The New American Militarism
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Andrew Bacevich
by Tom Engelhardt and
Andrew Bacevich
We are now
in an America where it's a commonplace for our President, wearing
a "jacket
with ARMY printed over his heart and 'Commander in Chief' printed
on his right front," to address vast assemblages of American troops
on the virtues of bringing democracy to foreign lands at the point
of a missile. As
Jim VandeHei of the Washington Post puts it: "Increasingly,
the president uses speeches to troops to praise American ideals
and send a signal to other nations the administration is targeting
for democratic change."
As it happens,
the Bush administration has other, no less militarized ways of signaling
"change" that are even blunter. We already have, for instance, hundreds
and hundreds of military bases, large and small, spread around
the world, but never enough, never deeply enough embedded in the
former borderlands of the Soviet Union and the
energy heartlands of our planet. The military budget soars;
planning for high-tech weaponry for the near (and distant) future
like the Common
Aero Vehicle, a suborbital space capsule capable of delivering
"conventional" munitions anywhere on the planet within 2 hours and
due to come on line by 2010 is the normal order of business in
Pentagonized Washington. War, in fact, is increasingly the American
way of life and, to a certain extent, it's almost as if no one notices.
Well, not
quite no one. Andrew J. Bacevich has written a book on militarism,
American-style, of surpassing interest. Just published, The
New American Militarism, How Americans Are Seduced by War
would be critical reading no matter who wrote it. But coming from
Bacevich, a West Point graduate, Vietnam veteran, former contributor
to such magazines as the Weekly Standard and the National
Review, and former Bush Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin,
it has special resonance.
Bacevich,
a self-professed conservative, has clearly been a man on a journey.
He writes that he still situates himself "culturally on the right.
And I continue to view the remedies proffered by mainstream liberalism
with skepticism. But my disenchantment with what passes for mainstream
conservatism, embodied in the present Bush administration and its
groupies, is just about absolute. Fiscal irresponsibility, a buccaneering
foreign policy, a disregard for the Constitution, the barest lip
service as a response to profound moral controversies: these do
not qualify as authentically conservative values. On this score
my views have come to coincide with the critique long offered by
the radical left: it is the mainstream itself, the professional
liberals as well as the professional conservatives who define
the problem."
I've long
recommended Chalmers Johnson's book on American militarism and military-basing
policy, The
Sorrows of Empire. Bacevich's The New American Militarism,
which focuses on the ways Americans have become enthralled by
and found themselves in thrall to military power and the
idea of global military supremacy, should be placed right beside
it in any library. Below, you'll find the first of two long excerpts
(slightly adapted) from the book, and posted with the kind permission
of the author and of his publisher, Oxford University Press. This
one offers Bacevich's thoughts on the ways in which, since the Vietnam
War, our country has been militarized, a process to which, as he
writes, the events of September 11 only added momentum. On Friday,
I'll post an excerpt on the second-generation neoconservatives and
what they contributed to our new militarism.
Bacevich's
book carefully lays out and analyzes the various influences that
have fed into the creation and sustenance of the new American militarism
over the last decades. It would have been easy enough to create
a 4-part or 6-part Tomdispatch series from the book. Bacevich is,
for instance, fascinating on evangelical Christianity (and its less
than war-like earlier history) as well as on the ways in which the
military, after the Vietnam debacle, rebuilt itself as a genuine
imperial force, separated from the American people and with an ethos
"more akin to that of the French Foreign Legion" a force
prepared for war without end. But for that, and much else, you'll
have to turn to the book itself. ~ Tom
The Normalization
of War
By Andrew J.
Bacevich
At
the end of the Cold War, Americans said yes to military power. The
skepticism about arms and armies that pervaded the American experiment
from its founding, vanished. Political leaders, liberals and conservatives
alike, became enamored with military might.
The ensuing
affair had and continues to have a heedless, Gatsby-like aspect,
a passion pursued in utter disregard of any consequences that
might ensue. Few in power have openly considered whether valuing
military power for its own sake or cultivating permanent global
military superiority might be at odds with American principles.
