Let's see:
- That the occupation forces kill lots of civilians at checkpoints and botched raids, then lie about it afterward.
- That these killings make Afghans angry and fuel the insurgency.
- That elements of Pakistani intelligence are
involved with some elements of the many resistance groups known
collectively (and incorrectly) in the West as the Taliban.
- That the Americans are using more and more robot drones to kill people.
- That the Americans are running death squads in Afghanistan aimed at Taliban leaders.
- That Afghan officials are corrupt, and that Afghan police and military forces are woefully inadequate.
Is there anything in these breathless new recitations that we did not
already know? For example, the NYT offers a few short vignettes from the
leaked documents concerning botched raids and errant missiles that
slaughter civilians. But in almost every case, these have already been extensively reported
-- in the Times itself and other mainstream venues -- in much greater
detail, with quotes and evidence from the victims and local
eyewitnesses, and not just the self-interested, ass-covering perspective
of official occupation reports. And the "revelation" that occupation
forces are killing "an amazing number of people" who have "never proven
to be a threat" at checkpoints was confirmed months ago by no less than Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the erstwhile commander of the whole shebang.
Likewise, the entanglement between Pakistani intelligence services
and some elements of violent resistance in Afghanistan has been a
constant theme of mainstream reportage on the Afghan War since the very
beginning -- not to mention a relentless drumbeat of official "concern"
in Washington. It is a rare week indeed when some Washington bigwig is not hinting darkly -- or declaring outright -- that Pakistan needs to "get with the program" in one way or another.
The increasing use of drones
is also no secret; indeed, it is frequently featured in giddy press
reports about these neat gizmos our boys are using to bravely blast
villages on the other side of the world from comfortably padded chairs
in Nevada control rooms.
And America's assassination squads
have also been loudly proclaimed and hailed; scarcely a week goes by
without a story about yet another "top-level" Taliban or al Qaeda
dastard meeting his doom. And of course, the Peace Laureate's
administration recently "leaked" the news that America is running hit
squads, secret armies and other covert operators in more than 75
countries around the world -- with the Peace Laureate also proclaiming
his right to assassinate American citizens when he feels like it.
As for the corruption and incompetence of the Afghan "government"
installed by the foreign occupiers, and the untrustworthiness of the
Afghan police and military being trained by the foreign occupiers to do
their dirty work for them -- again, this too has been a running theme
not only of media coverage but a plethora of official pronouncements.
Has a month gone by in recent years when some top-level Washington
figure has not scolded the powerless Afghan government for its manifold
failings? Has a month gone by without long, detailed stories -- usually
in the New York Times itself -- outlining the venality and brutality of
the warlords, gangsters, religious extremists and corruptocrats that the
United States has empowered in the occupied land?
Where then are the "revelations"? Anyone who has regularly read,
well, the New York Times, the Guardian and Der Spiegel could not
remotely be surprised by any of the facts (as opposed to the oceans of
spin and supposition) buried in this mountain of leakage. These are not
the Pentagon Papers or the Downing Street Memos; they do almost nothing
to alter the public image of the war, and tell almost nothing that we
don't already know.
In fact, the overall effect of the multi-part coverage of the
documents is to paint a portrait of plucky, put-upon Americans trying
their darnedest to get the job done despite the dastardly dealings and
gooberish bumblings of the ungrateful little brown wretches we are
trying to save from themselves. The NYT is quite explicit in this spin:
[T]he documents sketch a war hamstrung
by an Afghan government, police force and army of questionable loyalty
and competence, and by a Pakistani military that appears at best
uncooperative and at worst to work from the shadows as an unspoken ally
of the very insurgent forces the American-led coalition is trying to
defeat.
So you see, if our noble
enterprise is failing, it’s because the Afghans are idiots, the
Pakistanis are backstabbers ... and the Iranians are behind it all,
training Taliban fighters, making their bombs and bankrolling the
political opposition to America's appointed satrap, Hamid Karzai.
Ah, here we get down to it. Here's
metal more attractive for our militarists. The treachery of Iran is a
constant theme in the leakage -- both in the raw, unsifted,
uncorroborated "humint" and in the diplomatic cables of puzzled
occupiers who cannot fathom why there should be any opposition to their
enlightened rule. It must the fault of those perfidious Persians!
