You can’t turn on the TV news or pick up a paper these days without
stumbling across the latest political poll and the pros explaining how
to parse it, or some set of commentators, pundits, and reporters placing
their bets on the midterm elections. The media, of course, loves a
political horse race and, as those 2010 midterms grow ever closer, you
can easily feel like you’re not catching the news but visiting an
Off-Track Betting parlor.
Fortified by rounds of new polls and all those talking heads
calibrating and recalibrating prospective winners and losers, seats
“leaning Democratic” and “leaning Republican,” the election season has
essentially become an endless handicapping session. This is how
American politics is now framed -- as a months or years-long serial
election for which November 2nd is a kind of hangover. Then, only weeks
after the results are in, the next set of polls will be out and
election 2012, the Big Show, will be on the agenda with all the regular
handicappers starting to gather at all the usual places.
Doesn’t it strike you as odd, though, that this mania for
handicapping remains so parochially electoral? After all, it could be
applied to so many things, including the state of the world at large as
seen from Washington. So consider this my one-man tip sheet on what you
could think of as the global midterms, focused on prospective winners
and losers, as well as those “on the cusp,” including crucial countries
and key personalities.
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One other update, involving good news for Nick Turse, but
slightly less good news for some of you who recently contributed $75 (or
more) to TomDispatch.com in return for a signed copy of his new book, The Case for Withdrawal from Afghanistan (Verso).
For most of you, your book should already be heading your way, but we
hadn’t expected quite as many contributors as we got and, while we were
making the offer, the first printing sold out! The second printing
should be in this week and, if all goes well, Nick will have copies next
week to send to the rest of you. Please be patient. By the way, the
offer is still open -- just click here --
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get around to it. Again, thanks to all of you. You make TD possible. Tom
Handicapping the Global Midterms:
Winners and Losers
by Tom Engelhardt
Prospective Winners
Osama bin Laden: Who woulda thunk it? More than nine years after 9/11, Osama bin Laden and his number two compadre,
Ayman al-Zawahiri, are believed to be alive, well, and living
comfortably in the Pakistani borderlands with not a cave in sight, according to
the best guesstimate of a “NATO official who has day-to-day
responsibility for the war in Afghanistan.” With the globe’s “sole
superpower” eternally on his trail -- admittedly, the Bush
administration took a few years off from the “hunt” to crash and burn in
Iraq -- he’s a prospective global winner just for staying alive. But
before we close the books on him, he gets extra points for a singular
accomplishment: with modest funds and a few thousand ragtag masked
recruits, swinging on monkey bars
and clambering over obstacles in “camps” in Afghanistan, he managed to
lure the United States into two financially disastrous, inconclusive
wars, one in its eighth year, the other in its tenth. To give credit
where it’s due, he had help from the Bush administration with its dominatrix-like global fantasies. Still, it’s not often that someone can make his dreams your nightmares on such a scale.
The Taliban: Here’s another crew heading toward the winner’s circle after yet another typically fraud-wracked
Afghan parliamentary election conferring even less legitimacy on
President Hamid Karzai’s toothless government in Kabul. Think of the
Taliban as the miracle story of the global backlands, the phoenix of
extreme Islamic fundamentalist movements. After all, in November 2001,
when the Taliban were swept out of Kabul, the movement couldn’t have
been more thoroughly discredited. Afghans were generally sick of their
harsh rule and abusive ways and, if reports can be believed, relieved, even
overjoyed, to be rid of them (whatever Afghans thought about their
country being invaded). But when night fell in perhaps 2005-2006, they
were back, retooled and remarkably effective.
And it’s only gotten worse (or, from the Taliban point of view, better) ever since. Yes, they are now getting pounded by a heightened American bombing campaign, a Special Operations night-raids-and-assassination campaign, and pressure from newly surging U.S. forces in the southern part of the country. Nonetheless, as the Wall Street Journal reported recently,
they are achieving some remarkable successes in northern Afghanistan.
After all, the Taliban had always been considered a Pashtun tribal
movement and while there are Pashtuns in the north, they are a distinct
minority. The Journal nonetheless reports: “[T]he insurgency
is now drawing ethnic Uzbeks, Tajiks, and other minorities previously
seen as unsympathetic to the rebel cause.”
If, more than nine years later, the Taliban -- the Taliban!
