Plebiscite on an Outlaw Empire
Outlaw Empire Meets the Wave
5 Questions for Our FutureBy Tom Engelhardt
11/08/07 "TomDispatch"
-- -- The wave -- and make no mistake, it's a global one -- has
just crashed on our shores, soaking our imperial masters.
It's a sight for sore eyes.
It's been a long time since we've seen an election like
midterm 2006. After all, it's a truism of our politics that
Americans are almost never driven to the polls by
foreign-policy issues, no less by a single one that
dominates everything else, no less by a catastrophic war
(and the presidential approval ratings that go with it).
This strange phenomenon has been building since the moment,
in May 2003, that George W. Bush stood under that
White-House-prepared "Mission Accomplished" banner on the
USS Abraham Lincoln and
declared "major combat operations have ended."
That "Top Gun" stunt -- when a cocky President helped
pilot an S-3B Viking sub reconnaissance Naval jet onto a
carrier deck and emerged into the golden glow of
"magic hour light" (as his handlers then called it) --
was meant to give him the necessary victory photos to launch
his 2004 presidential reelection campaign. As it turned out,
that moment was but the first "milestone" on the path to
Iraqi, and finally electoral, hell. Within mere months,
those photos would prove useless for anyone but liberal
bloggers. By now, they seem like artifacts from another age.
On the way to the present
"precipice" (or are we already over the edge?), there
have been other memorable "milestones" -- from the
President's July 2003 petulant
"bring ‘em on" taunt to Iraq's then forming insurgency
to the Vice President's June 2005
"last throes" gaffe. All such statements have, by now,
turned to dust in American mouths.
In the context of the history of great imperial powers,
how remarkably quickly this has happened. An American
President, ruling the last superpower on this or any other
planet, and his party have been driven willy-nilly into
global and domestic retreat a mere three-plus years after
launching the invasion of their dreams, the one that was
meant to start them on the path to controlling the planet --
and by one of the more ragtag minority rebellions
imaginable. I'm speaking here, of course, of the Sunni
insurgency in Iraq, of perhaps 15,000 relatively lightly
armed rebels whose main weapons have been the roadside bomb
and the sniper's bullet. What a grim, bizarre spectacle it's
been.
The Fall of the New Rome
But let's back up a moment. After such an election, a bit
of history, however quick and potted, is in order -- in this
case of the post-Cold War era of U.S. supremacy, now
seemingly winding down. In the wake of the fall of the
Berlin Wall in 1989, to be followed by the relatively
violence-free collapse of the Soviet Union, there was a
brief moment of conceptual paralysis among leadership elites
in this country, none of whom had even imagined the loss of
the "Evil Empire" (in President Ronald Reagan's famous Star
Wars-ian phrase) until it suddenly, miraculously evaporated.
In this forgotten moment, we even heard hopeful mutterings
about a "peace dividend" that would take all the extra
military money that obviously was no longer needed to defend
against a missing superpower and use it to rebuild America.
A mighty country, soon to be termed a "hyperpower,"
straddling the globe alone and without obvious enemies --
that should have been a formula for declaring victory (as
many Cold Warriors promptly did) and acting accordingly
(which none of them did). It should have been the moment for
the Long Peace.
But in an enemy-less world, there was a small problem
called the Pentagon (and the vast military-industrial
complex that had grown up around it). So, while the
peace-dividend-that-never-was vanished in the post-Cold-War
morning fog, some new, prefab enemies did make their
appearances with startling speed. They essentially had to.
These new dangers to our country were termed "rogue
states," an obvious step or two down from a single Evil
Empire. They were, in fact, so relatively weak militarily
that you needed to pile them up into a conceptual heap to
get an enemy that would keep an empire and its global
network of bases in military restocking mode. Not too many
years down the line, the Bush administration would indeed
pile three of them up in just this way into the gloriously
labeled "axis of evil"; this was that old Evil Empire
rejiggered for midget powers (or alternatively the Axis
powers of World War II shrunk to Mini-Me standards).