One can only imagine the lipsmacking and handclapping now rampant
among the Bomb Iran crowd as they pore over these unsubstantiated rumors
and Potomac ass-coverings which are being doled out -- by the "liberal"
media, no less! -- as the new, grim truth about Afghanistan. The
Guardian helpfully compiles the incendiary material for them:
Iran is engaged in an extensive covert
campaign to arm, finance, train and equip Taliban insurgents, Afghan
warlords allied to al-Qaida and suicide bombers fighting to eject
British and western forces from Afghanistan, according to classified US
military intelligence reports contained in the war logs.
The secret "threat reports", mostly comprising raw
data provided by Afghan spies and paid informants, cannot be
corroborated individually. Even if the claims are accurate, it is
unclear whether the activities they describe took place with the full
knowledge of Tehran or are the work of hardline elements of the
semi-autonomous Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, ideological
sympathisers of the Taliban, arms smugglers or criminal gangs ....
Yes, no doubt there are a great many "ideological sympathisers" of the
Taliban's Shiite-hating Sunni extremists among the, er, Shiites in Iran.
But such nuances don't matter; all that matters is that you get some
headlines out there about "Iran's covert operations in Afghanistan."
[Because, as we all know, it is an unmitigated evil for any nation to
conduct covert operations in another country -- unless, of course, that
nation is run by nice, clean, English-speaking people.]
The Guardian details a number of raw humint reports on Iranian dastardy, then makes a curious claim for its other sources:
Summaries of US embassy diplomatic
cables and situation assessments contained and distributed through the
war logs offer firmer ground than some of the raw intelligence data,
given that they are evidently written by American officials and
represent an official record, or official evaluation, of high-level
meetings.
Why should the "situation assessments" of ass-covering bureaucrats
necessarily be "firmer" than the gossip and denunciations being retailed
in the "humint" reports? Especially if they are telling Washington
exactly what it wants to hear: the Iranians are behind our manifest
failures, both militarily and politically. The Guardian:
Summaries of classified diplomatic cables produced by the US embassy in
Kabul, contained in the war logs, reveal high-level concern about
Tehran's growing political influence in Afghanistan. Senior US and
Afghan officials appear at a loss over how to counter Iran's alleged
bribery and manipulation of opposition parties and MPs whom Afghan
government officials dismiss as Tehran's "puppets"....
"Over the past several months Iran has taken a
series of steps to expand and deepen its influence," says a secret cable
sourced to the US embassy in Kabul and written in May 2007 by CSTC-A
DCG for Pol-Mil Affairs [combined security transition command deputy
commanding general for political and military affairs]. The cable cites
the creation of the opposition National Front and National Unity
Council, which it claims are under Iranian influence.
Wow, that's heavy stuff, man. An apparatchik in the US embassy says that
the political opposition to America's man in Kabul is just Iranian
puppetry. Obviously, those Afghan ragheads couldn't possibly put
together an opposition by themselves. (It's just like that Civil Rights
stuff back in the day; it was all a Communist front. You know our docile
darkies would never have tried to get above their raising if the
Commies hadn't stirred them up.)
We see here a reflection of one of the enduring principles of the American power structure: that no one could ever have any reasonable objections
to the enlightened hegemony of our elites. Any opposition to their
dominance and privilege has to come from "outside agitators," sinister
troublemakers driven by motiveless evil to destroy all that's good and
holy in this world.
So in the end, what really is the "takeaway" from this barrage of
high-profile "revelations" dished up by these bold liberal gadflies
speaking truth to power? Let's recap:
Occupation forces kill lots of civilians. But everybody already knew that -- and it's been obvious for years that nobody cares. How does this alter the prevailing conventional wisdom about the war?
Pakistan is pursuing its own strategic interests in the region:
interests that don't always mesh with those of the United States.
Again, this has been a constantly -- obsessively -- reported aspect of
the war since its earliest days. How does this alter the prevailing
conventional wisdom about the war?
The Afghan government installed by the occupation is corrupt and dysfunctional.
Again, this theme has been sounded at every level of the American
government -- including by two presidents -- for years. How does this
alter the prevailing conventional wisdom of the war?
There is often a dichotomy between official statements about the war's progress and the reality of the war on the ground. Again,
has there been a month in the last nine years that prominent stories
outlining this fact have not appeared in major mainstream publications?
Is this not a well-known phenomenon of every single military conflict in
human history? How does this alter the prevailing conventional wisdom
about the war?
Iran is evil and is helping bad guys kill Americans and should be stopped.
