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Obama’s Flailing Wars
A Study in BP-Style “Pragmatism”
On stage, it would be farce. In Afghanistan and Pakistan, it’s bound to play out as tragedy.
Less than two months ago, Barack Obama flew into
Afghanistan for six hours -- essentially to read the riot act to Afghan
President Hamid Karzai, whom his ambassador had only months before termed “not
an adequate strategic partner.” Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Admiral
Mike Mullen followed within a day to deliver his own “stern message.”
While still on Air Force One, National Security Adviser James Jones offered reporters a version of the tough talk Obama was bringing with him. Karzai would later see one of Jones’s comments and find it insulting. Brought to his attention as well would be a newspaper article that quoted an anonymous senior U.S. military official as saying of his half-brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, a reputedly corrupt powerbroker in the southern city of Kandahar: “I'd like him out of there... But there's nothing that we can do unless we can link him to the insurgency, then we can put him on the [target list] and capture and kill him." This was tough talk indeed.
At the time, the media repeatedly pointed out that President Obama, unlike his predecessor, had consciously developed a standoffish relationship with Karzai. Meanwhile, both named and anonymous officials regularly castigated the Afghan president in the press for stealing an election and running a hopelessly corrupt, inefficient government that had little power outside Kabul, the capital. A previously planned Karzai visit to Washington was soon put on hold to emphasize the toughness of the new approach.
The administration was clearly intent on fighting a better version of the Afghan war with a new commander, a new plan of action, and a well-tamed Afghan president, a client head of state who would finally accept his lesser place in the greater scheme of things. A little blunt talk, some necessary threats, and the big stick of American power and money were sure to do the trick.
Meanwhile, across the border in Pakistan, the administration was in an all-carrots mood when it came to the local military and civilian leadership -- billions of dollars of carrots, in fact. Our top military and civilian officials had all but taken up residence in Islamabad. By March, for instance, Admiral Mullen had already visited the country 15 times and U.S. dollars (and promises of more) were flowing in. Meanwhile, U.S. Special Operations Forces were arriving in the country’s wild borderlands to train the Pakistani Frontier Corps and the skies were filling with CIA-directed unmanned aerial vehicles pounding those same borderlands, where the Pakistani Taliban, al-Qaeda, and other insurgent groups involved in the Afghan War were located.
In Pakistan, it was said, a crucial “strategic relationship” was being carefully cultivated. As the New York Times reported,
“In March, [the Obama administration] held a high-level strategic
dialogue with Pakistan’s government, which officials said went a long
way toward building up trust between the two sides.” Trust indeed.
Skip ahead to mid-May and somehow, like so many stealthy insurgents, the carrots and sticks had crossed the poorly marked, porous border between Afghanistan and Pakistan heading in opposite directions. Last week, Karzai was in Washington being given “the red carpet treatment” as part of what was termed an Obama administration “charm offensive” and a “four-day love fest.”
The president set aside a rare stretch of hours to entertain Karzai and the planeload of ministers he brought with him. At a joint news conference, Obama insisted that “perceived tensions” between the two men had been “overstated.” Specific orders went out from the White House to curb public criticism of the Afghan president and give him “more public respect” as “the chief U.S. partner in the war effort.”
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton assured Karzai of Washington’s long-term “commitment” to his country, as did Obama and Afghan War commander General Stanley McChrystal. Praise was the order of the day.
John Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, interrupted a financial reform debate to invite Karzai onto the Senate floor where he was mobbed by senators eager to shake his hand (an honor not bestowed on a head of state since 1967). He was once again our man in Kabul. It was a stunning turnaround: a president almost without power in his own country had somehow tamed the commander-in-chief of the globe’s lone superpower.
Meanwhile, Clinton, who had shepherded the Afghan president on a walk through a “private enclave” in Georgetown and hosted a “glittering reception” for him, appeared on CBS’s “60 Minutes” to flay Pakistan. In the wake of an inept failed car bombing in Times Square, she had this stern message to send to the Pakistani leadership: "We want more, we expect more... We've made it very clear that if, heaven forbid, an attack like this that we can trace back to Pakistan were to have been successful, there would be very severe consequences." Such consequences would evidently include a halt to the flow of U.S. aid to a country in economically disastrous shape. She also accused at least some Pakistani officials of “practically harboring” Osama bin Laden. So much for the carrots.
According to the Washington Post, General McChrystal delivered a “similar message” to the chief of staff of the Pakistani Army. To back up Clinton’s public threats and McChrystal’s private ones, hordes of anonymous American military and civilian officials were ready to pepper reporters with leaks about the tough love that might now be in store for Pakistan. The same Post story, for instance, spoke of “some officials... weighing in favor of a far more muscular and unilateral U.S. policy. It would include a geographically expanded use of drone missile attacks in Pakistan and pressure for a stronger U.S. military presence there.”