Back in 1990, Saddam Hussein, our former ally in a
Persian Gulf struggle with Iran for regional supremacy,
invaded Kuwait and, voilą!, you had the first Gulf
War. His military, already weakened by its eight-year
bloodletting with Iran, was not exactly a goliath for a
superpower to reckon with; but Americans took a tip from the
dictator (who liked to see images of himself puffed to
gigantic proportions everywhere in his land), blew his face
was up to Hitlerian size, and stuck it on every magazine and
in every TV news report in town ("Showdown with Saddam").
His genuinely evil-dictator face took the place of a whole
nuclear-armed Evil Empire, while American troops slaughtered
helpless Iraqi conscripts, burying them alive in their own
trenches or wiping them out from the air on the aptly named
"Highway of Death" out of Kuwait City.
Not so long after, in 1992, under the aegis of then
Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, a small group of unknown
Defense Department staffers -- Paul Wolfowitz, I. Lewis
Libby, and Zalmay Khalilzad – unveiled a new draft Defense
Planning Guidance, a document for developing military
strategy and planning Pentagon budgets. It was the first
such since the Cold War ended and, leaked to the New York
Times, it was denounced as an extremist vision and
buried. As
the
website Right Web describes it, the document "called for
massive increases in defense spending, the assertion of lone
superpower status, the prevention of the emergence of any
regional competitors, the use of preventive -- or preemptive
-- force, and the idea of forsaking multilateralism if it
didn't suit U.S. interests."
Sound familiar? No wonder. It was the very imperial
program for eternal American dominance and endless war
against the planet's rogue states that George W. Bush's
administration would officially adopt. By then, Wolfowitz
was the number two man at the Pentagon; Libby, the Vice
President's good right hand; and Khalilzad was the new,
post-invasion U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan.
In a post-9/11 atmosphere of belligerent fear, their
program went mainstream. Having been attacked not by a rogue
state but by a squad of 19 terrorists pledging allegiance to
a stateless terrorist organization, we were "at war" with
evil itself. By 2002, the administration had conducted a
"successful" war in Afghanistan; the Taliban had been
crushed; Osama bin Laden was MIA; and the neocons were
riding high. The rest of us found ourselves in a Global War
on Terror, or the Long War, or World War III, or even World
War IV or whatever our rulers
chose to call it that week. (As we would learn in Iraq,
counting was not one of their skills.)
Dazzled beyond any reasonable imperial sense by the power
to dominant that they believed American military superiority
gave them, top Bush administration officials essentially
proclaimed the U.S. an empire by fiat, a superduperpower the
likes of which the world had never seen. In their infamous
2002
National Security Strategy of the United States of America
(essentially the 1992 Defense Planning Guidance document
recycled), they swore that we would remain so forever and
feed the Pentagon so much money that it would be bulked up
into the distant future to suppress any potential superpower
or bloc of powers that might emerge.
They insisted that we would go our own way, strike
whomever we pleased, torture anyone we wished, and jail
without recourse anyone we cared to sweep up or kidnap
anywhere on Earth. The rest of the world could either
approve or be damned, but it would be full speed ahead for
us. Their acolytes in right-wing think tanks and lobbying
outfits around Washington, along with Washington's assembled
punditry (and some liberal tag-alongs) declared the world on
the verge of a Pax Americana and this nation the
globe's New Rome.
In the meantime, domestically, Karl Rove and his pals
were working to ensure that the Republican Party would be
dominant against all challengers for a generation or more.
This was to be a domestic version of "full spectrum
dominance." The two -- the global Pax Americana and
the Party's Pax Republicana seemed joined at the hip
back then, each reinforcing the unilateral,
don't-tread-on-me, I'll-do-anything-I-wish dominance of the
other. It was Rovian Abramoffism at home and Cheney-izing
Wolfowitzism abroad.
How deeply they misunderstood the nature of power in our
world, and how thoroughly they miscalculated the limited
nature of the power of the New Rome! If you want to take the
measure of how far we've come since then, consider the
spectacle of this last election season. Take Senate Majority
Leader Bill Frist. Like the President, deep into this
September he was still excoriating the Democrats not just
for their positions on the Iraq War, but for their
"surrender" policies in the war on terror. As he put it in
a PBS interview with Jim Lehrer on September 14th:
"I'd say, ‘Wake up, Harry Reid. Wake up, Harry Reid…' I
think that [the president] has got it right, that we're
not going to do what Harry Reid wants to do, and that is
surrender, to wave a white flag, to cut and run at a
time when we're being threatened… as we all saw just
three or four weeks ago, in a plot from Britain that was
going to send 10 airplanes over here."
