THE
PARTY OF HUAH
George W. Bush at the Home of America’s Hammer
The nationalist apotheosis of George W. Bush reached its fruition
last January 3, when the commander-in-chief of the United States’
armed forces traveled to Fort Hood, Texas. He was there ostensibly
to sell the idea of a war in Iraq to the American people, and
to rally the troops to the task ahead. But, much more importantly,
he was there to reclaim for himself and his party the mantle of
the true keepers of the American identity.
It was a chilly, damp afternoon for a rally, but the location
alone provided the White House public relations wizards with a
fine coincidence of cultural iconography. Fort Hood was named
for John Bell Hood, the tough, pigheaded Confederate general who
was all but shot to pieces by the Yankees, losing an arm, a leg,
and the city of Atlanta. No less than Elvis Presley himself had
slept in the base barracks, passing through on his way to Germany
as a buck private in the Cold War.
Today
Fort Hood is the most populous Army base in the country and the
home of its heavy armor; 340 square miles of rugged, East Texas
hill country, conveniently located 90 miles from Bush’ vacation
ranch in Crawford and housing some 42,000 soldiers. Most of these
were the men and women of the First Cavalry Divison and the Fourth
Infantry Division, and their presence lent an added poignancy
to the commander-in-chief’s visitation. Both units were
considered all but certain to be shipped out to the Gulf.
“For
God and country is what I signed the paperwork for,” Brad
Hastings, a twenty-year-old private from Memphis, Tennessee, told
a reporter from the Dallas Morning News. “If I’m
called, I’m ready to go.”
The
Morning News and The Houston Chronicle reported
that Bush spent most of the day meeting selected individuals such
as Pfc. Hastings and inspecting specialized tanks with nicknames
like “Anarchy,” “Burn, Baby, Burn,” and
“Anger Management.” He then proceeded to a gymnasium
off Tank Destroyer Boulevard, festooned with giant American flags
and a banner proclaiming “Fort Hood, Home of America’s
Hammer!!!” where he spoke before a sea of soldiers
in black berets and camouflage uniforms waving small, plastic
American flags. Behind him, serving as a backdrop for the TV cameras,
sat the usual melting pot of men and women, blacks and whites
and Hispanics and Asians that seem to pop up like magic for Bush’s
every speech on a military base or airfield or warship.
“The
Iraqi regime is a grave threat to the United States,” he
told them, and the country, after inveighing against the intransigence
of Saddam Hussein.
“Our
country is in a great contest of will and purpose. We’re
being tested,” Bush went on, vowing, “We must, and
we will, protect the American people and our friends and allies
from catastrophic violence wherever the source, whatever the threat.”
It
was very much the same sort of speech that Bush had been giving
throughout his campaign to drum up support for war in Iraq. Indeed,
it was much the same sort of vaguely Christian, newsbite-sized
portentiousness that has characterized his every address, beginning
with his 2001 inaugural.
It
was the response that was startling. The soldiers answered their
commander-in-chief not with cheers or claps, or any sort of ordinary,
civilian applause, but with a sudden, violent roar of “Hu-AH!
Hu-AH!” Shouted simultaneously from 4,500 throats, it came
across on the evening news as a primal, lusting sound; unexpected
and voracious and thoroughly martial, like something one might
have expected to hear from the Spartans, or a falangist
street rally in the 1930s. It was not like anything that I have
ever heard before, at a rally presided over by an American president.
The chant continued throughout the speech, turning Bush’s
address into a churchy call-and-response. Individual cries of
“Yeah!” and “Let’s go!” rose from
the crowd when he explained why we would invade Iraq, but would
not invade North Korea—but again and again there was that
same, swift chant, sweeping all before it: “Hu-AH! Hu-AH!
Hu-AH!” Reverberating around the gym until Bush, who just
before the rally had exchanged his dark, suit coat for a green,
waist-length army jacket, held up his left hand, palm-out, in
grand, imperious acknowledgement.
The
media would later come to dwell on another moment, four months
later, when Bush would take his now legendary turn across the
carrier U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln to declare Gulf War II
over—the most audacious strut across a ship of war since
Cher bumped and ground her way across a battleship in a black
leather thong for her “If I Could Turn Back Time”
video. Pundits lingered over every choice detail of that performance—over
Bush’s confidence, or whether he really took over the controls
over the small plane that flew him in, over even the bulge in
his flight suit pants.
But
Bush on the carrier was only a matching shot, a triumphalist bookend
to his visit to the Home of America’s Hammer. He had already
become, at Fort Hood, something more than any other president
has ever been, which is to say the very avatar of American power.
The president of Huah.
“Huah
is an all-purpose expression,” the journalist David Lipsky
explains in his fine new study of West Point, Absolutely American.
“Want to describe a cadet who’s very gung-ho, you
call them huah. Understand instructions, say huah.
Agree with what another cadet has just said, murmur huah.
Impressed by someone else’s accomplishment, a soft,
reflective huah.”
And
huah is exactly what George W. Bush’s presidency
was and is—a gung-ho, in-your-face, balls-to-the-wall approach
to governance that has refused any hint of compromise, and which
has already brought about a seismic transformation of American
politics. Bush’s appearance at Fort Hood came only four
days before the swearing-in of the first truly Republican-controlled
congress to serve under a Republican president in almost 50 years,
a stunning triumph achieved by an off-year electoral strategy
that boldly repudiated the old notion that all politics are local,
and based the entire campaign on the issues of national security—and
on George Bush himself.
