The Next War
By Daniel Ellsberg.
10/22/06 "Harpers" -- -- A hidden crisis is under way.
Many government insiders are aware of serious plans for war with
Iran, but Congress and the public remain largely in the dark.
The current situation is very like that of 1964, the year
preceding our overt, open-ended escalation of the Vietnam War,
and 2002, the year leading up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
In both cases, if one or more conscientious insiders had closed
the information gap with unauthorized disclosures to the public,
a disastrous war might have been averted entirely.
My own failure to act, in time, to that effect in 1964 was
pointed out to me by Wayne Morse thirty-five years ago. Morse
had been one of only two U.S. senators to vote against the
Tonkin Gulf resolution on August 7, 1964. He had believed,
correctly, that President Lyndon Johnson would treat the
resolution as a congressional declaration of war. His
colleagues, however, accepted White House assurances that the
president sought “no wider war” and had no intention of
expanding hostilities without further consulting them. They
believed that they were simply expressing bipartisan support for
U.S. air attacks on North Vietnam three days earlier, which the
president and Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara had told them
were in “retaliation” for the “unequivocal,” “unprovoked” attack
by North Vietnamese torpedo boats on U.S. destroyers “on routine
patrol” in “international waters.”
Each of the assurances above had been false, a conscious lie.
That they were lies, though, had only been revealed to the
public seven years later with the publication of the Pentagon
Papers, several thousand pages of top-secret documents on U.S.
decision-making in Vietnam that I had released to the press. The
very first installment, published by the New York Times on June
13, 1971, had proven the official account of the Tonkin Gulf
episode to be a deliberate deception.
When we met in September, Morse had just heard me mention to an
audience that all of that evidence of fraud had been in my own
Pentagon safe at the time of the Tonkin Gulf vote. (By
coincidence, I had started work as a special assistant to an
assistant secretary of defense the day of the alleged
attack—which had not, in fact, occurred at all.) After my talk,
Morse, who had been a senior member of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee in 1964, said to me, “If you had given those
documents to me at the time, the Tonkin Gulf resolution would
never have gotten out of committee. And if it had somehow been
brought up on the floor of the Senate for a vote, it would never
have passed.”
He was telling me, it seemed, that it had been in my power,
seven years earlier, to avert the deaths so far of 50,000
Americans and millions of Vietnamese, with many more to come. It
was not something I was eager to hear. After all, I had just
been indicted on what eventually were twelve federal felony
counts, with a possible sentence of 115 years in prison, for
releasing the Pentagon Papers to the public. I had consciously
accepted that prospect in some small hope of shortening the war.
Morse was saying that I had missed a real opportunity to prevent
the war altogether.
My first reaction was that Morse had overestimated the
significance of the Tonkin Gulf resolution and, therefore, the
alleged consequences of my not blocking it in August. After all,
I felt, Johnson would have found another occasion to get such a
resolution passed, or gone ahead without one, even if someone
had exposed the fraud in early August.
Years later, though, the thought hit me: What if I had told
Congress and the public, later in the fall of 1964, the whole
truth about what was coming, with all the documents I had
acquired in my job by September, October, or November? Not just,
as Morse had suggested, the contents of a few files on the
events surrounding the Tonkin Gulf incident—all that I had in
early August—but the drawerfuls of critical working papers,
memos, estimates, and detailed escalation options revealing the
evolving plans of the Johnson Administration for a wider war,
expected to commence soon after the election. In short, what if
I had put out before the end of the year, whether before or
after the November election, all of the classified papers from
that period that I did eventually disclose in 1971?
Had I done so, the public and Congress would have learned that
Johnson’s campaign theme, “we seek no wider war,” was a hoax.
They would have learned, in fact, that the Johnson
Administration had been heading in secret toward essentially the
same policy of expanded war that his presidential rival, Senator
Barry Goldwater, openly advocated—a policy that the voters
overwhelmingly repudiated at the polls.
I would have been indicted then, as I was seven years later, and
probably imprisoned. But America would have been at peace during
those years. It was only with that reflection, perhaps a decade
after the carnage finally ended, that I recognized Morse had
been right about my personal share of responsibility for the
whole war.
Not just mine alone. Any one of a hundred officials—some of whom
foresaw the whole catastrophe—could have told the hidden truth
to Congress, with documents. Instead, our silence made us all
accomplices in the ensuing slaughter.
* * *
The run-up to the 1964 Tonkin Gulf resolution was almost exactly
parallel to the run-up to the 2002 Iraq war resolution.
In both cases, the president and his top Cabinet officers
consciously deceived Congress and the public about a supposed
short-run threat in order to justify and win support for
carrying out preexisting offensive plans against a country that
was not a near-term danger to the United States. In both cases,
the deception was essential to the political feasibility of the
program precisely because expert opinion inside the government
foresaw costs, dangers, and low prospects of success that would
have doomed the project politically if there had been truly
informed public discussion beforehand. And in both cases, that
necessary deception could not have succeeded without the
obedient silence of hundreds of insiders who knew full well both
the deception and the folly of acting upon it.
