A World Made by War: How Old Will You Be
When the American War State Goes Down?
by Tom Engelhardt
When you look at me, you can’t mistake the fact that I’m of a certain
age. But just for a moment, think of me as nine years old. You could
even say that I celebrated my ninth birthday last week, without cake,
candles, presents, or certainly joy.
I’ve had two mobilized moments in my life. The first was in the
Vietnam War years; the second, the one that leaves me as a
nine-year-old, began on the morning of September 11, 2001. I turned on
the TV while doing my morning exercises, saw a smoking hole in a World
Trade Center tower, and thought that, as in 1945 when a B-25 slammed into the Empire State Building, a terrible accident had happened.
Later, after the drums of war had begun to beat, after the first headlines had screamed their
World-War-II-style messages (“the
Pearl Harbor of the 21st century”), I had another thought. And for a
reasonably politically sophisticated guy, my second response was not
only as off-base as the first, but also remarkably dumb.
I thought that
this horrific event taking place in my hometown might open Americans up
to the pain of the world. No such luck, of course.
If you had told me then that we would henceforth be in a state of
eternal war as well as living in a permanent war state, that, to face a
ragtag enemy of a few thousand stateless terrorists, the national
security establishment in Washington would pump itself up to levels not
faintly reached when facing the Soviet Union, a major power with
thousands of nuclear weapons and an enormous military, that “homeland”
-- a distinctly un-American word -- would land in our vocabulary never
to leave, and that a second Defense Department dubbed the Department of
Homeland Security would be set up not to be dismantled in my lifetime,
that torture (excuse me, “enhanced interrogation techniques”) would
become as American as apple pie and that some of those “techniques”
would actually be demonstrated to
leading Bush administration officials inside the White House, that we
would pour money into the Pentagon at ever escalating levels even after
the economy crashed in 2008, that we would be fighting two potentially
trillion-dollar-plus wars without end in two distant lands, that we
would spend untold billions constructing hundreds of military bases in
those same lands, that the CIA would be conducting the first drone air war in history over a country we were officially not at war with, that most of us would live in a remarkable state of detachment from
all of this, and finally -- only, by the way, because I’m cutting this
list arbitrarily short -- that I would spend my time writing incessantly
about “the American way of war” and produce a book with that title, I would have thought you were nuts.
But every bit of that happened, even if unpredicted by me
because, like human beings everywhere, I have no special knack for
peering into the future. If it were otherwise, I would undoubtedly now
be zipping through fabulous spired cities with a jetpack on my back (as I
was assured would happen in my distant youth). But if prediction isn’t
our forte, then adaptability to changing circumstances may be -- and it
certainly helps account for my being here today.
I’m here because, in response to the bizarre spectacle of this nation
going to war while living at peace, even if in a spasmodic state of
collective national fear, I did something I hardly understood at the
time. I launched a nameless listserv of collected articles and my own
expanding commentary that ran against the common wisdom of that October
moment when the bombing runs for our second Afghan war began. A little
more than a year later, thanks to the Nation Institute, it became a website with the name TomDispatch.com, and because our leaders swore we were “a nation at war,”
because we were indeed killing people in quantity in distant lands,
because the power of the state at home was being strengthened in
startling ways, while everything still open about our society seemed to
be getting screwed shut, and the military was being pumped up to
Schwarzeneggerian dimensions, I started writing about war.
At some level, I can’t tell you how ridiculous that was. After all,
I’m the most civilian and peaceable of guys. I’ve never even been in
the military. I was, however, upset with the Bush administration, the connect-no-dots media coverage
of that moment, and the repeated 9/11 rites which proclaimed us the
planet’s greatest victim, survivor, and dominator, leaving only one
role, greatest Evil Doer, open for the rest of the planet (and you know
who auditioned for, and won, that part hands down)!