Indeed, one striking aspect of America's drift toward militarism
has been the absence of dissent offered by any political figure
of genuine stature.
For example,
when Senator John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, ran for the
presidency in 2004, he framed his differences with George W. Bush's
national security policies in terms of tactics rather than first
principles. Kerry did not question the wisdom of styling the U.S.
response to the events of 9/11 as a generations-long "global war
on terror." It was not the prospect of open-ended war that drew
Kerry's ire. It was rather the fact that the war had been "extraordinarily
mismanaged and ineptly prosecuted." Kerry faulted Bush because,
in his view, U.S. troops in Iraq lacked "the preparation and hardware
they needed to fight as effectively as they could." Bush was expecting
too few soldiers to do too much with too little. Declaring that
"keeping our military strong and keeping our troops as safe as
they can be should be our highest priority," Kerry promised if
elected to fix these deficiencies. Americans could count on a
President Kerry to expand the armed forces and to improve their
ability to fight.
Yet on this
score Kerry's circumspection was entirely predictable. It was
the candidate's way of signaling that he was sound on defense
and had no intention of departing from the prevailing national
security consensus.
Under the
terms of that consensus, mainstream politicians today take as
a given that American military supremacy is an unqualified good,
evidence of a larger American superiority. They see this armed
might as the key to creating an international order that accommodates
American values. One result of that consensus over the past quarter
century has been to militarize U.S. policy and to encourage tendencies
suggesting that American society itself is increasingly enamored
with its self-image as the military power nonpareil
How Much
Is Enough?
This new
American militarism manifests itself in several different ways.
It does so, first of all, in the scope, cost, and configuration
of America's present-day military establishment.
Through
the first two centuries of U.S. history, political leaders in
Washington gauged the size and capabilities of America's armed
services according to the security tasks immediately at hand.
A grave and proximate threat to the nation's well-being might
require a large and powerful military establishment. In the absence
of such a threat, policymakers scaled down that establishment
accordingly. With the passing of crisis, the army raised up for
the crisis went immediately out of existence. This had been the
case in 1865, in 1918, and in 1945.
Since the
end of the Cold War, having come to value military power for its
own sake, the United States has abandoned this principle and is
committed as a matter of policy to maintaining military capabilities
far in excess of those of any would-be adversary or combination
of adversaries. This commitment finds both a qualitative and quantitative
expression, with the U.S. military establishment dwarfing that
of even America's closest ally. Thus, whereas the U.S. Navy maintains
and operates a total of twelve large attack aircraft carriers,
the once-vaunted [British] Royal Navy has none indeed, in all
the battle fleets of the world there is no ship even remotely
comparable to a Nimitz-class carrier, weighing in at some ninety-seven
thousand tons fully loaded, longer than three football fields,
cruising at a speed above thirty knots, and powered by nuclear
reactors that give it an essentially infinite radius of action.
Today, the U.S. Marine Corps possesses more attack aircraft than
does the entire Royal Air Force and the United States has two
other even larger "air forces," one an integral part of the Navy
and the other officially designated as the U.S. Air Force. Indeed,
in terms of numbers of men and women in uniform, the U.S. Marine
Corps is half again as large as the entire British Army and the
Pentagon has a second, even larger "army" actually called the
U.S. Army which in turn also operates its own "air force" of
some five thousand aircraft.
All of these
massive and redundant capabilities cost money. Notably, the present-day
Pentagon budget, adjusted for inflation, is 12 percent larger than
the average defense budget of the Cold War era. In 2002, American
defense spending exceeded by a factor of twenty-five the combined
defense budgets of the seven "rogue states" then comprising the
roster of U.S. enemies. Indeed, by some calculations, the United
States spends more on defense than all other nations in the world
together. This is a circumstance without historical precedent.