-- is attracting groups that theoretically loath it, have few cultural
affinities with it, and long fought or opposed it, then you know that
the American campaign in Afghanistan has hit its nadir. Thanks to us
and our man in Kabul, the Taliban is increasingly the fallback position,
the lesser of two disasters, for Afghan nationalists. This helps
explain why more than $27 billion dollars
in American training funds hasn’t produced an Afghan military or police
force capable of or willing to fight, while Taliban guerrillas, lacking
such aid, fight fiercely anyway.
Iran (in Iraq): Remember that old witticism
of the neocons of the ascendant Bush moment back in 2003: “Everyone
wants to go to Baghdad. Real men want to go to Tehran”? Well, it’s
turned out to be truer than they ever imagined. Just recently, for
instance, Iraqi caretaker prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, went to Tehran
to try to hammer out a deal to keep his position (see Sadr, Muqtada
al-, below). It’s undeniable that Iran, a moderate-sized regional power
the Bush administration expected to crush and instead found itself struggling with
by proxy in Iraq for years, now has a preponderant position of
influence there. Despite so many billions of dollars and American
lives, not to speak of years of covert destabilization campaigns aimed at Iran, Tehran seems to have outmaneuvered Washington in Baghdad (and perhaps in Lebanon as well). Call that an on-going win against the odds.
China: Here’s the bad news when it comes to China -- a weak third quarter dropped the growth rate of its gross domestic product to 9.6%. Yep, you read that right: only 9.6% (down from 10.3% in the second quarter). For comparison, the U.S rate of growth leaped from 1.7% in the second quarter to 2.3%
in the third quarter, with some experts predicting no growth or even
shrinkage by year’s end. Make no mistake, China has its lurking
problems, including an overheating urban real-estate market verging on bubbledom
(which, post-2008, should cause any leadership to shudder) and tens of
millions of peasants left in dismal poverty in the long decades when “to
get rich” was “glorious.” Still, the country has managed to pass Japan for number-two-global-economic-power status, to corner a startling range of future global energy reserves so that its economy can drink deep for decades to come, and to forge a front-running position
in various renewable-energy fields. Its leaders have accomplished all
this thanks to economic muscle, diplomacy, and cash (think: bribes)
without sending its soldiers abroad or fighting a war (or even a
skirmish) overseas. They have even learned how to be thoroughly
belligerent while relying only on economic power. Check out, for
instance, the over-the-top way they crushed Japan in a recent stand-off
over a Chinese trawler captain in Japanese custody, wielding only the threat
to withhold rare earth metals (necessary to various advanced industrial
processes), 95%-97% of which are, at the moment, produced by China.
We’re definitely talking global winner here.
Drone Makers: If America’s wars are eternal field
laboratories for new weaponry, then the grand winners of the latest
round of wars are the drone makers. General Atomics Aeronautical
Systems, the jewel in the crown of Southern California’s drone industry,
now employs 10,000 workers and runs double shifts in, as W.J. Hennigan
of the Los Angeles Times writes,
a “fast-growing business… fueled by Pentagon spending -- at least $20
billion since 2001 -- and billions more chipped in by the CIA and
Congress.” Washington has been plunking down more than $5 billion a
year for its drone purchases, the development of future drone technology, and the carrying out of 24/7 robot assassination campaigns as well as a full-scale Terminator war
in the Pakistani borderlands. These “precision” weapons are capable of
taking out people, including civilians in the vicinity, from thousands of miles away. The drones themselves -- termed
by CIA Director Leon Panetta “the only game in town” when it comes to
stopping al-Qaeda -- turn out to be capable of settling nothing. For
every bad guy they kill, they kill civilians as well, seeding new
enemies in what is essentially a war to create future terrorists. But
that hardly matters. Terminator wars are hot and the drone, as a product, is definitely a global winner. Not only are American companies starting to export
the craft to allies willing to pay in global hotspots, but other
countries are lining up to create drone industries of their own. Expect
the friendly skies to continue to fill.
Muqtada al-Sadr: Here’s a heartwarming winner’s circle story about a highly experienced political operator, still known in the U.S. press as the “anti-American cleric,”
who just couldn’t be kept down. Sadr led an armed Shiite movement of
the poor in Iraq that, in 2004, actively fought U.S. forces to a draw in
the old city of Najaf. He himself was hunted by the U.S. military and,
at one point during the years when Washington ruled in Baghdad,
warrants were even put out for his arrest in a murder case. Still, the
guy survived, as did his movement, armed and then un- (or less) armed.
