An American Foreign Legion
by
Tom
Engelhardt
and William Astore
by Tom Engelhardt
and William Astore
According to
the New York Times, suicides in the U.S. Army this January
alone could
total as many as 24. (For January 2008, the number was five.)
If so, that would not only be the highest monthly total since the
Army started keeping such figures in 1980, but more deaths than
occurred in Iraq and Afghanistan combined that month. In 2008 as
a whole, at least 128 soldiers killed themselves. As the Times
noted, "Suicides… rose for the fourth year in a row, reaching the
highest level in nearly three decades. Army officials say the stress
of long deployments to war zones plays a role in the increase."
Mark Benjamin
and Michael de Yoanna, who have just completed a major multi-part
examination of Army suicides at Salon.com, record this official
reaction to the military health crisis: "'Why do the numbers keep
going up?' Army Secretary Pete Geren said at a Pentagon news conference
Jan. 29. 'We can't tell you.' The Army announced a $50 million study
to figure it out." The two reporters find a wealth of evidence of
military misdiagnosis, mistreatment, and plain, outright lack of
desire to face a plague of suicides. ("At Fort Carson," the base
they studied, "a mental problem from combat is still a scarlet letter.")
But above
all, of course, there are simply those endlessly repeated tours
of duty in the Afghan and Iraq war zones. Suicides, in this sense,
can be thought of as the individual symptoms of a larger military
disease. In these last years, the U.S. military has been, like the
individuals who committed suicide, overstrained, overstressed, and
made to fight wars that consumed America's treasure, while becoming
ever more unpopular at home. As retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel
and TomDispatch regular William Astore points out below, despite
all the lovely "support our troops" sentiments in the U.S., the
military was essentially abandoned to its stresses abroad and so
became, in practical terms, ever more "foreign" to Americans.
While the
Army struggles, not particularly effectively, to deal with its suicide
problem, political and military leaders struggle no less unimpressively
to deal with the larger problems of military stress. Their unanimous
solution to the global policy version of post-traumatic stress disorder:
Cut down on those tours of duty and repair the military by significantly
expanding U.S. forces. The obvious response, the one that could
bring the military back to a state of health, is of course roundly
ignored: Downsize the global mission. Bring American troops home.
~ Tom
Is
the U.S. Military Now an Imperial Police Force?
By William
Astore
A leaner,
meaner, higher tech force that was what George W. Bush and
his Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld promised to transform the
American military into. Instead, they came close to turning it into
a foreign legion. Foreign as in being constantly deployed overseas
on imperial errands; foreign as in being ever more reliant on private
military contractors; foreign as in being increasingly segregated
from the elites that profit most from its actions, yet serve the
least in its ranks.
Now would
be a good time for President Barack Obama and Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates to begin to reclaim that military for its proper purpose:
to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against
all enemies, foreign and domestic. Now would be a good time to ask
exactly why, and for whom, our troops are currently fighting and
dying in the urban jungles of Iraq and the hostile hills of Afghanistan.
A few fortnights
and forever ago, in the Bush years, our "expeditionary" military
came remarkably close to resembling an updated version of the French
Foreign Legion in the ways it was conceived and used by those in
power and even, to some extent, in its makeup.
For the metropolitan
French elite of an earlier era, the Foreign Legion best known
to Americans from countless old action films was an assemblage
of military adventurers and rootless romantics, volunteers willing
to man an army fighting colonial wars in far-flung places. Those
wars served the narrow interests of people who weren't particularly
concerned about the fate of the legion itself.
It's easy
enough to imagine one of them saying, à
la Rumsfeld, "You go to war with the legion you have, not the
legion you might want or wish to have." Such a blithe statement
would have been uncontroversial back then, since the French Foreign
Legion was well so foreign. Its members, recruited
worldwide, but especially from French colonial possessions, were
considered expendable, a fate captured in its grim, sardonic motto:
"You joined the Legion to die. The Legion will send you where you
can die!"
Looking back
on the last eight years, what's remarkable is the degree to which
Rumsfeld and others in the Bush administration treated the U.S.
military in a similarly dismissive manner. Bullying his generals
and ignoring their concerns, the Secretary of Defense even dismissed
the vulnerability of the troops in Iraq, who, in the early years,
motored about in inadequately armored Humvees and other thin-skinned
vehicles.
Last year,
Vice President Dick Cheney offered another Legionnaire-worthy version
of such dismissiveness. Informed that most Americans no longer supported
the war in Iraq, he infamously and succinctly countered,
"So?" as if the U.S. military weren't the American people's
instrument, but his own private army, fed and supplied by private
contractor KBR, the former Halliburton subsidiary whose former CEO
was the very same Dick Cheney.