According to similar accounts, “more pointed” messages were heading for key Pakistanis and “new and stiff warnings” were being issued. Americans were said to be pushing for expanded Special Operations training programs in the Pakistani tribal areas and insisting that the Pakistani military launch a major campaign in North Waziristan, the heartland of various resistance groups including, possibly, al-Qaeda. “The element of threat” was now in the air, according to Tariq Fatemi, a former Pakistani ambassador, while in press reports you could hear rumblings about an “internal debate” in Washington that might result in more American “boots on the ground.”
Helpless Escalation
In other words, in the space of two months the Obama administration had flip-flopped when it came to who exactly was to be pressured and who reassured. A typically anonymous “former U.S. official who advises the administration on Afghan policy” caught the moment well in a comment to the Wall Street Journal. “This whole bending over backwards to show Karzai the red carpet,” he told journalist Peter Spiegel, “is a result of not having had a concerted strategy for how to grapple with him."
On a larger scale, the flip-flop seemed to reflect tactical and strategic incoherence -- and not just in relation to Karzai. To all appearances, when it comes to the administration's two South Asian wars, one open, one more hidden, Obama and his top officials are flailing around. They are evidently trying whatever comes to mind in much the manner of the oil company BP as it repeatedly fails to cap a demolished oil well 5,000 feet under the waves in the Gulf of Mexico. In a sense, when it comes to Washington’s ability to control the situation, Pakistan and Afghanistan might as well be 5,000 feet underwater. Like BP, Obama’s officials, military and civilian, seem to be operating in the dark, using unmanned robotic vehicles. And as in the Gulf, after each new failure, the destruction only spreads.
For all the policy reviews and shuttling officials, the surging troops, extra private contractors, and new bases, Obama’s wars are worsening. Lacking is any coherent regional policy or semblance of real strategy -- counterinsurgency being only a method of fighting and a set of tactics for doing so. In place of strategic coherence there is just one knee-jerk response: escalation. As unexpected events grip the Obama administration by the throat, its officials increasingly act as if further escalation were their only choice, their fated choice.
This response is eerily familiar. It permeated Washington’s mentality in the Vietnam War years. In fact, one of the strangest aspects of that war was the way America’s leaders -- including President Lyndon Johnson -- felt increasingly helpless and hopeless even as they committed themselves to further steps up the ladder of escalation.
We don’t know what the main actors in Obama’s war are feeling. We don’t have their private documents or their secret taped conversations. Nonetheless, it should ring a bell when, as wars devolve, the only response Washington can imagine is further escalation.
Washington Boxed In
By just about every recent account, including new reports from the independent Government Accountability Office and the Pentagon, the U.S. mission in Afghanistan is going dreadfully, even as the Taliban insurgency gains potency and expands. This spring, preparing for his first relatively minor U.S. offensive in Marja, a Taliban-controlled area of Helmand Province, General McChrystal confidently announced that, after the insurgents were dislodged, an Afghan “government in a box” would be rolled out. From a governing point of view, however, the offensive seems to have been a fiasco. The Taliban is now reportedly re-infiltrating the area, while the governmental apparatus in that nation-building “box” has proven next to nonexistent, corrupt, and thoroughly incompetent.
Today, according to a report by the International Council on Security and Development (ICOS), the local population is far more hostile to the American effort. According to the ICOS, “61% of Afghans interviewed feel more negative about NATO forces after Operation Moshtarak than they did before the February military offensive in Marja.”
As Alissa Rubin of the New York Times summed up the situation in Afghanistan more generally:
"Even as American troops clear areas of militants, they find either no government to fill the vacuum, as in Marja, or entrenched power brokers, like President Karzai's brother in Kandahar, who monopolize NATO contracts and other development projects and are resented by large portions of the population. In still other places, government officials rarely show up at work and do little to help local people, and in most places the Afghan police are incapable of providing security. Corruption, big and small, remains an overwhelming complaint."
In other words, the U.S. really doesn’t have an “adequate partner,” and this is all the more striking since the Taliban is by no stretch of the imagination a particularly popular movement of national resistance. As in Vietnam, a counterinsurgency war lacking a genuine governmental partner is an oxymoron, not to speak of a recipe for disaster.
Not surprisingly, doubts about General McChrystal’s war plan are reportedly spreading inside the Pentagon and in Washington, even before it’s been fully launched. The major U.S. summer “operation” -- it’s no longer being labeled an “offensive” -- in the Kandahar region already shows signs of “faltering” and its unpopularity is rising among an increasingly resistant local population. In addition, civilian deaths from U.S. and NATO actions are distinctly on the rise and widely unsettling to Afghans. Meanwhile, military and police forces being trained in U.S./NATO mentoring programs considered crucial to Obama’s war plans are proving remarkably hapless.
