Don't Know Much About History
In the summer of 2002, the Pentagon's Office of Net Assessment (ONA) published an 85-page monograph called "Military Advantage in History". Unusual for an office that is headed by Andrew Marshall, the Pentagon's "futurist in chief," the study looks back to the past-way back. It examines four empires, or "pivotal hegemonic powers in history," to draw lessons about how the United States "should think about maintaining military advantage in the 21st century." Though unclassified, the study was held close to the vest; a stamp on the cover limits its dissemination without permission. Mother Jones obtained it only through a Freedom of Information Act request. Though the report is far from revelatory, it provides a window into a mindset that unselfconsciously envisions the United States as the successor to some of history's most powerful empires.
The study looks a little like a high school text book, devoting chapters to Alexander the Great, Imperial Rome, Genghis Khan, and Napoleonic France and citing texts by Sun Tzu, Livy, and Jared Diamond. It attempts to break down exactly how historic empires sustained their military might across continents and even centuries. The study posits that the historical examples offer "insights into what drives U.S. military advantage," as well as "where U.S. vulnerabilities may lie, and how the United States should think about maintaining its military advantage in the future." There is no one secret to world domination, however. The Mongols' military advantage was rooted in their "tactical and operational superiority"; the Macedonians' in the "exceptional leadership" of and "cult of personality" surrounding Alexander the Great; Napoleon's in "innovative operational concepts" and "information superiority"; and the Romans' in "robust tactical doctrine" and "strong domestic institutions" which were "designed to incorporate conquered peoples as the empire grew." In an extraordinary passage, the study cites the Roman experience-from over a millennium ago-as a precedent for America's long-term dominance: "The Roman model suggests that it is possible for the United States to maintain its military advantage for centuries if it remains capable of transforming its forces before an opponent can develop counter-capabilities. Transformation coupled with strong strategic institutions is a powerful combination for an adversary to overcome."
The report's language is jargon laden and opaque-a lance used by Macedonian horsemen is referred to as a "primary weapon system." That may be due to the methodology of "net assessment," a fancy term for the ONA's approach to analyzing complicated real-world situations that is rooted in systems analysis and game theory. Military author James Dunnigan compares it to engineering. "You take apart historical events, reassemble them as a simulation, and then tinker with the simulation until you can recreate the historical event accurately," he explains. "What that allows you to do is play out 'what if?' situations: What if Napoleon did this? What if Ghengis Khan did that?"
While the study was produced under the auspices of the ONA, its five authors work for government intelligence contractor Booz Allen Hamilton, and they wrote the study as part of a contract for the Defense Department's Information Assurance Technology Analysis Center. Booz Allen won a 10-year, $200 million cost-plus contract to establish and "host" that center in 1998. (In May, the Carlyle Group announced it will be taking over Booz Allen's government services arm.)
The original idea for the study predates the Bush administration. Mark Herman, the Booz Allen vice president and war-game designer who is the study's lead author, recalls being asked to give a presentation on historical empires at one of Andrew Marshall's famous "summer studies" at the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1999. At that annual retreat, experts from government, academia, and beyond are invited to contemplate a big-picture question. Newt Gingrich, for example, participated in the 1999 program, according to Herman. He says that the ONA "liked the presentation so much they felt it should be written down" and expanded. A earlier version of the report, titled "Sustaining Military Dominance: Examples From Ancient History," was presented at the 2001 summer study and was later cited in a Maureen Dowd column. The current version was published a year later.
Coming out of the Office of Net Assessment, the study's theme of military transformation is not surprising. Described by the Washington Post as "an obscure but highly influential unit," the ONA was established as an in-house think tank in 1973. Its founding director was Marshall, a strategist who achieved demigod status in the press after years of colorful profiles portraying him as a visionary. (A 2002 article in the New York Times Magazine named Marshall the "Yoda of the Rumsfeld Defense Department"; William Safire dubbed him "the freshest mind in the Puzzle Palace.") ONA specializes in trend spotting and forecasting military threats. The office spent the 1980s exhaustively studying the US-Soviet balance; recently, it has turned to topics as diverse as neuropharmacology, Islamic warfare, and the national security implications of climate change.