In 2007, he packed his bags and moved to the safety of neighboring Iran
to “study” and move up in Shia clerical ranks. In the most recent Iraqi
elections, now seven months past, for a parliament that has yet to
meet, his movement won more than 10% of the vote and with that he was
declared a “kingmaker.”
He has always unwaveringly called for a full American withdrawal from
his country. Now, with the potential power to return Nouri al-Maliki
(for whom he has no love) to the prime ministership, he is evidently insisting that Washington retain not a single future base in Iraq -- and the Obama administration is twitching with discomfort.
General Stanley McChrystal: And here’s another heartwarming winner’s circle story. Once upon a time, McChrystal was essentially the U.S. military’s assassin-in-chief.
For five years he commanded the Pentagon's super-secret Joint Special
Operations Command which, among other things, ran what Seymour Hersh
called an "executive assassination wing"
out of Vice President Dick Cheney's office. Then, the general was
appointed Afghan War commander by Barack Obama and, under the worst of
circumstances, tried to implement his boss’s textbook version of
counterinsurgency doctrine (see COIN and Petraeus, General David,
below). He actually cut back
radically on the U.S. air war in Afghanistan in an attempt to kill far
less of the civilians he was supposed to “protect” and have a better
shot at winning “hearts and minds.”
The result: utter frustration. The Taliban grew, Afghans remained
miserably unhappy, and American troops hated his new war-fighting policy
which meant they couldn’t call in air support when they wanted it. He
and his circle of former Special Ops types flew to Paris to greet NATO
allies (for whom, it seems, he had nothing but contempt), drank hard,
and vented their feelings toward the Obama administration, all in the
presence of a Rolling Stone reporter. Next thing you know, the president has canned his war commander, putting him momentarily in the loser’s circle
-- and that was his good fortune. He was shown the door out of
Afghanistan before the going got worse. He is now in the process of
retooling himself via a teaching position at the Jackson Institute for Global Affairs at Yale University as a budding leadership guru and inspirational speaker.
(“Few people can speak about leadership, teamwork, and international
affairs with as much insight as General Stanley McChrystal...”)
If you’re a typical American of a certain age
laid off in today’s bad times, the likelihood of getting a half-decent
job is next to nil (and retraining isn’t going to help much either). On
the other hand, if you begin high enough and, say, the president of the
United States axes you, all’s well with the world.
On the Cusp
General David Petraeus: The Great Surgifier of Baghdad and
the Seer of Kabul is now, it seems, in something of a rush. For one
thing, his fabulous 2006-2008 surge in Iraq turns out to have been for
the benefit of Iran, not Washington (see Iran in Iraq above). In
addition, as members of the Sunni Awakening Movement reportedly peel off
in disillusionment or disgust with the present largely Shiite
government and rejoin the insurgency
in significant numbers, his modest success is threatening to unravel
behind him -- and so is American support for the Afghan War he now
commands, according to the opinion polls.
As a result, according to Washington pundit (and Petraeus-lover) David Ignatius, he’s making a “strategic pivot”
-- a decorous phrase -- in Afghanistan. Give him credit for daring --
or desperation. He may be known as the progenitor of the Army’s present
counterinsurgency strategy, or COIN, the man who dusted off that
failed, long discarded doctrine from the Vietnam era, made it
thrillingly sexy, complete with new manual,
and elevated it to a central position in Army planning for years to
come, but he’s not a man to let consistency stand in his way. Seeing
the need for quick signs of “progress” in Afghanistan (where the war has
been going desperately badly), both for a December Obama administration
policy review and to keep any U.S. troop drawdowns to a minimum in
2011, he has countermanded former war commander McChrystal’s COIN-ish
attempt to radically scale back U.S. air strikes. Instead, he’s loosed the U.S. Air Force on the Taliban, opted to try to pound them with anything available, pushed for escalation in the form of “hot pursuit” across the Pakistani border, upped
Special Operations "capture or kill" raids, and generally left COIN in a
ditch. Think of his new tactics as BKJ for bomb-kill-jaw -- the jawing
being about “peace talks” and aimed at influential sectors of the U.S.
media, among others, part of a rising drumbeat of “progress” propaganda from the general’s headquarters.