He then characterized the Democratic Party as a group
"who basically belittle in many ways this war on terror, who
do want to wave this white flag and surrender."
By late October, however, according to
Washington Post reporters Peter Slevin and Michael
Powell, Frist had fully grasped that the global and domestic
programs of dominance no longer were working together. So he
offered the following succinct advice -- a flip-flop of the
first order -- to congressional candidates: "The challenge
is to get Americans to focus on pocketbook issues, and not
on the Iraq and terror issue."
Just another "milestone" on the path to… well, that's the
question, isn't it?
Oil Wars
After September 11, 2001, the President and his advisors
were determined to run an invasion of, and war against, Iraq
that would be the anti-Vietnam conflict of all time. From
the draft to the
body count, they were going to reverse all our Vietnam
"mistakes." Above all, they were going to win quickly and
decisively. The result? In no time at all, they had brought
us deep into the Iraqi "big muddy" (as the Vietnam-era
phrase went). Now, looming in the distance -- think of it as
the dark at the end of this particular horror-fest of a
tunnel -- is the worst Vietnam nightmare of all:
defeat. Just check Juan Cole's Informed Comment website,
for his
"Top Ten Ways We Know We Have Lost in Iraq," if you
don't believe me.
Unlike in Indochina, however, this time there's something
essential at stake. Whatever we were doing in the largely
peasant land of Vietnam, in terms of global wealth and
resources, it was just what Henry Kissinger and other
frustrated U.S. policy-makers of that era always called it,
a third- or fourth-rate power of no real value to anyone
(other, of course, than its own inhabitants).
In Iraq, where a continuing American presence
only ensures a deeper plunge into chaos, mayhem, blood,
and horror as well as fragmentation and potential
dissolution, departure nonetheless remains largely
inconceivable. After all, Iraq has something everyone
desperately values: Oil. In quantity. A "sea" of oil in the
words of former Deputy Secretary of Defense
Wolfowitz. In a backhanded way, the President has
finally
acknowledged the obvious -- that his war in Iraq was, in
significant part, an oil invasion, an oil occupation
(remember it was only the Oil Ministry that we guarded in
otherwise looted Baghdad), and so is also bound to be an oil
defeat. As energy-obsessed Bush administration planners saw
it, Iraq was to be the lynchpin -- hence those permanent
bases that were
on
the drawing boards as American troops invaded -- of a
Bush administration strategy for dominating the oil
heartlands of the planet.
After Vietnam, the United States proved quite capable of
putting itself back together (despite years of fierce
culture wars). After Iraq -- and keep in mind that we
undoubtedly have at least a couple of years of horror to go
-- the question is whether the world will be similarly
capable or whether the oil lands of the planet will lie in
ruins along with the global economy.
Extremity on Display
So, just past the midterm election mark of 2006, what's
left of the New Rome? You could say that George W. Bush's
dark success story has involved bringing his version of the
United States into line with the look of the "rogue" enemies
and terrorist groups he set out to destroy. By the time
Americans went to the polls on November 7th, 2006 to
repudiate his policies, he had given our country the
ultimate in makeovers, creating the look of an Outlaw
Empire.
We now have our own killing fields in Iraq where, the
latest casualty study tells us, somewhere between 400,000
and 900,000-plus "excess Iraqi deaths"
have occurred since the 2003 invasion. And do you
remember Saddam's "torture chambers" (which the President
used to
cite all the time)? Now, we are the possessors of our
own
global prison system, our own (rented, borrowed, or
jerry-rigged) torture chambers, our own leased airline to
transport kidnapped prisoners around the planet, and a Vice
President who has openly lobbied Congress for a torture
exemption for the CIA and spoke glibly on the radio about
"dunking" people in water. And, thanks to a supine
Congress, we have the laws to go with it all.