Furthermore,
in all likelihood, the gap in military spending between the United
States and all other nations will expand further still in the
years to come. Projected increases in the defense budget will
boost Pentagon spending in real terms to a level higher than it
was during the Reagan era. According to the Pentagon's announced
long-range plans, by 2009 its budget will exceed the Cold War
average by 23 percent despite the absence of anything remotely
resembling a so-called peer competitor. However astonishing this
fact might seem, it elicits little comment, either from political
leaders or the press. It is simply taken for granted. The truth
is that there no longer exists any meaningful context within which
Americans might consider the question "How much is enough?"
On a day-to-day
basis, what do these expensive forces exist to do? Simply put,
for the Department of Defense and all of its constituent parts,
defense per se figures as little more than an afterthought. The
primary mission of America's far-flung military establishment
is global power projection, a reality tacitly understood in all
quarters of American society. To suggest that the U.S. military
has become the world's police force may slightly overstate the
case, but only slightly.
That well
over a decade after the collapse of the Soviet Union the United
States continues to maintain bases and military forces in several
dozens of countries by some counts well over a hundred in all
rouses minimal controversy, despite the fact that many of these
countries are perfectly capable of providing for their own security
needs. That even apart from fighting wars and pursuing terrorists,
U.S. forces are constantly prowling around the globe training,
exercising, planning, and posturing elicits no more notice
(and in some cases less) from the average American than the presence
of a cop on a city street corner. Even before the Pentagon officially
assigned itself the mission of "shaping" the international environment,
members of the political elite, liberals and conservatives alike,
had reached a common understanding that scattering U.S. troops
around the globe to restrain, inspire, influence, persuade, or
cajole paid dividends. Whether any correlation exists between
this vast panoply of forward-deployed forces on the one hand and
antipathy to the United States abroad on the other has remained
for the most part a taboo subject.
The Quest
for Military Dominion
The indisputable
fact of global U.S. military preeminence also affects the collective
mindset of the officer corps. For the armed services, dominance
constitutes a baseline or a point of departure from which to scale
the heights of ever greater military capabilities. Indeed, the
services have come to view outright supremacy as merely adequate
and any hesitation in efforts to increase the margin of supremacy
as evidence of falling behind.
Thus, according
to one typical study of the U.S. Navy's future, "sea supremacy
beginning at our shore lines and extending outward to distant
theaters is a necessary condition for the defense of the U.S."
Of course, the U.S. Navy already possesses unquestioned global
preeminence; the real point of the study is to argue for the urgency
of radical enhancements to that preeminence. The officer-authors
of this study express confidence that given sufficient money the
Navy can achieve ever greater supremacy, enabling the Navy of
the future to enjoy "overwhelming precision firepower," "pervasive
surveillance," and "dominant control of a maneuvering area, whether
sea, undersea, land, air, space or cyberspace." In this study
and in virtually all others, political and strategic questions
implicit in the proposition that supremacy in distant theaters
forms a prerequisite of "defense" are left begging indeed,
are probably unrecognized. At times, this quest for military dominion
takes on galactic proportions. Acknowledging that the United States
enjoys "superiority in many aspects of space capability," a senior
defense official nonetheless complains that "we don't have space
dominance and we don't have space supremacy." Since outer space
is "the ultimate high ground," which the United States must control,
he urges immediate action to correct this deficiency. When it
comes to military power, mere superiority will not suffice.
The new
American militarism also manifests itself through an increased
propensity to use force, leading, in effect, to the normalization
of war. There was a time in recent memory, most notably while
the so-called Vietnam Syndrome infected the American body politic,
when Republican and Democratic administrations alike viewed with
real trepidation the prospect of sending U.S. troops into action
abroad. Since the advent of the new Wilsonianism, however, self-restraint
regarding the use of force has all but disappeared. During the
entire Cold War era, from 1945 through 1988, large-scale U.S.
military actions abroad totaled a scant six. Since the fall of
the Berlin Wall, however, they have become almost annual events.
The brief period extending from 1989's Operation Just Cause (the
overthrow of Manuel Noriega) to 2003's Operation Iraqi Freedom
(the overthrow of Saddam Hussein) featured nine major military
interventions. And that count does not include innumerable lesser
actions such as Bill Clinton's signature cruise missile attacks
against obscure targets in obscure places, the almost daily bombing
of Iraq throughout the late 1990s, or the quasi-combat missions
that have seen GIs dispatched to Rwanda, Colombia, East Timor,
and the Philippines. Altogether, the tempo of U.S. military interventionism
has become nothing short of frenetic.