McClatchy News, for example, recently reported that the new Afghan National Civil Order Police (ANCOP), a specially trained elite force brought into the Marja area and “touted as the country's best and brightest” is, according to “U.S. military strategists[,] plagued by the same problems as Afghanistan's conventional police, who are widely considered corrupt, ineffective and inept.” Drug use and desertions in ANCOP have been rife.
And yet, it seems as if all that American officials can come up with, in response to the failed Times Square car bombing and the “news” that the bomber was supposedly trained in Waziristan by the Pakistani Taliban, is the demand that Pakistan allow “more of a boots-on-the-ground strategy” and more American trainers into the country. Such additional U.S. forces would serve only “as advisers and trainers, not as combat forces.” So the mantra now goes reassuringly, but given the history of the Vietnam War, it’s a cringe-worthy demand.
In the meantime, the Obama administration has officially widened its targeting in the CIA drone war in the Pakistani borderlands to include low-level, no-name militants. It is also ratcheting up such attacks, deeply unpopular in a country where 64% of the inhabitants, according to a recent poll, already view the United States as an "enemy" and only 9% as a “partner.”
Since the Times Square incident, the CIA has specifically been striking North Waziristan, where the Pakistani army has as yet refrained from launching operations. The U.S., as the Nation’s Jeremy Scahill reports, has also increased its support for the Pakistani Air Force, which will only add to the wars in the skies of that country.
All of this represents escalation of the “covert” U.S. war in Pakistan. None of it offers particular hope of success. All of it stokes enmity and undoubtedly encourages more “lone wolf” jihadis to lash out at the U.S. It’s a formula for blowback, but not for victory.
BP-Style Pragmatism Goes to War
One thing can be said about the Bush administration: it had a grand strategic vision to go with its wars. Its top officials were convinced that the American military, a force they saw as unparalleled on planet Earth, would be capable of unilaterally shock-and-awing America’s enemies in what they liked to call “the arc of instability” or “the Greater Middle East” (that is, the oil heartlands of the planet). Its two wars would bring not just Afghanistan and Iraq, but Iran and Syria to their knees, leaving Washington to impose a Pax Americana on the Middle East and Central Asia (in the process of which groups like Hamas and Hezbollah would be subdued and anti-American jihadism ended).
They couldn’t, of course, have been more wrong, something quite apparent to the Obama team. Now, however, we have a crew in Washington who seem to have no vision, great or small, when it comes to American foreign or imperial policy, and who seem, in fact, to lack any sense of strategy at all. What they have is a set of increasingly discredited tactics and an approach that might pass for good old American see-what-works “pragmatism,” but these days might more aptly be labeled “BP-style pragmatism.”
The vision may be long gone, but the wars live on with their own inexorable momentum. Add into the mix American domestic politics, which could discourage any president from changing course and de-escalating a war, and you have what looks like a fatal -- and fatally expensive -- brew.
We’ve moved from Bush’s visionary disasters to Obama’s flailing wars, while the people of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iraq continue to pay the price. If only we could close the curtain on this strange mix of farce and tragedy, but evidently we’re still stuck in act four of a five-act nightmare.
Even as our Afghan and Pakistani wars are being sucked dry of whatever meaning might remain, the momentum is in only one direction -- toward escalation. A thousand repetitions of an al-Qaeda-must-be-destroyed mantra won’t change that one bit. More escalation, unfortunately, is yet to come.
[Note on Sources: Let me offer one of my periodic appreciative bows to several websites I rely on for crucial information and interpretation when it comes to America’s wars: Juan Cole’s invaluable, often incandescent, Informed Comment blog, Antiwar.com (especially Jason Ditz’s remarkable daily war news summaries), the thoughtful framing and good eye of Paul Woodward at the War in Context website, and Katherine Tiedemann’s concise, useful daily briefs of the most interesting mainstream reportage on Afghanistan and Pakistan at the AfPak Channel website. A special bow to historian Marilyn Young, author of the classic book The Vietnam Wars, who keeps me abreast of the latest thinking on all sorts of war-related subjects via her own informal information service for friends and fellow historians.]
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122 Comments so far
Show All"Those whom the God's would destroy first the make mad."
Variations in this dictum include:
"Those whom the God's would destroy they first make proud."
"Those whom the God's would destroy they first make powerful."
Madness inevitably follows.
But, in a society awash in tides of insanity, who notices?
Thanks as always to TE for making sense out of the senseless.
Not long ago I posted that Obama christened the Afghanistan campaign a "just war" during his pres campaign merely as a tactic to deflect the war-mongering right's expected labeing him (and all Dimocrats) as soft on security and defense.
That was what I believed, even as I hoped I was wrong. Now TE in very simple terms confirms that belief.
