The Bureaucracy, the March, and the War
by Tom Engelhardt
As I was heading out into a dark, drippingly wet, appropriately dispiriting New York City day, on my way to the "Fall Out Against the War" march -- one of 11 regional antiwar demonstrations held this Saturday -- I was thinking: then and now, Vietnam and Iraq.
photo Tam Turse
Since the Bush administration had Vietnam on the brain while planning to take down Saddam Hussein's regime for the home team, it's hardly surprising that, from the moment its invasion was launched in March 2003, the Vietnam analogy has been on the American brain -- and, even domestically, there's something to be said for it.
As John Mueller, an expert on public opinion and American wars,
pointed out back in November 2005, Americans turned against the Iraq
War in a pattern recognizable from the Vietnam era (as well as the
Korean one) -- initial, broad post-invasion support that eroded
irreversibly as American casualties rose.
"The only thing remarkable
about the current war in Iraq," Mueller wrote, "is how precipitously
American public support has dropped off. Casualty for casualty, support
has declined far more quickly than it did during either the Korean War
or the Vietnam War."
He added, quite correctly, as it turned out: "And
if history is any indication, there is little the Bush administration
can do to reverse this decline."
Where the Vietnam analogy
distinctly breaks down, however, is in the streets. In the Vietnam era,
the demonstrations started small and built slowly over the years toward
the massive -- in Washington, in cities around the country, and then on
campuses nationwide.
In those years, as anger, anxiety, and outrage
mounted, militancy rose, and yet the range of antiwar demonstrators
grew to include groups as diverse as "businessmen against the war" and
large numbers of ever more vociferous Vietnam vets, often just back
from the war itself. Almost exactly the opposite pattern -- the vets
aside -- has occured with Iraq.
The prewar demonstrations were
monstrous, instantaneously gigantic, at home and abroad. Millions of
people grasped just where we were going in late 2002 and early 2003,
and grasped as well that the Bush dream of an American-occupied Iraq
would lead to disaster and death galore. The New York Times, usually
notoriously unimpressed with demonstrations, referred to the massed
demonstrators then as the second "superpower" on a previously one
superpower planet. And it did look, as the Times headline went, as if
there were "a new power in the streets."
But here was the
strange thing, as the "lone superpower" faltered, as the Bush
administration and the Pentagon came to look ever less super, ever less
victorious, ever less powerful, so did that other superpower.
Discouragement of a special sort seemed to set in -- initially perhaps
that the invasion had not been stopped and that, in Washington, no one
in a tone-deaf administration even seemed to be listening.
Still,
through the first years of the war, on occasion, hundreds of thousands
of demonstrators could be gathered in one spot to march massively, even
cheerfully; these were crowds filled with "first timers" (who were
proud to tell you so); and, increasingly, with the families of soldiers
stationed in Iraq (or Afghanistan), or of soldiers who had died there,
and even, sometimes, with some of the soldiers themselves, as well as
contingents of vets from the Vietnam era, now older, greyer, but still
vociferously antiwar.
However, over the years, unlike in the
Vietnam era, the demonstrations shrank, and somehow the anxiety, the
anger -- though it remained suspended somewhere in the American ether
-- stopped manifesting itself so publicly, even as the war went on and
on. Or put another way, perhaps the anger went deeper and turned
inward, like a scouring agent.
Perhaps it went all the way into what
was left of an American belief system, into despair about the
unresponsiveness of the government -- with paralyzing effect. As
another potentially more disastrous war with Iran edges into sight, the
response has been limited largely to what might be called the
professional demonstrators. The surge of hope, of visual creativity, of
spontaneous interaction, of the urge to turn out, that arose in those
prewar demonstrations now seemed so long gone, replaced by a far more
powerful sense that nothing anyone could do mattered in the least.
When
it comes to the Vietnam analogy domestically, the question that still
hangs in the air is whether, as in the latter years of the Vietnam era,
the soldiers, in Iraq (and Afghanistan) as well as here at home, will
take matters into their own hands; whether, as with Vietnam, in the end
Iraq (and Iran) will be left to the vets of this war and their families
and friends -- or to no one at all.