The administration went after the right to torture or
treat captives any way its agents pleased in places not open
to any kind of oversight remarkably quickly after the
September 11th attacks. By late 2001,
Donald Rumsfeld's office was instructing agents in the
field in Afghanistan to "take the gloves off" with a
captive. (Inside the CIA, as Ron Suskind has told us in his
book The One Percent Doctrine, Director George Tenet
was talking even more vividly about removing "the shackles"
on the Agency.) Inside the White House Counsel's office and
the Justice Department, administration lawyers were already
hauling out their dictionaries to figure out how to
redefine "torture" out of existence. But why such an
emphasis on torture (which is largely useless in the field,
as everyone knows)?
What administration officials grasped, I believe, is
this: If you could manage to get the right to legally employ
extreme (and normally repugnant) acts of torture, then you
would have in your possession the right to do anything.
Think of the urge to abuse as the initial extreme expression
of this administration's secret obsession with the creation
of a "wartime" commander-in-chief presidency which would
leave Congress and the courts in the dust.
If you want to measure where this has taken Bush
officialdom in five years, consider their latest legal
defensive measure.
According to the Washington Post, the administration has
just gone to court to declare American "alternative
interrogation techniques" -- which simply means "torture" --
as "among the nation's most sensitive national security
secrets." It is trying to get a federal judge to bar
"terrorism suspects held in secret CIA prisons" from even
revealing to their own lawyers details about what was done
to them by American interrogators. In other words, torture
is now to be put in the secrecy vault like a national
treasure. Next thing you know, we'll be sending it to the
Smithsonian.
Reflected in this desperate maneuver, you can catch a
glimpse of an administration driven to the extremity of
going to courts it despised -- and thought it had cut out of
the process of foreign imperial governance -- simply to bury
its own extreme misdeeds. You can feel the fear of the
docket (and perhaps of history) in such a stance.
Another example of the extremity into which this
administration has driven itself and the rest of us lies in
an editorial published in the four main (officially private)
military magazines, the Army Times, Air Force Times, Navy
Times, and Marine Corps Times, on the very eve of
the midterm elections. It
called for Donald Rumsfeld's resignation just after the
President had given him his vote of confidence once again.
Realistically speaking, this can only be seen as an extreme
military intervention in the American electoral process.
In so many ways, the American Constitutional system has
been shredded and this -- whether we are to be an outlaw
empire (and a failing one at that) -- is what Americans were
voting about this last Tuesday (though it was called
"Iraq").
The Wave
The history of recent American politics at the polls
might be seen this way: Not so long after he declared the
successful completion of his Iraqi dreams, George W. Bush
found himself, to the surprise of his top advisors and
supporters, hounded by Iraq's Sunni insurgency. He
essentially raced not John Kerry (who recently offered yet
another example of his special lack of dexterity on the
campaign trail) but that insurgency to the finish line in
November 2004. With a little help from his friends in Ohio
and the Rove smear-and-turnout operation, he managed to
squeak by. Then, in another of those milestone moments on
the way to disaster, he declared that he had
"political capital" to spare and would spend it.
The next summer, two storms hit the endlessly vacationing
President in Crawford, Texas -- Hurricanes
Cindy and Katrina. Cindy Sheehan tore away the bloodless
look of casualty-lessness in Iraq (where body counts, body
bags, and the return of the dead to these shores was being
hidden away from both cameras and attention). She gave a
mother's face to a son's death and to a nation's increasing
frustration. Katrina revealed to many Americans that the
Bush administration had been creating
Iraq-like conditions in the "homeland." And that was
more or less that. The President's approval rating plunged
under 40% and has (a few momentary blips aside) bounced
around between
there and the low 30s ever since. By election 2006,
presidential "capital" was a concept long consigned to the
dustbin of history.
Imagine where that "capital" will be by 2008. Our
President has been wedded to his war of choice in a way
unimaginable since Lyndon Baines Johnson quit the
presidential race after the Tet Offensive in 1968. Based on
what's happened so far, there's every reason to believe
that, in 2008, he will still be wedded to it (as would
potential Presidential candidate Sen. John McCain) and his
approval ratings may be bouncing in the 20%-30% range by
then.