Now in his 80s, Marshall has been a chief proponent of the so-called Revolution in Military Affairs, a cause also championed by Donald Rumsfeld that emphasizes speed and increased use of precision weapons and advanced communications technology. In 2001, Marshall was given a high-profile assignment by Rumsfeld to conduct an extensive review of the military and the possibilities of military transformation.
Most striking is how the study conceives of the United States in imperial terms. "You'll see some neoconservatives at the beginning of the Bush administration crowing that 'we do have an empire, let's just come out of the closet and say we do,'" said Ivan Eland, the author of a book on America's "informal empire" and the director of the Center on Peace & Liberty at the Independent Institute, on hearing a description of the study. "But the administration never did that because empire doesn't sell well with the public." After reviewing the study at Mother Jones' request, William Hartung, director of the Arms and Security Initiative at the New America Foundation, said he was struck by its "arrogance and immorality." "The presumption that the United States should rule the world, sword at the ready, for the foreseeable future is an unacceptable basis for a just, even-handed foreign policy."
Even coming from an office vaunted for its intellectual seriousness, "Military Advantage in History" often reads like it was meant as window dressing for the Revolution in Military Affairs agenda-sometimes at the expense of historical fact. (Herman says that the theme of transformation emerged naturally from his research.) After reviewing a section that identifies five discrete "transformations" of the Roman military over a period of 1,000 years, Lee Brice of Western Illinois University, president of the Society of Ancient Military Historians, described it as "so completely incorrect as to be useless." In general, Brice noted, "it is inappropriate to apply modern concepts of systems theory, doctrine, and strategy to ancient armies. That required a level of planning and centralization that simply did not exist."
Eland speculates that a study like this would "get warped by the military-industrial-congressional complex into more money for weapons." Furthermore, he says, it ignores the economic implications of military expansion. "The Office of Net Assessment is doing this to show, 'Well, gee, these other empires transformed themselves, they were successful, we need to do the same thing,'" Eland says. "Well that's going to cost big bucks, and that will cause economic overstretch. People say it can't happen to us since we have such a big economy, but every empire has said that." It is unclear how the study has been used; the Office of Net Assessment declined a request for an interview. Herman says only that "a whole bunch of [copies] went out to the government."
The idea that contemporary society can or should try to find direct guidance in the past has been assailed by some historians. The American historian Bernard Bailyn wrote of "an obvious kind of presentism, which at its worst becomes indoctrination by historical example." But the ONA study charges ahead, plumbing the past for contemporary lessons. An extraordinary color-coded table in the study's conclusion attempts to literally "map" the historical findings to the United States with an eye toward "enduring dominance." (See image here.)
Several historians who reviewed the study differed on its quality and meaning. Walter Scheidel, a Stanford professor of classics and the coauthor of a forthcoming survey of ancient empires, called it "a successful distillation of relevant information and scholarship complemented by very interesting systematic analysis." Others found the scholarship to be shoddy and superficial. Pamela Crossley, a Dartmouth historian who teaches on the Mongols, described the chapter on Genghis Khan as mostly "an accumulation of popularly transmitted misconceptions." She also noted the study's "amazingly strange spelling 'Chengis.'" Brice, the ancient military historian, said the text suffered from "an intense, myopic habit of wanting to make the ancient world fit into modern stereotypes." He compares it with "much lower-undergraduate-level work."
Justin Elliott, a former senior fellow at Mother Jones, is news editor at Talking Points Memo.
© 2008 The Foundation for National Progress
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39 Comments so far
Show Alldistant lesson that is.
" I wasn't looking for an explanation of the US military's failure in Iraq "
Nor did I provide one, so I guess you missed my point.