The Consensus Gap
Here's
the strange thing: As we all know, the Washington Consensus --
Democrats as well as Republicans, in Congress as in the Oval Office -–
has been settling ever deeper into the Iraqi imperial project. As a
town, official Washington, it seems, has come to terms with a
post-surge occupation strategy that will give new meaning to what, in
the days after the 2003 invasion, quickly came to be known as the
Q-word (for the Vietnam-era "quagmire").
The President has made it all
too clear that he will fight his war in Iraq to the last second of his
administration -- and, if he has anything to say about it (as indeed he
might), well beyond. In their "classified campaign strategy for the
country," our ambassador in Baghdad, Ryan Crocker, and the President's
surge commander, Gen. David Petraeus, are reportedly already planning
their war-fighting and occupation policy through the summer of 2009,
and so into the next presidency. The three leading Democratic
candidates for president, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John
Edwards, have refused to guarantee that American troops will even be
totally out of Iraq by 2013, the end of a first term in office -- as
essentially has every Republican candidate except Ron Paul, the
libertarian congressman from Texas.
In fact, in Washington, the ongoing
war is now such a given that it's hardly being discussed at the moment
(as the one in Afghanistan has never been). The focus has instead
shifted to the next possible administration monstrosity -- a possible
air assault on Iran that would essentially guarantee a global recession
or depression.
Meanwhile, the American people -- having formed
their own Iraq Study Group as early as 2005 -- have moved in another
direction entirely. On this, the opinion polls have been, and remain
(as Mueller suggested they would), unanimous. When Americans are asked
how the President is handling the war in Iraq, disapproval figures run
67% to 26% in the most recent CBS News poll; 68% to 30% in the ABC
News/Washington Post poll; and, according to CNN's pollsters,
opposition to the war itself runs at a 65% to 34% clip.
As for
"staying" some course in Iraq to 2013 or beyond, that CBS News poll,
typically, has 45% of Americans wanting all troops out in "less than a
year" and 72% in "one to two years" -- in other words, not by the end
of, but the beginning of, the next presidential term in office. (The
ABC News/Washington Post poll indicates, among other things, that, by
55% to 40%, Americans feel the Democrats in Congress have not gone "far
enough in opposing the war in Iraq"; and that they want Congress to
rein in the administration's soaring, off-the-books war financing
requests.)
In other words, the Washington elite are settling
ever deeper, ever less responsively, into the Big Muddy, while the
American Consensus has come down quite decisively elsewhere. For all
intents and purposes, it seems that most Americans are acting as if
some policy page had already been turned, as if Iraq was so been-there,
done-that.
Perhaps many are also assuming that the present
administration is beyond unreachable and that any successor will be
certain to fix the problem; or, alternately, that nothing the public
can do in relation to the Washington Consensus, including voting,
matters one whit; or some helpless, hopeless combination of the two and
who knows what else.
As I sat in that rumbling subway car on
my way to the march in lower Manhattan, I kept wondering who, between
the Iraq-forever-and-a-day crowd and the been-there/done-that folks
might think it worth the bother to turn out at an antiwar rally on such
a lousy day. And it was then that a brief encounter from the summer
came to mind.
I'm now 63 years old and increasingly feel as if
my 1950s childhood came out of another universe. Sometime in August, I
ran into a "kid" -- maybe in his early thirties -- employed by a
consulting firm to do what once would have been the work of a federal
government employee. He gamely tried to explain the sinews of his
privatized world to me. As he spoke, I began to wonder whether he was
interested in working in the federal government, not just as a
consultant to it. To ask the question, I began explaining how I had
grown up dreaming about being part of the government -- the State
Department, actually. It seemed to me then like an honorable, if not
downright glorious, destiny to represent your country to others. It was
a feeling that left me deep into the 1960s when I had, in fact, already
been accepted into the United States Information Agency (from which I
would have, a good deal less gloriously, propagandized for my country).
It was only then that anger over the Vietnam War swept me elsewhere.