As this
roster of incidents lengthened, Americans grew accustomed to
perhaps even comfortable with reading in their morning newspapers
the latest reports of U.S. soldiers responding to some crisis
somewhere on the other side of the globe. As crisis became a seemingly
permanent condition so too did war. The Bush administration has
tacitly acknowledged as much in describing the global campaign
against terror as a conflict likely to last decades and in promulgating
and in Iraq implementing a doctrine of preventive war.
In former
times American policymakers treated (or at least pretended to
treat) the use of force as evidence that diplomacy had failed.
In our own time they have concluded (in the words of Vice President
Dick Cheney) that force "makes your diplomacy more effective going
forward, dealing with other problems." Policymakers have increasingly
come to see coercion as a sort of all-purpose tool. Among American
war planners, the assumption has now taken root that whenever
and wherever U.S. forces next engage in hostilities, it will be
the result of the United States consciously choosing to launch
a war. As President Bush has remarked, the big lesson of 9/11
was that "this country must go on the offense and stay on the
offense." The American public's ready acceptance of the prospect
of war without foreseeable end and of a policy that abandons even
the pretense of the United States fighting defensively or viewing
war as a last resort shows clearly how far the process of militarization
has advanced.
The New
Aesthetic of War
Reinforcing
this heightened predilection for arms has been the appearance
in recent years of a new aesthetic of war. This is the third indication
of advancing militarism.
The old twentieth-century
aesthetic of armed conflict as barbarism, brutality, ugliness, and
sheer waste grew out of World War I, as depicted by writers such
as Ernest Hemingway, Erich Maria Remarque, and Robert Graves. World
War II, Korea, and Vietnam reaffirmed that aesthetic, in the latter
case with films like Apocalypse
Now, Platoon,
and Full
Metal Jacket.
The intersection
of art and war gave birth to two large truths. The first was that
the modern battlefield was a slaughterhouse, and modern war an
orgy of destruction that devoured guilty and innocent alike. The
second, stemming from the first, was that military service was
an inherently degrading experience and military institutions by
their very nature repressive and inhumane. After 1914, only fascists
dared to challenge these truths. Only fascists celebrated war
and depicted armies as forward-looking expressions of national
unity and collective purpose that paved the way for utopia. To
be a genuine progressive, liberal in instinct, enlightened in
sensibility, was to reject such notions as preposterous.
But by the
turn of the twenty-first century, a new image of war had emerged,
if not fully displacing the old one at least serving as a counterweight.
To many observers, events of the 1990s suggested that war's very
nature was undergoing a profound change. The era of mass armies,
going back to the time of Napoleon, and of mechanized warfare,
an offshoot of industrialization, was coming to an end. A new
era of high-tech warfare, waged by highly skilled professionals
equipped with "smart" weapons, had commenced. Describing the result
inspired the creation of a new lexicon of military terms: war
was becoming surgical, frictionless, postmodern, even abstract
or virtual. It was "coercive diplomacy" the object of the exercise
no longer to kill but to persuade. By the end of the twentieth
century, Michael Ignatieff of Harvard University concluded, war
had become "a spectacle." It had transformed itself into a kind
of "spectator sport," one offering "the added thrill that it is
real for someone, but not, happily, for the spectator." Even for
the participants, fighting no longer implied the prospect of dying
for some abstract cause, since the very notion of "sacrifice in
battle had become implausible or ironic."
Combat in
the information age promised to overturn all of "the hoary dictums
about the fog and friction" that had traditionally made warfare
such a chancy proposition. American commanders, affirmed General
Tommy Franks, could expect to enjoy "the kind of Olympian perspective
that Homer had given his gods."