It
was also a strategy that depended in good part on using the military
itself as a campaign prop. Bush stumped at military bases throughout
the 2002 elections, blowing in dramatically on Air Force One to
pump his latest tax cut or the Homeland Security plan (indeed,
he has spoken either at a military facility or to a specifically
military audience an astounding forty-five times since March 2001).
There was a practical advantage to this—no American president
has ever been less comfortable with unscripted appearances before
the general public, and by campaigning on military bases Bush’s
handlers could assure that his crowds would always be restricted
to jubilant, flag-waving supporters—but above all there
was the opportunity for the commander-in-chief to personally interact
with our men and women in uniform. Bush could throw his arms around
their necks; shake their hands, hug them, dress up like them.
Their physical presence and their huah approval erased
any remaining public memory of Bush’s own, adroit dodge
of the Vietnam War, or the fact that he may officially be a deserter
to this day after going AWOL from the Air National Guard unit
he managed to join during that war, or even his rabbity scurry
about the country on Air Force One in the immediate wake of the
September 11 terrorist attacks.
Surmounting
his largely pacific past, George W. Bush had made himself one
with what has become the most revered institution in the country.
According to a New York Times poll published soon after
the “completion” of the war in Iraq, 79 percent of
all Americans expressed “a great deal or quite a lot”
of confidence in their nation’s military, as opposed to
only 45 percent who had the same level of confidence in the leaders
of organized religion, and only 29 percent who believed so fervently
in the Congress. This sort of faith extended even to 64 percent
of the baby-boomers’ children, aged 18 to 29. A Harvard
Institute of Politics poll of 1,200 college students found that
75 percent trusted the military “to do the right thing”
either “all of the time” or “most of the time,”
and that they characterized themselves as hawks over doves by
a ratio of 2-1.
Nor
is this a new phenomenon. Confidence and trust in the American
military has been growing steadily since its nadir, back in 1975—almost
exactly the moment, not so coincidentally, that the last, compulsory
military draft ended and our modern, all-volunteer service began.
An
even more salient fact, which Bush’s advisors could not
have missed, is that many—perhaps most—Americans now
see the military as the last remaining refuge of many democratic
values, in a society that seems ever more shallow and materialistic
and ironic. David Lipsky—comparing the West Point cadets
to the cynical, disillusioned slackers he had become accustomed
to in a career of writing about college campuses—found the
America of the Army to be what his liberal father had described
when he talked about “his best hopes for the country. A
place where everyone tries their hardest. A place where everybody—or
at least most people—looked out for each other. A place
where people—intelligent, talented people—said honestly
that money wasn’t what drove them.”
There
is, of course, at least another side to the military, as the rape
scandal that emerged from the Air Force Academy during the latest
Gulf War demonstrated. But even this seemed to be handled in a
direct, forthright way compared to the scandals, real and invented,
sexual and financial, Democratic and Republican, that have dominated
Washington over the last decade. The military remains an institution
that has integrated women and minorities into its ranks more successfully
than most—perhaps all—other public institutions. That
gorgeous mosaic of faces behind Bush at every base may have been
contrived by his handlers, but it was only possible because the
military is such a mosaic.
It
is no wonder that Bush—along with “the genius”
Karl Rove and his other advisers—has sought to identify
himself so completely with this winning cultural icon. By again
defying conventional wisdom and running right at what might be
thought to have been Bush’s Achilles heel—his hypocritical
draft dodging—they managed to erase yet another chapter
of what has to be the murkiest past in presidential history.
But
there is more to Bush’s identification with our armed forces
than simply an effort to boost poll numbers. His apotheosis signals
both a reversion to the deepest, darkest roots of the Republican
party, and the new political era to come. It marks the advent
of the Party of Huah, and a dangerous and unprecedented confluence
of our democratic institutions and the military.
For
all of their supposed conservatism, the Republicans have always
been the true radical party in America. From its very inception
in 1854 as a rejoinder to the Slave Power, the GOP was a repository
for all sorts of crackpot notions and secret societies—the
Know-Nothings and the Sons of Sam, and the anti-Masons; the Sabbatarians
and the Prohibitionists. Their leading, shared characteristic,
what brought them together as a movement in the first place, was
their willingness to try to define for the first time just what
a true American was—and to enforce that definition by the
sword, if necessary.
From
its inception, the G.O.P. has been our party of blood and iron,
the (Protestant) church militant. Their first martyr was John
Brown, author of the Pottawatomie massacre and armed rebellion
at Harpers Ferry. During the 1860 electoral campaign, the first
party activists, the “Wide Awakes,” marched through
city streets in torchlight parades, wearing silver capes and singing,
“They’ll find what by felling and mauling/ Our railmaker
statesman can do…”
Lincoln
himself saw the incredibly bloody conflict that they would fight
and win as holy war, a divine redemption that would expunge the
great national sin of slavery and save not so much our individual
souls but the Union. This would be worth any
price in blood, as Lincoln made clear in his second inaugural—in
what is surely the most sanguinary passage ever penned by an American
president—when he asserted that “if God wills that
it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s
two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk,
and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid
by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years
ago, so still it must be said ‘the judgments of the Lord
are true and righteous altogether.’”