I
told the young consultant that, when young, I had dreamed of doing my
"civic duty" and his eyes promptly widened in visible disbelief. He
rolled that phrase around for a moment, then said (all dialogue
recreated from my faulty memory): "Civic duty? No one in my world
thinks about it that way any more." He paused and added, hesitantly,
"But I might actually like to be in the bureaucracy for a while."
That
was my moment to widen my eyes. What I once thought of as "the
government" had, in the space of mere decades, become "the
bureaucracy," even to someone who would consider joining it -- and, the
worst of it was, I knew he was right. This was one genuine
accomplishment of a quarter-century-plus of the Republican "revolution"
(and the Clinton interregnum). All those presidential candidates,
running as small-government outsiders ready to bring Washington big
spenders to heel, had, on coming to power, only fed that government
mercilessly, throwing untold numbers of tax dollars at the Pentagon and
the military-industrial complex, ensuring that they would become ever
more bloated, powerful, and labyrinthine, ever more focused on their
own well-being, and ever less civic; ensuring that the government as a
whole would be ever more "bureaucratic," ever less "ept," and -- always
-- ever more oppressive, with ever more police-state-like powers.
All
that had been strangled in the process -- made smaller, if you will --
was the federal government's ability to deliver actual services to the
population that paid for it. All that was made smaller in the world
beyond Washington was whatever residual faith existed that this was
"your" government, that it actually represented you in any way. As the
state's bureaucratic, military, and policing powers bloated, so, too,
did the electoral process -- and lost as well was the belief that your
vote could determine anything much at all.
Looking back, this
was, in a sense, what 9/11 really meant in America. The one thing that
a government, which had long reinforced its own powers, should have
been able to deliver was intelligence and protection. So it wasn't, I
suspect, just those towers that crumbled on that day. What also
crumbled was a residual faith in "we, the people." This was actually
what the Bush administration played on when it urged Americans not to
mobilize for its Global War on Terror, but simply to go about their
business, to -- as the President famously put it 16 days after 9/11 --
"get down to Disney World in Florida. Take your families and enjoy
life, the way we want it to be enjoyed." In a sense, Bush and his top
officials were just doing what came naturally -- further sidelining the
American people so they could fight their private wars in peace (so to
speak).
The "bureaucracy" had strangled the very idea of the
"civic." Who would even think about entering such a world today as a
"civic duty," rather than as a career move; or imagine Washington as
"our" government; or that anyone inside the famed Beltway, or near the
K-Street hive of lobbyists, or in Congress or the Oval Office would
give a damn about you? This is why, at a deeper level, the Washington
Consensus today has next to nothing to do with the American one.
American Disengagement
When
people look back on the Vietnam era, few comment on how connected the
size and vigor of demonstrations were to a conception of government in
Washington as responsible to the American people. Even the youthful
radicals of the time, in their outrage, still generally believed that
Washington was not living up to some ideal they had absorbed in their
younger years. Whatever they were denouncing, the founders of Students
for a Democratic Society (SDS) in their Port Huron Statement, for
instance, spoke without irony or discomfort of "[f]reedom and equality
for each individual, government of, by, and for the people -- these
American values we found good, principles by which we could live as
men."
Though they may not have known it, they were still
believers, after a fashion. By and large, the demonstrators of that
moment not only believed that Washington should listen, but when, for
instance, they chanted angrily, "Hey, hey, LBJ, how many kids did you
kill today?", that President Lyndon Baines Johnson would be listening.
(And, in fact, he was. He called it "that horrible song.") Which young
people today would believe that in their gut? Who would believe such a
thing of "the bureaucracy"?
Don't forget, demonstrating is
another kind of civic duty -- but perhaps a waning one. I was struck
this weekend that, even among people I know, many of whom had
demonstrated in the Vietnam era and had turned out again in the early
years of this war, next to none were on the streets this Saturday. Most
were simply going about their business with other, better things to do.
The fact is: Attending a march like Saturday's is still, for
me, something like an ingrained civic habit, like.... gulp.... voting,
which I can't imagine not doing -- even when it has little meaning to
me -- or keeping informed by reading a newspaper daily in print
(something that, it seems, just about no one under 25 does any more).