Fond of posing
in flight suits, leather jackets, and related pseudo-military gear,
President Bush might, on the other hand, have seemed overly invested
in the military. Certainly, his tough war talk resonated within
conservative circles, and he visibly relished speaking before masses
of hooah-ing soldiers. Too often, however, Bush simply used
them as patriotic props, while his administration did its best to
hide
their deaths from public view.
In that way,
he and his top officials made our troops into foreigners, in part
by making their ultimate sacrifice, their deaths, as foreign to
us as was humanly possible. Put another way, his administration
made the very idea of national "sacrifice" by anyone but
our troops foreign to most Americans. In response to the
9/11 attacks, Americans were, as the President famously suggested
only 16 days after the attacks, to show their grit by visiting Disney
World and shopping till they dropped. Military service instills
(and thrives on) an ethic of sacrifice that was, for more than seven
years, consciously disavowed domestically.
As the Obama
administration begins to deploy U.S. troops back to the Iraq or
Afghan war zones for their fourth or fifth tours of duty, I remain
amazed at the silent complicity of my country. Why have we been
so quiet? Is it because the Bush administration was, in fact, successful
in sending our military down the path to foreign legion-hood? Is
the fate of our troops no longer of much importance to most Americans?
Even the military's
recruitment and demographics are increasingly alien to much of the
country. Troops are now regularly recruited in "foreign" places
like South Central Los Angeles and Appalachia that more affluent
Americans wouldn't be caught dead visiting. In some cases, those
new recruits are quite literally "foreign" non-U.S.
citizens allowed to seek a fast-track to citizenship by volunteering
for frontline, war-zone duty in the U.S. Army or Marines. And when,
in these last years, the military has fallen short of its recruitment
goals less likely today thanks
to the ongoing economic meltdown mercenaries have simply
been hired at
inflated prices from civilian contractors with names like Triple
Canopy or Blackwater redolent of foreign adventures.
With respect
to demographics, it'll take more than the sons of Joe Biden and
Sarah Palin to redress inequities in burden-sharing. With startlingly
few exceptions, America's sons and daughters dodging bullets remain
the progeny of rural America, of immigrant America, of the working
and lower middle classes. As long as our so-called best and brightest
continue to be AWOL when it comes to serving among the rank-and-file,
count on our foreign adventurism to continue to surge.
Diversity
is now our societal byword. But how about more class diversity
in our military? How about a combat regiment of rich young volunteers
from uptown Manhattan? (After all, some of their great-grandfathers
probably fought with New York's famed "Silk Stocking" regiment in
World War I.) How about more Ivy League recruits like George H.W.
Bush and John F. Kennedy, who respectively piloted a dive bomber
and a PT boat in World War II? Heck, why not a few prominent Hollywood
actors like Jimmy Stewart, who piloted heavy bombers in the flak-filled
skies of Europe in that same war?
Instead of
collective patriotic sacrifice, however, it's clear that the military
will now be running the equivalent of a poverty
and recession "draft" to fill the "all-volunteer" military.
Those without jobs or down on their luck in terrible times will
have the singular honor of fighting our future wars. Who would deny
that drawing such recruits from dead-end situations in the hinterlands
or central cities is strikingly Foreign Legion-esque?
Caught
in the shock and awe of 9/11, we allowed our military to be transformed
into a neocon imperial police force. Now, approaching our eighth
year in Afghanistan and sixth year in Iraq, what exactly is
that force defending? Before President Obama acts to double the
number of American boots-on-the-ground in Afghanistan before
even more of our troops are sucked deeper into yet another quagmire
shouldn't we ask this question with renewed urgency? Shouldn't
we wonder just why, despite all the reverent words about "our troops,"
we really seem to care so little about sending them back into the
wilderness again and again?
Where indeed
is the outcry?
The French
Foreign Legionnaires knew better than to expect such an outcry:
The elites for whom they fought didn't give a damn about what happened
to them. Our military may not yet be a foreign legion but
don't fool yourself, it's getting there.
February
17, 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. William
J. Astore [send him mail],
a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF), taught for six years at the
Air Force Academy. He currently teaches at the Pennsylvania College
of Technology. He is the author of Hindenburg:
Icon of German Militarism (Potomac Press, 2005), among other
works.
Copyright
© 2009 William Astore
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Engelhardt Archives
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