Well-connected, savvy, and willing to shift tactics on a moment’s
notice, Petraeus is a figure to contend with in Washington, our most
political general since I don’t know when. Like Israeli Prime Minister
Netanyahu, he may be playing a cagey hand to extend matters through
2012, when a president ready to fight on till hell freezes over could
take office. He’s a man on the cusp, destined for success, but only a
few hops, skips, and jumps ahead of failure.
(By the way, keep an eye on another Bush-era holdover, Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates, if you want to gauge what Washington thinks of the
war’s “progress.” Just a month ago, he was publicly muttering
about retirement early next year. He’s not a man who will want to
preside over disaster in Afghanistan. If he does leave early in 2011,
just assume that the war is headed for the toilet and, having supported
his war commanders in their surge strategy through 2009 and 2010, he’s
getting out while the going is still good and his reputation intact.)
Pakistan: Only recently 20% underwater,
Pakistan is in a protracted military, intelligence, and policy dance
with the U.S., the Afghans, the Taliban, India, and god knows who else
so intricate that only a contortionist could appreciate it. For
Washington, Pakistan is an enigma curled in a conundrum wrapped in a
roti and sprinkled with hot pepper. With the Obama administration
schizophrenically poised between partnership and poison -- policies of “hot pursuit” across the Pakistani border and placation, showering the Pakistani military with yet more weaponry and cutting off
some units from any aid at all -- anything is possible. Armed to the
teeth, clobbered by nature, beset by fundamentalist guerrillas,
surrounded by potential enemies, and unraveling, democratic and ever at
the edge of military rule, Pakistan is the greatest unknown of the
Greater Middle East (even if it is in South Asia). If it’s on the cusp
of hell, then, like it or not, Washington will be, too.
Israel: The question here is straightforward enough: Just
how badly can Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu and his
government treat the Obama administration (and the president himself)
and get away with it? Right now, the answer seems to be, as badly as it
wants. After all, Washington put almost all its global diplomatic
apples in one ill-woven negotiating basket, named it making progress on a
two-state solution to the Israel/Palestine problem, started talks, and
then offered Israel a package of goodies
of a sort that would normally only be given away deep into
negotiations, if at all, for nothing more than a two-month extension of
the Israeli settlement-construction freeze. The result: Israeli
settlers are again building up a storm on the West Bank while the Netanyahu government plays even harder to get. If the Obama administration can’t do better
than this, then at the next TomDispatch handicapping session Israel has
a reasonable shot at being elevated into the winner’s circle. If Obama
and his team ever get tired of being kicked around by Netanyahu &
Co., especially with the U.S. midterms behind them, life could get
tougher for Bibi. The real question is: Can the prime minister play out
this version of the game until 2012 in hopes that Obama will lose out
and a new U.S. president will be ready to give away the store?
Iran (not in Iraq): Nasty government, shaky economy beset by
international sanctions, poor choices and poor planning, irritated
population, enemies with malice aforethought, and an embattled peaceful
nuclear program that could be headed for “breakout” capacity versus
fabulous reserves of oil and natural gas and integration into the great Eurasian energy grid as well as into the energy-eager plans of China, Russia, Pakistan, and India. It’s anybody’s bet.
The Global Economy: I wouldn’t even think about handicapping
this one or guessing what it might be on the cusp of. After all, Asian
economies (minus Japan) are heating up, as are a number of developing
ones like Brazil’s (with capital flowing
to such places in problematic amounts); meanwhile, the American economy
is cold as a tomb, and Europe is teetering at the edge of who knows
what. If this isn’t the definition of a jerry-built
Rube-Goldberg-version of a global system, what is? Put your money down
if you want, but you’ll get no odds here.
Prospective Losers
Counterinsurgency Doctrine or COIN: It was Petraeus’s baby and later the belle of the military ball as well as the talk of the militarized intelligentsia at every Washington think-tank that mattered. It took the U.S. Army by storm and, when it comes to laying out the latest plans
for the U.S. Army’s future fighting doctrine, it’s still
counterinsurgency all the way to the horizon (and 2028). But how long
does any fad last? Who remembers hula hoops, bell bottoms, or the
Whiskey a Go Go? In the same way, in Afghanistan, COIN, the military
doctrine of “protecting the people” in order to win “hearts and minds,”
just lost out to smashing the enemy -- and whoever else happens to be
around (see Petraeus, General David, above). Okay, COIN is still there,
and you’ll hear the carnies in and out of the war-making tent talking a
great COIN game for some time to come, but that was the case in
Vietnam, too, even after B-52s were carpet-bombing the South Vietnamese
countryside and CIA-sponsored teams were roaming the provinces murdering
locals by the score. Hearts and minds? COIN’s a loser, and even
General Petraeus now seems to know it (though he’ll never admit it).