So what part of the 2001 dream team and its "vision" of
the world are we left with? To answer this, you first have
to realize that yesterday's electoral "wave" of repudiation
is hardly an American phenomenon. It's global and, if
anything, we were way late into the water. All you have to
do is look at the latest polling figures (which are but
extensions of previous, similar polls) to see that wave in
country after country. The most recent
international survey of opinion -- in Britain, Canada,
Israel, and Mexico -- found that Bush's America is viewed as
"a threat to world peace by its closest neighbors and
allies." In Britain, the land of the "special relationship,"
only Osama bin Laden outranks our President as a global
"danger to peace." While he comes in a dozen points behind
bin Laden, he does manage to best Kim Jong Il, North Korea's
grim leader, as well as those shining stars of the
diplomatic firmament, the President of Iran and the leader
of Hezbollah. And these are the countries most likely to
have positive views of the U.S.
As hectorer-in-chief, George W. Bush has, hands down,
used the word "must" more than any combination of presidents
in our history. Only recently, he repeatedly told the North
Koreans that they must not develop (and then test)
nuclear weapons; he told the Iranians that they must
halt their nuclear program; and his minions told the
Nicaraguans that they must not vote for former
Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega. The results: The North
Koreans tested a weapon; the Iranians went right on
enriching uranium; and the Nicaraguans, poverty-stricken and
threatened with nothing short of economic ruin if their
democratic vote went into the wrong column,
simply ignored him.
All these decisions were based on assessments of the
limits of power that had been revealed by the desperate acts
of a failing empire stretched to its military and economic
limits. If these are the "rogue" parts of the global wave,
all you have to do is look at Russia's reassertion of
interest and power in its old energy-rich Central Asian
bailiwick (much coveted by the Bush administration); or the
expansion of Chinese economic power in Southeast Asia and
energy power in Africa to see other aspects of the global
wave of reassessment under way.
In fact, the global part of the election was long over by
November 7, 2006. For vast majorities abroad, the vision of
the U.S. as an Outlaw Empire is nothing new at all. The wave
here has perhaps only begun to rise, but here too those
presidential "musts" (along with the President's designation
of the Democrats as little short of "enemy noncombatants")
have begun to lose their effect. Hence the presidential
plebiscite of yesterday. No matter what else flows from it,
the fact that it happened is of real significance. A
majority of the American people -- those who voted anyway --
did not ratify Bush's Outlaw Empire. They took a modest step
toward sanity. But what will follow?
Here, briefly, are five "benchmark" questions to ask when
considering the possibilities of the final two years of the
Bush administration's wrecking-ball regime:
Will Iraq Go Away? The political maneuvering in
Washington and Baghdad over the chaos in Iraq was only
awaiting election results to intensify. Desperate
call-ups of more Reserves and National Guards will go
out soon. Negotiations with Sunni rebels, coup rumors
against the Maliki government, various plans from James
Baker's Iraq Study Group and Congressional others will
undoubtedly be swirling. Yesterday's plebiscite (and exit
polls) held an Iraqi message. It can't simply be ignored.
But nothing will matter, when it comes to changing the
situation for the better in that country, without a genuine
commitment to American withdrawal, which is not likely to be
forthcoming from this President and his advisors any time
soon. So expect Iraq to remain a horrifying, bloody,
devolving fixture of the final two years of the Bush
administration. It will not go away. Bush (and Rove) will
surely try to enmesh Congressional Democrats in their
disaster of a war. Imagine how bad it could be if -- with,
potentially, years to go -- the argument over
who "lost" Iraq has already begun.
Is an Attack on Iran on the Agenda? Despite all
the alarums on the political Internet about a pre-election
air assault on Iran, this was never in the cards. Even the
hint of an attack on Iranian "nuclear facilities" (which
would certainly turn into an attempt to "decapitate" the
Iranian regime from the air) would send oil prices soaring.
The Republicans were never going to run an election on oil
selling at $120-$150 a barrel. This will be no less true of
election year 2008. If Iran is to be a target, 2007 will be
the year. So watch for the pressures to ratchet up on this
one early in the New Year. This is madness, of course. Such
an attack would almost certainly throw the Middle East into
utter chaos, send oil prices through the roof, possibly
wreck the global economy, cause serious damage in Iran,
not fell the Iranian government, and put U.S. troops in
neighboring Iraq in perilous danger. Given the
administration record, however, all this is practically an
argument for launching such an attack. (And don't count on
the military to stop it, either. They're unlikely to do so.)