Lincoln
and the Republicans were right about the Civil War, of course.
They not only abolished slavery but forged the United States into
what was truly one nation for the first time, upsetting the long,
delicate series of compromises that the accommodationist antebellum
Democrats had used to preserve the old half-slave, half-free Union.
But
they also set the casts of our two major parties to this day.
For better and worse, the Democrats would remain the party of
moderation and compromise, trying to reconcile the inevitability
of change (for America has only been a nation during the modern
age, and thus change is an intrinsic part of its character) with
the customs and folkways of the past. Despite the common conception
of the Democrats as the “left,” none of the great
liberation movements that have transformed American society over
the last century-and-a-half —populism, the labor movement,
civil rights, women’s liberation, gay rights, etc.—originated
from within the Democratic party. Instead, they all started
as protest movements outside the party that the Democrats
gradually absorbed and worked into the political mainstream.
The
Republicans, by contrast, would remain the party of uncompromising,
self-generated, draconian solutions—and it is their agenda
that has mostly driven the national political debate. As Walter
Karp wrote in The Politics of War, the Republicans shared
a belief that their party “was not a faction, not a group,
not a wing, [but] a synonym for patriotism, another name for the
nation.” Thus they have tended to couch their arguments
in terms of “conserving” essential American values,
while actually embracing one radical nostrum after another, from
Social Darwinism to Progressivism, from protectionism to laissez-faire
to the corporate state, from isolationism to the new imperialism.
None
of these had much to do with traditional notions of conservatism.
For all of the rhetoric about limited government, since the advent
of Reagan and the current Republican hegemony the federal government
has by any objective measure become larger, more intrusive, more
coercive, less accountable, and more deeply indebted than ever
before. It has more weapons, more soldiers, more police, more
spies, more prisons. These trends have only accelerated under
the present administration, whose stated agenda includes plans
to privatize Social Security by forcing Americans to turn their
retirement savings over to private investment firms, to turn Medicare
over to HMOs, to turn most other social welfare funds over to
religious organizations, and to place most American businesses
under the regulation of remote, international—and unaccountable—bureaucracies.
What
Republicans have really done, over the past quarter-century, is
to return to their roots. They once again presume to speak for
the idea of Volk—for the larger, mistier notion
of the American people, beyond any specific, coherent ideology,
or even the bonds of the Constitution.
The problem with such an ambition is that, unlike Europe, America
has no mystic ties of blood. Being an entirely modern nation,
it did not have time to build a “race” before it was
flooded with immigrants. The early, nativist wing of the GOP was
largely obliterated during the Civil War and the following decades.
And America as a mixed-race, multicultural, nonsectarian country,
came to be an accepted—then a celebrated—fact of our
national character. Despite the power wielded by the GOP’s
white Protestant clerics, and its perfection of the coded racial
appeal, the party has never been able to sustain itself simply
as a movement of racial identity.
Lagging
hopelessly behind the urban, Democratic machines in recruiting
the new immigrant masses, Republicans were historically all the
more anxious to find a national zeitgeist that might
substitute for blood. But here, too, they badly miscalculated,
misreading the national will during the great, twentieth-century-long
emergence of the United States as the world’s foremost power.
The isolationist wing of the G.O.P. opposed America’s entry
into both world wars, into the League of Nations, and even—under
Robert Taft—the series of alliances that would contain the
Soviet Union and win the Cold War. In each instance, the Republicans
were forced to scramble and come up with later red scares that
sought to judge what true “Americanism” was. These
had some initial success, but ultimately proved too ugly to be
sustainable. Even the most frenetic examples of Republican activism,
such as John Foster Dulles’s stated determination to “roll
back” communism or Ronald Reagan’s revived arms race,
proved ultimately to be no more than variations on established,
long-term Democratic strategies.
But
all that changed on September 11, 2001. For the first time, Republicans
found themselves more-or-less in charge of the federal government
at a moment when a stunning new foreign threat presented itself.
They immediately embraced the crisis as their own, applying the
sorts of radical remedies—both at home and abroad—that
they have often advocated in the past but have never been able
to fully put into effect. The destruction of the World Trade Center
towers enabled Bush and the Republicans to finally, fully reclaim
the mantle of national identity—to become the Party of Huah.
Just
what the Republicans’ crowded hour portends has since become
very clear, and it is disturbing for anyone who values our democratic
institutions. In keeping with his party’s tradition of identifying
itself with a “higher” notion of the national will,
Bush has not bothered to ask Congress to declare either of the
two wars it has launched since 9/11, as is clearly mandated in
the Constitution. Instead, he has claimed unprecedented powers
to use whatever military force he deems necessary, for as long
as he wants, in this conflict of open-ended duration against terrorists
and “evildoers.”
At home, Bush used the issue of Homeland Security—as
opposed to actual homeland security—to personify the national
will and drive the Democrats from any remaining vestiges of power.
He achieved this by insisting that the new Department of Homeland
Security be exempted from the usual, federal government standards
regarding employee compensation and job security.
Let
us put aside the fact that Bush’s requirements would automatically
make Homeland Security the least desirable government department
to work in, or that it was revealed—after the 2002 elections—that
it would still take several years to integrate all the parts of
the new department, or that these would not include the FBI, the
CIA, or any other important segment of the national security apparatus.
