A
New Age of 'Enlightened' War
by
Tom Engelhardt and William
Astore
Recently
by Tom Engelhardt: Pox
Americana
In case you
hadn't noticed, they are no kidding around absolutely
the niftiest non-humans on Earth. I'm speaking about the special
operations force of Navy SEALs that took out Osama bin Laden.
They and their special ops colleagues are "supermen" (ABC
News), "X-men" (Jon Stewart), "America's Jedi
Knights" (the New
York Times), and that's just to pick the odd example in
a sea of churning hyperbole. For the last week, while the
bin Laden operation swallowed
almost 69% of all news space according to the Project for Excellence
in Journalism, they have been the most reported upon Xtra Special
Soldiers anywhere, possibly of all time from the "square-jawed
admiral from Texas" who commanded them right down to the
dog (oops... "possible
war hero") they reportedly took
along.
In an era when
U.S. troops have become little short of American
idols, seldom have the media gone quite so nuts as over those
SEALs and the other military and CIA "teams" that make
up our counterterrorism forces. You couldn't pay for this
sort of publicity. It would, in fact, hardly be an exaggeration
to say that all of American society has, for the last 10 days, been
"embedded" with them. But here's the strange thing
(or perhaps I mean the strangest thing of all): if you read most
of the over-the-top press about America's special ops troops, you
probably think that they are tiny crews of elite forces divided
into even tinier teams trained to dispel global darkness and take
out the bin Ladens of the world.
No such thing.
Almost a year ago, the Washington Post reported
that there were at least 13,000 U.S. special operations troops deployed
overseas in (no, this is not a typo) 75 countries, a significant
expansion of these forces in the Obama era. Since thousands
of them remain in the U.S. at any moment, Washington may now have
up to 20,000 special operations troops on hand and the odds are
that there will be even more after the bin Laden publicity blitz
has had a chance to work its charms. In the latest Pentagon
budget, the Obama administration had already asked for $10.5
billion to pay for special forces, a tripling of their budget
since 2001 and that figure is sure
to rise in the years to come, as media slavering turns into
congressional slavering.
Keep in mind
that this growing set of secret forces cocooned inside the U.S.
military, along with the missile-armed pilotless drones fighting
the CIA's semi-secret war in Pakistan (which also got a modest
publicity boost from the bin Laden operation), add up to the
newly dominant form of American conflict: presidential war fought
on the sly and beyond any serious kind of accountability to the
American people. In return for ponying up the necessary dough,
for instance, Congress is now practically begging just to be updated
on the executive's counterterror operations four times a year.
As TomDispatch
regular and retired Lieutenant Colonel William Astore makes
clear, "remote war" on the imperial peripheries of the
planet is a direct danger to this country, to us, and it's growing
by the day. ~ Tom
The
Crash and Burn of Old Regimes
Washington Court Culture and Its Endless Wars
By William
J. Astore
The killing
of Osama bin Laden, "a testament to the greatness of our
country" according
to President Obama, should not be allowed to obscure a central
reality of our post-9/11 world. Our
conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, and Libya
remain instances of undeclared war, a fact that contributes to
their remoteness from our American world. They are remote
geographically, but also remote from our day-to-day interests
and, unless you are in the military or have a loved one who serves,
remote from our collective consciousness (not to speak of our
consciences).
And this remoteness
is no accident. Our wars and their impact are kept in remarkable
isolation from what passes for public affairs in this country,
leaving most Americans with little knowledge and even less say about
whether they should be, and how they are, waged.
In this sense,
our wars are eerily like those pursued by European monarchs in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries: conflicts carried out by professional
militaries and bands of mercenaries, largely at the whim of what
we might now call a unitary
executive, funded by deficit spending, for the purposes of protecting
or extending the interests of a ruling elite.
Cynics might
say it has always been thus in the United States. After
all, the War of 1812 was known to critics as "Mr. Madison's
War" and the Mexican-American War of the 1840s was "Mr.
Polk's War." The Spanish-American War of 1898 was a
naked war of expansion vigorously denounced by American
anti-imperialists. Yet in those conflicts there was
at least genuine national debate, as well as formal
declarations of war by Congress.
Today's ruling
class in Washington no longer bothers to make a pretense of following
the letter of our Constitution and they sidestep its spirit
as well, invoking hollow claims of executive
privilege or higher callings of humanitarian
service (as in Libya) or of exporting democracy (as in Afghanistan).
But Libya is still torn by civil war, and Afghanistan has yet
to morph into Oregon.
"Enlightened"
War, Then and Now
History does
not simply repeat itself, yet realities of power, privilege, and
pride ensure certain continuities from the past. Consider
how today's remote wars and the ways they reinforce existing power
relations for a privileged and prideful elite echo a style of
European warfare more than three centuries old.
Surveying the
wreckage of the devastating Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), fought
feverishly across Germanic territories by most of Europe, monarchs
like Louis XIV of France began to seek to fight "limited"
wars. These they considered more consistent with the spirit
of a rational and "enlightened" age. In their hands,
such wars became the sport of kings, the real-life equivalents of
elaborate chess matches in which foot soldiers drawn from the lower
orders served as expendable pawns, while the second or lesser sons
of the nobility, fulfilling their duty as officers, proved hardly
less expendable knights, bishops, and rooks.
As much as
possible, the monarch and his retinue tried to keep war-making and
its disruptions at a distance from thriving economic and manufacturing
concerns. In many cases, in the centuries to follow, this
would essentially mean exporting war to faraway, "barbaric"
realms or colonies. In the process, death and destruction
were outsourced to places and peoples remote from European metropoles.