In short,
by the dawn of the twenty-first century the reigning postulates
of technology-as-panacea had knocked away much of the accumulated
blood-rust sullying war's reputation. Thus reimagined and amidst
widespread assurances that the United States could be expected
to retain a monopoly on this new way of war armed conflict
regained an aesthetic respectability, even palatability, that
the literary and artistic interpreters of twentieth-century military
cataclysms were thought to have demolished once and for all. In
the right circumstances, for the right cause, it now turned out,
war could actually offer an attractive option cost-effective,
humane, even thrilling. Indeed, as the Anglo-American race to
Baghdad conclusively demonstrated in the spring of 2003, in the
eyes of many, war has once again become a grand pageant, performance
art, or a perhaps temporary diversion from the ennui and boring
routine of everyday life. As one observer noted with approval,
"public enthusiasm for the whiz-bang technology of the U.S. military"
had become "almost boyish." Reinforcing this enthusiasm was the
expectation that the great majority of Americans could count on
being able to enjoy this new type of war from a safe distance.
The Moral
Superiority of the Soldier
This new
aesthetic has contributed, in turn, to an appreciable boost in
the status of military institutions and soldiers themselves, a
fourth manifestation of the new American militarism.
Since the
end of the Cold War, opinion polls surveying public attitudes toward
national institutions have regularly ranked the armed services first.
While confidence in the executive branch, the Congress, the media,
and even organized religion is diminishing, confidence in the military
continues to climb. Otherwise acutely wary of having their pockets
picked, Americans count on men and women in uniform to do the right
thing in the right way for the right reasons. Americans fearful
that the rest of society may be teetering on the brink of moral
collapse console themselves with the thought that the armed services
remain a repository of traditional values and old-fashioned virtue.
Confidence
in the military has found further expression in a tendency to
elevate the soldier to the status of national icon, the apotheosis
of all that is great and good about contemporary America. The
men and women of the armed services, gushed Newsweek in
the aftermath of Operation Desert Storm, "looked like a Norman
Rockwell painting come to life. They were young, confident, and
hardworking, and they went about their business with poise and
élan." A writer for Rolling Stone reported after a more
recent and extended immersion in military life that "the Army
was not the awful thing that my [anti-military] father had imagined";
it was instead "the sort of America he always pictured when he
explained… his best hopes for the country."
According
to the old post-Vietnam-era political correctness, the armed services
had been a refuge for louts and mediocrities who probably couldn't
make it in the real world. By the turn of the twenty-first century
a different view had taken hold. Now the United States military
was "a place where everyone tried their hardest. A place where
everybody… looked out for each other. A place where people
intelligent, talented people said honestly that money wasn't
what drove them. A place where people spoke openly about their
feelings." Soldiers, it turned out, were not only more virtuous
than the rest of us, but also more sensitive and even happier.
Contemplating the GIs advancing on Baghdad in March 2003, the
classicist and military historian Victor Davis Hanson saw something
more than soldiers in battle. He ascertained "transcendence at
work." According to Hanson, the armed services had "somehow distilled
from the rest of us an elite cohort" in which virtues cherished
by earlier generations of Americans continued to flourish.
Soldiers
have tended to concur with this evaluation of their own moral
superiority. In a 2003 survey of military personnel, "two-thirds
[of those polled] said they think military members have higher
moral standards than the nation they serve… Once in the military,
many said, members are wrapped in a culture that values honor
and morality." Such attitudes leave even some senior officers
more than a little uncomfortable. Noting with regret that "the
armed forces are no longer representative of the people they serve,"
retired admiral Stanley Arthur has expressed concern that "more
and more, enlisted as well as officers are beginning to feel that
they are special, better than the society they serve." Such tendencies,
concluded Arthur, are "not healthy in an armed force serving a
democracy."
In public
life today, paying homage to those in uniform has become obligatory
and the one unforgivable sin is to be found guilty of failing
to "support the troops." In the realm of partisan politics, the
political Right has shown considerable skill in exploiting this
dynamic, shamelessly pandering to the military itself and by extension
to those members of the public laboring under the misconception,
a residue from Vietnam, that the armed services are under siege
from a rabidly anti-military Left.