Or that the latest report from Warren Rudman’s Independent
Task Force for the Council on Foreign Relations found that our
security efforts were “underfunded” to the tune of
$98 billion and that the country “remains dangerously unprepared
to handle a catastrophic attack on American soil.” To understand
just how much of a joke Homeland Security really is, it is necessary
to live in a major urban area and see its forces in action everyday.
In
New York’s Pennsylvania Station, for instance, pairs of
uniformed National Guardsmen sit all day behind desks at what
seem to have become permanent posts. When a friend of mine approached
one desk, to ask if the Guardsmen would contact the police and
have them remove a violent homeless man from the subway platform
below, he was politely informed that the Guard’s radios
did not operate on the police bands.
Meanwhile,
once a week or so, a helicopter comes and hovers over my neighborhood
for an afternoon, apparently expecting to see Al Qaeda operatives
moving freely about in their kaffiyehs. Out on Broadway and 96th
Street, a checkpoint is sometimes set up by the curb, with police
waving over vans and small trucks for inspection. Of course, the
flashing police car lights are visible for a good five blocks
away, and because they are close to a bus stop and have little
space, the police wave any bigger trucks past—apparently
hoping that Al Qaeda will not try to smuggle in too large
a weapon of mass destruction.
These are only a few examples of our new national security state
in action; everyone I know has their own stories. One can scarcely
imagine the sheer scale of this nonsense; the waste of manpower
and money multiplied many times over, at airports and bus stations
and bridges and train depots throughout the United States.
But
of course Homeland Security, the issue, is less about catching
or deterring actual terrorists than about making a show of action—and
of force. The men and women of our national-security agencies—just
like the men and women of our armed forces—have been fetishized,
made into another political prop for the Party of Huah. Homeland
Security will not apprehend or deter any terrorist blessed with
more than a sub-cretinous level of intelligence. But it has injected
a constant military presence into our lives. Already, it has become
routine to see armed men in uniform roaming our streets, to hear
Air Force jets and military helicopters buzzing low over our homes—one
more pretense of uniformed efficiency.
Where
the Bush administration fights its real national-security battles
is in the subcommittee room, or in the halls of John Ashcroft’s
Justice Department. The administration even went so far as to
try to hire Henry Kissinger in order to exculpate itself from
any blame during the long-delayed investigation of the September
11 attacks. Eventually, it had to settle for temporarily classifying
28 pages of the congressional committee’s report, in a pathetic
attempt to obfuscate the leading role prominent Saudi friends
of the Bush family played in funding Al Qaeda. Such political
face-saving means that, incredibly, there will be no wholesale
re-assessment of our intelligence capabilities in the wake of
the 9/11 fiasco. No heads will roll, no departments will be reorganized.
Instead,
the Bush administration has decided that it is the Bill of Rights
which needs to be reassessed. During the Iraq war Attorney General
Ashcroft—far and away the most radical individual ever to
sit in a U.S. cabinet—worked up an 86-page, legislative
draft of the “Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003,”
or “Patriot II”. The bill is designed to preclude
any court challenges to the original Patriot Act, the law under
which Ashcroft has has already claimed the power to suspend the
right of habeus corpus for any American citizen he deems
to be a security risk.
Section
201 of Patriot II, entitled, “Prohibition of Disclosure
of Terrorism Investigation Detainee Information,” would
provide that “the government need not disclose
information about individuals detained in investigations of terrorism
until…the initiation of criminal charges.” Another
crucial clause would give the government the wholly novel right
to strip any American of his or her citizenship, if he or she
“becomes a member of or provides material support to, a
group that the United States has designated as a ‘terrorist
organization,’ if that group is engaged in hostilities against
the United States.” [my italics]
“Until
now,” longtime civil liberties champion Nat Hentoff pointed
out in the Village Voice, “an American could only
lose his or her citizenship by declaring an intent to abandon
it.” Under Section 501 of Patriot II, however, “the
intent to relinquish nationality need not be manifested in words,
but can be inferred from conduct.” It would be Mr. Ashcroft
and his subordinates in Justice who would be doing all the inferring,
and determining just what “providing material support”
to a terrorist group means.
The
premature leaking of Patriot II has delayed its formal submission
to Congress, but related ways of closing up Patriot I “loopholes”
are already being discussed. Even the Pentagon’s proposed
“Total Information Awareness” (TIA) program—a
gargantuan intelligence operation under which almost every transaction
Americans make would be electronically monitored—is back
on the table, under the new, somewhat less Orwellian label of
“Terrorist Information Awareness.”
It
is unclear just how any of this purported technological fix is
to stop Al Qaeda, an organization already so devoted to low-tech
strategies that it reportedly disdains cellphones in favor of
personal messengers. But then, many of our security programs seem
to reply on similarly ineffectual tactics. A report issued this
past June by the Clinton-appointed inspector general of the Justice
Department, Glenn Fine, found that of 762 illegal immigrants caught
up in Ashcroft’s nets since September 11, 2001, none were
terrorists. Of course, this did not save them from being detained,
incommunicado, for months, subjected to “a pattern of physical
and verbal abuse,” and even threatened with death before
being deported.