Things That Go Boom in the Night
I won’t say, however, that I had no expertise whatsoever with a
permanent state of war and a permanent war state, only that the
expertise I had was available to anyone who had lived through the
post-World War II era. I was reminded of this on a recent glorious
Sunday when, from the foot of Manhattan, I set out, for the first time
in more than half a century, on a brief ferry ride that proved, for me,
as effective a time machine as anything H.G. Wells had ever imagined.
That ferry was not, of course, taking me to a future civilization at the
edge of time, but to Governor’s Island, now
a park and National Monument in the eddying waters of New York harbor
and to the rubble of a gas station my father, a World War II vet, ran
there in the early 1950s when that island was still a major U.S. Army
base.
On many mornings in those years, I accompanied him on that short ride
across the East River and found myself amid buzzing jeeps and drilling
soldiers in a world of Army kids with, among other wonders, access to
giant swimming pools and kiddy-matinee Westerns. As a dyed-in-the-wool
city boy, it was my only real exposure to the burbs and it proved an
edenic one that also caught something of the exotically militarized mood
of that Korean War moment.
As
on that island, so for most Americans then, the worlds of the warrior
and of abundance were no more antithetical than they were to the
corporate executives, university research scientists, and military
officers who were using a rising military budget and the fear of
communism to create a new national security economy. An alliance
between big industry, big science, and the military had been forged
during World War II that blurred the boundaries between the military and
the civilian by fusing together a double set of desires: for
technological breakthroughs leading to ever more efficient weapons of
destruction and to ever easier living. The arms race -- the race, that
is, for future good wars -- and the race for the good life were then, as
on that island, being put on the same “war” footing.
In the 1950s, a military Keynesianism was already driving the U.S.
economy toward a consumerism in which desire for the ever larger car and missile, electric range and tank, television console and
submarine was wedded in single corporate entities. The companies --
General Electric, General Motors, and Westinghouse, among others --
producing the large objects for the American home were also major
contractors developing the big ticket weapons systems ushering the
Pentagon into its own age of abundance.
More than half a century later, the Pentagon is still living a life of abundance -- despite one less-than-victorious,
less-then-good war after another -- while we, increasingly, are not.
In the years in-between, the developing national security state of my
childhood just kept growing, and in the process the country militarized
in the strangest of ways.
Only once in that period did a sense of actual war seem to hover over
the nation. That was, of course, in the Vietnam years of the 1960s and
early 1970s, when the draft brought a dirty war up close and personal,
driving it into American homes and out into the streets, when a kind of
intermittent warfare seemed to break out in this country’s cities and
ghettos, and when impending defeat drove the military itself to the edge
of revolt and collapse.
From the 1970s until 2001, as that military rebuilt itself as an
all-volunteer force and finally went back to war in distant lands, the
military itself seemed to disappear from everyday life. There were no
soldiers in sight, nothing we would consider commonplace today -- from
uniforms and guns in train stations to military flyovers at football
games, or the repeated rites of praise for American troops that are now
everyday fare in our world where, otherwise, we largely ignore American
wars.
In 1989, for instance, I wrote in the Progressive magazine
about a country that seemed to me to be undergoing further
militarization, even if in a particularly strange way. Ours was, I
said, an “America that conforms to no notions we hold of militarism…
Militarization is, of course, commonly associated with uniformed,
usually exalted troops in evidence and a dictatorship, possibly
military, in power. The United States, by such standards, still has the
look of a civilian society. Our military is, if anything, less visible
in our lives than it was a decade ago: No uniforms in the streets,
seldom even for our traditional parades; a civilian elected government;
weaponry out of sight… the draft and the idea of a civilian army a thing
of the past.
“In the Reagan-Bush era, the military has gone undercover in the
world that we see, though not in the world that sees us. For if it is
absent from our everyday culture, its influence is omnipresent in
corporate America, that world beyond our politics and out of our control
-- the world which, nonetheless, plans our high-tech future of work and
consumption. There, the militarization of the economy and the
corporatization of the military is a process so far gone that it seems
reasonable to ask whether the United States can even be said to have a
civilian economy.”
