The Doomsday Project, Deep Events, and the Shrinking of American
Democracy
by
Peter Dale Scott
Global
Research
Recently
by Peter Dale Scott: Afghanistan,
Colombia, Vietnam: The Deep Politics of Drugs and Oil
I know the
capacity that is there to make tyranny total in America, and we
must see to it that this agency [the National Security Agency] and
all agencies that possess this technology operate within the law
and under proper supervision, so that we never cross over that abyss.
That is the abyss from which there is no return."
Senator Frank Church (1975)
In recent years
I have become more and more concerned with the interactions between
three important and alarming trends in recent American history.
The first is America’s increasing militarization, and above all
its inclination, even obsession, to involve itself in needless and
pernicious wars. The second, closely related, is the progressive
shrinking of public politics and the rule of law as they are subordinated,
even domestically, to the requirements of covert U.S. operations
abroad.
The third,
also closely related, is the important and increasingly deleterious
impact on American history and the global extension of American
power, of what I have called deep events. These events, like the
JFK assassination, the Watergate break-in, or 9/11, which repeatedly
involve law-breaking or violence, are mysterious to begin with,
are embedded in ongoing covert processes, have consequences that
enlarge covert government, and are subsequently covered up by systematic
falsifications in media and internal government records.
One factor
linking Dallas, Watergate, and 9/11, has been the involvement in
all three deep events of personnel involved in America’s highest-level
emergency planning, known since the 1980s as Continuity of Government
(COG) planning, or more colloquially as “the Doomsday Project.”
The implementation of COG plans on 9/11, or what I call Doomsday
Power, was the culmination of three decades of such planning, and
has resulted in the permanent militarization of the domestic United
States, and the imposition at home of institutions and processes
designed for domination abroad.
Writing about
these deep events as they occurred over the decades, I have been
interested in the interrelations among them. It is now possible
to show how each was related both to those preceding it, and those
which followed.
I would like
in this essay to go further and propose a framework to analyze the
on-going forces underlying all of the most important deep events,
and how they have contributed to the political ascendance of what
used to be called the military-industrial complex. I hope to describe
certain impersonal governing laws that determine the socio-dynamics
of all large-scale societies (often called empires) that deploy
their surplus of power to expand beyond their own borders and force
their will on other peoples. This process of expansion generates
predictable trends of behavior in the institutions of all such societies,
and also in the individuals competing for advancement in those institutions.
In America it has converted the military-industrial complex from
a threat at the margins of the established civil order, to a pervasive
force dominating that order.
With this framework
I hope to persuade readers that in some respects our recent history
is simpler than it appears on the surface and in the media. Our
society, by its very economic successes and consequent expansion,
has been breeding impersonal forces both outside and within itself
that are changing it from a bottom-up elective democracy into a
top-down empire. And among these forces are those that produce deep
events.
I am far from
alone in seeing this degradation of America’s policies and political
processes. A similar pattern, reflecting the degradation of earlier
empires, was described at length by the late Chalmers Johnson:
The evidence
is building up that in the decade following the end of the Cold
War, the United States largely abandoned a reliance on diplomacy,
economic aid, international law, and multilateral institutions
in carrying out its foreign policies and resorted much of the
time to bluster, military force, and financial manipulation.
But my analysis
goes beyond that of Johnson, Kevin Phillips, Andrew Bacevich, and
other analysts, in proposing that three major deep events – Dallas,
Watergate, and 9/11 – were not just part of this degradation of
American democracy, but played a significant role in shaping it.
As author Michael
Lind has observed, there have for a long time been two prevailing
and different political cultures in America, underlying political
differences in the American public, and even dividing different
sectors of the American government. One culture is predominantly
egalitarian and democratic, working for the legal consolidation
of human rights both at home and abroad. The other, less recognized
but with deep historical roots, prioritizes and teaches the use
of repressive violence against both domestic and Third World populations
to maintain "order."
To some extent
these two mindsets are found in all societies. They correspond to
two opposing modes of power and governance that were defined by
Hannah Arendt as “persuasion through arguments” versus “coercion
by force.” Arendt, following Thucydides, traced these to the common
Greek way of handling domestic affairs, which was persuasion (πείθειν)
as well as the common way of handling foreign affairs, which was
force and violence (βία)."