Fine’s
report did not deal with our prison at Guantanamo, which is outside
his jurisdiction, being run by the U.S. military. In fact, Guantanamo’s
“Camp X-Ray” seems to operate outside the jurisdiction
of every national or international body of law. Its wardens answer
only to their commander-in-chief, George W. Bush, making it the
first detention center—or, for that matter, the first institution
of any kind—to be run by a U.S. president without
any judicial or congressional oversight. Despite all
the reports of underaged captives at Camp X-Ray, despite the accounts
of attempted suicides and severe psychological depression and
deprivation on the part of the prisoners, the Pentagon still offers
no information on when or how they will be tried—beyond
a vague promise of military tribunals, “when the time is
right,” that would not be bound by normal rules of evidence,
would offer no independent right of appeal, and would place attorneys
under a “permanent gag order.”
There
is a silent, secret war going on, all around us, terrifying whenever
we dare to contemplate it. Usually we do not, for this war is
largely invisible to most us, directed against the most marginal
citizens of our society, new immigrants of color and without much
money.
Occasionally
we get a glimpse of it when some less marginal individual stumbles
onto the battlefield. One Jason Halperin, a writer who had the
bad luck to enter an Indian restaurant off New York’s Times
Square last March, before going to see a Broadway show, posted
up his experiences on the web. Halperin and a friend, named Asher,
were just tucking into their vegetable curry when they looked
up to see five, New York City police officers with drawn guns,
clamoring into the restaurant. Shouting and gesturing with their
weapons, the police herded patrons and the waiters alike into
a back corner of the establishment. Then, with fingers on their
triggers, they smashed their way into the kitchen and made the
workers there come crawling out on their hands and knees at gunpoint.
For
the next hour-and-a-half, the police officers continued to barge
about the restaurant, fingers still on their guns, kicking in
bathroom and closet doors, and taunting their prisoners. Meanwhile,
some ten INS and Homeland Security Department agents entered,
confiscated their captives’ IDs, and started checking them
out on laptop computers.
When
Halperin and his friend—the only two whites in the restaurant—protested,
the agents told them that they had “every right” to
do what they wanted under “the Homeland Security Act.”
When they asked for a lawyer, they were informed that first they
would have to be taken to a police station and held there while
they awaited “security clearance”—a process
that would take “Maybe a day, maybe a week, maybe a month.”
When they threatened to leave, a police officer walked over to
them with his hand on his gun and told them, “Go ahead and
leave, just go ahead.” The restaurant staff and the other
customers seemed terrified. When Halperin continued to protest,
an Asian-American customer urged him, "Please stop talking
to them. I have been through this before. Please do whatever they
say. Please for our sake.”
In
the end, the whole raid turned out to be a mistake. An INS agent
gave the Halperin and Asher their licenses back and apologized
as he escorted them outside—telling them they didn’t
think any non-Asians were likely to be inside.
This
is how your country is run today.
It
is unclear that, even if they knew more about it, the American
people would care much about the abuses of power being perpetrated
in their name. The greater question, though, is whether they could
stop them anymore, even if they wanted to.
The
war has largely succeeded in finishing off any effective opposition.
The Democracy is a cobweb, waiting to be swept away. In a unique
disaster, the party has been simultaneously de-pedded and beheaded;
bereft of a dedicated, activist core and any meaningful
leadership.
The
Democrats’ first presidential debate this spring, shown
on tape delay, revealed its potential candidates to be perhaps
the most singular array of non-entities, curiosities, stalking
horses, and outright charlatans ever brought together on a single
stage. Most of them seem to quietly agree with the Republicans’
basic world view, and those who do not lack the will or the ability
to do anything about it, or to offer any alternative vision of
their own. It seems all but inconceivable that the likes of either
Joe Lieberman or Howard Dean will get to wear the little green
jacket at the Home of the Hammer.
Unlike
their counterparts in the GOP, political activists on the liberal/left
are unfocused and badly organized. Above all, they has been unable
to muster a convincing worldview to counter that put forward by
the Party of Huah. For all that it has dwelled on the blatant
lies told by the administration about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction
and terrorist connections, the American left has been unable to
fashion any effective response to the inescapable conclusion that
the war was the best possible (and I stress possible)
turn of events for the people of Iraq, providing them as it did
with at least a chance for freedom.
Whether
that chance will be taken up is something else again. But the
fact remains that the activist left lacks any real strategy for
engaging with the world as it is, preferring to retreat into the
usual, Chomsky-Zinn-Vidal dreamworld of outraged American innocence.
There was little or no acknowledgement from the left that Afghanistan
was a failed state that had become a haven for terrorists and
would have to be invaded, or that destroying Al Qaeda and any
related terrorist networks will involve a long-term campaign that
will have to include at least some military and intelligence oerpations,or
that there should always be, in the modern world, an ongoing effort
to dislodge, by one means or another, any and all dictators, including
Saddam Hussein. In failing to develop a nuanced, engaged worldview
that would both reject Bush and find a way to confront
Saddam and Bin Laden, the successors to the old, engaged Democratic
liberalism have allowed themselves to be cast as hopelessly naïve
and ineffectual.