It goes without saying that this too has been a relentless drumbeat of
the American power structure for many years. The occupation forces in
Iraq began blaming Iran for the rise of the insurgency and the political
instability almost the moment after George W. Bush proclaimed "mission
accomplished" and all hell broke loose in the conquered land. The Obama
administration has "continued" -- and expanded -- the Bush Regime's
demonization of Iran, and its extensive military preparations for an
attack on that country. The current administration's "diplomatic effort"
is led by a woman who pledged to "obliterate" Iran -- that is, to kill
tens of millions of innocent people -- if Iran attacked Israel. The
American power structure has seized upon every single scrap of
Curveball-quality "intelligence" -- every rumor, every lie, every
exaggeration, every fabrication -- to convince the American people that
Iran is about to nuke downtown Omaha with burqa-clad atom bombs.
So once again, and for the last time, we ask the question: How does this alter the prevailing conventional wisdom about the war?
It doesn't, of course. These media "bombshells" will simply bounce off the hardened shell of American exceptionalism
-- which easily countenances the slaughter of civilians and "targeted
killings" and "indefinite detention" and any number of other atrocities
anyway. In fact, I predict the chief "takeaway" from the story will be
this:
American forces are doing their best to help the poor Afghans,
but the ungrateful natives are too weak and corrupt to be trusted, while
America's good intentions are also being thwarted by evil outsiders.
Getting this message out via "critical" stories in "liberal"
publications is much more effective than dishing up another serving of
patriotic hokum on Fox News or at a presidential press conference. In
fact, it is so much more effective that one almost begins to wonder
about the ultimate provenance of the leaks. Did some deep-delving
gamester allow these files to get out? Most likely not; but their ultimate effect does provoke the age-old question, cui bono?
The assumption is that these 92,000 files about the Afghan war were
obtained by an American private serving in Iraq, the unfortunate Bradley
Manning, who is now under arrest for the "crime" of leaking something
far more disturbing than any written document: a video showing the
slaughter of Iraqi civilians by American Apache helicopters in 2007.
Washington knows that a couple of moving pictures on the tee-vee have a
far greater potential to disturb the moral sleep of the American people
than tens of thousands of newspaper reports -- or leaked documents --
detailing similar killings. (That said, in the end the Apache video has
had zero effect on public perceptions of the Iraq War, which
most people believe is "over," or on public support for the murderous
machinations of the Terror War in general, which most people believe
needs to continue in one form or another, to "keep us safe.") The only
kind of grim truth attended to by anyone in America these days is that
which can be shown in moving pictures. (Although the number of people
who are upset even by that seems to be rapidly diminishing. That's why Manning had to be put away.
I don't question the bravery or sincerity of
Manning or of Julian Assanage in bringing the latest material to light.
And I suppose on balance it is better to have it than not to have it.
But I still question the usefulness of rolling out mountains of raw
"human intelligence" -- precisely the same kind of unfiltered junk that
was "stovepiped" to build the false case for the mass-murdering invasion
of Iraq -- about Iran, al Qaeda, Pakistan; even North Korea gets into
the mix. None of this can be checked -- but all of it will be extremely useful to those who want to build cases for more and more military action, death squads and covert actions around the world.
And it seems very odd that intelligence reports and bureaucratic
memos by forces carrying out a prolonged, brutal military occupation of
another country are now being treated by "liberal" media outlets as holy
writ which paints a "true" picture of the war -- a picture that omits
any reference to American war-related corruption, for instance,
not only in Afghanistan but more especially in Washington, or to
America's wider "Great Game" machinations in Central Asia, involving
pipelines, strategic bases and "containing China," etc.
If I believed anything would come of this document dump, if I believed
it would actually lead to, say, the prosecution of even one single
person for a war-related crime, or to a genuine debate over the morality
of the war in the political and media establishments, or even a 5 point
rise in public opposition to the Terror War project, then I would
rejoice, and embrace the flashy packages of the NYT, Guardian and Der
Spiegel at their own self-inflated valuation.
But I honestly believe that the net effect will be simply to
entrench the conventional wisdom about the war in the halls of power --
and in the echo chambers of opinion -- on both sides of the Atlantic. We
have already seen far too many atrocities, brutalities and acts of
criminal folly countenanced, when they are not actually praised, far too
many times -- over and over and over again -- in the course of the last
decade to believe that these disgorgings of junk intelligence and
apparatchik memos will make any difference.
Any difference for the better, that is. For I believe they will supply plenty of ammunition to those bent on further murder and plunder.
(*Note: This piece has been revised for typos, with some new content added, since its original posting.*)