The Ponzi Scheme Presidency
by
Tom
Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
Bush's Legacy
of Destruction
It may finally
be 2009, but in some ways, given these last years, it might as well
be 800 BCE.
From the ninth
to the seventh centuries BCE, the palace walls of the kings who
ruled the Assyrian Empire were decorated with vast stone friezes,
filled with enough dead bodies to sate any video-game maker and
often depicting in almost comic strip-style various
bloody royal victories and conquests. At least one of them shows
Assyrian soldiers lopping off the heads of defeated enemies and
piling them into pyramids for an early version of what, in the VCE
(Vietnam Common Era) of the 1960s, Americans came to know as the
"body count."
So I learned
recently by wandering through a traveling
exhibit of ancient Assyrian art from the British Museum. On
the audio tour accompanying the show, one expert pointed out that
Assyrian scribes, part of an impressive imperial bureaucracy, carefully
counted those heads and recorded the numbers for the greater glory
of the king (as, in earlier centuries, Egyptian scribes had recorded
counts of severed
hands for victorious Pharaohs).
Hand it to
art museums. Is there anything stranger than wandering through one
and locking eyes with a Vermeer lady, a Van
Eyck portrait, or one of Rembrandt's burghers staring out at
you across the centuries? What a reminder of the common humanity
we share with the distant past. In a darker sense, it's no less
a reminder of our kinship across time to spot a little pyramid of
heads on a frieze, imagine an Assyrian scribe making his count,
and eerily enough feel at home. What a measure of
just how few miles "the march of civilization" (as my parents' generation
once called it) has actually covered.
Prejudiced
Toward War
If you need
an epitaph for the Bush administration, here's one to test out:
They tried. They really tried. But they couldn't help it. They
just had to count.
In a sense,
George W. Bush did the Assyrians proud. With his secret prisons,
his outsourced torture chambers, his officially approved kidnappings,
the murders committed by his interrogators, the massacres committed
by his troops and mercenaries, and the shock-and-awe slaughter he
ordered from the air, it's easy enough to imagine what those Assyrian
scribes would have counted, had they somehow been teleported into
his world. True, his White House didn't have friezes of his victories
(one problem being that there were none to glorify); all it had
was Saddam Hussein's captured pistol proudly
stored in a small study off the Oval Office. Almost 3,000 years
later, however, Bush's "scribes," still traveling with the imperial
forces, continued to count the bodies as they piled ever higher
in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Pakistani borderlands, and elsewhere.
Many of those
body counts were duly made public. This record of American "success"
was visible to anyone who visited the Pentagon's website and viewed
its upbeat news articles complete with enumerations
of "Taliban fighters" or, in Iraq,
"terrorists," the Air Force's news feed listing
the number of bombs dropped on "anti-Afghan forces," or the U.S.
Central Command's stories of killing "Taliban
militants."
On the other
hand, history, as we know, doesn't repeat itself and unlike
the Assyrians the Bush administration would have preferred
not to count, or at least not to make its body counts public.
One of its small but tellingly unsuccessful struggles, a sign of
the depth of its failure on its own terms, was to avoid the release
of those counts.
Its aversion
to the body count made some sense. After all, since the 1950s, body
counting for the U.S. military has invariably signaled not impending
victory, but disaster, and even defeat. In fact, one of the strangest
things about the American empire has been this: Between 1945 and
George W. Bush's second term, the U.S. economy, American corporations,
and the dollar have held remarkable sway over much of the rest of
the world. New York City has been the planet's financial capital
and Washington its war capital. (Moscow, even at the height of the
Cold War, always came in a provincial second.)
In the same
period, the U.S. military effectively
garrisoned much of the globe from the Horn of Africa to Greenland,
from South Korea to Qatar, while its Navy controlled the seven seas,
its Air Force dominated the global skies, its nuclear command stood
ready to unleash the powers of planetary death, and its space command
watched the heavens. In the wake of the Cold War, its various military
commands (including Northcom,
set up by the Bush administration in 2002, and Africom,
set up in 2007) divided the greater part of the planet into what
were essentially military satrapies. And yet, the U.S. military,
post-1945, simply could not win the wars that mattered.
