Washington’s 30-Year High
by Tom Engelhardt
If, as 2011 begins, you want to peer into the future, enter my time
machine, strap yourself in, and head for the past, that laboratory for
all developments of our moment and beyond.
Just as 2010 ended, the American military’s urge to surge resurfaced
in a significant way. It seems that “leaders” in the Obama
administration and “senior American military commanders” in Afghanistan
were acting as a veritable WikiLeaks machine. They slipped information to New York Times reporters
Mark Mazzetti and Dexter Filkins about secret planning to increase
pressure in the Pakistani tribal borderlands, possibly on the tinderbox province of Baluchistan,
and undoubtedly on the Pakistani government and military via
cross-border raids by U.S. Special Operations forces in the new year.
In the front-page story those two reporters produced, you could practically slice with a dull knife American military frustration over a war going terribly wrong,
over an enemy (shades of Vietnam!) with “sanctuaries” for rest,
recuperation, and rearming just over an ill-marked, half-existent
border. You could practically taste the chagrin of the military that
their war against... well you name it: terrorists, guerrillas, former Islamic fundamentalist allies,
Afghan and Pakistani nationalists, and god knows who else... wasn’t
proceeding exactly swimmingly. You could practically reach out and be
seared by their anger at the Pakistanis for continuing to take American bucks by the billions while playing their own game, rather than an American one, in the region.
If you were of a certain age, you could practically feel (shades of
Vietnam again!) that eerily hopeful sense that the next step in
spreading the war, the next escalation, could be the decisive one.
Admittedly, these days no one talks (as they did in the Vietnam and
Iraq years)
about turning “corners” or reaching “tipping points,” but you can
practically hear those phrases anyway, or at least the mingled hope and
desperation that always lurked behind them.
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The Urge to Surge:
Washington’s 30-Year High
by Tom Engelhardt
Take this sentence, for instance: “Even with the risks,
military commanders say that using American Special Operations troops
could bring an intelligence windfall, if militants were captured,
brought back across the border into Afghanistan and interrogated.” Can’t
you catch the familiar conviction that, when things are going badly,
the answer is never “less,” always “more,” that just another decisive
step or two and you’ll be around that fateful corner?
In this single New York Times piece (and other hints
about cross-border operations), you can sense just how addictive war is
for the war planners. Once you begin down the path of invasion and
occupation, turning back is as difficult as an addict going cold
turkey. With all the sober talk about year-end reviews
in Afghanistan, about planning and “progress” (a word used nine times
in the relatively brief, vetted “overview” of that review recently released
by the White House), about future dates for drawdowns and present
tactics, it’s easy to forget that war is a drug. When you’re high on
it, your decisions undoubtedly look as rational, even practical, as the
public language you tend to use to describe them. But don’t believe it
for a second.
Once you’ve shot up this drug, your thinking is impaired. Through
its dream-haze, unpleasant history becomes bunk; what others couldn’t
do, you fantasize that you can. Forget the fact that crossing similar
borders to get similar information and wipe out similar sanctuaries in
Cambodia and Laos in the Vietnam War years led to catastrophe for
American planners and the peoples of the region. It only widened that
war into what in Cambodia would become auto-genocide.
Forget the fact that, no matter whom American raiders might capture,
they have no hope of capturing the feeling of nationalism (or the tribal
equivalent) that, in the face of foreign invaders or a foreign
occupation, keeps the under-armed resilient against the mightiest of forces.
Think of the American urge to surge as a manifestation of the war
drug’s effect in the world. In what the Bush administration used to call
“the Greater Middle East,” Washington is now in its third and grimmest
surge iteration. The first took place in the 1980s during the Reagan
administration’s anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan and proved
the highest of highs; the second got rolling as the last century was
ending and culminated in the first years of the twenty-first century
amid what can only be described as delusions of grandeur, or even
imperial megalomania. It focused on a global Pax Americana and
the wars that extend it into the distant future. The third started in
2006 in Iraq and is still playing itself out in Afghanistan as 2011
commences.