These are the habits of a lifetime and they don't disappear quickly.
But when they're gone, or if they don't make it to the next generation
intact, it's hard, if not impossible, to get them back.
If you
need another point of comparison, consider TV comic Stephen Colbert's
joke (or is it?) race for the presidency in his home state of South
Carolina (or the fact that, in a Rasmussen Report telephone poll, he
garnered 13% support in the Republican field just days after announcing
his run). Again, I'm old enough to remember the last time something
like this happened. Sometime in the late 1950s -- the details escape me
-- a few fans of the cartoon strip Pogo decided to launch a "Pogo for
President" campaign in election season. (Mind you, that strip, about a
talking opossum and his pals in Okefenokee Swamp, was a classic with a
critical, political edge. Who could forget the moment when Howland Owl
and the turtle, Churchy LaFemme, decided to enter the nuclear age by
creating uranium from a combination of a Yew tree and a geranium.) In
the strip, Pogo did indeed run for president and its creator, Walt
Kelly, used that hook to promote perfectly real voter-registration
campaigns. But -- as I remember it -- he was horrified by the real-life
campaign for his character and insisted that it be stopped. You didn't,
after all, make a mockery of American democracy that way. It just
wasn't funny.
No longer. Now, the "character" is launched onto
the field of electoral play by the creator himself, who also happens to
be promoting a book in need of publicity; and Colbert's ploy is hailed
as a kind of transcendent reality, not simply a mockery of it, even on
that most mainstream of Sunday yak shows, Tim Russert's Meet the Press.
Of course, the joke -- and it's a grim one indeed -- is on what's left
of American democracy, which, as Colbert obviously means to prove, is
the real mockery of our moment.
Perhaps we all have to hope
that, when he's done with the election, he'll turn his attention to
demonstrations in a world increasingly uncongenial to "civic duty" of
any sort. It seems that we've entered a time in which even
demonstrating can be outsourced, privatized, left to the pros, or
simply dismissed (like so much else) as hopeless, a waste of time. So I
was heading toward this demonstration, wondering not why more people
wouldn't be there, but why anyone would be.
Penned in on the Streets
And here's how it felt:
"From
the moment I looked across the aisle in the subway and saw the woman
with the upside-down, hand-painted sign -- an anguished face, blood,
and 'no war' on it -- and she noted my sign, also resting against my
knees but modestly turned away from view, and gave me the thumbs up
sign, I knew things would be okay. As my wife, a friend, and I exited
the subway at the 50th Street station on the west side of New York, I
noted three college-age women bent over a subway bench magic-marking in
messages on their blank sign boards, a signal that we were heading for
some special do-it-yourself event."
Oops! Sorry, that was my
description of the first moments of a massive antiwar march -- half a
million or more people took part -- in New York City on February 15,
2003, just over a month before the invasion of Iraq was launched.
On
my subway car Saturday, there were no obvious demonstrators carrying
signs; no eager faces or hands ready to give a thumbs-up sign; no one
who even looked like he or she was heading for a demonstration. (Of
course, I had no handmade sign and didn't look that way either.)
A
signature aspect of this era's antiwar demonstrations, from the first
prewar giants on, has been the spontaneous, personal signage, often a
literal sea of waving individual expressions of indignation, sardonic
humor, hope, despair, absurdity, you name it.
On Saturday,
most of the signs were printed and clearly organizationally inspired;
not all, however, as the shots by Tam Turse, the young photojournalist
who accompanied me, eloquently indicate.
As for the police, well, here's how it felt with them:
"They
still had us more or less confined to the sidewalk and a bit of the
street on one side of the avenue, and cars were still crawling by. But
already demonstrators were moving the orange police cones quickly set
up for this unexpected crowd on an unexpectedly occupied avenue ever
farther out into the traffic. Soon, to relieve pressure, the police
opened a side street and with a great cheer our section of the rolling
non-march burst through up to Second [Avenue] where we found ourselves
in an even greater mass of humanity, heading north on our own avenue
without a single car, truck, or bus."
