in Iraq and elsewhere, the "engine for terror"
(EFT).
Among the
administration's greatest achievements was launching what in the
eyes of many globally came to look like a "crusade" to use
a word that
slipped effortlessly out of the President's mouth soon after
9/11 against Islam. In the process, the President's neocon
supporters demarcated an area extending from the western border
of China, through the former Central Asian SSRs of the Soviet Union,
through the Middle East, down through the Horn of Africa and across
North Africa (more or less coinciding with the oil heartlands of
the planet), and dubbed it "the arc of instability." Then, from
Somalia to Pakistan, the Bush administration managed to set it aflame,
transforming an empty turn of phrase into a reality on the ground,
an actual arc of instability, even as the price of crude oil soared
above $130 a barrel.
For most of
these years, much of this was remarkably ill-covered (if covered
at all) in the mainstream U.S. media. Almost no American reporter,
for instance, considered it worth the bother to write about those
massive "facts on the ground" in Iraq, the
permanent mega-bases heavily fortified American small
towns, sometimes 1520 square miles in area, with multiple
bus routes, PXs, brand fast-food outlets, and many of the amenities
of home that the Pentagon was building at the cost of multi-billions
of dollars. (And no television news show thought it worth the bother
to show Americans pictures of what their tax dollars had built in
Iraq.) Few American journalists in Iraq or Afghanistan bothered
to look to the skies and consider the
role of air power in the president's global war (even though
air power had been the signature American way of war for well over
half a century); almost all of them found the crucial issue of energy
flows through the oil heartlands, and the vast oil reserves of Iraq
in particular, an embarrassment to mention in conjunction with the
invasion and occupation of that country.
From 2002
through 2007, TomDispatch has focused on stories like these, as
well as on what underpins so many of the missing stories of these
years the imperial nature of the American world we've been
inhabiting. For a brief period in 20022003, the neocons and
various right-wing pundits were openly beating the drum for "empire,"
but when Iraq started to go south and the U.S. military visibly
ran off the tracks, the words "empire" and "imperial" left the scene
of the crime as well except at websites like TomDispatch.
And yet, in
American thinking, this still remains an imperial planet. Try to
imagine, for instance, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad landing
on an aircraft carrier in the Gulf of Mexico as Vice President
Dick Cheney did on the USS John C. Stennis on May 11, 2007,
while it floated in the Persian Gulf off Iran's coast and
saying, as Cheney
also did: "With two carrier strike groups in the Gulf, we're sending
clear messages to friends and adversaries alike. We'll keep the
sea lanes open. We'll stand with our friends in opposing extremism
and strategic threats…," and so on.
If that had
happened the other way round, it would have been cause for a declaration
of war and imagine what the press coverage would have been
like then. Cheney's address to the sailors of the Stennis
was instead reported as just another humdrum event on our still
one-way planet.
In these last
years, the Bush administration's unbounded sense of imperial impunity,
and an older American belief that this country possesses a moral
code exceptional among nations, have proven a lethal geopolitical
cocktail. This curious perspective has led our administration to
commit acts of horror in our name, while absolving us from thinking
about how others might look on those acts and by extension,
how they think about us.
Because, for
years, so little on these, and similar, subjects made it into print
or onto the TV news, there has been a special need and place for
online political websites. We started and maintained
discussions that only slowly seeped into the mainstream, even as
readers from that world increasingly fled on-line. At the height
of the Bush administration's power and narcissism, what TomDispatch
and other sites like it represented was perhaps a simple urge not
to let them set an agenda for all of America, and for the
planet. This, it turns out, they were incapable of doing
and for that, perhaps, we should be modestly thankful. When the
first histories of our desperate times are finally written, historians
will have to turn to the record created by the world of the Internet,
or their histories will be as incomplete, the dots as unconnected
as they were in the mainstream in these sorry years.
June
11, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who
runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of Tomdispatch book, The
World According to Tomdispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), which is being published this month.
Copyright
© 2008 Tom Engelhardt
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
|