Of course, that was then, this is now. Little did I know. Today, it
seems, our country is triumphant in producing only things that go boom
in the night: we have a near monopoly on the global weapons market and
on the global movie market, where in the dark we’re experts in
explosions of every sort. When I wrote in 1989 that the process was “so
far gone,” I had no idea how far we still had to go. I had no idea,
for instance, how far a single administration could push us when it came
to war. Still, one thing that does remain reasonably constant about
America’s now perpetual state of war is how little we -- the 99% of us
who don’t belong to the military or fight -- actually see of it, even
though it is, in a sense, all around us.
Warscapes
From a remarkable array of possibilities, here are just a few
warscapes -- think of them as like landscapes, only deadlier -- that
might help make more visible an American world of, and way of, war that
we normally spend little time discussing, questioning, debating, or
doing anything about.
As a start, let me try to conjure up a map of what “defense,” as
imagined by the Pentagon and the U.S. military, actually looks like.
You can find such a map
at Wikipedia, but for a second just imagine a world map laid flat
before you. Now divide it, the whole globe, like so many ill-shaped
pieces of cobbler, into six servings -- you can be as messy as you want,
it’s not an exact science -- and label them the U.S. European Command
or EUCOM (for Europe and Russia), the U.S. Pacific Command or PACOM
(Asia), CENTCOM (the Greater Middle East and a touch of North Africa),
NORTHCOM (North America), SOUTHCOM (South America and most of the
Caribbean), and AFRICOM (almost all of Africa). Those are the “areas of
responsibility” of six U.S. military commands.
In case you hadn’t noticed, on our map that takes care of just about
every inch of the planet, but -- I hasten to add -- not every bit of
imaginable space. For that, if you were a clever cartographer, you
would somehow need to include STRATCOM, the U.S. Strategic Command
charged with, among other things, ensuring that we dominate the heavens,
and the newest of all the “geographic” commands, CYBERCOM, expected to
be fully operational later this fall with “1,000 elite military hackers and spies under one four-star general” prepared to engage in preemptive war in cyberspace.
Some of these commands have crept up on us over the years. CENTCOM,
which now oversees our wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, was formed in 1983,
a result of the Carter Doctrine
-- that is, of President Jimmy Carter’s decision to make the protection
of Persian Gulf oil a military necessity, while both NORTHCOM (2002)
and AFRICOM (2007) were creations of the Global War on Terror.
From a mapping perspective, however, the salient point is simple
enough: at the moment, there is no imaginable space on or off the planet
that is not an “area of responsibility” for the U.S. military. That,
not the protection of our shores and borders, is what is now meant by
that word “defense” in the Department of Defense. And if you were to
stare at that map for a while, I can’t help but think it would come to
strike you as abidingly strange. No place at all of no military
interest to us? What does that say about our country -- and ourselves?
In
case you’re imagining that the map I’ve just described is simply a case
of cartographic hyperbole, consider this: we now have what is, in
essence, a secret military inside the U.S. military. I’m talking about
our Special Operations forces. These elite and largely covert forces
were rapidly expanded in the Bush years as part of the Global War on
Terror, but also thanks to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s urge
to bring covert activities that were once the province of the CIA under
the Pentagon’s wing. By the end of George W. Bush’s second term in
office -- think of that map again -- Special Operations forces were
fighting in, training in, or stationed in approximately 60 countries
under the aegis of the Global War on Terror. Less than two years later,according to the Washington Post,
13,000 Special Operations troops are deployed abroad in approximately
75 countries as part of an expanding Global War on Terror (even if the
Obama administration has ditched that name); in other words, Special Ops
troops alone are now operating in close to 40% of the 192 countries
that make up the United Nations!