In Central and South Asia, we could now be heading for the end of the
age of American surges, which in practical terms have manifested
themselves as the urge to destabilize. Geopolitically, little could be
uglier or riskier on our planet at the moment than destabilizing
Pakistan -- or the United States. Three decades after the American urge
to surge in Afghanistan helped destabilize one imperial superpower, the
Soviet Union, the present plans, whatever they may turn out to be,
could belatedly destabilize the other superpower of the Cold War era.
And what our preeminent group of surgers welcomed as an “unprecedented
strategic opportunity” as this century dawned may, in its later stages,
be seen as an unprecedented act of strategic desperation.
That, of course, is what drugs, taken over decades, do to you: they
give you delusions of grandeur and then leave you on the street, strung
out, and without much to call your own. Perhaps it’s fitting that
Afghanistan, the country we helped turn into the planet’s leading narco-state, has given us a 30-year high from hell.
So, as the New Year begins, strap yourself into that time machine and
travel with me back into the 1980s, so that we can peer into a future
we know and see the pattern that lies both behind and ahead of us.
Getting High in Afghanistan
As 2011 begins, what could be eerier than reading secret Soviet documents
from the USSR's Afghan debacle of the 1980s? It gives you chills to
run across Communist Party General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev at a
Politburo meeting in October 1985, almost six years after Soviet troops
first flooded into Afghanistan, reading letters aloud to his colleagues
from embittered Soviet citizens (“The Politburo had made a mistake and
must correct it as soon as possible -- every day precious lives are
lost.”); or, in November 1986, insisting to those same colleagues that
the Afghan war must be ended in a year, “at maximum, two.” Yet,
with the gut-wrenching sureness history offers, you can’t help but know
that, even two years later, even with a strong desire to leave (which
has yet to surface among the Washington elite a decade into our own
Afghan adventure), imperial pride and fear of loss of “credibility”
would keep the Soviets fighting on to 1989.
Or what about Marshal Sergei Akhromeev offering that same Politburo
meeting an assessment that any honest American military commander might offer a quarter century later about our own Afghan adventure:
“There is no single piece of land in this country that has not been
occupied by a Soviet soldier. Nevertheless, the majority of the
territory remains in the hands of the rebels.” Or General Boris Gromov,
the last commander of the Soviet 40th Army in Afghanistan, boasting “on
his last day in the country that ‘[n]o Soviet garrison or major outpost
was ever overrun.’”
Or Andrei Gromyko, Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet,
emphasizing in 1986 the strategic pleasure of their not-so-secret foe,
that other great imperial power of the moment: “Concerning the
Americans, they are not interested in the settlement of the situation in
Afghanistan. On the contrary, it is to their advantage for the war to
drag out.” (The same might today be said of a far less impressive foe,
al-Qaeda.)
Or
in 1988, with the war still dragging on, to read a “closed” letter the
Communist Party distributed to its members explaining how the Afghan
fiasco happened (again, the sort of thing that any honest American
leader could say of our Afghan war): “In addition, [we] completely
disregarded the most important national and historical factors, above
all the fact that the appearance of armed foreigners in Afghanistan was
always met with arms in the hands [of the population]... One should not
disregard the economic factor either. If the enemy in Afghanistan
received weapons and ammunition for hundreds of millions and later even
billions of dollars, the Soviet-Afghan side also had to shoulder
adequate expenditures. The war in Afghanistan costs us 5 billion rubles
a year.”
Or finally the pathetic letter the Soviet Military Command delivered
to the head of the UN mission in Afghanistan on February 14, 1989,
arguing (just as the American military high command would do of our war
effort) that it was “not only unfair but even absurd to draw...
parallels” between the Soviet Afghan disaster and the American war in
Vietnam. That was, of course, the day the last of 100,000 Soviet
soldiers -- just about the number of
American soldiers there today -- left Afghan soil heading home to a
sclerotic country bled dry by war, its infrastructure aging, its economy
crumbling. Riddled by drugs and thoroughly demoralized, the Red Army
limped home to a society riddled by drugs and thoroughly demoralized led
by a Communist Party significantly delegitimized by its disastrous
Afghan adventure, its Islamic territories from Chechnya to Central Asia
in increasing turmoil. In November of that same year, the Berlin Wall
would be torn down and not long after the Soviet Union would disappear
from the face of the Earth.