Because the
neocons of the Bush administration brushed aside this counterintuitive
fact, they believed themselves faced in 2000 with an unparalleled
opportunity (whose frenetic exploitation would be triggered by the
attacks of 9/11, the
"Pearl Harbor" of the new century). With the highest-tech military
on the planet, funded at levels no other set of nations could cumulatively
match, the United States, they were convinced, was uniquely situated
to give the phrase "sole superpower" historically unprecedented
meaning. Even the Assyrians at their height, the Romans in their
Pax Romana centuries, the British in the endless decades
when the sun could never set on its empire, would prove pikers by
comparison.
In this sense,
President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, and
the various neocons in the administration were fundamentalist idolaters
and what they worshipped was the staggering power of the
U.S. military. They were believers in a church whose first tenet
was the efficacy
of force above all else. Though few of them had the slightest
military experience, they gave real meaning to the word bellicose.
They were prejudiced towards war.
With awesome
military power at their command, they were also convinced that they
could go it alone as the dominating force on the planet. As with
true believers everywhere, they had only contempt for those they
couldn't convert to their worldview. That contempt made "unilateralism"
their strategy of choice, and a global Pax Americana their
goal (along with, of course, a Pax Republicana at home).
If All
Else Fails, Count the Bodies
It was in
this context that they were not about to count the enemy dead. In
their wars, as these fervent, inside-the-Beltway utopians saw it,
there would be no need to do so. With the "shock and awe" forces
at their command, they would refocus American attention on the real
metric of victory, the taking of territory and of enemy capitals.
At the same time, they were preparing to disarm the only enemy that
truly scared them, the American people, by making none of the mistakes
of the Vietnam era, including as the President later admitted
counting bodies.
Of course,
both the Pax Americana and the Pax Republicana would
prove will-o'-the-wisps. As it turned out, the Bush administration,
blind to the actual world it faced, disastrously miscalculated the
nature of American power especially military power
and what it was capable of doing. And yet, had they taken a clear-eyed
look at what American military power had actually achieved in action
since 1945, they might have been sobered. In the major wars (and
even some minor actions) the U.S. military fought in those decades,
it had been massively destructive but never victorious, nor even
particularly successful. In many ways, in the classic phrase of
Chinese Communist leader Mao Zedong, it had been a "paper tiger."
Yes, it had
"won" largely meaningless victories in Operation Urgent Fury,
the invasion of the tiny Caribbean island of Grenada in 1983; against
the toothless Panamanian regime of Manuel Noriega in Operation Just
Cause in 1989; in Operation Desert Storm, largely an air campaign
against Saddam Hussein's helpless military in 1990 (in a war that
settled nothing); in NATO's Operation Deliberate Force, an air war
against the essentially defenseless Serbian military in 1995 (while
meeting disaster in operations in Iran in 1980 and Somalia in 1993).
On the other hand, in Korea in the early 1950s and in Vietnam, Laos,
and Cambodia from the 1960s into the early 1970s, it had committed
its forces all but atomically, and yet had met nothing but stalemate,
disaster, and defeat against enemies who, on paper at least, should
not have been able to stand up to American power.
It was in
the context of defeat and then frustration in Korea that the counting
of enemy bodies began. Once Chinese communist armies had entered
that war in massive numbers in late 1950 and inflicted a terrible
series of defeats on American forces but could not sweep them off
the peninsula, that conflict settled into a "meatgrinder" of a stalemate
in which the hope of taking significant territory faded; yet some
measure of success was needed as public frustration mounted in the
United States: thus began the infamous body count of enemy dead.
The body count
reappeared quite early in the Vietnam War, again as a shorthand
way of measuring success in a conflict in which the taking of territory
was almost meaningless, the countryside a hostile place, the enemy
hard to distinguish from the general population, and our own in-country
allies weak and largely unable to strengthen themselves. Those tallies
of dead bodies, announced daily by military spokesmen to increasingly
dubious reporters in Saigon, were the public face of American "success"
in the Vietnam era. Each body was to be further evidence of what
General William Westmoreland called "the light at the end of the
tunnel." When those dead bodies and any sense of success began to
part ways, however, when, in the terminology of the times, a "credibility
gap" opened between the metrics of victory and reality, the body
count morphed into a symbol of barbarism as well as of defeat. It
helped stoke an antiwar movement.