And talking about what the Pentagon has taken under its wing, I’m reminded of a low-budget sci-fi film of my childhood, The Blob. In it, a gelatinous alien grows ever more humongous by eating every living thing in its path, with the exception of Steve McQueen in his debut screen role. By analogy, take what’s officially called the “IC” or U.S. Intelligence Community,
that Rumsfeld was so eager to militarize. It’s made up of 17 major
agencies and outfits, including the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence (ODNI). Created in 2004 in response to the intelligence
dysfunction of 9/11, ODNI is already its own small bureaucracy with 1,500 employees
and next to no power to do the only thing it was really ever meant to
do, coordinate the generally dysfunctional labyrinth of the IC itself.
You might wonder what kind of “intelligence” a country could possibly
get from 17 competing, bickering outfits -- and that’s not even the
half of it. According to a Washington Post series, Top Secret America, by Dana Priest and William Arkin:
“In all, at least 263 organizations have been created or reorganized
as a response to 9/11… Some 1,271 government organizations and 1,931
private companies work on programs related to counterterrorism, homeland
security and intelligence in about 10,000 locations across the United
States… In Washington and the surrounding area, 33 building complexes
for top-secret intelligence work are under construction or have been
built since September 2001. Together they occupy the equivalent of
almost three Pentagons or 22 U.S. Capitol buildings -- about 17 million
square feet of space.”
Oh, and keep in mind that more than two-thirds of the IC’s
intelligence programs are controlled by the Pentagon, which also means
control over a major chunk of the combined intelligence budget,
announced at $75 billion (“2 1/2 times the size it was on Sept. 10,
2001,” according to Priest and Arkin), but undoubtedly far larger.
And when it comes to the Pentagon, that’s just a start.
Massive expansion in all directions has been its m.o. since 9/11. Its
soaring budget hit about $700 billion for fiscal year 2010 (when you
include a war-fighting supplemental bill of $33 billion) -- an increase of only 4.7% in otherwise budget-slashing times -- and is now projected
to hit $726 billion in fiscal year 2011. Some experts claim, however,
that the real figure may come closer to the trillion-dollar mark when
all aspects of national security are factored in. Not surprisingly, it
has taken over a spectrum of State Department-controlled civilian activities, ranging from humanitarian relief and
development (aka “nation-building”) to actual diplomacy. And don’t
forget its growing roles as a domestic-disaster manager and a global
arms dealer, or even as a Green Revolution energy innovator.
You could certainly think of the Pentagon as the Blob on the American
horizon, and yet, looking around, you might hardly be aware of the ways
your country continues to be militarized.
With that in mind, let’s consider another warscape, one particularly appropriate to a moment when numerous commentators are pointing out that the U.S. seems to be morphing from a can-do into a can’t-do nation, when the headlines are filled with exploding gas lines and grim reports
on the country’s aging infrastructure, when a major commuter tunnel
from New Jersey to Manhattan, the sort of project that once would have
been tattoo-ably American, has just been canceled by New Jersey’s governor.
Still, don’t imagine that the old can-do American spirit I remember
from my childhood is dead. Quite the contrary, we still have our great
building projects, our pyramid- and ziggurat-equivalents. It’s just
that these days they tend to get built nearer to the ruins of actual
ziggurats and pyramids. I’m talking about our military bases,
especially those being constructed in our war zones.
I
mean, no sooner had U.S. troops taken Baghdad in April 2003 than the
Pentagon and the crony corporations it now can’t go to war without began
to pour billions of taxpayer dollars into the construction of well fortified American towns
in Iraq that included multiple bus routes, PXes, fast-food joints,
massage parlors, Internet cafés, power plants, water-treatment plants,
sewage plants, fire stations, you name it. Hundreds of military bases,
micro to mega, were built in Iraq alone, including the ill-named but ginormous Victory Base Complex
at the edge of Baghdad International Airport, with at least nine
significant sub-bases nestled inside it, and Balad Air Base, which --
sooner than you could say “Saddam Hussein’s in captivity” -- was
handling air traffic on the scale of O'Hare International in Chicago,
and bedding down 40,000 inhabitants including hire-a-gun African cops,
civilian defense employees, Special Ops forces, the employees of private
contractors, and of course tons of troops.
