Are We the Martians of the Twenty-First Century?
by
Tom
Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
Recently by Tom Engelhardt: Lost
in Military Limbo
War of the
Worlds: London, 1898; Kabul, 2009
An unremarkable
paragraph in
a piece in my hometown paper recently caught my eye. It was
headlined "White House Believes Karzai Will Be Re-elected," but
in mid-report Helene Cooper and Mark Landler of the New York
Times turned to Afghan War commander General Stanley McChrystal's
"redeployment option." Here's the humdrum paragraph in question:
"The redeployment option calls for moving troops from sparsely populated
and lawless areas of the countryside to urban areas, including Kandahar
and Kabul. Many rural areas 'would be better left to Predators,'
said an administration official, referring to drone aircraft."
In other words,
the United States may now be represented in the Afghan countryside,
as it already is in the tribal areas on the Pakistani side of the
border, mainly by Predators and their even more powerful cousins,
Reapers, unmanned aerial vehicles with names straight out of a sci-fi
film about implacable aliens. If you happen to be an Afghan villager
in some underpopulated part of that country where the U.S. has set
up small bases two of which were almost
overrun recently they will be gone and "America" will
instead be soaring overhead. We're talking about planes
without human beings in them tirelessly scanning the ground with
their cameras for up to 22 hours at a stretch. Launched from Afghanistan
but flown by pilots thousands of miles away in the American West,
they are armed with two to four Hellfire missiles or the equivalent
in 500-pound bombs.
To see Earth
from the heavens, that's the classic viewpoint of the superior being
or god with the ultimate power of life and death. Zeus, that Greek
god of gods, used
lightning bolts to strike down humans who offended him. We use missiles
and bombs. Zeus had the knowledge of a god. We have "intelligence,"
often fallible (or score-settling). His weapon of choice destroyed
one individual. Ours take out anyone in the vicinity.
He made his
decisions from Mount Olympus; we make ours from places like Creech
Air Force Base outside Las Vegas, and Davis-Monthan
Air Force Base in Tucson, Arizona. Those about whom we make
life-and-death decisions, as they scurry below or carry on as best
they can, have like any beings faced with the gods
no recourse or appeal. Seen on screens, they are, to us, distant,
grainy figures, hardly larger than ants. This is what implacable
means.
Soothing
the Children
And none of
this strikes us as strange. Quite the opposite, it represents reasonable
policy. Comments like the one quoted above are now commonplace.
In the Washington Post, for instance, Rajiv Chandrasekaran
recently
recorded the thoughts of an anonymous U.S. officer in Afghanistan:
"If more forces are not forthcoming to mount counterinsurgency operations
in those parts of the province, he concluded, the overall U.S. effort
to stabilize Kandahar and by extension, the rest of Afghanistan
will fail. 'We might as well pack our bags and go home… and
just keep a few Predators flying overhead to whack the al-Qaeda
guys who return.'"
We know as
well that, in the Washington debate
over what to do next in the Afghan War, Vice President Joe Biden
has come down on the side of "counterterrorism." He wants to put
more emphasis on those
drones and on special operations forces, while focusing more
on Pakistan (though without dropping U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan).
At the same time, the Pentagon has just created an
Afghan Hands program and a Pakistan-Afghanistan Coordination
Cell, two units focused on improving military performance in the
Af-Pak theater of operations over the next three to five years.
All of this represents the norm for military and civilian leaders
who, whatever their differences, believe wars that go on for endless
years thousands of miles from home are the sine qua non of
American safety.
And none of
this seems less than reasonable to us, especially given the much-publicized
"success"
of the drone assassination program in taking out Taliban and al-Qaeda
leadership figures. What does strike us as strange, though, is that
the locals, whether in Pakistan or Afghanistan, find all this upsetting.
A recent U.S. poll in Pakistan typically reported
"that 76 percent of the respondents were opposed to Pakistan partnering
with the United States on missile attacks against extremists by
American drone aircraft."