Uh-oh, my mistake again!
That, too, was the February 15, 2003 demo. This time, I came out of the
subway at 23rd Street and was promptly accosted by a confused young
German woman, postcards clutched in one hand. She pointed at two blue
mailboxes on the corner and asked, in charmingly accented English, how
you put the cards in. "Oh," I said, "let me show you." And I promptly
pulled on each mailbox handle, only to find them locked. The police had
undoubtedly done this as an anti-terror measure. The woman was
relieved, she told me, that she wasn't "mad." No, I assured her, it was
the world that was mad, not her.
The rest of the march was, in
essence, a police event, the demonstrators penned in by moveable metal
barricades, "guarded" often by more police personnel than on-lookers.
From the moment we began to march in the rain, the police presence was
overwhelming, starting with a well-marked NYPD "Sky Watch" tower, a
mobile tower that can be raised anywhere in which police observers can
spy on you from behind a Darth Vader-style darkened window. In fact, we
marchers were penned in by the police as we headed south for Foley
Square, cut off, for instance, from the large cross street at 14th by a
row of dismounted police using their motorcycles as a barricade. Police
vehicles and police on foot moved slowly in front of the demonstration
as well as behind it. Police even marched in the demonstration (though
not as demonstrators). Essentially, it was, as all rallies and
demonstrations now seem to be in our growing Homeland Security
state-let, a police march.
Led by a sizeable contingent of
soldiers, vets, and military families, there were perhaps 10,000
marchers -- a rare occasion when my own rough estimate fit the normal
police undercount -- on a dreary, rainy day, which is no small thing.
Each of them left his or her life for a few hours to take a walk (or,
in the case of one elderly lady, to be wheeled, encased in plastic, or
for two "grannies for peace" to be peddled in a volunteer pedicab) in
mild discomfort, to chant, to call out, even in a few creative cases,
to display feelings on individual placards or constructions or in group
tableaux. Each of them, for his or her own reason, was civic, even
global. Add up all the people who did this in 11 cities nationwide, and
the numbers aren't unimpressive. But with unending war, as well as
perpetual death and destruction on the Bush administration menu, with
the horizon darkened by the possibility of a strike against Iran, and a
population which has turned its back on most of the above, it was,
nonetheless, clearly underwhelming.
Meanwhile, in Iraq on
Saturday, according to news reports, it was just an ordinary day, the
usual harvest of decomposing corpses, deadly roadside blasts,
assassinations, kidnappings, U.S. raids, and, bizarrely, the breakfast
poisoning of 100 Iraqi soldiers. One American death was announced on
Saturday. We don't yet know who the soldier was, only that he died
"when he sustained small arms fire while conducting operations in Salah
ad Din [Province]." He could, of course, have come from New York City,
but the odds are that he came from a small town somewhere in the
American hinterlands, from perhaps Latta, South Carolina or Lone Pine,
California.
He might, or might not, have ever visited Disney
World. He might have joined the overstretched U.S. armed forces for the
increasingly massive bonuses the military is now offering to bind the
poor and futureless close in a war that has been rejected by the
American people; or perhaps he simply signed on with some of that
residual sense of civic duty that's fast fleeing the land; or,
possibly, both of the above. Perhaps, if he hadn't died, he would, like
12 former captains who recently wrote "The Real Iraq We Knew" for the
Washington Post op-ed page and called our "best option… to leave Iraq
immediately," have returned to speak out against the war. Who knows.
Already, for 3,839 Americans in Iraq and 451 Americans in Afghanistan,
we will never have a way of knowing.
Tom Engelhardt, who runs
the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com, is the co-founder of the
American Empire Project. His book, The End of Victory Culture
(University of Massachusetts Press), has just been thoroughly updated
in a newly issued edition that deals with victory culture's
crash-and-burn sequel in Iraq.
Tam Turse is a photojournalist
working in New York City. Her photos of the demonstration discussed in
this piece can be viewed by clicking here.
Copyright 2007 Tom Engelhardt
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