And all of this was nothing compared to the feat the Pentagon
accomplished in Afghanistan where the U.S. military now claims to have
built something like 400 bases of every sort from the smallest combat outposts to monster installations like Bagram Air Base
in a country without normal resources, fuel, building materials, or
much of anything else. Just about all construction materials for those
bases and the fuel to go with them had to be delivered over treacherous
supply lines thousands of miles long, so treacherous and difficult in
fact that, by the time a gallon of fuel reaches Afghanistan to keep
those Humvees and MRAPs rolling along, it’s estimated to cost $400.
At some level, of course, all of this represents a remarkable can-do
achievement and tells you a great deal about American priorities today,
about where our national treasure and can-do efforts are focused.
Ziggurats or Tunnels?
And I could go on. The Pentagon and the military make going on
easy. After all, the list is unending, the militarization of our
American world ongoing, and it’s all happening in your time, on your
watch. This is the world you are going to walk out into. I may be nine
years old in TomDispatch terms, but I’ve been around for 66 years and
this won’t be my world for so long.
So let me ask you: Are you sure that you want the U.S. military to be
concerned with every inch of the planet? Are you sure that you want
your tax dollars to go, above all, into building pyramid-equivalents in
Iraq or Afghanistan instead of tunnels at home, or into fighting a
multigenerational war on terror planet-wide, instead of into putting theunemployed
to work here? If you can’t imagine reducing the American military
mission and “footprint” on this planet significantly, then, of course,
it’s probably best to ignore this talk. But rest assured: you won’t
save our country that way, you’ll destroy it.
A decade ago, when I was born as TomDispatch.com, many of you were
only ten or eleven years old, as were many of our soldiers now in
Afghanistan and Iraq. A decade from now, if the war in Afghanistan (and
increasingly Pakistan)
is still being fought, most of you will be entering your fourth decade
on this planet and you may even have a 10 year-old of your own. A
decade from then, if -- as some top Washington officials insist -- the
global war on terror is “multigenerational,”
that child may be fighting in Pakistan or Yemen or Somalia or some
other military “area of responsibility” somewhere on the planet. A
decade from then…
Of course, whatever skills we may lack when it comes to predicting
the future, all things must end, including the American war state and
our strange state of war. The question is: Can our over-armed global
mission be radically downsized before it downsizes us? It will happen
anyway and it won’t take forever either, not the way things are going,
but it will happen in an easier and less harmful way, if you’re
involved, in whatever fashion you choose, in making it so. Had I had a
birthday cake with candles on it for that ninth birthday of mine and
blown them out, that, I think, would have been my wish.
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. His latest book, The American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s
(Haymarket Books), has recently been published. You can catch him
discussing war American-style and his book in a Timothy MacBain TomCast
video by clicking here. This was originally a talk given to students attending Hofstra University's lecture series, The International Scene.
[Note: If Marty and Margaret Melkonian hadn’t
offered me a double invitation to speak at Hofstra College and the
Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Shelter Rock, this talk would
never have seen the light of day. A bow of appreciation to both of
them! If it weren’t for Juan Cole’s Informed Comment website, Antiwar.com, and Paul Woodward’s The War in Context,
which jostle fiercely in my mind each morning as I try to decide where
to stop first in my online travels, I would be so much poorer in good
information and analysis. So let me add a bow to them as well! In a
world made by war, Noah Shachtman’s Danger Zone blog also shouldn't be missed. It contains all things warlike. And Katherine Tiedemann’s AfPak Daily Brief
is the best ongoing summary of mainstream coverage of our Afghan (and
increasingly Pakistan) War. For any of you interested in learning more
about my childhood in Cold War America -- from G.I. Joe to Star Wars and beyond -- check out the updated edition of my book, The End of Victory Culture.]
Copyright 2010 Tom Engelhardt