"It was more of a rhetorical question, to point out the absurdity of attempting to take a lesson from distant history while steadfastly refusing to take any lessons from recent history."
In the case of Iraq, was anyone specifically trying to apply a distant from ancient history there that you thought absurd? And that they might have done that, does it at all take away from the point that leaders may be reluctant to apply new thinking to a new situation?
Seems like you completely missed the point of my question, jake. I wasn't looking for an explanation of the US military's failure in Iraq (I have many theories of my own in that regard, thank you very much.) It was more of a rhetorical question, to point out the absurdity of attempting to take a lesson from distant history while steadfastly refusing to take any lessons from recent history.
Actually WmC your complaint about the current military situation parallels many similar situations from history. Example: The Siege of Petersburg in the American Civil War should have been a lesson that could have prevented the protracted trench warfare that characterized WWI.
Why slow to adapt? I think it has less to do with gleaning from history and more to do with leader's fear of failure, that they would tend to cling to a conventional but outdated dogma than to boldly think outside the box and use something that could fail to an even greater degree.
Interesting analysis,Jack37 @ 9:48 pm. We just returned from a visit to Greece, where as you scour the ruins of 3,000 year old civilizations, you can't help be stunned by the huge waste of resources tied up in war making and community defense measures. On its face, it makes no rational or economic sense. Do you happen to know of any references that discuss the "economic logic of war" in the ancient world?
A question for the ONA: Why did it take the US military--with its overwhelming advantage in firepower, technology, intelligence gathering means, and training--more than 5 years to come up with a strategy that allowed it, finally, to control a completely disorganized bronze age fighting force?
Until they can answer that question convincingly, they have absolutely no business trying to glean lessons from ancient history.
vrajitorul:
Thanks. I will read that.
Deepa-
re: your last post:
If you haven't yet read The Devil In Massachusetts by Marion L. Starkey (ISBN 0-385-03509-8. Originally Knopf 1949, my edition Anchor Books 1989), it's an amazingly well researched and written account of the Salem Witch Trials. I think you may find the roots of your research in there. (And if Emmanuel Todd, or indeed Arthur Miller, hadn't read it, I would be very surprised).
Let me quote Emmanuel Todd ("After the Empire: The Breakdown of the American Order," p. 120): "The American rhetoric about an "evil empire", an "axis of evil", or any other earthly manifestations of the devil's handiwork is so grossly inept that one has to smile and shake one's head or else scream in outrage depending on the moment and one's personal temperament. However, it ought to be taken seriously in its decoded form. The rhetoric truthfully expresses an American obsession with evil that is identified accusingly as emanating from outside the country when in fact it originates from inside the United States. The menace of evil in the United States is truly everywhere if one thinks of the renunciation of the principle of equality, the rise of an irresponsible plutocracy, the overdrawn credit card existence of millions of consumers and the country as a whole, the increasing use of the death penalty, and the return with a vengeance of obsessions about race....The country is steaming mad about the evil it sees everywhere, no doubt in part because the kettle cannot see how black it has become."
ROB NICHOLS: Thank you for the acknowledgement, which I would like to extend to the eloquent discussion offered by JACK 37. I need to learn more about this earlier civilization, and particularly praise you for stating that equal worship was allotted to both sun and moon. There is a synergy operating between our posts (or thought processes) as I am busily doing the final edit of a book I've worked on since l992 that focuses on the moon's influence on societies and behaviors, especially in relation to the mood flux cycles women experience as a biological fact of destiny.
This has been another one of those compelling threads that draw me back to this site on a frequent basis.
"I'd say that to define one thing (peace) as the absence of another thing (war, as if it's the human norm vs. the exception) points straight to the vast cultural blindspot "
If we substitute in the above statement "dark" for "peace" and "light" for "war", are we also pointing straight to a vast cultural blindspot? Many things are defined as the absence of something else. You allude to this definition of war yourself later in your post.
Having said that, I have no doubt that a web of established relations as you put it would help prevent war. If only everyone were on board.
