The Ir-Af-Pak War
by
Tom
Engelhardt
Recently
by Tom Engelhardt: Confronting
the CIA's Mind Maze
Obama Looses
the Manhunters: Charisma
and the Imperial Presidency
Let's face
it, even Bo is photogenic,
charismatic. He's a camera hound. And as for Barack, Michelle, Sasha,
and Malia keep in mind that we're now in a first name
culture they all glow on screen.
Before a camera
they can do no wrong. And the president himself, well, if you didn't
watch his
speech in Cairo, you should have. The guy's impressive. Truly.
He can speak to multiple
audiences Arabs, Jews, Muslims,
Christians, as well as a staggering range of Americans and
somehow just about everyone comes away hearing something they like,
feeling he's somehow on their side. And it doesn't even feel
like pandering. It feels like thoughtfulness. It feels like intelligence.
For all I
know and the test of this is still a long, treacherous way
off Barack Obama may turn out to be the best pure politician
we've seen since at least Ronald Reagan, if not Franklin Delano
Roosevelt. He seems to have Roosevelt's same unreadable ability
to listen and make you believe he's with you (no matter what he's
actually going to do), which is a skill not to be whistled at.
Right now,
he and his people are picking
off the last Republican moderates via a little party-switching
and some well-crafted
appointments, and so driving that party and its conservative base
absolutely nuts, if not into extreme southern
isolation. In this sense, his first Supreme Court pick was little
short of a political stroke of brilliance, whatever she turns out
to do on the bench. Whether the opposition "wins" (which they won't)
or loses in any attempt to block her nomination, they stand to further
alienate a key voting bloc, Hispanics. Now
9% of voters, Hispanics went for Obama in the last election
by a staggering 35-point margin. Next time their heft might even
bring solidly red-state Texas closer to in-play status in the two-party
system. In other words, the president has left his opponents in
a situation where they can't win for losing.
Mix Roosevelt,
Kennedy, and Reagan...
All this is
little short of amazing, particularly if put into even the most
modest historical context.
If, in a Star-Trekkian
mode hand me the "red matter," Mr. Spock! you could
transport yourself back to early 2003 and tell just about any American
what's coming, you might have found yourself institutionalized.
If you had said that the new norm would be a black president with
Reagan-like
popularity, Kennedy-like charisma, and Roosevelt-like skills
in the political arena, leading a majority Democratic Congress in
search of universal health care, solutions to global warming, energy
conservation, and bullet trains, your listener might, at best, have
responded with his or her own joke: "A priest, a rabbi, and a penguin
walk into a bar..."
After all,
back then, before two
"hurricanes" the invasion of Iraq and Katrina
began the process of turning our American world upside down, the
Bush administration seemed to be riding ever higher globally and
the Republican Party even higher than that at home. Back then, the
neocons were consumed
with imperial dreams of shock-and-awe-style eternal global conquest
and domination ("Everyone wants
to go to Baghdad. Real men want to go to Tehran"); and the President's
"brain," Karl Rove, now exiled to the opinion
pages of the Wall Street Journal, was convinced that
he was nailing down a domestic Pax Republicana for generations
to come.
And at that
moment, who would have denied that things would turn out just that
way? So don't let anyone tell you that history doesn't have its
surprises. A black guy with the middle name of "Hussein," a liberal
Chicago politician from in a phrase Republicans then regularly
spit out, as if saying "Democratic" was too much effort the
"Democrat Party"? I don't think so.
And yet, in
mid-June 2009, less than five months into the Obama presidency,
can you even remember that era before the dawn of time when people
were wondering what it would be like for an African-American family
to inhabit the White House? Would American voters allow it? Could
Americans take it?
You betcha!
Being President
All that said,
let's not forget reality. Barack Obama did not win an election to
be president of Goodwill Industries, or the YMCA, or the Ford Foundation.
He may be remarkable in many ways, but he is also president of the
United States which means that he is head honcho for the globe's
single great garrison state which now, to a significant extent,
lives off war and the preparations for future war.
