Siamese Twins Sharing the Same Brain: How the Military and the Civilian Are Blurring in Washington
I have a fairy tale for you. Once upon a time, a representative
democracy was established with a constitution that distilled the wisdom
of the ages. Its foundational principles included civilian control of
the military and a system of checks and balances that encouraged
vigorous public debate as a basis for effective policy-making.
In this fabled land, the role of civilian leaders was, in part, to
serve as a check on military ambition and endless wars. They were to
prove cautious, too, in committing their citizen-soldiers to battle, and
when they did, they would issue Congressional declarations of war so
that everyone could grasp the nature of the national emergency at hand
and the necessity of military action. In waging war, they would rely on
shared sacrifice and even raise taxes. When necessary, it was their
job to rein in or even remove military leaders who acted like Caesar
(read: General Douglas MacArthur) rather than Cincinnatus (read: General George Washington).
Yes, you’ve guessed it: it’s not a fairy tale, or at least not
completely. It’s the United States -- an older America that, despite a
decidedly checkered and often imperial past, was nevertheless proud of
its reluctance to fight, but steadfast in its commitment to win once it
decided that battle was the course of action. Even then, this America
remained resolute in its reluctance to embrace a military ethos or bow
down before military gods, committed as it was to civilian primacy and
the avoidance of a large standing army.
Tomgram: William Astore, American Militarism Is Not A Fairy Tale
President Obama recently reshuffled his top Washington
warriors, sending CIA Director Leon Panetta, a man who knows Congress
well, on to the Pentagon to replace retiring Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates. In turn, the president is bringing in General David
Petraeus, present Afghan War Commander, former Centcom commander, and
former Iraq War commander (as well as “Bush’s general”), to run the Agency.
Whatever the local politics involved, and the Petraeus appointment ensures that the potentially popular general will be on the political sidelines for campaign year 2012, these moves catch the zeitgeist of our Washington moment. Since the bin Laden assassination, in which U.S. military special operations forces “commanded” by Panetta took out the al-Qaeda leader, a new face of American war,
“where sovereignty is irrelevant, armies tangential, and decisions are
secret,” has been emerging according to Foreign Policy in Focus
analyst Conn Hallinan.
With the latest news (revealed last week by the New York Times)
that the U.S. has launched a significant “intensification” of its
secret air campaign against Yemeni tribesmen believed to be connected
with al-Qaeda, the U.S. is now involved in no less than six wars. Count
‘em, if you don’t believe me: Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen,
Libya, and what used to be called the Global War on Terror.
In anyone’s book, that certainly qualifies as a working definition of
“endless” war, but that doesn’t mean endlessly the same kind of war.
Let’s look at this, war by war:
Iraq: Now largely the dregs of a counterinsurgency
operation, this war will not end in 2011. At his confirmation
hearings, for instance, Panetta cited
the existence of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a reason for U.S. troops to remain
beyond an agreed-upon year-end withdrawal date. Should those troops
actually leave, however, the war will still go on, even if in quite a
different form. A gargantuan, increasingly militarized State Department “mission” in that country, complete with its own “army” and “air force” of perhaps 5,100 mercenaries, will evidently keep the faith.
Afghanistan: This remains a full-scale U.S. Army-run counterinsurgency war, backed by a major special operations/CIA counterterror war.
Pakistan: A full-scale CIA-run drone war in the Pakistani borderlands is actually expanding.
In the post-9/11 era, this has been the first of Washington’s “covert”
or "shadow" wars (which no longer means “secret” -- it’s all over the
news almost daily -- but something closer to “off the books,” as in
beyond the reach of any form of significant popular or congressional
oversight or accountability). Panetta is calling for
more emphasis on such off-the-books wars in which U.S. military
operatives might, as in the bin Laden operation, temporarily find
themselves under the command of the CIA.
Libya: Officially a NATO air war, this one is nonetheless
partially run by the Pentagon with targeting assistance from various
U.S. intelligence agencies. It involves both direct U.S. air strikes
and support for strikes by various NATO and Arab allies fronting the
operation. It is also, for Americans, a “war” in name only since,
except in the case of engine malfunction, there is essentially no way
the Libyans can harm a U.S. pilot. It is also an example of another
air war that, while destructive, has proven itself incapable of
fulfilling its stated aims. Months later, Gaddafi remains alive and
more or less in power, while NATO flags.