Then again,
we take it for granted that the people of such backward lands are
strange, touchy types. Not like us. In George Packer's recent New
Yorker profile of Richard Holbrooke, the president's special
representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, there were some classic
lines reflecting this.
Packer describes
Holbrooke on a flying visit to Afghanistan this way: "He seemed
less like a visiting emissary than like a proconsul inspecting a
vast operation over which he commanded much of the authority." When
that same proconsul makes it out of impoverished, shattered Afghanistan
(where the U.S. Embassy, at one point, had
to deny he had engaged in a "shouting match" with Afghan President
Hamid Karzai) and into Pakistan, a fractious, disturbed, unnerved
country of genuine significance, he packs the proconsul away and,
according to Packer, becomes Washington's cajoler-in-chief. As Packer
writes, "In moments when I overheard him talking to Pakistani leaders,
he took the solicitous tone of someone reassuring an unstable friend.
'It's like dealing with psychologically abused children,' a member
of his staff said. 'You don't focus on the screaming and the violence
you just hug them tighter.'"
So, if Afghan
and Pakistani peasants in the mountainous tribal borderlands are
so many ants or rabbits, Pakistani leaders are "children." It matters
little that Holbrooke has a reputation himself as an egotist and
a screamer who demands his way. (Among diplomats back in the 1990s
when he was negotiating in the former Yugoslavia, one joke went:
What's the most dangerous place in the Balkans? The answer: Between
Dick Holbrooke and a camera.)
Packard reports
Holbrooke's disappointment over the amount of aid Congress is ponying
up for Pakistan ($7.5 billion) and, to add to his set of frustrations,
there's this: "Because of Pakistan's sensitivity about its sovereignty,
he had been unable to persuade its military to allow American helicopters
to bring aid to the refugees," who had been driven from the Swat
Valley by the Taliban and a Pakistani military offensive.
Let's think
about that for a moment, especially since it's a commonplace of
American reporting from the region and so reflects official thinking
on the subject. Karen DeYoung and Pamela Constable, for instance,
write in a Washington Post piece:
"Pakistanis, who are extremely sensitive about national sovereignty,
oppose allowing foreign troops on their soil and have protested
U.S. missile attacks launched from unmanned aircraft against suspected
Taliban and al-Qaeda targets inside Pakistan." In fact, let's reverse
the situation.
Imagine that,
after the next Katrina, Pakistani military helicopters based on
a Pakistani aircraft carrier in the Gulf of Mexico are preparing
to deliver supplies to New Orleans. Of course, you also have to
imagine, minimally, that the Pakistanis are in the process of building
a three-quarters of a billion dollar fortress
of an embassy in Washington D.C. (to be guarded by armed Pakistani
private contractors), that Pakistani drones are regularly cruising
the Sierra Nevada mountains, launching missiles at residences in
small towns below, that the Pakistanis are offering billions of
dollars in desperately needed aid to a hamstrung American government
and military in
return for not complaining too much about whatever they might
want to do in the United States, that top Pakistani military and
civilian officials are constantly shuttling through Washington demanding
"cooperation," and finally that Pakistani reporters covering all
this regularly point to an "extreme American sensitivity about national
sovereignty," as illustrated by a bizarre unwillingness to accept
Pakistani aid delivered in Pakistani military helicopters. Then
again, you know those Americans: combustible as spoiled kids.
Such reversals
are, of course, inconceivable and so, nearly impossible to imagine.
Today, were a Pakistani military helicopter to approach the U.S.
coast with anything on board and refuse to turn back, it would undoubtedly
be shot down. So much for American touchiness.
But here's
a question that comes to mind: Why is it that Americans like Holbrooke
seem to feel so at home so far away from home? Why, for instance,
do U.S. military spokespeople so regularly refer to our indigenous
enemies in Iraq as "anti-Iraqi forces," and in Afghanistan as "anti-Afghan
forces"? Why does our military in Iraq speak of the neighboring
Iranians as "foreign forces" without ever including our own military
in that category?