Great Britain: The British lion just got a haircut and -- who could be surprised -- most of the hair that got cut was shorn from women and children, always first to disembark from the HMS Economy.
One other casualty of government slashing, however, is the British
defense establishment, suffering an 8% budget cut over the next four
years -- which means losing lots of jets, 17,000 bodies, and even the
fleet’s flagship aircraft carrier, which will be “decommissioned,”
leaving the British unable to launch a plane at sea until at least
2019. As the Washington Post politely put the matter:
“[T]he [government’s] moves amount to a tactical scaling down of
military ambition by the one European ally consistently willing to back
the United States with firepower in international conflicts.” Put more
bluntly, as the British in their imperial days used native recruits to
help police their colonies and fight their wars, so in recent years, the
Brits have been America’s Gurkhas.
No longer, however, will Britain be, militarily speaking, the mouse
that roared. Despite pathetic pledges to remain at the American side in
Afghanistan forever and a day, the sun is now setting
on the British military, which means that the U.S. has lost its key
sidekick in any future “coalition of the willing.” (Note for the
Pentagon: Carpe diem. The Brits are the canary in the mine on this. Sooner or later, it will be your turn, too. By then, of course, women and children in the U.S. will already be well shorn.)
Iraqis, Afghans, and Americans: We’re talking peoples here. Afghans and Iraqis have spent these last years, if not decades, in hell. Lives ripped apart and destroyed, exiles created in vast numbers,
basic services debilitated. The numbers of dead and wounded, while
contested, are vast enough to stagger the imagination. Just the other
day, thanks to the Wikileaks Iraq document dump, Iraq Body Count
was able to identify approximately 15,000 previously unknown Iraqi
civilian deaths between 2004 and 2009. As that organization’s John
Sloboda commented,
the new cache of 400,000 U.S. military documents from 2004-2009 shows
"the relentless grind of daily killings in almost every town or village
in every province." The Iraqis, like the Afghans, deserved better and
yet, when it comes to misery and death, there’s still no end in sight.
Both peoples were supposedly “liberated” by American invasions. Both
are the true losers of the last decade and the saddest of stories,
planetarily speaking. And let’s not forget the American people either,
pounded in their own way. Just imagine what kind of winners they might
have been if, instead of building vast, useless base complexes
in Iraq and Afghanistan (and elsewhere across the Greater Middle East)
and fighting trillion-dollar wars, the U.S. had chosen to build almost
anything at home. But why go down that road? It’s such a sorry what-if
journey to nowhere (see Economy, the American, below).
Barack Obama & Company: He had the numbers (in the polls
and in Congress) and the popularity in early 2009. He could have done
almost anything. But first, in the key areas of foreign
and economic policy, he surrounded himself with the old crew, the
deadest of heads, and the stalest Washington thinking around. While
this was presented as an Ivy League fest
of the best and the brightest, so far their track record shows them to
be politically dumb and dumber. They missed out on jobs (about as
simple and basic as you can get), and took a dismal year of review to double down twice
on a war from hell. Now, the president stands a reasonable chance in
2012 of turning over to a new (possibly far more dismal) administration
an even more disastrous Afghan War, an unfinished Iraq crisis, a
Guantanamo still unclosed, “don’t ask, don’t tell” still in place (who
says the coming Congress will care to do Obama’s bidding on this one,
now that he’s bypassed the courts), and a jobless nonrecovery or worse -- and that’s just to start down the path of DisObamapointment.
The American Economy: Don’t even get me started. Just kiss this one goodbye for a while.
Check back in a month. With the global (and American) midterms over
and the Big Show of 2012 ahead, rest assured that our hardy gang of
pollsters and pundits will soon be gearing up again. You can sort
through the odds and place your next set of bets in late November.
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. His latest book is The American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s (Haymarket Books). You can catch him discussing war American-style and that book in a Timothy MacBain TomCast video by clicking here.
Copyright 2010 Tom Engelhardt