Yemen: Another of those “covert” air wars, being run, according to the Times,
by the Pentagon’s Joint Special Operations Command, closely
coordinated with the CIA out of a secret office in the Yemeni capital.
The Global War on Terror: While the Obama administration officially discarded the Bush-era name, it expanded the war and the forces meant to fight it in places like Somalia. U.S. special operations forces now pursue war-on-terror tasks in at least 75 countries and who knows how many CIA and other intelligence agents are involved as well.
Think of all this as a kind of mix-and-match version of war that
increasingly integrates civilian branches of the government like the
State Department, an ever more warlike CIA (once known as
“the president’s private army”), the regular Army, Marines, and Air
Force, ever-growing drone air power (split between an officially
civilian intelligence agency and the military), and a secret combined
military force of perhaps 20,000 special operatives.
With the face of American war changing in striking ways and at least
six wars, none going particularly well, on or off the books, no one
should be surprised if, as retired Air Force lieutenant colonel and TomDispatch regular William Astore makes clear, Washington as a war capital increasingly looks like a new kind of town. Tom
Siamese Twins Sharing the Same Brain:
How the Military and the Civilian Are Blurring in Washington
by William J. Astore
Paradoxically, the last vestiges of this America could still be seen
some 50 years ago under President Dwight D. Eisenhower, himself a
retired five-star general, who tried with varying degrees of success to
limit defense spending, and who famously warned in his farewell address in 1961 of the dangers of a surging “military-industrial complex.”
And leaping forward almost four decades, here’s another paradox for
you: prior to September 11, 2001, what many leading pundits and
commentators fretted most about was an alleged widening gap between
American civilians and their now all-volunteer military. In 1997, Wall Street Journal Pentagon correspondent Tom Ricks typically worried
about an all-volunteer military that saw civilians as privileged and
flabby, increasingly considered itself a breed apart, and held the
public it served in contempt.
Concerned as well was Richard Kohn, former chief historian of the
U.S. Air Force. In a special lecture to Air Force Academy cadets in
1999 on “the erosion of civilian control of the military in the United
States today,” Kohn worried about a military that openly disrespected
President Bill Clinton, its commander-in-chief, even as it meddled in
areas like policy-making for which it was not suited and from which it
had been excluded by the Constitution.
How
times have changed. In the post-9/11 world, a far more insidious
problem confronts us. That gap, if it ever existed, is no more.
Instead, at the highest levels, what’s civilian and what’s military are
increasingly difficult to tell apart as the two spheres blur and blend.
Today, civilian control of the military is largely a principle without a
meaning, while inside Washington’s Beltway, even with a scorecard it’s
hard to tell the players apart.
In the process, the military has gained a kind of unspoken and
distinctly un-American primacy. Put another way, after a decade-long
budgetary feeding frenzy, the Pentagon has soared, while an eclipsed Department of State, all those civilian diplomats, has been left to eke out a living on budgetary scraps or, as in Iraq today, arm and militarize itself. State, in other words, has become a remora clinging to the predatory shark that is the Department of Defense.
Large and small, symbolic or otherwise, signs of this civil-military
blending (with the military significantly running the show) can be found
almost anywhere you look. Civilian presidents regularly appear in
military flight gear or jackets, as George W. Bush famously did before his “Mission Accomplished” speech on the deck of the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln in 2003 and as President Obama did
on a visit to U.S. troops in Afghanistan in 2010. Military leaders are
now regularly put in charge of previously civilian intelligence
agencies, as in the case of General David Petraeus, now nominated to leave the Afghan battlefield and become director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
Civilian agencies now militarize themselves and wage war (as the CIA has done or is doing in various drone wars in the Greater Middle East, often in conjunction with the military). America’s part-time citizen-soldiers have morphed into full-time warriors and warfighters, if not the equivalent of foreign legionnaires. America’s civilian embassies continue to morph into so many militarized fortresses protected by armed mercenaries.