Nor
can one expect any real defense of our democracy from the media
any longer. The giant media conglomerates (created in good part
by the Reagan-era gutting of the FCC’s old anti-monopoly
safeguards) have served mostly as auxiliaries to the administration
since 9/11, as exemplified by Clear Channel’s persecution
of the Dixie Chicks. During the latest Gulf War, the New York
Times, for one, seemed to be recycling much of its vocabulary
from the 1960s, writing of a “long-haired” opponent
of the war and a “short-haired” supporter. The paper
of record granted that “the antiwar movement today appears
more diverse than it was during the early protests of the Vietnam
War, when it often seemed hostile to ‘anyone over thirty,’”
but put us all on notice that “disruptive demonstrations
can wear out even the most tolerant.” Meanwhile, James Traub,
writing in The New York Times Magazine, denounced as
“Weimar Whiners” those acquaintances of his who claimed
that such little repressions proved the United States was becoming
a fascist state—as if there could be no gradations of authoritarianism.
Much
more chilling than these exercises in denial has been the media’s
creeping acceptance of the concept, put forth for some time now
by various Bush apparatchiks, that we are now an “empire.”
The Atlantic Monthly, in its July/August 2003 issue,
published one in what it threatens will be a series of articles
by Robert D. Kaplan intended to serve as “a kind of user’s
manual for managing an unruly world”—a series that,
in Kaplan’s own description, “will be a ground-level
portrait from the remotest and most exotic regions, not a broad
overview from the imperial capital.”
Kaplan
finds military operations of the scale employed in Iraq to be
unsustainable for very long, and estimates that in any case the
American worldwide empire will probably not last beyond “a
few decades from now.” His user’s manual, though,
is broken down into such indicative, and ominous, subheadings
as “Rule No. 3: Emulate Second-Century Rome,” “Rule
No. 4: Use the Military to Promote Democracy,” and “Rule
No. 10: Speak Victorian, Think Pagan,” and suggests that
we take our cues from “liberal empires—like those
of Venice, Great Britain…,” which he claims were “motivated
not by an appetite for conquest per se but because it was thought
necessary for the security of the core homeland.”
Kaplan
urges us to borrow tactics from some of our bloodiest foreign
adventures, including the conquest of the Philippines, our foray
into Central America under Reagan, and our overthrow of the Chilean
regime of Salvador Allende. He advocates that CIA and Special
Forces teams revert to running coups and carrying out assassinations.
He wants a corps of Roman-style military tribunes who will make
foreign policy as well as enforce it, and that we become “more
pagan” in our outlook. Most chillingly of all, he complains
that “the media increasingly, and dramatically, affect policy
yet bear no responsibility for the outcome.” Kaplan’s
solution for this problem is primarily that the government “find
the budget and the will to hire away the best communicators,”
but he insists that ultimately “our intelligence officers,
backs by commando detachments, should in the future be given as
much leeway as they require to get the job done, so that problems
won’t fester to the point where we have to act in front
of a battery of television cameras.”
Never
mind, for a moment, that the idea of Rome or the British Empire
as liberal institutions of any sort would have come as a surprise
to, say, the Gauls or the Carthaginians, or the Jews of Masada;
or, respectively, the Zulus or the Boers or the North American
Indians or the Maoris of New Zealand. Or that the dark side of
these supposedly civilizing forces is, say, the Japanese Empire
of the twentieth century, a venture that was also launched on
the excuse of national survival and soon spiraled down into the
absolute “need” to take over half the world.
Much
more demoralizing, for the American prospect, is the fact that
a venerable publication of the humanities, such as the Atlantic,
would give its imprimatur to any screed suggesting that “intelligence
officers” and “commando detachments” be empowered
to get rid of journalists “as they require to get the job
done.” After such an immediate capitulation to secrecy and
brute force, what can we look forward to in the future?
With
their utter dominance of the national media, their vast advantages
in money and organization, their tactical ruthlessness, and the
disarray of the opposition, George W. Bush and his party have
positioned themselves for a crushing electoral victory in 2004,
and most likely for some years to come. The Republicans already
control all three branches of the federal government, most of
the country’s governors’ mansion and statehouses;
even—for the third term in a row—the mayoralty of
the nation’s largest city. There, still another ceremony
of apotheosis is in store for us, on September 11, 2004, now that
the genius, Karl Rove, has scheduled the Republican convention
to coincide with the third anniversary of the attack on the World
Trade Center.
Rove likes to compare the Bush ascendancy to the election of William
McKinley in 1896, after which the Republicans controlled the presidency
and remained the majority party for all but eight of the next
36 years, or until they were finally ousted with the onset of
the Great Depression. He may be more right than he knows. Soon
after becoming president, McKinley took the nation into its “splendid
little war” with Spain, in which America took its first,
overseas colonies—and then waged a brutal, extended, not-so-splendid
guerrilla struggle in the Philippines, one in which our armed
forces—for all of Robert Kaplan’s admiration—killed
a larger percentage of the population than they would in Vietnam.
Currently,
in Afghanistan and Iraq, we are occupying some 428,000 square
miles of the most fractious real estate in Asian history. Our
troops there are subjected to almost daily ambushes, and the cost
of occupying Iraq alone has already doubled, to some $4 billion
a month. By July, the Pentagon was conceding that our ground forces
had already been stretched nearly to their limit, with some 370,000
troops deployed in 120 countries around the world. Between our
occupation forces, planned replacements for those troops, and
units being held in abeyance for emergency deployment in North
Korea, there were only three Army brigades available for any potential
new missions—a situation that one official, in a beautifully
evasive bit of Pentagonese, lamented as “the tyranny of
fixed numbers.”