He is today
the proprietor
of to speak only of the region extending from North Africa
to the Chinese border that the Bush loyalists used to call "the
Greater Middle East" American bases, or facilities, or prepositioned
military material (or all of the above) at Djibouti in the Horn
of Africa, in Bahrain, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait,
Iraq (and Iraqi Kurdistan), Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan (where
the U.S. military and the CIA share Pakistani military facilities),
and a major Air Force facility on the British-controlled Indian
Ocean island of Diego Garcia.
Some U.S.
bases in these countries are microscopic and solitary, but others
like Camp Victory or Balad Air Base, both in Iraq, are gigantic
installations in a web of embedded bases. According
to an expert on the subject, Chalmers Johnson, the Pentagon's
most recent official count of U.S. "sites" (i.e. bases) abroad is
761, but that does not include "espionage bases, those located in
war zones, including Iraq and Afghanistan, and miscellaneous facilities
in places considered too sensitive to discuss or which the Pentagon
for its own reasons chooses to exclude e.g. in Israel, Kosovo,
or Jordan."
In January
when he entered the Oval Office, Barack Obama also inherited the
largest
embassy on Earth, built in Baghdad by the Bush administration
to imperial
proportions as a regional command center. It now houses what
are politely referred to as 1,000 "diplomats." Recent news reports
indicate that such a project wasn't just an aberration of the Bush
era. Another embassy, just as gigantic, expected
to house "a large military and intelligence contingent," will
be constructed
by the Obama administration in its new war capital, Islamabad, Pakistan.
Once the usual cost overruns are added in, it may turn out be the
first billion-dollar embassy. Each of these command centers will,
assumedly, anchor the American presence in the Greater Middle East.
Barack Obama
is also now the commander-in-chief of 11 aircraft carrier strike
groups, which regularly patrol the planet's sea lanes. He sits
atop a U.S. Intelligence Community (yes, that's what our intelligence
crew like to call themselves) of at least 16 squabbling, overlapping
agencies, heavily Pentagonized, and often at
each other's throats. They have a cumulative hush-hush budget
of perhaps $50
billion or more.
(Imagine a power so obsessively consumed by the very idea of "intelligence"
that it is willing to support 16 sizeable separate outfits doing
such work, and that's not even counting various smaller offices
dedicated to intelligence activities.)
The new president
will preside over a country which now ponies up almost
half the world's total military expenditures. His 2010 estimated
Pentagon budget will be marginally higher than the last staggering
one from the Bush years at $664
billion. (The real figure, once military funds stowed away in
places like the Department of Energy are included, is actually significantly
larger.)
He now inhabits
a Washington in which deep-thinking consists of a pundit like Michael
O'Hanlon of the Brookings Institution whining
that these bloated sums are, in fact, too little to "maintain" U.S.
forces (a budgetary increase of 78% per year for the next
decade would, he claims, be just adequate); in which forward-looking
means Secretary of Defense Robert Gates reorienting military spending
toward preparations
for fighting one, two, many Afghanistans; and in which out-of-the-box,
futuristic thinking means letting the blue-skies crew at DARPA (the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) loose on far-out problems
like how to turn "programmable
matter" into future Transformer-like weapons of war.
While Obama
enthusiasts can take pride in the appointment of some out-of-the-box
thinkers in domestic areas, including energy, health, and the science
of the environment, in two crucial areas his appointments are pure
old-line Washington and have been so from the first post-election
transitional moments. His key economic players and advisors are
largely a crew of former Clintonistas, or Clintonista wannabes or
protégés like Secretary of the Treasury Tim Geithner. They are distinctly
inside-the-boxers, some of them responsible for the thinking that,
in the 1990s, led directly to this catastrophic economic moment.