And above all, among policy arguments in Washington, whether you’re a
civilian official or a military one, the choices are increasingly
between militarized alternatives -- say, counterinsurgency versus
counterterror -- with that most civilian of all options, peace, not even
on that “table” where officials eternally claim that all options are
placed.
At the same time, a new civic religion at whose heart is
military-worship implores us to “support our troops” (without any
concomitant call to uphold our laws and our Constitution). And even as ordinary Americans express serious doubts about the wisdom and cost
of an open-ended commitment to Afghanistan -- 64% of Americans don’t
believe the Afghan war is worth fighting, and 73% would prefer sizable
withdrawals of U.S. troops this summer, according to a recent Washington Post/ABC News poll -- the Pentagon continues to prepare for a future of “two, three, many Afghanistans,” as Michael Klare, defense correspondent for the Nation magazine, noted in April 2010.
Clearly, if we’re not careful, the civilian and military will become
the Washington equivalent of Siamese twins, co-joined at the head and,
however bitter their internecine arguments, sharing the same underlying
militarized thought processes.
Militarism Run Rampant
To separate such twins is a dicey thing, medically speaking, and no
less so politically when the lines between civilian and military
authority are being so rapidly erased. Make no mistake, as President
Obama is wont to say, the impact of this erasure has been devastating.
It’s both sensible and logical to argue that our president and
elected representatives must serve as a check on the military
establishment, rather than issuing blank checks to them. It’s both
sensible and logical to argue that all wars, as required by the
Constitution, must have a Congressional declaration before American
troops and treasure are committed. It’s both sensible and logical to
argue that, as good as our military is, it ultimately can’t win someone
else’s civil war (Iraq) or nation-build in a place where the concept of
“nation” is little more than notional (Afghanistan).
Sensible and logical, yes, but such arguments have been made -- and
roundly ignored. They aren’t given the time of day among serious policy
types in Washington, where to question the efficacy and legitimacy of
the forces and tactics being used is simply not acceptable. Sharing one
brain and one ethos means being incapable of grasping one’s own
militarized rigidity or truly recognizing the perils that have been
unleashed on this nation.
There’s a word for this disease, even if after all these years it remains remarkably foreign to American ears: militarism.
When Americans think of that word, they tend to conjure up images of
fanatical jackbooted Nazis or suicidal Japanese kamikazes, and so the
concept seems eminently dismissible. But militarism also describes a
situation in which a country’s civil society and political culture are
permeated to the point of dominance by military attitudes and values --
an undeniable fact of life, I would argue, in America today.
Militarists see war as productive, as offering solutions rather than posing problems. They see it as heroic. (President Bush famously waxed poetic
about the “exciting” and “romantic” nature of fighting in
Afghanistan.) When wars are romanticized as action-packed tests of a
nation’s warriors, cuts to war spending are naturally seen as
perfidiously unpatriotic -- as kneecapping those same heroes. Hence our
ever-growing “defense” budgets, even as a sledgehammer of a national
debt hobbles America’s economic vitality and social security.
The end result of this militaristic mindset is a garrison state,
constantly girding itself for national security crises, real or
perceived, as in the last decade’s open-ended and frantic “war on terror.”
A singular danger of such a mindset, as pointed out by Laurence Radway in a telling article on “militarism” in the International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences,
is that militarists, unable to select means appropriate to true defense
needs, end up jeopardizing the very national security they say they’re
seeking to safeguard. By exaggerating threats, defining all responses
to those threats in military terms, dismissing dissenters as weak and
deluded (even when they prove right), and being incapable of questioning
their principles, they repeat the same mistakes again and again.
Until Americans turn away from militarism and learn again how to
“support our Constitution” more than our troops (and don’t worry: those
troops swear an oath to that very Constitution), until we return to a
broader vision of national security that deemphasizes a garrison
mentality, we will continue to wound, perhaps mortally, a once great
republic.
And that’s no fairy tale, it's a fact.
Copyright 2011 William J. Astore