It
is this tyranny of fixed numbers that provides the real threat
to Karl Rove’s Republican millenium. They now seem to pop
up everywhere. We simply cannot go on indefinitely waging war
around the world while giving ourselves record tax cuts. And we
cannot go on occupying vast swaths of Asia for years without resorting
to a military draft.
The
administration has resolutely rejected any such suggestion. A
few months ago, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld even went
so far as to ridicule the performance of America’s old draft
army before being forced to apologize. Others, such as longtime
Congressman Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.), a Korean War veteran, have
proposed that the draft should indeed be restored. Rangel’s
suggestion was mostly facetious, a small protest against what
he saw as the disproportionate burden that the poor and minorities
currently bear in our all-volunteer army. But it speaks very much
to the hollowness of the whole politics of Huah.
The Bush administration rushes to repudiate even the idea of a
draft because it realizes that such an eventuality would pose
a mortal threat to its own popularity. It is no coincidence that
public confidence in the American military, as noted above, has
grown exponentially since 1975, for this is roughly the time when
the armed forces returned to their all-volunteer status for the
first time in a generation.
For
all of its merits, our military is not, and cannot be, an actual
democracy. The administration, and often the army itself, tries
constantly to obscure this fact, most recently under the Thoreauvian
rubric, “An Army of One.” No more disingenuous recruiting
slogan has ever been devised, for no army has ever been about
promoting individualism but rather its exact opposite, bending
the wills of many individuals into a single, blunt instrument
of incredible violence.
No
doubt, the young men and women at Fort Hood meant every word they
said about defending freedom, and some have probably already paid
the last full measure of their devotion to that cause. But the
world that our soldiers live in every day is one in which where
nearly every aspect of their lives is carefully controlled. It
is—ironically, considering our victory in the Cold War—the
closest thing in America to the collectivist ideal. Grow your
hair too long, and you will receive a threatening letter. Let
the grass grow too long around the house you live in on base,
and you will get another letter. Our servicemen and women shop
at the same PX and BX monopolies, are subjected to a national
health care system whether they like it or not. Even the personal
behavior of their spouses is carefully scrutinized, and can be
cause for official reprimands and other punishments.
A
military that everyone actually had to serve in would mean one
that they might actually come to know—a military that is
not simply rows of men and women in crisp new uniforms on a carrier
deck, or natty black berets at the Home of the Hammer. An old-school
military would also mean inane orders and lousy chow; sadistic
drill sergeants and incompetent officers, and aching feet and
KP.
The
old draft did not make the military a democracy either, but it
did connect it organically to the democracy it was created to
serve. Under the draft the armed forces were a levy of free citizens,
taking up an onerous but temporary duty in order to preserve their
freedom. Any military commitment that extended this duty had to
be well thought out and truly important to our national security,
or it was bound to founder on popular opposition.
It
is well and good that this should have been so, for in a true
democracy the military should never be an end unto itself, or
an isolated institution, but a necessary burden that we all share
in, one way or another. We should always celebrate the heroism
and dedication of our troops, but we must never try to force upon
them roles that they are not equipped to play.
Under
the Bush administration, the all-volunteer military has become
a photo-op, a fantasy; a feel-good, television substitute for
actual participation in our democracy. Its troops can be shuttled
around like toy soldiers on a ever-expanding game board, whisked
to conflicts of every possible size and duration, all around the
globe. The Bush attempt to substitute it for our democracy has
done a terrible disservice to both institutions. It has made each
one a simulacrum of its true self, rendering our democracy passive
and largely unengaged, while our military is overburdened with
all sorts of tasks and missions it is not ultimately suited for,
such as nation-building, and policing the streets of Baghdad.
This
is the ultimate politics of Huah—with Bush himself revealed
as no more of a leader than, say, Al Pacino’s risible characterization
of a blind, retired colonel in the film, Scent of a Woman,
yelling out “Hu-ah!” at every opportunity, in order
to convince us that he had some connection with real fighting
men.
And
yet we go on, making an ever greater commitment to our armed forces,
$329 billion in 2002 alone—or more than China, Russia, Japan,
Iraq, North Korea, and all other NATO countries combined,
according to the Center for Defense Information.
“No
other military is even close to the United States,” Gregg
Easterbrook wrote in the New York Times following the
fall of Baghdad. “The American military is now the strongest
the world has ever known, both in absolute terms and relative
to other nations; stronger than the Wehrmacht in 1940, stronger
than the legions at the height of Roman power…the extent
of American military superiority has become almost impossible
to overstate.”
According
to Easterbrook, our Navy now has nine supercarrier battle groups,
with a tenth under construction; no other navy in the world has
a single supercarrier. Our Air Force has “more advanced
fighters and bombers than those of all other nations combined.”
We possess the world’s only stealth aircraft; the world’s
only aerial tanker fleet, to project our air power around the
world; the only AWACS planes. We have far and away the most heavy
bombers, the most advanced tanks, the most deadly air-to-air and
air-to-ground missiles; the most sophisticated military electronics,
including armed drone airplanes, and space satellites…
As
it is written in the Bible, where your treasure is, there will
your heart be also. We now substitute military solutions for almost
everything, including international alliances, diplomacy, effective
intelligence agencies, democratic institutions—even national
security. Although a mere five months and fewer than 270 fatalities
in Iraq have our ground forces dangerously extended, we continue
to rattle sabers at Syria, Iran, North Korea.