As for foreign
policy, had the November election results been reversed, Obama's
top team of today could just as easily have been appointed
by Senator John McCain. National Security Advisor James Jones was
actually a McCain
friend, Gates
someone he admired, and Hillary Clinton a figure he could well have
picked for a top post after a narrow election victory, had he decided
to reach out to the Democrats. As a group, Obama's key foreign policy
figures and advisors are traditional players in the national security
state and pre-Bush-style Washington guardians of American power,
thinking globally in familiar ways.
General
Manhunter
And let's
be careful not to put all of this in the passive voice either when
it comes to the new president. In both of these areas, he may have
felt somewhat unsure of himself and so slotted in the old guard
around him as a kind of political protection. Nonetheless, this
hasn't just happened to him. He didn't just inherit the presidency.
He went for it. And he isn't just sitting atop it. He's actively
using it. He's wielding power. In foreign policy terms, he's settling
in and despite his Cairo speech and various hints of change
on subjects like relations with Iran, in largely predictable ways.
He may, for
example, have declared a sunshine
policy when it comes to transparency in government, but in his
war policies in Afghanistan and Pakistan, his imperial avatar is
already plunging deep into the dark, distinctly opaque valley of
death. He's just appointed
a general, Stanley A. McChrystal, as his Afghan commander. From
2003 to 2008, McChrystal ran a special operations outfit in Iraq
(and then Afghanistan) so secret that the Pentagon avoided mention
of it. In those years, its operatives were torturing,
abusing, and killing Iraqis as part of a systematic targeted assassination
program on
a large scale. It was, for those who remember the Vietnam era,
a mini-Phoenix program in which possibly hundreds of enemies were
assassinated: al-Qaeda-in-Iraq types, but also Sunni insurgents,
and Sadrists (not to speak of others, since informers always settle
scores and turn over their own personal enemies as well).
Although he's
now being touted in the press as the man to bring the real deal
in counterinsurgency to Afghanistan (and "protect" the Afghan population
in the bargain), his actual field is "counter-terrorism."
He spoke the right
words to Congress during his recent confirmation hearings, but
pay no attention.
The team he's
now assembling in Washington to lead his operations in Afghanistan
(and someday maybe Pakistan) tells you what you really need to know.
It's filled with special operations types. The expertise of his
chosen key lieutenants is, above all, in special ops work. At the
same time, reports
Rowan Scarborough at Fox News, an extra 1,000 special operations
troops are now being "quietly" dispatched to Afghanistan, bringing
the total number there to about 5,000. Keep in mind that it's been
the special operations forces, with their kick-down-the-door night
raids and air strikes, who have been involved
in the most notorious incidents of civilian slaughter, which continue
to enrage Afghans.
Note, by the
way, that while the president is surging into Afghanistan 21,000
troops and advisors (as well as those special ops forces), ever
more civilian diplomats and advisors, and ever larger infusions
of money, there is now to be a command surge as well. General McChrystal,
according to a recent
New York Times article, has "been given carte blanche
to handpick a dream team of subordinates, including many Special
Operations veterans... [He] is assembling a corps of 400 officers
and soldiers who will rotate between the United States and Afghanistan
for a minimum of three years. That kind of commitment to one theater
of combat is unknown in the military today outside Special Operations,
but reflects an approach being imported by General McChrystal, who
spent five years in charge of secret commando teams in Iraq and
Afghanistan."
Like the new
mega-embassy in Pakistan, this figure the Spartans, after
all, only needed 300
warriors at Thermopylae tells us a great deal about the
top-heavy manner in which the planet's super-garrison state fights
its wars.
So, this is
now truly Obama's war, about to be run by his
chosen general, a figure from the dark side. Expect, then, from
our sunshine president's men an ever-bloodier secret campaign of
so-called counter-terror (though it's essence is likely to be terror,
pure and simple), as befits an imperial power trying to hang on
to the Eastern reaches of the Greater Middle East.
The new crew
aren't counterinsurgency warriors, but a term that has only
recently entered our press "manhunters."
And don't forget, President Obama is now presiding over an expanding
war in which "manhunters" engaging in systematic assassination programs
will not only be on the ground but, thanks to the CIA's escalating
program of targeted assassination by robot
aircraft, in the skies over the Pakistani tribal borderlands.