Failing empires have certainly been known to lash out or, as
neocon writer Robert Kagan put the matter recently in
a Washington Post op-ed, "Indeed, the preferred European
scenario [of a Democratic Congressional victory] -- 'Bush
hobbled' -- is less likely than the alternative: ‘Bush
unbound.' Neither the president nor his vice president is
running for office in 2008. That is what usually prevents
high-stakes foreign policy moves in the last two years of a
president's term." So when you think about Iran, think of
Bush unbound.
Are the Democrats a Party? If Rovian plans for a
Republican Party ensconced in Washington for eons to come
now look to be in tatters, the Democrats have retaken the
House (and possibly the Senate) largely as the not-GOP
Party. The election may leave the Republicans with a dead
presidency and a leading candidate for 2008 wedded to
possibly the least popular war in our history; the Democrats
may arrive victorious but without the genuine desire for a
mandate to lead. Unlike the Republicans, the Democrats in
recent years were not, in any normal sense, a party at all.
They were perhaps a coalition of four or five or six parties
(some trailing hordes of pundits and consultants, but
without a base). Now, with the recruitment of so many
ex-Republicans and conservatives into their House and Senate
ranks, they may be a coalition of six or seven parties. Who
knows? They have a genuine mandate on Iraq and a mandate on
oversight. What they will actually do -- what they are
capable of doing (other than the normal money, career, and
earmark-trading in Washington) -- remains to be seen. They
will be weak, the surroundings fierce and strong.
Will We Be Ruled by the Facts on the Ground? In
certain ways, it may hardly matter what happens to which
party. By now -- and this perhaps represents another kind of
triumph for the Bush administration --
the facts on the ground are so powerful that it would be
hard for any party to know where to begin. Will we, for
instance, ever be without a second Defense Department, the
so-called Department of Homeland Security, now that a
burgeoning $59 billion a year private "security"
industry with all its interests and its herd of lobbyists in
Washington has grown up around it? Not likely in any of our
lifetimes. Will an ascendant Democratic Party dare put on a
diet the ravenous Pentagon, which now feeds off
two budgets -- its regular, near-half-trillion dollar
Defense budget and a regularized series of multibillion
dollar "emergency" supplemental appropriations, which are
now part of life on the Hill. What this means is that the
defense budget is not what we wage our wars on or pay for a
variety of black operations (not to speak of earmarks
galore) with. Don't bet your bottom dollar that this will
get better any time soon either. In fact, I have my doubts
that a Democratic Congress with a Democratic president in
tow could even do something modestly small like shutting
down Guantanamo, no less begin to deal with the empire of
bases that undergirds our failing Outlaw Empire abroad. So,
from time to time, take your eyes off what passes for
politics and check out the facts on the ground. That way
you'll have a better sense of where our world is actually
heading.
What Will Happen When the Commander-in-Chief
Presidency and the Unitary Executive Theory Meets What's
Left of the Republic? The answer on this one is
relatively uncomplicated and less than three months away
from being in our faces; it's the Mother of All
Constitutional Crises. But writing that now, and living with
the reality then, are two quite different things. So when
the new Congress arrives in January, buckle your seatbelts
and wait for the first requests for oversight information
from some investigative committee; wait for the first
subpoenas to meet Cheney's men in some dark hallway. Wait
for this crew to feel the "shackles" and react. Wait for
this to hit the courts -- even a Supreme Court that, despite
the President's best efforts, is probably still at least one
justice short when it comes to unitary-executive-theory
supporters. I wouldn't even want to offer a prediction on
this one. But a year down the line, anything is possible.
So we've finally had our plebiscite, however covert, on
the failing Outlaw Empire of George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.
But what about their autocratic inclinations at home. How
will that play out?
Will it be: All hail, Caesar, we who are about to dive
back into prime-time programming.
Or will it be: All the political hail is about to pelt
our junior caesars as we dive back into prime-time
programming? Stay tuned.
Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's
Tomdispatch.com ("a regular antidote to the mainstream
media"), is the co-founder of
the American
Empire Project and, most recently, the author of
Mission Unaccomplished: Tomdispatch Interviews with American
Iconoclasts and Dissenters (Nation Books), the first
collection of Tomdispatch interviews.
Copyright 2006 Tom Engelhardt
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