Writing amid
the protests and riots of the 1960s, Arendt feared that traditional
authority was at risk, threatened (in her eyes) by the contemporary
“loss of tradition and of religion.” A half century later, I would
argue that a far greater danger to social equilibrium comes now
from those on the right who invoke authority in the name of tradition
and religion. With America’s huge expansion into the enterprise
of covertly dominating and exploiting the rest of the world, the
open processes of persuasion, which have been America’s traditional
ideal for handling domestic affairs, have increasingly tilted towards
top-down violence.
This tilt towards
violent or repressive power is defended rhetorically as a means
to preserve social stability, but in fact it threatens it. As Kevin
Phillips and others have demonstrated, empires built on violent
or repressive power tend to rise and then fall, often with surprising
rapidity. Underlying the discussion in this essay is the thesis
that repressive power is unstable, creating dialectical forces both
within and outside its system. Externally, repressive power helps
create its own enemies, as happened with Britain (in India), France
(in Indochina) and the Netherlands (in Indonesia).
The
Socio-dynamics of Repressive Power in Large-scale Societies
But more dangerous
and destabilizing has been the conversion of those empires themselves,
into hubristic mechanisms of war. The fall of Periclean Athens,
which inspired Thucydides’ reflections, is a case in point. Thucydides
described how Athens was undone by the overreaching greed (pleonexia)
of its unnecessary Sicilian expedition, a folly presaging America’s
follies in Vietnam and Iraq. Thucydides attributed the rise of this
folly in the rapid change in Athens after the death of Pericles,
and in particular to the rise of a rapacious oligarchy. Paul Kennedy,
Kevin Phillips, and Chalmers Johnson have described the recreation
of this process in the Roman, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, and British
empires. Its recurrence again in recent American history corroborates
that there is a self-propelling dynamic of power that becomes repressive.
It is useful
to be reminded of the historical division between two cultures in
America, which both underlay and predated the Civil War. But these
two cultures have evolved and been reinforced by many factors. For
example urbanization in America’s South and West worked for most
of the 20th century to meld the two cultures, but after
about 1980 the increasing disparity of wealth in America tended
to separate them to an extent recalling the Gilded Age of the 19th
century.
More importantly,
postwar U.S. history has seen the institutions of domestic self-government
steadily displaced by an array of new institutions, like the CIA
and Pentagon, adapted first to the repressive dominance and control
of foreign populations abroad, and now increasingly dominant domestically.
The manipulative ethos of this repressive bureaucracy promotes and
corrupts those who, in order to be promoted, internalize the culture
of repressive dominance into a mindset.
The egalitarian
mindset is widely shared among Americans. But Washington today is
securely in the hands of the global repressive dominance mindset,
and a deepening of the military-industrial complex into what in
my most recent book I call the American war machine. This transformation
of America represents a major change in our society. When Eisenhower
warned against the military-industrial complex in 1961 it was still
a minority element in our political economy. Today it finances and
dominates both parties, and indeed is now also financing threats
to both parties from the right, as well as dominating our international
policy. As a result, liberal Republicans are as scarce in the Republican
Party today as Goldwater Republicans were scarce in that party back
in 1960.
That change
has been achieved partly by money, but partly as a result of deep
events like the JFK assassination, the Watergate break-in, and 9/11.
As a rule, each of these deep events is attributed by our government
and media to marginal outsiders, like Lee Harvey Oswald, or the
nineteen alleged plane hijackers.
I have long
been skeptical of these “lone nut” explanations, but recently my
skepticism has advanced to another level. My research over four
decades points to the conclusion that each of these deep events
1) was carried
out, at least in part, by individuals in and out of government
who shared and sought to promote this repressive mindset;
2) enhanced
the power of the repressive mindset within the U.S. government;
3) formed
another stage in a continuous narrative whose result has been
a transformation of America, into a social system dominated from
above, rather than governed from below.