Hello jakenewton---"The first definition of peace in most dictionaries is absence of war." The dictionary fact you point out makes me smile; as in the Oxford English Dictionary the clitoris is non-defined as "the female homolog to the male penis." I'd say that to define one thing (peace) as the absence of another thing (war, as if it's the human norm vs. the exception) points straight to the vast cultural blindspot we're talking about---for if you ask me the "absence of war" is life itself, and life is no non-thing! Let me just point out the entry I wrote above---where you can see some of the specific demonstrable examples of things the Minoans (like others "off the books" of history) were doing for a long time, that do in a sense contrast with the familiar signs of war, colonization etc. For example in the Greek Islands, where the Minoans mined certain stones/metals etc., suddenly they're building houses/ceremonial places, water-course systems, port facilities at the same time, and then we find that island's resources as exports in other places. Add many myths/words/family names that signify intermarriage (a most important element)---plus the absence of evidence for conflict in any major sense---and there seems to be no other scientifically parsimonious explanation for the ongoing mixture of development and tranquility...that was not even discouraged/broken by multiple natural disasters (things got bigger/better instead)....More enormously, consider---the Minoans were the old collaborative cultural contexts of "the Greeks"; their descendants the Philistines and cousin Canaanites were the contexts of the Israelites and the birth of the mighty Book; the egalitarian, advanced Etruscans were the contexts of later Rome---all of them this non-defined "life" surrounding the books that tell us all we've done is make war and crumbling empires. We need to find out a lot more of their best ideas---the most prominent being as paralleled in Native/Colonial America, where intermarriage becomes a family-style web of cousins, in-laws etc. So that when human beings cheat, fight etc., there is a SOCIAL WEB that deals with it rather than armies. Hence, we can also describe, measure, learn from these webs of relations "off the books" by studying how they were invasively dismantled by their conquerors; for all of them left some fairly descriptive accounts of their glories (sic). Thomas Morton of MErrymount was the first, funniest and maybe best example in colonial New England---thrown out of the country and daemonized for 250 years because he knew how to cooperate.....In fine, because of imperial effects on scholarship, I think we have little idea of how corrupt our very histories are....
Just another "what if" paper among hundreds. Doesn't mean anything.
"Interesting and very American that no comparable study looked into periods of international peace "
Has there ever been such a study by any entity from any country? If not, why would it be "very American"? There are "peace studies" classes at many American colleges.
The first definition of peace in most dictionaries is absence of war. I am not sure how you would study a non thing, and would like to hear ideas as to how you would.
Siouxrose,
Thanks for the kind words and for providing your unique perspective on events.
deepa,
Many good points as usual. Sometimes it is difficult to separate the misdeeds* that arise from the hubris that inevitably attaches to all great powers, the misdeeds that arise from the particular religious beliefs and economic theories of those in control, and the misdeeds that follow from the problematic history of the US, established through the use of genocide and slavery.
Progress in understanding human society remains difficult because scientific experiments in the subject matter may not be performed and the multitude of variables cannot be clearly separated and analyzed, even with the most sophisticated statistical methods.
* I use the term "misdeeds" to mean acts that appear inconsistent with the long-term welfare and survival of human society.
Souixrose, I've liked your thread tonight. One of the major awakenings of my education came as an undergrad in 1980, when several history courses let me see how around the world, agriculture, surplus food, settlement, and division of labor came together to allow a similar pattern, the ever popular interlocking and mutually supportive triumvirate of professional royalty, priest, and soldier. So-called civilization overthrew the Goddess and set up the Patriarchy, and it isn't ending well.