One insider aware of the Iraq plans, and knowledgeable about the
inevitably disastrous result of executing those plans, was
Richard Clarke, chief of counterterrorism for George W. Bush and
adviser to three presidents before him. He had spent September
11, 2001, in the White House, coordinating the nation’s response
to the attacks. He reports in his memoir, Against All Enemies,
discovering the next morning, to his amazement, that most
discussions there were about attacking Iraq.
Clarke told Bush and Rumsfeld that Iraq had nothing to do with
9/11, or with its perpetrator, Al Qaeda. As Clarke said to
Secretary of State Colin Powell that afternoon, “Having been
attacked by al Qaeda, for us now to go bombing Iraq in
response”—which Rumsfeld was already urging—“would be like our
invading Mexico after the Japanese attacked us at Pearl Harbor.”
Actually, Clarke foresaw that it would be much worse than that.
Attacking Iraq not only would be a crippling distraction from
the task of pursuing the real enemy but would in fact aid that
enemy: “Nothing America could have done would have provided al
Qaeda and its new generation of cloned groups a better
recruitment device than our unprovoked invasion of an oil-rich
Arab country.”
I single out Clarke—by all accounts among the best of the best
of public servants—only because of his unique role in
counterterrorism and because, thanks to his illuminating 2004
memoir, we know his thoughts at that time, and, in particular,
the intensity of his anguish and frustration. Such a memoir
allows us, as we read each new revelation, to ask a simple
question: What difference might it have made to events if he had
told us this at the time?
Clarke was not, of course, the only one who could have told us,
or told Congress. We know from other accounts that both of his
key judgments—the absence of linkage between Al Qaeda and Saddam
and his correct prediction that “attacking Iraq would actually
make America less secure and strengthen the broader radical
Islamic terrorist movement”—were shared by many professionals in
the CIA, the State Department, and the military.
Yet neither of these crucial, expert conclusions was made
available to Congress or the public, by Clarke or anyone else,
in the eighteen-month run-up to the war. Even as they heard the
president lead the country to the opposite, false impressions,
toward what these officials saw as a disastrous, unjustified
war, they felt obliged to keep their silence.
Costly as their silence was to their country and its victims, I
feel I know their mind-set. I had long prized my own identity as
a keeper of the president’s secrets. In 1964 it never even
occurred to me to break the many secrecy agreements I had
signed, in the Marines, at the Rand Corporation, in the
Pentagon. Although I already knew the Vietnam War was a mistake
and based on lies, my loyalties then were to the secretary of
defense and the president (and to my promises of secrecy, on
which my own career as a president’s man depended). I’m not
proud that it took me years of war to awaken to the higher
loyalties owed by every government official to the rule of law,
to our soldiers in harm’s way, to our fellow citizens, and,
explicitly, to the Constitution, which every one of us had sworn
an oath “to support and uphold.”
It took me that long to recognize that the secrecy agreements we
had signed frequently conflicted with our oath to uphold the
Constitution. That conflict arose almost daily, unnoticed by me
or other officials, whenever we were secretly aware that the
president or other executive officers were lying to or
misleading Congress. In giving priority, in effect, to my
promise of secrecy—ignoring my constitutional obligation—I was
no worse or better than any of my Vietnam-era colleagues, or
those who later saw the Iraq war approaching and failed to warn
anyone outside the executive branch.
Ironically, Clarke told Vanity Fair in 2004 that in his own
youth he had ardently protested “the complete folly” of the
Vietnam War and that he “wanted to get involved in national
security in 1973 as a career so that Vietnam didn’t happen
again.” He is left today with a sense of failure:
It’s an arrogant thing to think, Could I have ever stopped
another Vietnam? But it really filled me with frustration that
when I saw Iraq coming I wasn’t able to do anything. After
having spent thirty years in national security and having been
in some senior-level positions you would think that I might be
able to have some influence, some tiny influence. But I couldn’t
have any.
But it was not too arrogant, I believe, for Clarke to aspire to
stop this second Vietnam personally. He actually had a good
chance to do so, throughout 2002, the same one Senator Morse had
pointed out to me.
Instead of writing a memoir to be cleared for publication in
2004, a year after Iraq had been invaded, Clarke could have made
his knowledge of the war to come, and its danger to our
security, public before the war. He could have supported his
testimony with hundreds of files of documents from his office
safe and computer, to which he then still had access. He could
have given these to both the media and the then
Democratic-controlled Senate.
“If I had criticized the president to the press as a special
assistant” in the summer of 2002, Clarke told Larry King in
March 2004, “I would have been fired within an hour.” That is
undoubtedly true. But should that be the last word on that
course? To be sure, virtually all bureaucrats would agree with
him, as he told King, that his
only responsible options at that point were either to resign
quietly or to “spin” for the White House to the press, as he
did. But that is just the working norm I mean to question here.