And as I said then, if that asshole has any sense of morality in his being he must know that innocent men, women and children are dying senseleesly for his act of political expediency.
Reading history about the demise of civilizations and nations is so completely different than living through it. This may be the last long slow nail in the US coffin. There is no joy in that. Humanity is the same throughout, and another will rise to take our place and commit the same acts of senseless destruction.
I agree with you until your last sentence. There will be no other "civilization" that will rise to take our place. This last one is the whole enchilada, I'm afraid. Read the Chris Hedges article on this site for more in-depth analysis.
Sorry Justaman but you are a latecomer. In the spring of 2008 when Mr. Obama considered running for the presidency he was interviewed by the Chicago Tribune. In the published version he volunteered that he was not against all wars, he was only against "stupid wars". He also volunteered that the war in Afghanistan was not "stupid" in his opinion. When I combined the CT interviews with his speeches for AIPAC I wrote in 2008 on this site that Mr. Obama is an imperialist hell-bent on starting his own war in Afghanistan/Pakistan to prove that he had cojones. Obviously only very few voters believed me then.
Crowsnest: I don't see or read everything here, so probably missed your analysis. Who said what first is of no consequence. The point is that so much senseless death and destruction to serve political ambition. TE's piece proves beyond a doubt to me that we both were right and those assholes don't have a fucking clue what they're doing or the moral fortitude to stop doing it.
The paragraph equating the two nightmare wars with the Deepwater Horizon was apt. You can add to that the incredible flailing around in the mortgage mess -- yet another article on this site about that yesterday. Flailing on everything -- just everything -- and all the death and pain that follows from all this flailing.
As I was reading this I was thinking about Will Farrell's one-man show on Bush, and how, even after a short time in office, it wouldn't be hard to find plenty of material for one on Obama. I'm just not sure it would be funny, though. I find Obama far more sinister than Bush.
Barack Obama is a war criminal.
We need a global movement to put all of the living US emperors on trial for war crimes. We need to see Bush I, Bill Clinton, Bush II and Obama in The Hague facing charges of crimes against humanity. Once that begins we then can get the numerous living Senators and architects of these numerous war crimes to stand trial as well.
The United States is the most vicious and unrepentant rogue nation on the planet, perhaps in the history of the planet, though we need not argue too long into the night the point of who takes first in unremitting massacre and oppression.
Mccoyote
Your well-taken point is certainly echoed by a most well written, relevant and informative book by Carl Boggs entitled The Crimes of Empire: Rogue Superpower and World Domination.
As Tom Engelhardt accurately points out, all this seems eerily familiar as when he notes that the U.S. wishes to place troops in Pakistan who "would serve as 'advisers and trainers, not as combat forces'". Obama and his war advisers do not seem to have learned much from history as 'advisers' were sent into Vietnam by JFK in the early 1960s. Many of those so-called advisers ended up fighting next to the ARVN and, in coordination with Englehardt's theme, the fighting soon escalated out of control. It would not be very surprising if the same thing happened in Pakistan.
Regarding Afghanistan, I have a bumper sticker that perhaps many readers of Common Dreams may find to be of interest:
"Is Afghanistan Obama's Vietnam?"
Good post, but I would point out that we had advisor's there before the 60's. Hundreds by late 59 and doubling before JFK took office.
I think your analogy is fair.
"advisers and trainers"
translation: assassins and terrorists
anyone who flies in an airplane other than business
supports these wars
anyone who owns a cell phone
supports these wars
anyone who gets in their car for more than transportation
to and from work and the grocery store
supports these wars.
The problem is us
No, the problem isn't "Us" the problem are the plutocrats who designed the system for their benefit.
While I live a life of frugality and simplicity I cannot pretend that this one life lived in a somewhat conscientious manner impacts the meta situation even one whit.
I'll use just one glaring example to disprove your thesis.
If you have ever been to St. Louis (or most other urban centers in the US) you will notice not only the sprawl but the horrendous to non-existent mass transit system. Accompanying this is the fact that most jobs are placed outside the urban center in "tax-friendly" areas and most small businesses choose to locate outside the city for the obvious reasons of socio-economic population densities.
So what we see is that for most people in St. Louis they are trapped into the need for a car and the need to drive about willy-nilly just to get the basics let alone have a few simple pleasures.
Blaming people for this is not only wrong-headed but flies in the face of the truth of the matter. The entire city landscape of St. Louis and the surrounding counties was designed specifically to suit the needs of big business with all manner of laws being written by and for these pariahs. The folks in North St. Louis had no say in this. The folks in South St. Louis had no say in any of this. And yet you are holding them to blame.
Most folks in St. Louis would gladly ride trains to work (if they could even find work) but the bureaucrats in charge have other ideas.