Please note
that I am talking about the result of this continuous narrative,
not about its purpose. In saying that these deep events have contributed
collectively to a major change in American society, I am not attributing
them all to a single manipulative “secret team.” Rather I see them
as flowing from the workings of repressive power itself, which (as
history has shown many times) transforms both societies with surplus
power and also the individuals exercising that surplus power.
We are conditioned
to think that the open institutions of American governance could
not possibly provide a milieu for plots like 9/11 against public
order. But since World War Two covert U.S. agencies like the CIA
have helped create an alternative world where power is exercised
with minimal oversight, often at odds with public agencies’ proclaimed
policy objectives of law and order, and often in conjunction with
lawless and even criminal foreign and domestic elements.
The expansion
of this covert world has occurred principally in Asia. There covert
U.S. decisions were made to build up drug-financed armies in Burma,
Thailand, and Laos, in a series of aggressive actions that by the
1960s involved America in a hot Indochina War. This war, like the
related wars that ensued later in Kuwait, Iraq, and Afghanistan,
was initiated by America for a mix of geostrategic and economic
reasons, above all the desire to establish a dominant U.S. presence
in an important region of petroleum reserves.
The country
most deeply affected by the succession of Asian Wars has been America
itself. Its expansive forces, backed by powerful interest groups,
are now out of control, as our managers, like other empire managers
before them, have “come to believe that there is nowhere within
their domain – in our case, nowhere on earth – in which their presence
is not crucial.”7
To illustrate
this, loss of control, let us look for a moment at a milieu which
I believe to have been an important factor in all of America’s major
domestic deep events: the CIA’s ongoing interactions with the global
drug connection.
Unaccountable
Power: The CIA and the Return of the Global Drug Connection
Since World
War Two the CIA has made systematic use of drug-trafficking forces
to increase its covert influence first in Thailand and Burma,
then in Laos and Vietnam, and most recently in Afghanistan.8
With America’s expansion overseas, we have seen more and more covert
programs and agencies, all using drug traffickers to different and
opposing ends.
In 2004 Time
and USA Today ran major stories about two of the chief Afghan
drug traffickers, Haji Juma Khan and Haji Bashir Noorzai, alleging
that each was supporting al-Qaeda, and that Khan in particular “has
helped al-Qaeda establish a smuggling network that is peddling Afghan
heroin to buyers across the Middle East, Asia and Europe.”9
Later it was revealed that both traffickers were simultaneously
CIA assets, and that Khan in particular was “paid a large amount
of cash by the United States,” even while he was reportedly helping
al-Qaeda to establish smuggling networks.10
There is no
longer anything surprising in the news that large U.S. payments
were made to a drug trafficker who was himself funding the Taliban
and al-Qaeda. The arrangement is no more bizarre than the CIA’s
performance during the U.S. “war on drugs” in Venezuela in the 1990s,
when the CIA first set up an anti-drug unit in Venezuela, and then
helped its chief, Gen. Ramon Guillén Davila, smuggle at least one
ton of pure cocaine into Miami International Airport.11
It would be
easy to conclude from these reports that the CIA and Pentagon intentionally
use drugs to help finance the enemy networks that justify their
overseas operations. Yet I doubt that such a cynical Machiavellian
objective is ever consciously voiced by those responsible in Washington.
More likely,
it is an inevitable consequence of the U.S. repressive style of
conducting covert operations. Great emphasis is put on recruiting
covert assets; and in unstable areas with weak governance, drug
traffickers with their own ample funds and repressive networks are
the most obvious candidates for recruitment by the CIA. The traffickers
in turn are happy to become U.S. assets, because this status affords
them at least a temporary immunity from U.S. prosecution.12
In a nutshell:
I am describing a development that is not so much intentional, as
a consequence of repressive dynamics. A related example would be
the CIA’s recurring use of double agents, again for the reason just
suggested. In the 1998 bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Kenya, the
chief planner was a double agent, Ali Mohammed, who surveyed the
Embassy and reported to Osama bin Laden in 1993, just months after
the FBI had ordered the Canadian RCMP to release him from detention.13
In the Mumbai terrorist attack of 2008, the scene was initially
surveyed for the attackers by a DEA double agent, David Headley
(alias Daood Sayed Gilani) whom “U.S. authorities sent … to work
for them in Pakistan…despite a warning that he sympathized with
radical Islamic groups.”14
The central
point is that expansion beyond a nation’s borders engenders a pattern
of repressive power with predictable results results that
transcend the conscious intentions of anyone within that repressive
power system. Newly formed and ill-supervised agencies spawn contradictory
policies abroad, the net effect of which is usually both expansive
and deleterious – not just to the targeted nation but also to America.