Reading those documents, you can almost imagine CIA director William Webster and “his euphoric ‘Afghan Team’” toasting the success
of the Agency's 10-year effort, its largest paramilitary operation
since the Vietnam War. The Reagan administration surge in Pakistan and
Afghanistan had been profligate, involving billions of dollars and a
massive propaganda campaign, as well as alliances with the Saudis and a
Pakistani dictator and his intelligence service to fund and arm the most
extreme of the anti-Soviet jihadists of that moment -- “freedom fighters” as they were then commonly called in Washington.
It’s easy to imagine the triumphalist mood of celebration in
Washington among those who had intended to give the Soviet Union a full
blast of the Vietnam effect. They had used the “war” part of the Cold
War to purposely bleed the less powerful, less wealthy of the two
superpowers dry. As President Reagan would later write in his memoirs:
“The great dynamic of capitalism had given us a powerful weapon in our
battle against Communism -- money. The Russians could never win the
arms race; we could outspend them forever.”
By 1990, the urge to surge seemed a success beyond imagining. Forget
that it had left more than a million Afghans dead (and more dying),
that one-third of that impoverished country’s population had been turned
into refugees, or that the most extreme of jihadists,
including a group that called itself al-Qaeda, had been brought
together, funded, and empowered through the Afghan War. More important,
the urge to surge in the region was now in the American bloodstream.
And who could ever imagine that, in a new century, “our” freedom
fighters would become our sworn enemies, or that the Afghans, that
backward people in a poor land, could ever be the sort of impediment to
American power that they had been to the Soviets?
The Cold War was over. The surge had it. We were supreme. And what better high could there be than that?
Fever Dreams of Military Might
Of course, with the Soviet Union gone, there was no military on the
planet that could come close to challenging the American one, nor was
there a nascent rival great power on the horizon. Still, a question
remained: After centuries of great power rivalry, what did it mean to
have a “sole superpower” on planet Earth, and what path should that
triumphant power head down? It took a few years, including passing talk
about a possible “peace dividend” -- that is, the investment of monies
that would have gone into the Cold War, the Pentagon, and the military
in infrastructural and other domestic projects -- for this question to
be settled, but settled it was, definitively, on September 12, 2001.
And for all the unknown paths that might have been taken in this
unique situation, the one chosen was familiar. It was, of course, the very one
that had helped lead the Soviet Union to implosion, the investment of
national treasure in military power above all else. However, to those
high on the urge to surge and now eager to surge globally, when it came
to an American future, the fate of the Soviet Union seemed no more
relevant than what the Afghans had done to the Red Army. In those glory
years, analogies between the greatest power the planet had ever seen
and a defeated foe seemed absurd to those who believed themselves the
smartest, clearest-headed guys in the room.
Previously, the “arms race,” like any race, had involved at least
two, and sometimes more, great powers. Now, it seemed, there would be
something new under the sun, an arms race of one, as the U.S. prepared
itself for utter dominance into a distant, highly militarized future.
The military-industrial complex would, in these years, be further
embedded in the warp and woof of American life; the military expanded
and privatized (which meant being firmly embraced by crony corporations and hire-a-gun outfits
of every sort); and the American “global presence” -- from military
bases to aircraft-carrier task forces -- enhanced until, however
briefly, the United States became a military presence unique in the
annals of history.
Thanks to the destructive acts of 19 jihadis, the urge to
surge would with finality overwhelm all other urges in the fall of 2001
-- and there would be a group ready for just such a moment, for (as the
newspaper headlines screamed) a “Pearl Harbor of the twenty-first century.”
To take full stock of that group, however, we would first have to
pilot our time machine back to June 3, 1997, the day a confident crew of
Washington think-tank, academic, and political types calling themselves
the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) posted a fin de siècle “statement of principles.”
In it, they called for “a military that is strong and ready to meet
both present and future challenges; a foreign policy that boldly and
purposefully promotes American principles abroad; and national
leadership that accepts the United States' global responsibilities.”