Now of course I'm not excusing the gluttony that is emblematic of many Americans but if you take an honest look at resource consumption you will find it skewed dramatically towards the top of the socio-economic ladder.
It's really amazing if you look at the stats that if we simply eliminate the wealthiest top 5% of the population in our chart we gain extraordinary amounts of planetary breathing room.
To blame "everyone" for what we are burdened with today is to place blame on a whole lot of victims.
Great points! Los Angeles is another perfect example. We HAD a wonderful mass-transit system here that people LOVED. The auto and oil corporations made sure to "change" (manufactured consent) our ideology to fit in with THEIR invention: "car culture"
Sioux Rose
MCOYOTE: Great post. Another take on this idea of the power of the individual to change things is challenged by conditions about to reverberate from the tragedy in the Gulf waters. I have been trying to learn to garden, grow some food, fruit trees, etc. and this debacle may well bring forth the worst sort of acid rain essentially negating all such efforts. ONE person (and likeminded others) trying to get off the grid does slim to nothing, especially when such efforts are negatively impacted by the larger corporate interests shaping events for most of us in ways we can't much alter. IF we had the numbers, and to get those numbers we'd need media access, and then we'd need to find the means to de-program those who have been repeatedly told that their depreciating standard of living is the product of "socialist" ideas or "the progressive" incentives of recent decades.
"ONE person (and likeminded others) trying to get off the grid does slim to nothing"
It does more than you may realize.
1. Teaches by example
2. Reduces corporate profit and dependence
3. Just might save you and yours
Climate imbalance could unpredictably render any spot inhabitable. We all may become refugees, but keep planting and don't let gardening failures discourage you. Every gardener has to learn as they go.
Peace, Buck
Sioux Rose
BUCK: Yes, you raised valid points. I'd love to see mass movements away from "the old ways" but I suppose someone has to be the local example. And you're certainly right about learning as you go (as per gardening). A friend of mine who has a real green thumb told me to collect the sea grass that washes up on the shore, as it's rich in nutrients. He said to use that mixed with soil as compost. I started doing that... it was a CRUEL winter and a few of my trees didn't make it through the repeated and unrelenting FROSTS. This is Florida! Mother Nature is definitely exhibiting signs of imbalance with all that She's been up against on so many ecological fronts simultaneously. Thank you for your post.
Yes, Sioux Rose, myself and others (yourself included) have for many years realized that you can have a soft dictatorship without the troops and police on every street corner if you almost totally control the message (media) and have that media appear to be independent and free. In many countries where you know the government (including military, economic, and religious dictatorships) are overtly censoring everything then people are on guard and skeptical.
It is rather shocking to realize that the elite right wing power brokers with their almost infinite faith in police, courts, armaments, armies, and every type of bomb or death ray imaginable, actually, at least unconsciously, realizes that the pen (print, voice or image) is mightier then the sword. Next to a politician the elite get more bang for the buck from controlling media then all the backwaters in the world. Just ask the Koch brothers or the Schaiff/Mellons, or the Murdocks, etc. how they have transformed the world into their own dark fantasy with them at the center of the web.
Why is Rush Limbaugh heard on every band width in every town or hamlet across america? Why does he get paid one million dollars a week to tell us we don't need minimum wage, health care, corporate regulations, or any other piece of social legislation that makes for a strong and living democracy... and that we should be very, very, oh so very afraid of everything he tells us to be afraid of. Why does Rupert Murdock have the eyes and ears of two thirds of worlds 7 billion people through his network of newspapers, tv stations, cable stations, radio stations, magazines and movies. Why are these media types with their strong history in advertisement (the art of making something out of nothing) like one long everlasting infomercial with no mention of any other product except in a pejorative sense.........
Because they know HIRED TONGUES ARE MORE POWERFUL AND INSIDIOUS THEN HIRED GUNS. Naturally the hired guns are there as back up and especially needed for pesky foreigners who might be outside the orb of total thought control of the american media prison. Lets face it, the one great asset we had for our security in the past: our isolation, has become our Achilles heel with our lack of exposure to different and varying degrees of thought and solutions.
So we now live in the dystopic world not just of the thought control and double speak of "1984" but also the synthetic opiated clouded fog of thousands of trash foods, medicines, machines and products ala "Brave New World."
Our only hope is that the pendulum has swung so far off balance that some force of gy'n gravity will assist us in some type of transformation (with purging) of our group soul.