This is especially
true of covert agencies, whose practice of secrecy means that controversial
policies proliferate without either coordination or review. Asia
in particular has been since 1945 the chief area where the CIA has
ignored or overridden the policy directives of the State Department.
As I document in American War Machine, CIA interventions
in Asia, especially those that escalated into the Laotian, Vietnam,
and Afghan wars, fostered an ongoing global CIA drug connection,
or what I have called elsewhere a dark quadrant of unaccountable
power.
This drug connection,
richly endowed with huge resources and its own resources of illegal
violence, has a major stake in both American interventions and above
all unwinnable wars to aggravate the conditions of regional lawlessness
that are needed for drug trafficking. Thus it makes perfect sense
that the global drug connection has, as I believe, been an ongoing
factor in the creation of an overseas American empire that most
U.S. citizens never asked for. More specifically, the dark quadrant
has contributed to all the major deep events – including Dallas,
Watergate, and 9/11, that have helped militarize America and overshadow
its public institutions.
Doomsday
Power and the Military Occupation of America
I have said
that, underlying the surface of America’s major deep events, there
has been a pattern of conflict between two mindsets – that of openness
and that of repressive dominance – dating back to the Civil War
and the Indian wars of the mid-nineteenth century (and before that
to the American Revolution).15 But it would be wrong
to conclude from this on-going pattern of conflict that there is
nothing new in our current situation. On the contrary, America is
in the midst of a new crisis arising from this very old antagonism.
Since World
War Two, secrecy has been used to accumulate new covert bureaucratic
powers under the guise of emergency planning for disasters, planning
known inside and outside the government as the “Doomsday Project.”
Known more recently (and misleadingly) as “Continuity of Government”
(COG) planning, the Doomsday Project, under the guiding hands in
the 1980s of Oliver North, Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, and others,
became the vehicle on 9/11 for a significant change of government.
This package of extreme repressive power accumulated under the guise
of the Doomsday Project can be referred to as Doomsday Power. In
concrete terms, the repressive power developed to control the rest
of the world is now, to an unprecedented extent, treating America
itself as an occupied territory.
What I mean
by “doomsday power” is the package of repressive mechanisms (which
I have discussed elsewhere under their official name of “continuity
of government” or COG plans), that was prepared over two decades
by the elite COG planning group, and then implemented beginning
on 9/11. The package includes 1) warrantless surveillance, 2) warrantless
detention, (including unprecedented abridgments of the right to
habeas corpus), and 3) unprecedented steps towards the militarization
of domestic security enforcement and shrinking of the posse comitatus
acts.
One recent
development of Doomsday power, for example, has been the deployment
since 2008 of a U.S. Army Brigade Combat Team to be stationed permanently
in the United States. A major part of its dedicated assignment is
to be "called upon to help with civil unrest and crowd control.”16
Many people seem to be unaware that Americans, together with this
Brigade, have lived since 2002 under a U.S. Army Command called
NORTHCOM.17 Yet if nothing is done to change the present
course of events, historians may come some day to compare the stationing
of this brigade in 2008 CE to the date, in 49 BCE, when Caesar,
along with his legion, crossed the Rubicon.
And I believe
that the forces that have worked for decades to create Doomsday
power have, like the global drug connection, been involved in every
one of the deep events, from Dallas to 9/11, that have helped bring
us here.
Notes
- Chalmers
Johnson, Blowback:
The Costs and Consequences of American Empire (New York:
Henry Holt, 2000), 217. Cf. Chalmers Johnson, The
Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy and the End of the Republic
(New York: Metropolitan/Henry Holt, 2004).
- Michael
Lind, Made
in Texas: George W. Bush and the Southern Takeover of American
Politics (New York: Basic Books, 2003), 143.