The
logic is inexorable. Having committed so many of our resources
to the military, at the cost of so much else, there is nothing
else we can do. No previous national dilemma compares with our
current one. Even Vietnam was, in the end, overreaching in pursuit
of the basically sound policy of containment. Our current course
is no more than a blind stumbling forward, until we shall indeed
run up against, once and for all, the tyranny of fixed numbers.
For
the fact is that we are not an empire, no matter how fashionable
it has become to say so, on both the left and the right. We have
no storied class of dedicated, career civil servants; no vast
surplus population, hungry for land or betterment. Nor are we
some ancient race of pagan warriors. A random survey of those
undecided about Gul War II drew such comments as “I think
they should finish the job fast and get out” and “I
think it would be a mistake to tie down American troops for years.”
For all of the conditioning that the administration and the enthusiasts
of empire have already subjected us to, America remains at heart
an isolationist country, willing to tolerate foreign ventures
only for so long as they seem vital to actual homeland security.
“Remember…
It is the soldier, not the reporter
Who has given us freedom of the press
It is the soldier, not the poet.
Who has given us freedom of speech
It is the soldier, not the campus organizer,
Who has given us freedom to demonstrate
It is the soldier
Who salutes the flag
Who serves beneath the flag
Whose coffin is draped by the flag
Who allows the protestor to burn the flag.”
—Father Denis Edward O’Brien
USMCThe
sentiments above can be found on a poster, pasted on the side
of one of four little sheds near the foot of the Lincoln Memorial.
They are staffed by four different, Vietnam POW/MIA groups: The
Last Firebase, POW Outpost, Rolling Thunder, and Warriors. Their
sheds—no bigger than an average city newsstand—have
been open twenty-four hours a day since 1982, when Maya Lin’s
remarkable Vietnam Veterans Memorial was first dedicated, keeping
a round-the-clock vigil until all of the remaining American troops
missing in action in Southeast Asia “come home.”
These
are the only private groups represented on the National Mall,
at the heart of our nation’s capital. To raise money they
sell all sorts of martial tchatchkes: unit insignias;
statuettes of soldiers and Marines; old MIA bracelets, small round
coasters labeled “Hanoi Jane’s Urinal Stickers”;
and posters with a variety of super-patriotic platitudes printed
on them—including the above poem by Father O’Brien,
and one reading “Politicians don’t keep the United
States FREE Our Military Does! USA, USN, USAF, USMC, USCG.”
For
all of the bellicosity and the schmaltz, the individuals manning
the stands are soft-spoken, polite, almost shy. They are not conspiracy
nuts, and as melodramatic as some aspects of their vigil could
be—one shed billed itself as “THE LAST FIREBASE STANDING
VIGIL UNTIL THEY ALL COME HOME WORLD WAR II, KOREA, COLD WAR,
VIETNAM, GULF WAR”—there was a certain dignity to
it all. Standing in those the sheds for so many nights, close
to twenty years now, through the dead of winter. Alone out by
the silent monuments, waiting for what they expect to be mostly
a few boxes of bones. It is a grand, romantic gesture, and the
sort only associated with the military among all our institutions
today.
By
contrast, our civilian democratic culture at home is fading away.
Slowly, slowly, we are becoming conditioned to a military style
of discipline. We live in a country now where anyone can be banned
from flying, or detained and searched, or browbeaten and humiliated,
or arrested and hauled off to prison for as long as the Supreme
Commander says so—and where soon Americans may even be stripped
of their citizenship at his discretion. We have become a nation
of secret police raids that never make the papers, and of permanent
gag orders; of military tribunals and perhaps even drumhead death
sentences that cannot be appealed. In America today, federal agents
can walk into a public library and confiscate any public records
they choose. They can also demand lists of who has taken out which
books, and they can order the librarians, under the threat of
criminal prosecution, to keep quiet about it all.
We
have not yet arrived at a point where we receive letters ordering
us to cut our hair, or our grass. But we may well be told, in
the very near future, what private firms we are to trust with
our retirement savings and our health care; what religious sect,
or cult, the administration will turn us over to if we fall upon
hard times. Fewer and fewer men tell us what we may read, or watch,
or listen to, while on their television channels the huah
heads shout down any dissent. Already, most democratic dialogue
has vanished, replaced by personal insults, and growing accusations
of treason—even death threats.
When
troubles arise in this new America, when we are no longer able
to escape the tyranny of fixed numbers, it is unlikely that we
will return to a befuddled, liberal opposition. Instead, we will
most likely look for the real thing.
When
the Party of Huah can no longer keep up its various pretenses,
we will seek out an even stronger, more confident hand. The one
public institution we respect above all others—because most
of us have never experienced it. The one that over three-quarters
of us expect to do the right thing all, or at least most of the
time, and the one which has, after all, the longest experience
running a paternalistic, authoritarian society. The one that is
demographically the most like us, that does its job with startling
efficiency and without complaint; the one that captures our imagination
to the point that men hold twenty-one-year, ’round-the-clock
vigils to honor it.
In
the end, we’ll beg for the coup.
©
Copyright Harper's Magazine