Sioux
RALPH: I could not agree more. You laid it out in perfect form. When my TV show was canceled at the end of l994 (in the Florida Keys), I took it for a coincidence. I could see that the right wing Christians were exerting a lot more control over local TV and radio. Then Clear Channel bought up the big radio markets in Florida, and where I had been a popular guest on a number of shows, NO more invitations came my way. It took a while to realize that similar things were happening to voices on the left, real progressives, and anyone with an agenda/understanding that didn't fit it to the metrics of the authoritarians taking charge, and sometimes finding illegal ways to come by the money to do so. And it's led to a sort of Herman Hesse hall of mirrors... where so many get so much disinformation that the post on Tuesday's edition showing that America is NOT right of center was refreshing, the intellectual equivalent of "God bless the grass that grows between the cracks, they roll the concrete over it, to try to keep it back. The concrete gets tired from what it has to do, it breaks all open and the grass grows through. God bless the grass." (I think it was written by Pete Seeger, but I forget).
Thanks for writing! It's time for me to bike. The exercise and communion with trees keeps me sane during times that are anything but.
Right on. It's propaganda focus on the individual while neglecting the systemic causes of a problem.
It's also propaganda to blame this problem on the victims of corporate rule in the US, which means just about everyone in the bottom 4/5.
I'm with ya on the main premise, but
"other than business"?
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Bill Moyers warned Team Obungle in excruciating detail why he should not repeat the lessons unlearned from the escalation of the Vietnam police action. The younger pro-war Baby Boomers are repeating the older pro-war Boomers' exact same Vietnam era mistakes in Iraq and Afghanistan: Total lack of familiarity with the languages and cultures on the ground; insufficient number of translators; brutal insensitivity to what little they do know about them; over-emphasis on indiscriminate remote force and body counts regardless of whether they're innocent civilians or not; cover-ups of too many massacres of innocent civilians; failure to rebuild enough to win any hearts and minds that way, and dubious partnerships with corrupt government officials and others linked to the illegal drug trade.
Team Bush's and Team Obama's tactics & strategies have been failing for nearly a decade in Afghanistan and for seven years in Iraq, yet Obama keeps repeating these same failed ideas over and over again expecting different results, and their enemy is a cult of martyrdom with a recruitment pool of 1.3 Billion annoyed-to-infuriated Muslims to draw from. Even the NVA didn't have that kind of recruitment potential, nor were they quite as suicidal as the dedicated jihadis. These quagmires were child's play to predict and the Trillions of dollars they will cost and the sheer numbers of terrorists and terrorist events they have multiplied makes them a bigger, clearer more obvious threat to the true national defense security and economic security of the U.S. than any Al Qaeda members who may (or may not) have taken part in the 9/11 attacks.
It's hard to say who are the bigger fools now. Team Obama or the American masses for tolerating these grotesque military-industrial-petrol-complex charades.
Excellent post!
Though the American "masses" may still fool all of you.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
I'm not holding my breath.
Obama's AfPak policy is not as illogical as Engelhardt makes it out to be - if you start from the premise that the US is an empire. Empires as far back as Assyria, Persia and Rome used military power to assure the flow of tribute from subjugated nations. Right now, the strength of the US paper dollar guarantees that much of the rest of the world produces goods and raw materials that flow to the US, giving us Americans a high standard of living that would not be possible if we had to rely on what we actually produced here. Calling this economic transfer tribute rather than trade might make it clearer. And military dominance is what ultimately makes other nations take that paper dollar in exchange for actual goods and raw materials. If any president simply abandoned the empire and withdrew all American troops from overseas, the dollar and the standard of living it supports would collapse.
Spoken like a government or Pentagon spook with less dialectical connective tissue than even that that senile old fool Ronald Reagan used to mumble and loaded with generalized assumptions without a shred of specificity to back any of this mush up.
So...Metal...what do YOU think is Obama's motivation to continue his wars? Do you think that Obama is genuinely clueless or that he is being advised by people who use V's schtick or some other possibility I haven't considered?
May I butt in? V is in the excellent company of Andrew J. Bacevich ("The Limits of Power"). I fully agree with him that our nation's insatiable demand for the highest standard of living on Earth is an important cornerstone of U.S. imperialism and have expressed this view on this site some time ago. I am contributing to this imperialism by hoping that gas prices will not rise above three dollars per gallon because I will then have to stop driving as much as I do in my big city which is bereft of public transportation. Multiply my hope/demand by ten to the power eight and, pronto, real imperialism backed by military adventurism springs alive.
In the spring of 2008 I wrote on this site why Mr. Obama would not only continue existing wars but start new ones of his own because he too is infected with the "highest standard of living" bug.
The fact that our infection plays right into the hands of big banks, big oil, and the Military Industrial Complex in general does not mean that big banks, big oil, and the Military Industrial Complex are the only culprits as, alas, many Americans conveniently believe.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Monroematt: Personally, the more I observe his policies and statements the more I believe he and Rahm Emanuel are just another couple of Chicago pols (in a very long line) on the make to benefit themselves and their families by serving the monied interests. I think these two have already cut deals for cushy lobbying, speaking and book writing gigs after their time in the White House. They have served Big Weapons, Big Oil, Big Pharma, Big Insurance and Mercenaries Inc. SO well they probably had their pick of suh-weet post-presidency pimp-gigs with offices on K Street. I think Obama is such a made man, in fact, that he doesn't even care if he's a one term wonder. I suspect he thinks he's going to use his negative accomplishments as a corporatist, militarist facilitator to pole vault himself and his family into becoming the first black political neo-lib dynasty--an oreo version of the Bush family dynasty.