This was why,
in choosing to take on Saddam Hussein's hapless military in 2003
the administration was looking for a "cakewalk"
campaign that would "shock and awe" enemies throughout the Middle
East they officially chose not to release any counts of enemy
dead. General Tommy Franks, commander of the administration's Afghan
operation in 2001 and the invasion of Iraq thereafter, put
the party line succinctly, "We don't do body counts."
As the President
finally admitted
in some frustration to a group of conservative columnists in October
2006, his administration had "made a conscious effort not to be
a body-count team." Not intending to repeat the 1960s experience,
he and his advisors had planned out an opposites war on the home
front anything done in Vietnam would not be done this time
around and that meant not offering official counts of the
dead which might stoke an antiwar movement… until, as in Korea and
Vietnam, frustration truly set in.
When the taking
of Baghdad in April 2003 proved no more of a capstone on American
victory than the taking of Kabul in November 2001, when everything
began to go disastrously wrong and the carefully enumerated count
of the American dead in Iraq rose precipitously, when "victory"
(a word which the President still
invoked 15 times in a single speech in November 2005) adamantly
refused to make an appearance, the moment for the body count had
arrived. Despite all the planning, they just couldn't stop themselves.
A frustrated President expressed it this way: "We don't get to say
that a thousand of the enemy killed, or whatever the number
was. It's happening. You just don't know it."
Soon enough
the Pentagon was regularly releasing such figures in reports on
its operations and, in December 2006, the President, too, first
slipped such a tally into a press
briefing. ("Our commanders report that the enemy has also suffered.
Offensive operations by Iraqi and coalition forces against terrorists
and insurgents and death squad leaders have yielded positive results.
In the months of October, November, and the first week of December,
we have killed or captured nearly 5,900 of the enemy.")
It wasn't,
of course, that no one had been counting. The President, as we
know from Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward, had
long been keeping "'his own personal scorecard for the [global]
war [on terror]' in the form of photographs with brief biographies
and personality sketches of those judged to be the world's most
dangerous terrorists each ready to be crossed out by the
President as his forces took them down." And the military had been
counting bodies as well, but as the possibility of victory disappeared
into the charnel houses of Iraq and Afghanistan, the Pentagon and
the President finally gave in. While this did not stoke an antiwar
movement, it represented a tacit admission of policy collapse, a
kind of surrender. It was as close as an administration which never
owned up to error could come to admitting that two more disastrous
wars had been added to a string of military failures in the truncated
American Century.
That implicit
admission, however, took years to arrive, and in the meantime, Iraqis
and Afghans civilians, insurgents, terrorists, police, and
military men were dying in prodigious numbers.
The Global
War on Terror as a Ponzi Scheme
As it happened,
others were also counting. Among the earliest of them, a website,
Iraq Body Count, carefully
toted up Iraqi civilian deaths as documented in reputable media
outlets. Their estimate has, by now, almost reached 100,000
and, circumscribed by those words "documented" and "civilian," doesn't
begin to get at the full scope of Iraqi deaths.
Various groups
of scholars and pollsters also took up the task, using sophisticated
sampling techniques (including door-to-door interviews under exceedingly
dangerous conditions) to arrive at reasonable approximations of
the Iraqi dead. They have come up with figures ranging from the
hundreds
of thousands to a
million or more
in a country with a prewar population of perhaps 26 million. United
Nations representatives have similarly attempted, under difficult
circumstances, to keep a count
of Iraqis fleeing into exile exile being, after a fashion,
a form of living death and have estimated that more
than 2 million Iraqis fled their country, while another 2.7
million, having fled their homes, remained "internally displaced."
Similar attempts
have been made for Afghanistan. Human Rights Watch has, for instance,
done its best to tally civilian
deaths from air strikes in that country (while even TomDispatch
has attempted to keep a modest
count of wedding parties obliterated by U.S. air attacks in
Afghanistan and Iraq). But, of course, the real body count in either
country will never be known.
One thing
is certain, however: it is an obscenity of the present moment that
Iraq, still a charnel
house, still in a state of near total disrepair, still on the
edge of a whole host of potential conflicts, should increasingly
be portrayed here
as a limited Bush administration "surge" success. Only a country
or a punditry or a military incapable of facing the
depths of destruction that the Bush administration let loose could
reach such a conclusion.