Interesting and very American that no comparable study looked into periods of international peace and parity to see what the players were doing right, in order to discover principles on which we might build for something other than a male-and-military-centered civilization. This is the problem with most such research---unexamined assumptions and teleological goals already steering where you're looking. Why study Genghis Khan or the Caesars unless you want to be one? And it's maddeningly ironic that these "historians" seem completely oblivious to the longest continuous period of demonstrable peace and progress on Western (and maybe world) record: Minoan Crete from at least 3000 to 1450 BCE (longer than Rome, or Israel or anybody else). How did they do it? Their culture was modeled on natural cycles of astronomy (being in synch with the stars) and Earth's seasons. It was a dynamic (inventive) steady-state that fostered well-being right now for the most people (archaeological finding is that they had the highest AVERAGE living standards in their world). There was a great emphasis on law, there were limitations on rulers (4 or 8 year terms) based in the same cosmic/natural cycles and their brilliant calendar at whose root was the symbolic equality of Moon and Sun (and so in their politics, a "scandalous" equality of men and women). This was the widest-ranging civilization until Rome and we have yet to find more than a squad's worth of weapons. When they wanted a foreign natural resource, they gave in return building skills, sea trade, artisans, all kinds of other materials PLUS protection on the open sea for further trade. Sexism, racism, slavery, colonial war--these things leave physical traces and no matter what international group of scholars goes after this "utopia," it stands to scrutiny. Twice the Minoans rebuilt after catastrophic natural disasters. The third time, the Thera Eruption, they were invaded in its aftermath, never allowed to get up again and buried to this day under caricatures. Their "successors" were the Mycenean or "homeric" Greeks whose predatory ways lasted 1/10 as long: raping Crete was their first glory and raping Troy their last. Do yourself a FAVOR and look at Minoan art---proud, intelligent, free (and sexy) women, men of robust strength and incredible technical skill, exploratory and playful spirit everywhere you look (happy children too). Where people really understand strength (as, I believe, in Native America too), RESTRAINT is the only real test of real power. Finally---guess what. An empire that spends fortunes trying to plan for or arrange even longer domination already knows it is going down. It will dig in its heels and drag us all through our own blood to prevent more human progress. We need to root out the fascist fantasists inside our American machine, but quick. More at http://ancientgreece-earlyamerica.com
DEEPA: Do you not see where your project (sounds evocative) also supports my recurrent mention that in the US the PREMISE of Mars rules? Every item you mention strengthens the case I make in this forum, nor is your historical perspective mutually exclusive from the astrological basis for why aggressive drives remain a PART of the human condition.
What I would argue for is the understanding that while this penchant for babboon like-hierarchies based on force first IS an aspect of who we mortals are, it is far from the only compelling drive within our natures. Were other components of human personality and expression AS championed as Mars and its ruthless contests of naked barbarism (as well as the more covert spectacles that also serve the purpose of getting that fire in the loins moving, preferably in a compeitive, angry or aggressive direction) we would see a different society, a different order among human beings.
Instead of working with those priniciples taken from the Holy circle that would counterbalance the inclinations of Mars, the US leads the world in feeding the beast, supporting the worst in human nature. Then we spend a fortune on all the armies & policing forces supposedly to keep the beast we have unleashed in check. Another layer of Disaster Capitalism. Ms. Klein nailed that one!
The Genghis Of Glass Towers and Stone Gardens
Genghis Khan got nothin on the flim flam fascist fools who lead us on
those mad suiter banker baron looter tapeworms of truck
growing exponentially like stupidity in a mission accomplished flight suit
squirting black gold like baby burning bail out bandits in the blackwater desert of despair
from New York to LA from Bagdad to Dubai
from depraved indifference to the fertile valley
from shock me better to the awe of deformed babies....
Genghis Khan was a prince of peace compared to you
The complicit many...... who bought the promise
......who bought the dream
the stone and gilded towers
where the new age bandit creed is:
'We don't care about terra so long as we have our toys
We don't care if the temperature goes up to simmer
so long as we have a Bimmer, status and ease
The edifice with gold engraved and numbered names
Oedipus? would he say:
'I won without the swelling or the spike'?