Crucially, they were demanding that the Clinton administration, or
assumedly some future administration with a better sense of American
priorities, “increase defense spending significantly.”
The 23 men and two women who signed the initial PNAC statement urging
the United States to go for the military option in the twenty-first
century would, however, prove something more than your typical crew of
think-tank types. After all, not so many years later, after a disputed
presidential election settled by the Supreme Court, Dick Cheney would be
vice president; I. Lewis (“Scooter”) Libby would be his right-hand man;
Donald Rumsfeld would be Secretary of Defense, Paul Wolfowitz, Deputy
Secretary of Defense; Zalmay Khalilzad, head of the Bush-Cheney
transition team at the Department of Defense and then the first post-
invasion U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, as well as ambassador to Iraq
and UN ambassador; Elliot Abrams, special assistant to the president
with a post on the National Security Council; Paula Dobriansky, Under
Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs; Aaron Friedberg,
Deputy Assistant for National Security Affairs and Director of Policy
Planning in the office of the vice president; and Jeb Bush, governor of
Florida. (Others like John Bolton, who signed on to PNAC later, would
be no less well employed.)
This may, in fact, be the first example in history of a think tank
coming to power and actually putting its blue-sky suggestions into
operation as government policy, or perhaps it’s the only example so far
of a government-in-waiting masquerading as an online think tank. In
either case, more than 13 years later, the success of that group can
still take your breath away, as can both the narrowness -- and scope --
of their thinking, and of their seminal document, “Rebuilding America’s Defenses,” published in September 2000, two months before George W. Bush took the presidency.
This crew of surgers extraordinaires was considering a
global situation that, as they saw it, offered Americans an
“unprecedented strategic opportunity.” Facing a new century, their
ambitions were caught by James Peck in his startling upcoming book, Ideal Illusions: How the U.S. Government Co-opted Human Rights, in this way: “In the [Reagan] era, Washington organized half the planet; in the [Bush era] it sought to organize the whole."
“Rebuilding America’s Defenses,” if remembered at all today, is
recalled mainly for a throwaway sentence that looked ominous indeed in
retrospect: “Further, the process of transformation [of the military],
even if it brings revolutionary change, is likely to be a long one,
absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event -- like a new Pearl
Harbor.” It remains, however, a remarkable document
for other reasons. In many ways canny about the direction war would
take in the near future, ranging from the role of drones in air war to
the onrushing possibility that cyberwar (or “Net-War,” as they called
it) would be the style of future conflict, it was a clarion call to
ensure this country’s “unchallenged supremacy” into the distant future
by military means alone.
In 1983, in an address
to the National Association of Evangelicals, President Ronald Reagan
famously called the Soviet Union an “evil empire.” It wanted, as he saw
it, what all dark empires (and every evildoer in any James Bond film)
desires: unchallenged dominion over the planet -- and it pursued that
dominion in the name of a glorious “world revolution.” Now, in the name
of American safety and the glories of global democracy, we were -- so
the PNAC people both pleaded and demanded -- to do what only evil
empires did and achieve global dominion beyond compare over planet
Earth.
We could, they insisted in a phrase they liked, enforce an American peace, a Pax Americana,
for decades to come, if only we poured our resources, untold billions
-- they refused to estimate what the real price might be -- into war
preparations and, if necessary, war itself, from the seven seas to the
heavens, from manifold new “forward operating bases on land” to space
and cyberspace. Pushing “the American security perimeter” ever farther
into the distant reaches of the planet (and “patrolling” it via
“constabulary missions”) was, they claimed, the only way that “U.S.
military supremacy” could be translated into “American geopolitical
preeminence.” It was also the only that the “homeland” -- yes, unlike
99.9% of Americans before 9/11, they were already using that term --
could be effectively “defended.”