If all roads
once led to Rome, all acts of the Bush administration have led to
destruction, and remarkably regularly to piles of dead or tortured
bodies, counted or not. In fact, it's reasonable to say that every
Bush administration foreign policy dream, including its first-term
fantasy about a pacified "Greater Middle East" and its late second-term
vision of a facilitated "peace process" between the Israelis and
Palestinians, has ended
in piles of bodies and in failure. Consider this a count all its
own.
Looked at
another way, the Bush administration's Global War on Terror and
its subsidiary wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have, in effect, been
a giant Ponzi scheme. At a cost of nearly one
trillion taxpayer dollars to date (but sure to be in the multi-trillions
when all is said and done), Bush's mad "global war" simply sucked
needed money out of our world at levels that made Bernie
Madoff seem like a small fry.
Madoff,
by his own accounting, squandered perhaps $50 billion of other people's
money. The Bush administration took a trillion dollars of ours and
handed it out to its crony
corporate buddies and to the Pentagon as down payments on disaster
and that's without even figuring into the mix the staggering
sums still needed to care for American soldiers maimed, impaired,
or nearly destroyed by Bush's wars.
With Bush's
"commander-in-chief" presidency only days from its end, the price
tag on his "war" continues to soar as dollars grow scarce, new investors
refuse to pay in, and the scheme crumbles. Unfortunately, the American
people, typical suckers in such a con game, will be left with a
mile-high stack of IOU's. In any Ponzi scheme comparison with Madoff,
however, one difference (other than size) stands out. Sooner or
later, Madoff, like Charles
Ponzi himself, will end up behind bars, while George, Dick,
& Co. will be writing their memoirs and living off the fat of the
land.
Eight
years of bodies, dead, broken, mutilated, abused; eight years of
ruined lives down countless drains; eight years of massive destruction
to places from Baghdad to New Orleans where nothing of significance
was ever rebuilt: all this was brought to us by a President, now
leaving office without apology, who said the following in his first
inaugural address: "I will live and lead by these principles:
to advance my convictions with civility… to call for responsibility
and try to live it as well."
He lived,
however, by quite a different code. Destruction without responsibility,
that's Bush's legacy, but who's counting now that the destruction
mounts and the bodies begin to pile up here in the "homeland," in
our own body count nation? The laid off, the pension-less, the homeless,
the suicides
imagine what that trillion dollars might have meant to them.
It's clear
enough in these last days of the Bush administration that its model
was Iraq, dismantled and devastated. The world, had he succeeded,
might have become George W. Bush's Iraq.
Yes, he came
up short, but, given the global economic situation, how much short
we don't yet know. Perhaps, in the future, historians will call
him a Caesar of destruction.
Veni, vidi,
vastavi... [I came, I saw, I devastated...]
Note:
I rely on many wonderful sources and websites in putting together
TomDispatch.com, but as 2009 starts, I would feel remiss if I didn't
credit three in particular: Antiwar.com,
Juan Cole's Informed Comment,
and Paul Woodward's The War in
Context. Each is invaluable in its own way; each made my task
of trying to make some sense of George W. Bush's world so much easier.
A deep bow of thanks to all three. Finally, I can't help wondering
about one missing Iraqi who remains on my mind: a young Sunni woman
living in Baghdad in 2003, who adopted the pseudonym Riverbend.
She began her "girlblog from Iraq," Baghdad Burning, with
this epigraph: "...I'll meet you 'round the bend my friend, where
hearts can heal and souls can mend..." For several years, she provided
a vivid citizen's reportage on Bush's disaster that should have
put most journalists to shame. As I
wrote in 2006, hers was "an unparalleled record of the American
war on, and occupation of, Iraq (and Riverbend writes like an angel).
[It represents] simply the best contemporary account we are likely
to have any time soon of the hell into which we've plunged that
country." Her last report from Syria she had just arrived
as a refugee was posted
on October 22, 2007. Since then, as far as I know, she has not been
heard from.
January
6, 2009
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), a collection of some of the best pieces from his site and
an alternative history of the mad Bush years now ending.
Copyright
© 2009 Tom Engelhardt
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