One
More Clue That the American Empire Is Waning
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
There are many
signs along the road that leads to the dark end of an empire. Some,
like the pattern of American monetary policy and her associated
incursions in the Middle East, have been up for so long they are
now covered with kudzu and shotgun holes.
Others, like
the extraordinarily troubled presidential elections of a troubled
child of privilege and ambition, are relatively new. That this president
surrounds himself with corrupt
officials who whisper sweet nothings such as "How
’bout that big fish!" and "Your
very word is law," as they gorge at the public trough is
to be expected. But in an age where manners don’t matter in this
country the President’s irresponsible behavior has newly
offended many average Americans who are beginning to think he is
obsessed, self-centered, even somewhat stupid and unpatriotic.
But empire
is never just about the emperor. The enablers of empire – the big
purple
socialist hegemonic American state – include not just a slavish
and well-paid royal military, but also corporate interests, state-funded
educational institutions, and an ever-devoted media.
This is the
same media so cleanly gutted by Steven
Colbert a few weeks ago at the White House Correspondent’s Dinner.
All those novels
about intrepid Washington reporters with the courage to stand
up to the administration will be coming soon en masse to a Costco
near you. Imperial Americans aren’t going to read them anyway –
we don’t care!
Thus, most
of the major signs of empire in decline are already posted, and
many have been up for a while. And connoisseurs of clues have taken
note of yet another revealed just last week.
My former Pentagon
boss, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy and one of several ill-qualified
but very enthusiastic neoconservative architects of war and destruction
in the Middle East, has a new job.
Doug Feith
stepped
down last August to spend more time with his family and write
his memoirs. He’s still working on the book, but he will now have
to squeeze it in between lectures at Georgetown. Feith is a Hoya!
He was hired – in
a most odd way – by the Dean of the School of Foreign Service
at Georgetown University, Robert Gallucci.
Now, we might
debate the qualifications that predispose Feith to teach at Georgetown.
He is an ideologically radical freakshow who spent the best part
of his time at the Pentagon engineering what history will show to
be the winner of the prize for Most Politically and Militarily Idiotic
Strategy Ever. His plan for Iraq failed to achieve any of its stated
objectives – while members of the Doug Feith fan club do understand
that it did, in fact, achieve several of its unstated objectives
– at a cost of accelerating the decline of American power worldwide
in ways no one could have imagined.
This certainly
doesn’t disqualify the man from a coveted position at Georgetown
University! In fact, it seems to be why they hired him.
Gallucci says,
"The [Bush] administration has not been found guilty in this
country in any court of law that I am aware of. No one has been
indicted on these kinds of charges. They are controversial. The
policy is controversial. That's what we're looking to accomplish
on the campus: to represent controversy fairly. And I do believe
that having Mr. Feith will help us do that. I think it will be good
for the students. I think it will be good for him to interact with
our graduate students."
And Gallucci
is right. Georgetown students will be able to watch, hear and question
a man who is not exceptionally intelligent, has few academic or
professional accomplishments, who is justifiably nervous about decisions
he has made and whether people like him or not, and who supervised
convicted spy Larry Franklin during, as the president likes to say,
"a time of war." Well – they’ll learn from that.
Georgetown
is a political school in a political town, and I imagine if Steven
Colbert could joke about the supine media, he could do the same
about prostrate Washington academic circles. Quality people, along
with quality politics, education, debate and ethics have left
the building. It happens that way, when those who tend to survive
such things recognize that collapse has become inevitable.
Thus, the hiring
of Doug Feith by Georgetown reveals the extent of the decline. Couched
in academic seriousness, with trappings of intellectual courage
and curiosity, Georgetown students are in for a real bait and switch.
I say this
only based on the level of listening, honesty and achievement we
observed on a daily basis by Feith at the Pentagon. Perhaps he has
changed. In any case, in Gallucci’s own words, "[Feith] could
defend,
as well as explain, those decisions [behind the Iraq War]. Not
many faculty on campus would attempt to defend them, myself among
them."
Feith is also
a Georgetown University Law Center alumnus, and perhaps loyalty
entered into it. Certainly, if Feith kept any papers and notes,
those will be a goldmine for historians baffled by the Bush presidency
and his foreign policy. Perhaps Georgetown is positioning to be
granted those papers decades from now.
I suspect the
collapse of the empire will happen long before we get access to
Feith’s personal diaries. As the empire wanes and something far
more hopeful and free and peaceful emerges here, I can assure you
I’ll be too busy to care about what Feith wrote as he played King
Leopold hungrily obsessing over the Mesopotamian cake.
Georgetown’s
comradely decision to honor Feith with an appointment is just another
sign of festering imperial decline in Washington. The
Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock comes to mind. Like this poem
by T.S. Eliot, the Feith appointment should be briefly savored for
what it says about modern mediocrity, and the educated circle’s
self-conscious ridiculousness. And that is all.
May
15, 2006
Karen
Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send her
mail], a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on defense
issues with a libertarian perspective for militaryweek.com,
hosts the call-in radio show American
Forum on Saturday nights, and blogs occasionally for Huffingtonpost.com.
To receive automatic announcements of new articles and upcoming
guests on her American Forum radio program, click
here.
Copyright ©
2006 LewRockwell.com
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