Ah... the home of the civilized rogue
where 'shock and awe' is still in vogue
Stone gardens a few with fresh flowers
for the big money honored braves
and a trillion dollars worth of "I am" waves
to impress the silence
Sorry about the spelling "Offensive"
Kivals: There is nothing affesive in your comments.
I am actually working on a writing project on "The Imperial System of Peace: Augustus' "Acts of Deified Augustus" and Bush's "State of Union Address, 2003"." Hopefully I may get some publisher?????
In both, "peace" is understood as pacification and subjugation through military victory (victory is nothing but decisive violence). "Enemy" of those who are represented by Bush are either power-contenders (internal and external) or those who resist their hegemony. However, these "personal enemies" are presented as "public enemies" in order to get public support. That was how Saddam Hussein was presented by Bush in his State of Union Address and the American public readily responded by giving their support (About 73% supported the US' bombing of Iraq.) to American imperial violence. This violence was concealed in the garb of national security, or promoting "American values" and "peace", "freedom" and "democracy". By claiming divine legitimacy and sanction of the Christian god, the state sponsored violence was mythified as "holy, legal and legitimate". The overwhelming American public gesture of unanimity in their support to this "holy, legal and legitimate" slaughter of innocent Iraqi people and destruction of a sovereign country's political and economic structures was seen in the public frenzy and euphoria at the sight of death and destruction in Iraq, when Americans started bombing Iraq.
This is not an abherration. The US as a country was founded on "divinely legitimated and sanctioned violence" like Israel in the Old Testament, by exterminating the owners of the land and occupying it by claiming that God promised it.
I do agree that there a tiny minority of Americans, like Howard Zinn and some in CD, who acknowledge the continuing violent history of the US. But majority of Americans believe and support the state sponsored violence. Otherwise how can one explain the election of presidents, who have been consistently following the same foreign policy? Who are electing them? Isn't it the majority of Americans (both elites and "non-elites")? Even the present two presidential candidates subscribe to the same imperial policy. They enjoy the support of majority of Americans!!!!!!!
And Siouxrose August 5th, 2008 4:27 pm says
Or how straight men cringe when identified with FEMININE traits like being "a pussy," or showing feelings, especially feelings of emmpathy or concern for others.
This is so because MEN can only define themselves as a negative. In groups of all men they will define themselves as anything but feminine. Not pussy, not empathetic, not concerned, not weak, not soft. In the presence of women, they will define themselves as honorable, truthful, strong,competitive,or tough. All attributes that can also be claimed by women.
Lets just examine the top two males in America...Bush Cheney. Not honorable (attacking small countries that are basically helpless), not truthful (lying to do so), illusion of strength based on weakness ( draft dodgers ), competitive but losers (Iraq first Afganistan next)(won the election only to go down in history as the worst in American history), tough as a cowboy who rides a bike and chokes on pretzels and tough enough until the microwave buzzes then shits himself thinking his pacemaker just died.
Keep up the good work guys. A little more and you will make yourselves totally irrelevant.Hey the games on.........
Vee vill haf der 1000 year Reich.
KIVALS: You never need to apologize to me! I enjoy the expressions of your well-balanced mind. You are Dr. Spock crossed with the decency of a Jimmy Carter. Even if you're not a Libra, I am fairly certain your rising sign or Moon would otherwise be found in that diplomatic sign given to seeing both sides of every issue.
Siouxrose,
I know deepa understands that the term "freedom" is just used as a fig leaf. I was agreeing with deepa, but just approaching it from another perspective and trying to express it another way. I certainly did not mean to sound pedagogical (as I sometimes clumsily do). Apologies to you and deepa for any offense or confusion.
KIVALS: I'm 90% sure Deepa recognizes that the word freedom is used as an attractive fig leaf to lend poor cover to the outright destruction of other lands and their people.
Oops: typo, should read same (not sam). And I meant to relate that the types of women usually found in high offices resonates with Athena, so in many respects she is the "Uncle Tom" equivalent of what passes for female representation.