Resistant
as Washington may be to the thought, the obvious has recently been
crossing some influential minds. Amid the debate over war options
more troops, more
training of the Afghan military and police, more drone attacks
in Pakistan, or some mix-and-match version of all of the above,
but certainly
not a withdrawal from the country it has become more
common to express concern that deploying up to 40,000 more U.S.
troops might create too big an American "footprint." As Peter Baker
and Thom Shanker of the New York Times wrote in a profile
of Robert Gates, the secretary of defense "has repeatedly declared
his concern that more troops would make Americans look increasingly
like occupiers."
After almost
eight years of war, only now does the danger that we might "look
increasingly like occupiers" rise to the surface. Since "occupier"
is a role Americans just can't imagine occupying, let's consider
a fantasy alternative instead, one perhaps easier to imagine: What
if it turns out that we are the Martians?
Crushing
the Rabbits
The first
Martian invasion of this planet they landed near the town
of Woking in England and, before they were done, laid waste to London
took place in 1898, thanks to the Tasmanians, and if you
don't think that's worth considering more than a century later,
think again. In fact, General McChrystal, President Obama, Proconsul
Holbrooke, as you're doing your reassessments of the Afghan War,
do I have a book for you.
I was perhaps
12 years old when I first read it under the covers by flashlight
long after I was supposed to be asleep and it scared the
hell out of me. Even now, when alien invasion plots are a dime a
dozen, I have a hunch that it could do the same for you. I'm talking,
of course, about H.G. Wells's The
War of the Worlds. If you remember, that other Wells, Orson,
successfully redid it in a 1938 radio
version in which the fictional Martians landed in New Jersey,
and many perfectly real New Yorkers were reportedly unnerved. (The
2005 Steven Spielberg movie
version, the second
film made from Wells's classic, had all the expectable modern
pyrotechnics, but none of the punch of the book.)
Back in the
era when Wells wrote his book, invasion novels were already commonplace
in England, with the part of the implacable, inhuman invader normally
played by the Germans. Wells, on the other hand, almost single-handedly
created the alien invader genre, arming
his brainy monsters from the dying planet Mars with poison gas and
a laser-like heat ray, and then supplying them with giant walking
tripods (think elevated tanks without treads) all prefiguring
the weaponry of the world wars to come (and even of wars beyond
our own).
However, nothing
in the book not the weaponry, not even the destruction
is more terrifying than the attitude of the Martians ("intellects
vast and cool and unsympathetic"), for this is one of the great
role-reversal novels of all time. They are implacable exactly because
they see the English as we would see rabbits, or as English colonists
in Australia did indeed see the Tasmanians, a people they all but
exterminated with hardly a twinge of regret. In fact, that's where
The War of the Worlds evidently began. It seems that Wells's
brother Frank brought
up the extermination of the Tasmanians one day and so launched
the idea for a book still in print 111 years later. Evidently, the
question that came to Wells's mind was this: What if someone arrived
in England with the same view of the superior English that the English
had had of the Tasmanians, and the sort of advanced weaponry and
technology capable of turning that attitude into a grim reality?
As his unnamed
central character comments in the first pages of the novel: "The
Tasmanians, in spite of their human likeness, were entirely swept
out of existence in a war of extermination waged by European immigrants,
in the space of fifty years. Are we such apostles of mercy as to
complain if the Martians warred in the same spirit?"
The Martians
(actually transmogrified Englishmen) advance through the English
countryside and into London, frying everything in sight in a version
of what, in the next century, would come to be known as total war
that is, war visited not just on the warriors, but on the
civilian population. At the same time, they harvest humans and feed
off their blood. In the coming century, there would indeed be Martians
aplenty on this planet, more than ready to feed off the blood of
its inhabitants.
General McChrystal,
President Obama, Proconsul Holbrooke, The War of the Worlds,
old as it is, offers a rare example of how to imagine us
from the point of view of them. I urge you to study it with
the intensity you now apply to counterinsurgency and counterterrorism
strategies. After all, in our own way, we could be considered the
Martians of the twenty-first century and (how typical!) we don't
even know it.