Thanks Metal...I'm afraid that you are correct.
Actually, you're right to bring up Reagan. The "analysis" seems at least 30 years old.
I appreciate the compliment. Government or pentagon spooks, as you call them, and even Dick Cheney, are committed to maintaining US military hegemony because it guarantees the financial hegemony underpinning our undeservedly high standard of living. I am not saying that it is morally good for the average American to live better than people who produce all our material crap. It isn't. But to think that the US can give up its empire without people here in the "homeland" giving up the cheap oil, cheap laptops, and cheap food is not realistic. Too many of our own people have become so spoiled that they will scream at the slightest hint of sacrifice.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Many of our people are now so brainwashed they scream at the slightest fantasy whim their right-wing and far-right media program them with anyway. Tens of millions of Americans have always and will always whine even about changes that are good for them and the country. It matters what type of economy and energy system the current empire is transitioned to and the quality of the leadership and the ability of that leadership to get out its message.
The only Americans capable now of resisting the prevailing corporatist, militarist message on the merits of their principles are authentic progressives, pareconomists and democratic socialists. That is why if you believe in changing America for the better you should be helping to organize ASAP.
Many who post on this site have given up entirely on the idea of positively transforming America and just pray for it to fall into a complete failed State--balkanized and turned on itself in violence. To pretend that a failed State as heavily armed as the U.S. and crawling with its class and race elitism would not still pose a threat to the physical, economic and environmental security of working people around the world is incredibly naive. The nature of the U.S. as a rogue pariah State would have somewhat changed, but not the essential fact.
Thanks Valatius for the analysis. If you were President of US, AND you had the greatest good for the greatest number of citizens as a goal, would you continue our military predations (with their humanitarian, moral, legal, and financial costs)?
Based on what I know, I am absolutely against US military actions in South Asia. I cannot imagine ANY general financial or social benefit that is worth the costs of "our" military assaults. From a Realpolitik point of view, however, I would at least like to hear a rational discussion of the calculations.
Finally, do you think that Uberpragmatist Obama is employing your analysis...but is too contemptuous of the American people to let us in on the "real" reason for the killings? I find it hard to believe that someone as intelligent as Obama, would employ these policies which obviously have no chance of achieving his stated "goals."
My guess is that sustainability (not "victory") is the goal of these "wars." After all, "victory" drives down profits for the MIC. Also, it's much easier for a "war president" to maintain office, and accumulate power at the expense of the more servile branches of government.
Where we differ, Monroematt, is that I think that these wars benefit not only the sectors of the economy that draw direct profits from the military but the financial system as well. The value of the dollar vs. other currencies depends on the speculations of a vast number of traders and if the US appears weak, that value could drop, i.e. inflation here would rise. Ever since Reagan, inflation has been kept under control and this is the result of the perception that the US is strong and stable. Even the September 2008 market crash did not cause the dollar to waver. Considering that the US is a debtor nation and that most of our industrial might has been trashed, this is hard to explain except by the one area in which the US remains undeniably the strongest nation on Earth: our military machine.
Sioux Rose
VALATIUS: While morally repugnant, I think you make a strong case for what's at play. In my parlance, it's the unseemly marriage between Mammon with Mars (MIC) and these events (imperial wars of resource acquisition) are the fruit of that union.
I appreciate your comments...but still have to ask the question: do YOU think that our military predations are worth it? For instance, assuming your analysis is correct, I am willing to accept a diminution of "standard of living" all the way down to driving a Yugo and never eating out again for abandoning "our" military pursuits in South Asia.
Pardon me for butting in, but, while I don't accept the above analysis as correct, our military power stems from our financial power, not the other way around, I can answer your question.
"think that our military predations are worth it?"
Absolutely not. And if there is a diminuation of our living standards, it will be in part because of these assaults and occupations.
Iraq and Afghanistan were fool's errands in the first place and probably in the case of Iraq, the greatest strategic mistake in our history. Now we have new leadership compounding the mistake.
Thanks for the butting...of course, I agree with you. I have more respect for V's analysis than that of Obama's. From my perspective Obama is either really, really stupid (unlikely) or criminally dishonest in his use of America's military.
Well...I don't think he is stupid......
Tell it like it is...obomber IS a mass murderer, as are never elected ex- dictators bush and cheney !