DEEPA: Excellent post, and it creates a segue into the response I'd like to make/add to PARANOID PESSIMIST'S post. I think you answered the conundrum in your own sentence, "It's the sam story over and over again."
I turned off history (advanced classes, no less) because the redundancy of armed conflict dressed up as something to celebrate was so obviously a historical enactment of theater of the absurd to me. It is HIS-story, and by that I mean, note how politicians must appear as war heros or tough GUYS to even be considered legitimate leaders. Think of all the movies that glorify macho expressions of toughness. Or how straight men cringe when identified with FEMININE traits like being "a pussy," or showing feelings, especially feelings of emmpathy or concern for others.
This idea of MARS RULES is my way of distilling centuries of glorified militarism into what it actually constitutes. The god of war has little respect for those who care, those who feel, those who won't stand up to fight. Sports is the precursor to war because it sets up the mindset of enemies, the importance of team, even an identification wih color or symbolic insignia.
Until HER story is brought to the decision-making table, the emphasis only on a logic-based/action-oriented, who's the top dog scenario will reign supreme. For all the intelligent men in this forum who now prepare to bring up Margaret Thatcher and Condi Rice, may I once again insert that the basic energetic templates for the genders are themselves composites. And there is a sector of the feminine, attributable to the Goddess Athena (who champions war) that identifies more with patriarchal systems than with any remotely nurturing forms of individual or collective expression.
You can check out Jean Shinoda Bolen's, "Gods in Everyman," and "Goddesses in Everywoman." They are extremely helpful books as they expand the notion of psychology into far broader bases for gender depictions.
deepa,
The rhetoric about "freedom and democracy" is designed to get middle class worker bees to get with the program and to accept their role in support of the empire. I doubt many elites believe in that nonsense, though Bush, a quite dimwitted specimen, quite possibly may.
"Democracy" to the Washington elites means rule by the people, the people in Washington, and domination by predatory US corporations. The natives can either resist and be bombed or submit and live in "peace." "Freedom" means the freedom of US corporations to engage in plunder wherever they see fit. For the natives it means the freedom to live in poverty as slave labor, or to die, as it does not really matter much to Washington.
About the US William Appleman Williams said, "We have only just begun our confrontation with our imperial history, our imperial ethic, and our imperial psychology." The American empire, like the Roman empire (Read Caesar Augustus' document "Acts of Deified Augustus"), presented its imperial violent acts as to bring American peace (pax Americana), freedom and democracy (republic) into the world. America's "grand strategy" is dressed in grandiose rhetoric and its will to power, control, and plunder is presented as benevolent service to the peoples of the world through enlightened militarism. The exceptionalism of empire is very much evident in the American rhetoric. Bush declared "Our values are God-given values. They aren't United States-created values." He again said: "Because America loves peace America will always work and sacrifice for the expansion of freedom. The advance of feedom is more than an interest we pursue. It is a calling we follow." Here the "peace" "freedom" and "democracy" which Americans boast about is nothing but extermination of those who resist the US' hegemony, and occupation and plunder of sovereign countries. Appleman Williams rightly says: "Empire became so intrinsically our American way of life that we rationalized and suppressed the nature of our means in the euphoria of our enjoyment of the ends." The day after the death of Ronald Reagan, the editorial cartoon in the Minneapolis Star Tribune showed the beaming "killer of innocent people around the world, especially in Nicaragua" accompanied by his words: "There can be no greater good than the quest for peace, no finer purpose than the preservation of freedom."
One wonders whether anyone noticed that a globalized world economy doesn't leave much spare room for a good old fashioned military empire. Besides these days when you think of empire it doesn't call to mind the Romans but it does the Chinese Empire.
Oddly the 'what if' theorists also didn't 'what if' global warming does this mass migration and causes that massive disruption. You'd think they'd plan?
How do you have no plan which takes that much changed world into account? Oh wait! Of course! It's a modified Rummy No Plan plan!