In making their pitch, they were perfectly willing to acknowledge
that the United States was already a military giant among midgets, but
they were also eager to suggest as well that our military situation was
“deteriorating” fast, that we were “increasingly ill-prepared” or even
(gasp!) in “retreat” on a planet without obvious enemies. They couldn’t
have thought more globally. (They were, after all, visionaries, as
druggies tend to be.) Nor could they have thought longer term. (They
were twenty-first century mavens.) And on military matters, they
couldn’t have been more up to date.
Yet on the most crucial issues, they -- and so their documents -- couldn’t have been dumber or more misguided. They were fundamentalists
when it came to the use of force and idolaters on the subject of the
U.S. military. They believed it capable of doing just about anything.
As a result, they made a massive miscalculation, mistaking military
destructiveness for global power. Nor could they have been less
interested in the sinews of global economic power (though they did
imagine our future enemy to be China). Nor were they capable of
imagining that the greatest military power on the planet might be
stopped in its tracks -- in the Greater Middle East, no less -- by a
ragtag crew of Iraqis and Afghans. To read “Rebuilding America’s
Defenses” today is to see the rabbit hole down which, as if in a fever
dream, we would soon disappear.
It was a genuine American tragedy that they came to power and
proceeded to put their military-first policies in place; that, on
September 12th of the year that “changed everything,” the PNAC people
seized the reins of defense and foreign policy, mobilized for war, began
channeling American treasure into the military solution they had long
desired, and surged. Oh, how they surged!
That urge to surge was infamously caught in notes
on Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s comments taken on September
11, 2001. "[B]arely five hours after American Airlines Flight 77 plowed
into the Pentagon... Rumsfeld was telling his aides to come up with
plans for striking Iraq," even though he was already certain that
al-Qaeda had launched the attack. ("'Go massive,' the notes quote him as
saying. 'Sweep it all up. Things related and not.'")
And so they did. They swept up everything and then watched as their
dreams and geopolitical calculations were themselves swept into the
dustbin of history. And yet the urge to surge, twisted and ever more
desperate, did not abate.
The Soviet Path
To one degree or another, we have been on the Soviet path for years
and yet, ever more desperately, we continue to plan more surges. Our
military, like the Soviet one, has not lost a battle and has occupied
whatever ground it chose to take. Yet, in the process, it has won less
than nothing at all. Our country, still far more wealthy than the
Soviet Union ever was, has nonetheless entered its Soviet phase. At
home, in the increasing emphasis on surveillance of every sort, there is even a hint of what made “soviet” and “totalitarian” synonymous.
The U.S. economy looks increasingly sclerotic; moneys for an aging and rotting infrastructure are long gone; state and city governments are laying off teachers, police, even firefighters; Americans are unemployed in near record numbers; global oil prices (for a country that has in no way begun to wean itself from its dependence on foreign oil) are ominously on the rise; and yet taxpayer money continues to pour
into the military and into our foreign wars. It has recently been
estimated, for instance, that after spending $11.6 billion in 2011 on
the training, supply, and support of the Afghan army and police, the
U.S. will continue to spend an average of $6.2 billion a year at least through 2015 (and undoubtedly into an unknown future) -- and that’s but one expense in the estimated $120 billion to $160 billion a year being spent at present on the Afghan War, what can only be described as part of America’s war stimulus package abroad.
And, of course, the talk for 2011 is how to expand the American ground war -- the air version of the same has already been on a sharp escalatory trajectory -- in Pakistan. History and common sense assure us that this can only lead to further disaster.
Clear-eyed leaders, military or civilian, would never consider such
plans. But Washington’s 30-year high in the region, that urge to surge
still coursing through its veins, says otherwise, and it’s not likely to
be denied.
Sooner than later, Washington, the Pentagon, and the U.S. military
will have to enter rehab. They desperately need a 12-step program for
recovery. Until then, the delusions and the madness that go with surge
addiction are not likely to end.
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.
[Note on sources: The National Security Archive,
filled to bursting with documents from our imperial and Cold War past,
is an online treasure. I have relied on it for both the Soviet documents quoted on the Afghan war of the 1980s and an analysis of the American version of that war. For those who are interested in reading PNAC’s “Rebuilding America’s Defenses,” click here and then on the link to the pdf file of the document.]
Copyright 2011 Tom Engelhardt