His unperceived alternative, I wish to suggest, was precisely to
court being fired for telling the truth to the public, with
documentary evidence, in the summer of 2002. For doing that,
Clarke would not only have lost his job, his clearance, and his
career as an executive official; he would almost surely have
been prosecuted, and he might have gone to prison. But the
controversy that ensued would not have been about hindsight and
blame. It would have been about whether war on Iraq would make
the United States safer, and whether it was otherwise justified.
That debate did not occur in 2002—just as a real debate about
war in Vietnam did not occur in 1964—thanks to the disciplined
reticence of Clarke and many others. Whatever his personal fate,
which might have been severe, his disclosures would have come
before the war. Perhaps, instead of it.
* * *
We face today a crisis similar to those of 1964 and 2002, a
crisis hidden once again from the public and most of Congress.
Articles by Seymour Hersh and others have revealed that, as in
both those earlier cases, the president has secretly directed
the completion, though not yet execution, of military
operational plans—not merely hypothetical “contingency plans”
but constantly updated plans, with movement of forces and high
states of readiness, for prompt implementation on command—for
attacking a country that, unless attacked itself, poses no
threat to the United States: in this case, Iran.
According to these reports, many high-level officers and
government officials are convinced that our president will
attempt to bring about regime change in Iran by air attack; that
he and his vice president have long been no less committed,
secretly, to doing so than they were to attacking Iraq; and that
his secretary of defense is as madly optimistic about the
prospects for fast, cheap military success there as he was in
Iraq.
Even more ominously, Philip Giraldi, a former CIA official,
reported in The American Conservative a year ago that Vice
President Cheney’s office had directed contingency planning for
“a large-scale air assault on Iran employing both conventional
and tactical nuclear weapons” and that “several senior Air Force
officers” involved in the planning were “appalled at the
implications of what they are doing—that Iran is being set up
for an unprovoked nuclear attack—but no one is prepared to
damage his career by posing any objection.”
Several of Hersh’s sources have confirmed both the detailed
operational planning for use of nuclear weapons against deep
underground Iranian installations and military resistance to
this prospect, which led several senior officials to consider
resigning. Hersh notes that opposition by the Joint Chiefs in
April led to White House withdrawal of the “nuclear option”—for
now, I would say. The operational plans remain in existence, to
be drawn upon for a “decisive” blow if the president deems it
necessary.
Many of these sources regard the planned massive air attack—with
or without nuclear weapons—as almost sure to be catastrophic for
the Middle East, the position of the United States in the world,
our troops in Iraq, the world economy, and U.S. domestic
security. Thus they are as deeply concerned about these
prospects as many other insiders were in the year before the
Iraq invasion. That is why, unlike in the lead-up to Vietnam or
Iraq, some insiders are leaking to reporters. But since these
disclosures—so far without documents and without
attribution—have not evidently had enough credibility to raise
public alarm, the question is whether such officials have yet
reached the limit of their responsibilities to our country.
Assuming Hersh’s so-far anonymous sources mean what they
say—that this is, as one puts it, “a juggernaut that has to be
stopped”—I believe it is time for one or more of them to go
beyond fragmentary leaks unaccompanied by documents. That means
doing what no other active official or consultant has ever done
in a timely way: what neither Richard Clarke nor I nor anyone
else thought of doing until we were no longer officials, no
longer had access to current documents, after bombs had fallen
and thousands had died, years into a war. It means going outside
executive channels, as officials with contemporary access, to
expose the president’s lies and oppose his war policy publicly
before the war, with unequivocal evidence from inside.
Simply resigning in silence does not meet moral or political
responsibilities of officials rightly “appalled” by the thrust
of secret policy. I hope that one or more such persons will make
the sober decision—accepting sacrifice of clearance and career,
and risk of prison—to disclose comprehensive files that convey,
irrefutably, official, secret estimates of costs and prospects
and dangers of the military plans being considered. What needs
disclosure is the full internal controversy, the secret
critiques as well as the arguments and claims of advocates of
war and nuclear “options”—the Pentagon Papers of the Middle
East. But unlike in 1971, the ongoing secret debate should be
made available before our war in the region expands to include
Iran, before the sixty-one-year moratorium on nuclear war is
ended violently, to give our democracy a chance to foreclose
either of those catastrophes.
The personal risks of doing this are very great. Yet they are
not as great as the risks of bodies and lives we are asking
daily of over 130,000 young Americans—with many yet to join
them—in an unjust war. Our country has urgent need for
comparable courage, moral and civil courage, from its public
servants. They owe us the truth before the next war begins.
This is The Next War, originally from October 2006, published
Thursday, October 19, 2006. It is part of Features, which is
part of Harpers.org.
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