This 'No Plan for Empire' ...plan of empire! All you need is guns and we will just John Wayne it from there and see what happens.
What if Ghengis Khan did what? If Alexander had... Oh forget trying to pick and chose and tweak history to say what you want it to. Where's the need?
Get real. Get John Wayne on em!
John Wayne's Empire... you know that was what they were aiming at. A John Wayne version of Military Empire.
Late stage fantasy denial of strange people who speak of the death of millions in the same terms as they do the little figurines of Napoleonic armies that they move about on tabletops.
Bush incompetence and an utterly corrupt republican agenda ... ended their dreams of empire.
Here's one more 'what if'. What if greed, incompetent cronies, no bid contracts and open malfeasance ... out sourcing, off shoring, revenue cutting tax cuts, crushing debt and a weary almost enslaved military under stop loss...
...ended such dreams of empire forever?
What if?
"It is most certainly the same thing."
That historic events would provide insight into the present is one thing. That you would take that historic event and try to shoehorn it wholesale into the present is another. It is not clear that the report in question does the latter. Elliot himself isn't saying that. Don't we agree that you can learn from history?
"What are these people doing with their newfound "insight?"
We would have to read the report I guess.
History is the most maddening of intellectual pursuits. If you want to be discouraged about the prospects for human survival, history is a great place to look. I'm not a scholar, just someone who is interested, who reads a lot of it and watches a lot of History Channel-type documentaries.
To me, it's the same story over and over again from the beginning of civilization: warrior-chiefs declaring themselves to be God or gods, convincing their populations that killing, maiming, and torturing those "others" is a sacred duty, and leading the way, banners flying. More human inventiveness and ingenuity has been spent devising new weapon systems and torture and punishment devices than any other area of human endeavor, even food production.
Optimists used to think that nuclear weapons would change the game because they were so destructive that war-making would become "unthinkable." That certainly isn't the case. Current leaders seem downright eager to nuke away, thinking that somehow this will cause them to prevail.
And the soldiers keep being willing to soldier on and the flag-waving, teary-eyed moms keep being willing to sacrifice their offspring (used to be "sons" but now sexual equality is cited to get more of the women involved -- even if it means being raped a lot) for the noble cause.
There's something in human nature that seems to want to get it all over with in a big blaze of so-called glory. Working together for human betterment is seen as wimpy and not very exciting.
Just for fun, the Pentagon's Office of Net Assessment (ONA) should be tasked to do a study titled, "How To Achieve World Peace."
Meanwhile, "maintaining US military dominance" will eventually come down to this: f**k with us and we'll nuke your asses.
jakenewton:
It is most certainly the same thing. What are these people doing with their newfound "insight?"
The central problem is thus: some of the reviewers cite the authors' penchant for placing ancient concepts into present day U.S. society. They are deducing "insights" which are formulated by spanning temporal and cultural boundaries. Most basic history textbooks reinforce this flawed pedagogy. Playing "games" with historical concepts is dangerous, especially when millions die as a result of such "analysis."
Try researching the term "historical relativism."
Why are they spending millions on such a silly program?
None of this is important unless you want to build a great world empire, and apparently that has been the objective of US foreign policy for many years now.
Karl Marx observed that, unlike previous civilizations which considered history as a cyclical decline from an idyllic past, capitalist civilization interprets the past as imperfect versions of itself, the pinnacle of achievement of a benighted history.
"Using examples of previous societies to mold your military is absurd."
I don't see "using" here in the sense of unaltered. The author states that the historical examples may offer insight. Not the same thing.
Using examples of previous societies to mold your military is absurd. Anyone who seriously studies history understands that every single thing analyzed must be done so in historical context. Plucking out past concepts and situating them in today's world just does not make sense. If these government reports read like secondary school and freshman level undergraduate textbooks, which I am sure they do, then they are merely scattering the same old patriotic propaganda - Why learn about past societies on their own terms when we can compare them all to ours?