- Hannah
Arendt, Between
Past and Future: Eight Exercises in Political Thought
(New York: Penguin Books, 1993), 93. Adapting Arendt’s distinction,
Jonathan Schell made a Gandhian case in support of nonviolent
persuasive or community power as a means of challenging top-down
violent power and thus reforming the world. I developed this case
myself in The
Road to 9/11 (Jonathan Schell, The
Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People
[New York: Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt, 2003], 227-31; Peter
Dale Scott, Road to 9/11, 249-66, 269).
- Kevin Phillips,
Wealth
and Democracy: A Political History of the American Rich
(New York: Broadway Books, 2002), 171-200.
- Carl A.
Huffman, Archytas
of Tarentum: Pythagorean, philosopher, and mathematician king
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), 207: “In Diodotus’
speech in the Mytilenian debate, wealth is particularly identified
as producing arrogant “overreaching” (pleonexia –iii.45.4).
Thus pleonexia seems to be associated with the abuse of power
by either a tyrant or a wealthy oligarchy.”
- Paul M.
Kennedy, The
Rise and Fall of the Great Powers (New York: Random House,
1987); Phillips, Wealth and Democracy; Johnson, The
Sorrows of Empire.
- Johnson,
Blowback, 221.
- Scott,
American
War Machine, 63-142, 239-53. The Karzai regime in Afghanistan
is only the latest of CIA client governments to struggle to maintain
itself with support from drug traffickers. Cf. Peter
Dale Scott, "Can the US Pacify the Drug-Addicted War in Afghanistan?
Opium, the CIA and the Karzai Administration", The Asia-Pacific
Journal: Japan Focus, April 5, 2010; Ryan
Grim, “Karzai Releasing Scores Of Drug Traffickers In Afghanistan,
WikiLeaks Cables Show,” Huffington Post, December 31, 2010.
- Tim McGurk,
Time, August 2, 2004; cf. USA Today, October 26,
2004.
- James Risen,
New York Times, December 11, 2010. Both traffickers were
ultimately arrested by DEA officials: Noorzai in 2005, and Khan
in 2008. The U.S. probably came to prefer Khan over Noorzai, because
he was more closely allied to Abdul Wali Karzai, another drug
trafficker and CIA asset, as well as a central figure in the power
apparatus of his brother Hamid Karzai, the U.S. client president
of Afghanistan.
- Time,
November 29, 1993; Scott, American War Machine, 14-15;
Tim Weiner, New York Times, November 23, 1996.
- It is too
early to report the ultimate fate of Noorzai and Khan after their
arrest and indictment by the United States. But it is clear that
Guillén Davila’s arrest and indictment never led to conviction
or imprisonment. On the contrary, he appears to have continued
to enjoy CIA favor in Venezuela. (Scott, American
War Conspiracy,
14-15).
- Scott,
Road to 9/11, 152-58.
- “D.E.A.
Deployed Mumbai Plotter Despite Warning,” New York Times,
November 8, 2009; cf. Scott, American War Machine, 246-47.
In another essay I will develop the thesis that what I call surplus
repressive power – power developed exclusively by one society
for the repressive dominance of others is doomed, in this
and other ways, to encourage the proliferation of its enemies.
My point here is a more modest and general one. Maybe save the
sentence for the later work?
- Cf. Peter
Dale Scott, "Atrocity and its Discontents: U.S. Double-Mindedness
About Massacre," in Adam Jones, ed. Genocide,
War Crimes and the West: Ending the Culture of Impunity
(London: Zed Press, 2004).
- “Brigade
homeland tours start Oct. 1,” Army Times, September
30, 2008.
- Scott, Road
to 9/11, 241-42.
January
26, 2011
Peter
Dale Scott, a former Canadian diplomat and English Professor at
the University of California, Berkeley, is the author of Drugs
Oil and War, The
Road to 9/11, and The
War Conspiracy: JFK, 9/11, and the Deep Politics of War.
His book, Fueling America's War Machine: Deep Politics and the
CIAs Global Drug Connection is in press, due Fall 2010
from Rowman & Littlefield.
Copyright
© 2011 Peter
Dale Scott
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