"the greatest strategic mistake in our history"
None of this was/is a "mistake".
perpetual war for perpetual profit
You could well be right Buck since it was a calculate decision to do it. But I used "the greatest strategic mistake in our history" in the context of whats best for our country and the rest of the world.
Not Cheney and his Bud's. RIHFTDBMFSH's!
Valatius: Americans are fucking poors, americans cannot join a college, can't get a plastic surgery like Britney Spears and rich celebrities can, can't have good dental health, if americans are fat, they can't go to an endocrinologist doctor to lose weight, americans can't take vacation cruises, americans can't even go to the movies, can't go out to party (only the rich can go out at night and have fun).
Heck man even in Mexico fat poor people can visit an endocrinologist doctor for a weight loss treatment. Not in the good USA of freedom.
USA is a big poor country really, not a rich country
.
Cost of war/ amerikan terrorism- NO winners in war- fascist amerikan empire WILL fall! In the longer run, for World Peace, the fascist bully...amerika MUST fall !
Valatius. Whereas I agree with the general tenure of your views I do have questions which need analysis and answers. However, first one needs to distinguish between the standard of living of the upper plus middle classes as against a nation as a whole. When I do that I have the temerity to posit that the standards of living of the whole nations of the Netherlands, Sweden, France, and Germany are higher than of the whole USA. While they participate in our post WW2 wars it is only to a very minor extent. Are these nations hiding behind the U.S. "shield" to maintain their high standards of living or are there other reasons for their well-being? Would you agree that nearly every colonial revolution has spawned an upper class in these nations which demands the same high standard of living as our upper class (Saudi Arabia!). Would you agree that it is these post-colonial upper classes which are the greatest danger for our imperialism rather than the lowly Taliban or El Qaeda?
Lastly, the way I read Engelhardt's piece (I am a fan of E.)I think that he considers Mr. Obama's AfPak policies incoherent/senseless rather than illogical. Tom E. is fully aware that US is an empire and has written extensively about it.
Crowsnest, here's a very late response:
I was saying that the dollar's value is supported by US military dominance. The income and wealth inequities within the US are another issue entirely, but maintaining the dollar's strength can fit either a conservative or liberal domestic agenda. In my view, Obama would not have launched either war, but once they were on, he has to continue them in a manner that maintains the perception of US military strength and, just as importantly, a continuity in US military/foreign policy that transcends elections and changes of political party.
This is not to say that Obama will not miscalculate and end up with two disastrous defeats on his hands. Is he cynical? Is he lying? No, he is simply being pragmatic, as he likes to say. To paraphrase the French revolutionary, Saint-Just,no one can rule without getting blood on his hands.
As to Europe - The value of the Euro depends on the actual productivity of western European nations, particularly Germany and France. The newer, less productive members of the Eurozone are, in effect, subsidized by the older EU members. (Germany had to do a major bailout of Greece.) And of course, the US military still keeps Russia from exerting much influence, saving EU countries resources that can then be used to meet domestic needs. And the higher standards of life in the countries you cite are also the result of social democratic policies unacceptable in the US.
As to the rise of post-colonial upper classes beyond the US and Europe, it remains to be seen whether nations like India, China and Brazil will present a threat to US military/financial dominance any time soon. And as for the Taliban and Al Queda or even Iran, they are simply a pretext for the militarism that is so essential to dollar supremacy. If you want to look like the toughest guy on the planet, you gotta have somebody to fight - and the Islamic fanatics are happy to serve as punching bags for the big guy. They manage to almost get in a punch now and then (Times Square? Underwear bomber?) but that only makes the sparring more convincing.
From Democracy Now today:
"The New York Times reports the Pentagon is continuing to rely on a secret network of private spies in Afghanistan and Pakistan to produce intelligence that is used to track and kill suspected militants. The existence of the private spy network was revealed earlier this year, but at the time the Pentagon portrayed it as a rogue operation. The Times reports the spy network is still running and has become an important source of intelligence for military commanders."
As U.S. reliance on privatized intelligence gathering and mercenaries has soared over the last decade far beyond what the regular military once held responsibility for doing itself with its own regular military personnel, have American wars gotten shorter in duration? NO.
Have ANY of them been more decisively won or become more affordable? NO.
Have any of them reduced the overall numbers of terrorists and terrorist events? NO.
What is the primary motivation for any private captalist company? MONEY.
Is there a fundamental conflict of interest between a private capitalist company providing intelligence gathering and other espionage services to the Pentagon and the primary capitalist desire of said company to prolong lucrative government contracts with the Pentagon (on the taxpayers' dime)--especially when the Pentagon is trusting it to be honest with no known process for double-checking the privatized intelligence or espionage reports it receives? You bet your country there is.
Again, well said.
There is a very good reason our troops hold civilian contractors in contempt for the most part.