In fact,
this was precisely what enraged our founders: that the colonies
in America had become a never-ending battleground for French and
British imperial ambitions from which the colonists themselves
reaped the whirlwind of war while gaining few of its benefits.
A close reading of the Declaration of Independence, for instance,
reveals a proto-republic's contempt for wars fought at a king's
whim and guaranteed to reduce the colonists to so much cannon
fodder.
Refusing to
surrender the hard-fought right as British men to have a say in
how they were taxed, how their families and lands were defended,
and especially for what purposes they themselves fought and died,
the founders forged a new nation. Given this history, it's
not surprising that they granted to Congress, and not to the President,
the power to declare and fund war.
In this way,
a noble experiment was born, and it worked, however imperfectly,
until the devastation of a new thirty years' war in Europe (better
known as World Wars I and II) propelled the United States to superpower
status with all its accompanying ambitions stoked by existential
fears, whether of yesterday's godless communists or today's god-crazed
terrorists.
Inside
the Washington Beltway: The New Court of Versailles
In the eighteenth
century, France was the superpower of Europe with a military that
dwarfed those of its neighbors. And who dictated France's
decisions to go to war? The answer: the king, his generals,
and his courtiers at the Court of Versailles. In the twenty-first-century,
the U.S. celebrates its status as the world's "sole superpower"
with a military second to none. And who dictates its decisions
to go to war? Considering the lessons of Iraq, Afghanistan,
and now Libya, the answer is no less obvious: the president, his
generals, and his courtiers within the vast edifice of Washington's
national security state.
France's
"enlightened" wars were fought by professional armies
and mercenaries, directed by a unitary executive who did as he
pleased, and endured by the lower orders who had no say (even
though they provided the brawn and blood). Similarly, our
twenty-first century masters plunge us into their version of enlightened
wars and play their version of global chess matches.
The analogy
can be pushed further. In pre-revolutionary France, the
First and Second Estates (the clergy and the nobility) constituted
less than 2% of the population but controlled nearly all of France's
wealth and power. Their unholy alliance kept the Third Estate
(everyone who wasn't a churchman or a noble) under their collective
thumb.
Now, consider
the United States today. Our equivalent to the First Estate
would be the clergy of finance and banking (the religion of the
almighty dollar). Look for them in their houses of worship
on Wall Street. Our Second Estate equivalent would be the
movers and shakers inside Washington's Beltway. Look for them
in the White House, the Pentagon, Congress, and on K Street where
the lobbyists for the First Estate tend to congregate. The
unholy alliance of these two estates leaves the American Third Estate
you and me with the deck stacked against us.
When it comes
to war, the American ruling class has relegated the members of its
Third Estate alternately to the role of "foreign
legionnaires" in overseas service, or silent spectators
passively watching moves on the big board. These, in turn,
are continually interpreted for us by retired members of the Second
Estate: generals and admirals in mufti, hired
by the corporate media to provide color commentary on Washington's
wars.
Small wonder
that today's Beltway elite is as imperious and detached as yesterday's
Court of Louis XIV. A colleague of mine recently endured
a short audience with some members of our Second Estate near Dupont
Circle in Washington. In his words: "They were at once
condescending and puzzled by 'tea party types,' as they referred
to them, which was to say that they inadvertently admitted to
being out of touch and were pretty okay with that. 'Look,'
I finally said, 'you cannot continue to pick someone's pocket
while hectoring him about how stupid and uninformed he is and
then be surprised that he gets angry.'"
Whether it
be unwashed "tea party types," "retarded"
(according
to ex-courtier Rahm Emanuel) progressives, or other members
of a disgruntled American Third Estate, the Washington elites
who wage war in our name simply couldn't care less what we think,
just as Louis XIV and his court couldn't have cared less about
their subjects' desires.
Endless "limited"
wars fought for the interests of the ruling class, massive deficit
spending on those wars, a refusal to recognize (or even understand)
the people's growing disgruntlement, a "let them eat cake"
mentality: all of this is familiar to a historian. And like
those old French masters of limited war, our new masters of war
are hemorrhaging legitimacy.
The
Crash and Burn of Old Regimes
In isolating
the American Third Estate from war indeed, in disengaging
it from any meaningful public debate about this nation's perpetual
war-making our rulers have conspired to advance their own
interests. Yet in deciding everything of importance out of
view, they have unwisely eliminated any check on their folly.
Consider
again the example of pre-revolutionary Versailles. A top-heavy,
remarkably dissolute, and openly parasitic bureaucracy plundered
the commonweal of France in its pursuit of power and privilege.
Can we not say the same of Washington today? In its kleptocratic
tendency to enrich itself and its accountability-free deployment
of military power globally, the American ruling class bears a certain
resemblance to French kings and their courts which, in the end,
drove their country to economic ruin and violent revolution.
Fed up with
its prodigal and prideful rulers, France saw the tumbrels roll and
the guillotine blades drop. How many more undeclared "enlightened"
wars, how many more trillions of dollars in war-driven debt, how
many more dead and wounded will it take for the American people
to reclaim their power over war? Or are we content to remain
deferential to our ruling class and court and to their less-than-liberty-loving
overseas creditors until such a time as their prideful wars
and prodigal trillion-dollar-plus
"defense" budgets bring our great democratic experiment
crashing down?
May
14, 2011
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. His new book
is The
American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s. William
J. Astore [send him mail]
is a TomDispatch
regular, a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF), and a
professor of history.
Copyright
© 2010 William J. Astore
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