Unlike Wells's
Martians, who arrived on this planet without a propaganda department
or a care in the world about English "hearts and minds," we landed
in Afghanistan talking a people-friendly game, and we've never stopped,
even if much of the palaver has been for home consumption. And yet
during the first eight years of our Afghan War, as General McChrystal
recently admitted
in his 66-page report to the secretary of defense, we could hardly
have exhibited a more profound ignorance of the Afghan world, or
a more Martian lack of interest in finding out about it, even as
we were blowing
Afghans away.
Now, the Pentagon
is attempting to correct that by setting up a new intelligence unit
"to provide military and civilian officials in Afghanistan with
detailed analysis of the country's tribal, political and religious
dynamics." As Robert Dreyfuss of the Nation's Dreyfuss
Report, points out, however, this unit will be based at a center
in Tampa, Florida; we will, that is, now study the Afghans as anthropologists
might once have studied the Trobriand Islanders. Then we will process
that information thousands of miles away, just as our "pilots" do.
Perhaps it's
time to study ourselves instead. What if, from an Afghan point of
view, we really are Wells's Martians? Then, it's not a matter of
counterinsurgency versus counterterror,
or more American troops versus more American-trained Afghan ones,
or even nation-building versus stabilization. What if and
this is an un-American thought there is no American solution
to Afghanistan? What if no alternative, or combination of alternatives,
will work? What if the only thing Martians can effectively do is
destroy or leave? (Remember, even Wells's aliens finally
and involuntary chose to abandon their occupation of England. They
died, thanks to bacteria to which they had no immunity.)
What
if the Afghans will never see those Predators our equivalent
of the Martian "tripods" and death rays combined as their
protectors? After all, our drones represent the technologically
advanced, the alien, and the death-dealing along with, as Toronto
Sun columnist Eric Margolis wrote
recently, the whole panoply of our "B-1 heavy bombers, F-15s,
F-16s, F-18s, Apache and AC-130 gunships, heavy artillery, tanks,
radars, killer drones, cluster bombs, white phosphorus, rockets,
and space surveillance." Even our propaganda, dropped from the air
(as if from another universe), can kill.
Recently, an Afghan girl died after being hit by a box of propaganda
leaflets, released from a British plane, that "failed to come apart."
Her heart and mind may be stilled, but rest assured, those of her
parents, her relatives, and others who knew her, undoubtedly aren't.
Here's a little
exchange, as reported
at a New York Times blog from an alien "encounter" in another
land. A U.S. Army major, Guy Parmeter, had it near Samara in Iraq's
Salahuddin province in 2004 ("[I]t made me think: how are we perceived,
who are we to them?"):
Maj. Guy
Parmeter: "Seen any foreign fighters?"
Iraqi farmer:
"Yes, you."
Sometimes
it takes 66
pages to report on a war. Sometimes a century-old novel can
do the trick. Sometimes you can write tomes about the "mistakes"
made in, and the "tragedy" of, an American counterinsurgency war
in a distant land. Sometimes a simple "yes, you" will do.
Note
on sources and resources: I thought I might mention several
websites that I read avidly and rely on in writing pieces like this
one, starting with Robert Dreyfuss's invaluable work at his Dreyfuss
Report blog at the Nation magazine. On Iran, Afghanistan,
and Iraq, it should not be missed. In addition, there are my long-term
favorites: Antiwar.com (and Jason
Ditz's regular news summaries
there); Juan Cole's Informed
Comment website always a must read, but lately he's been
producing remarkable columns day after day; and the
War in Context, another website I simply couldn't do without.
I also find Noah
Shachtman's Danger Room blog at Wired magazine of special
interest on military matters. On the Afghan War, check out Robert
Greenwald's Rethink
Afghanistan (and his striking new
film of the same
name), as well as the Af-Pak
Channel and its "daily
brief" newsletter. Finally, a small bow to Michael Maddox who,
in a
letter to the New York Times, brought Major Parmeter's
exchange to my attention.
October
9, 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.
Copyright
© 2009 Tom Engelhardt
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