In fact,
the Democratic mainstream if only to save itself from extinction
has long since purged itself of any dovish inclinations. "What's
the point of having this superb military that you're always talking
about," Madeleine Albright demanded of General Colin Powell, "if
we can't use it?" As Albright's Question famously attests, when
it comes to advocating the use of force, Democrats can be positively
gung ho. Moreover, in comparison to their Republican counterparts,
they are at least as deferential to military leaders and probably
more reluctant to question claims of military expertise.
Even among
Left-liberal activists, the reflexive anti-militarism of the 1960s
has given way to a more nuanced view. Although hard-pressed to
match self-aggrandizing conservative claims of being one with
the troops, progressives have come to appreciate the potential
for using the armed services to advance their own agenda. Do-gooders
want to harness military power to their efforts to do good. Thus,
the most persistent calls for U.S. intervention abroad to relieve
the plight of the abused and persecuted come from the militant
Left. In the present moment, writes Michael Ignatieff, "empire
has become a precondition for democracy." Ignatieff, a prominent
human rights advocate, summons the United States to "use imperial
power to strengthen respect for self-determination [and] to give
states back to abused, oppressed people who deserve to rule them
for themselves."
The President
as Warlord
Occasionally,
albeit infrequently, the prospect of an upcoming military adventure
still elicits opposition, even from a public grown accustomed
to war. For example, during the run-up to the U.S. invasion of
Iraq in the spring of 2003, large-scale demonstrations against
President Bush's planned intervention filled the streets of many
American cities. The prospect of the United States launching a
preventive war without the sanction of the U.N. Security Council
produced the largest outpouring of public protest that the country
had seen since the Vietnam War. Yet the response of the political
classes to this phenomenon was essentially to ignore it. No politician
of national stature offered himself or herself as the movement's
champion. No would-be statesman nursing even the slightest prospects
of winning high national office was willing to risk being tagged
with not supporting those whom President Bush was ordering into
harm's way. When the Congress took up the matter, Democrats who
denounced George W. Bush's policies in every other respect dutifully
authorized him to invade Iraq. For up-and-coming politicians,
opposition to war had become something of a third rail: only the
very brave or the very foolhardy dared to venture anywhere near
it.
More
recently still, this has culminated in George W. Bush styling himself
as the nation's first full-fledged warrior-president. The staging
of Bush's victory lap shortly after the conquest of Baghdad in the
spring of 2003 the dramatic landing on the carrier USS
Abraham Lincoln, with the president decked out in the full regalia
of a naval aviator emerging from the cockpit to bask in the adulation
of the crew was lifted directly from the triumphant final
scenes of the movie Top
Gun, with the boyish George Bush standing in for the boyish
Tom Cruise. For this nationally televised moment, Bush was not simply
mingling with the troops; he had merged his identity with their
own and made himself one of them the president as warlord.
In short order, the marketplace ratified this effort; a toy manufacturer
offered for $39.99 a Bush look-alike military action figure advertised
as "Elite Force Aviator: George W. Bush U.S. President and
Naval Aviator."
Thus
has the condition that worried C. Wright Mills in 1956 come to pass
in our own day. "For the first time in the nation's history," Mills
wrote, "men in authority are talking about an ‘emergency' without
a foreseeable end." While in earlier times Americans had viewed
history as "a peaceful continuum interrupted by war," today planning,
preparing, and waging war has become "the normal state and seemingly
permanent condition of the United States." And "the only accepted
‘plan' for peace is the loaded pistol."
The
New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced By War,
copyright © 2005 by Andrew J. Bacevich. Used by permission of the
author and Oxford University Press, Inc.
April
21, 2005
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Andrew
J. Bacevich is Professor of International Relations and Director
of the Center for International Relations at Boston University.
A graduate of West Point and a Vietnam veteran, he has a doctorate
in history from Princeton and was a Bush Fellow at the American
Academy in Berlin. He is the author of several books, including
the just published The
New American Militarism, How Americans Are Seduced by War.
Copyright
© 2005 Andrew J. Bacevich
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