For those
who care to remember, it was into counter-terrorism and an orgy
of manhunting, abuse, and killing that the Vietnam era version of
"counterinsurgency" dissolved as well.
Into the
Charnel House of History
A neologism
coined for the expanding Afghan war has recently come into widespread
use: Af-Pak (for Afghanistan-Pakistan Theater of Operations). But
the coining of neologisms shouldn't just be left to those in Washington,
so let me suggest one that hints at one possible new world over
which our newest president may unexpectedly preside: Ir-Af-Pak.
Let it stand, conveniently, for the Iraq-Iran-Afghanistan-Pakistan
Theater of Operations a neologism that catches the perilously
expansionist and devolutionary possibilities of our moment.
Media organizations
in increasingly tight financial straits sense the explosive nature
of this expansionist moment and, even as they are fleeing Iraq (and
former bureaus in so many other places), like the president, they
are doubling down and piling into Afghanistan and Pakistan. But
don't count Iraq pacified yet. It remains an uneasy, dangerous,
explosive place as, in fact, does the Greater Middle East. Worse
yet, the Af-Pak War may not itself be done expanding. It could still,
for instance, seep into one or more of the Central Asian 'stans,
among other places, and already has made it into catastrophic Somalia,
while a shaky Yemen could be swept into the grim festivities.
Finally, let's
return to that "dream team" being put together by Obama's man in
Afghanistan. That team of Spartans, according to the New York
Times, is being formed with, minimally, a three-year horizon.
This in itself is striking. After all, the Afghan War started in
November 2001. So when the shortest possible Afghan tour of duty
of the 400 is over, it will have been going on for more than 10˝
years and no one dares to predict that, three years from
now, the war will actually be at an end.
Looked
at another way, the figure cited should probably not be one decade,
but three. After all, our Afghan
adventure began in 1980, when, in the jihad against the Soviets,
we were supporting some of the very
same fundamentalist figures now allied with the Taliban and
fighting us in Afghanistan just as, once upon a time, we
looked positively upon the Taliban; just as, once, we looked positively
upon Saddam Hussein, who was for a while seen as our potential bulwark
in the Middle East against the fundamentalist Islamic Republic of
Iran. (Remarkably enough, only Iran has, until this moment, retained
its position as our regional enemy over these decades.)
What a record,
then, of blood and war, of great power politics and imperial hubris,
of support for the heinous (including various fundamentalist groups
and grim, authoritarian Middle Eastern regimes who remain our allies
to this day). What a tale of imperial power frittered away and treasure
squandered. Truly, Rudyard Kipling would have been able to do something
with this.
As for me,
I find myself in awe of these decades of folly. Thirty years in
Afghanistan, it staggers the imagination. What tricks does that
land play with the minds of imperial Great-Gamers? Maybe it has
something to do with those poppies. Who knows? I'm no Kipling, but
I am aware that this sorry tale has taken up almost half of my lifetime
with no end in sight.
In the meantime,
our new president has loosed the manhunters. His manhunters.
This is where charisma disappears into the charnel house of history.
Watch out.
Note: Credit
where credit's due: the neologism, "Ir-Af-Pak," is actually the
invention of Jonathan Schell. A small bow of appreciation to him
for handing it off to me and to Jim Peck for some inspired suggestions.
Thanks as well to Alfred
McCoy for helping to bring me up to speed on the meaning of
General McChrystal's Iraq activities. In addition, the filmmaker
Robert Greenwald's website Rethink
Afghanistan is starting to post clips about Afghan casualties
of the U.S.
air war for the next part of his film about the Afghan War being
released part by part on-line. Because we see so little of this,
these initial clips are sobering and well worth viewing. To do so,
click here,
here, and here.
June
17, 2009
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
co-founder
of 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), an alternative history of the mad Bush years. To catch
an audio interview in which he discusses our airborne assassins,
click here.
Copyright
© 2009 Tom Engelhardt
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