Marching
Toward Hell
By Jim Miles
05/07/08
"Palestine
Chronicle"
-- Michael Scheuer's
new work
"Marching
Toward Hell"
is very
clear with
its overall
purpose of
exposing
where
American
interests
have gone
wrong in
their
interactions
with the
various
peoples,
beliefs, and
religions of
the Middle
East. As an
ex-CIA agent
specifically
working on
gathering
information
on Osama bin
Laden and al
Queda,
Scheuer
appears to
have a solid
background
of
information
on the
message and
intentions
of bin
Laden. He
also has a
solid
perspective
of putting
‘America
first' that
more often
than not
contradicts
the
neo-traditional
view of
American
exceptionalism
and
unilateralism.
There are
moments when
his obvious
pro-American
rhetoric
becomes too
edgy, but
given the
nature of
his career
and his
place within
the American
establishment,
those
moments can
be seen as a
natural part
of his
personal
paradigm -
America
first, quit
the
stupidity of
a foreign
policy that
only
attracts
more people
of the world
to dislike,
hate, and
attack us.
There are
several main
ideas that
run through
the course
of the work,
each
receiving
slightly
different
emphasis as
time and
place
changes
through
events.
Scheuer
starts very
strongly,
stating that
his goal is
to
"reconstruct
how the
United
States found
itself in an
untenable
set of
foreign
policies and
national-security
strategies"
on 9/11; and
secondly, to
explain and
"assess the
costs of the
U.S.
government's
stubborn and
obviously
losing
rearguard
action to
maintain
these
catastrophically
deficient
policies and
strategies."
The latter
idea he
reinforces
consistently
and very
simply by
stating
throughout
the book
that, yes,
the U.S. has
lost the
wars in Iraq
and
Afghanistan,
always
referring to
the loss in
past tense -
not that it
is a
possibility
but that it
has already
happened.
Associated
with the
maintenance
of the
catastrophic
policies he
argues
effectively
"policy
makers from
both
parties...must
stand guilty
of wilful
historical
ignorance, a
paucity of
common
sense,
and...a
disastrous
degree of
intellectual
hubris."
That
statement is
no news for
many who
have opposed
war from a
well-informed
perspective,
but to an
American
audience,
coming from
someone
obviously
proud of
their
country in
many other
respects, it
is a clear
stark
statement of
culpability
in the
disasters in
the Middle
East.
Ignorant
elites
From that
starting
point the
concept of
ignorance is
also tied in
with the
"elites",
not well
defined, but
obviously
intended to
mean the
foreign
policy
decision
makers and
power
controllers
in a fully
bipartisan
critique.
The elites
reveal a
"staggering
level of
ignorance
and
dishonesty,"
"ignorant of
history,"
hold "those
who have
made it in
contempt,"
the seeming
"permanent
obtuseness
of their
[Americans]
elite," and
a "wilful
blindness to
this
reality."
The reality
that the
elite are
blinded to
in the realm
of foreign
policy
carries
several
facets.
First he
recognizes
that "the
energy
resources
upon which
the U.S.
economy
depends are
controlled
by
foreigners,
among whom
are Muslim
leaders."
Secondly he
understands
that "our
immense and
growing
debt," which
allows the
continuation
of the war
effectively
subsidized
by possible
economic/
strategic
opponents,
"is
increasingly
held by"
foreigners
who are
either
economic
rivals or
energy
masters who
"run
directly
counter to
U.S.
national
security
interests."
Finally, and
this is
repeated at
intervals
throughout
the book,
the elite
"has put the
United
States in
the
addle-brained
position of
backing both
sides in a
vicious
religious
war between
Israelis and
Arabs,
thereby
making us
part of an
endless war
in which we
have nothing
at stake but
the
emotions,
religious
affiliation,
and divided
loyalties of
two small
segments of
our
population."
Israeli
Firsters
Scheuer
recognizes
the power of
one of those
"small
segments."
It is not so
much the
Israeli
lobby itself
that he
criticizes,
but the
"Israeli-firsters,"
those of the
elite who
whole-heartedly
adopt the
cause of
Israel as
the cause of
America. He
describes
them as
"dangerous
men...seeking
to place de
facto
limitations
on the First
Amendment to
protect the
nation of
their
primary
attachment
[Israel]."
He
vociferously
denies that
"to believe
that
relationship
is not only
a burden but
a cancer on
America's
ability to
protect its
genuine
national
interests...equates
to either
anti-Semitism
or a lack of
American
patriotism."
He concludes
that these
elite
Israeli-firsters
"are either
the most
suspect in
the realm of
loyalty or
simply
resolute
liars who
champion the
fantasy of
identical
U.S. and
Israeli
national
interests."
Within his
extensive
and well
referenced
notes, a
worthy read
for further
details and
support,
Scheuer says
"it ought to
be a source
of pride for
Israeli
citizens"
for the
success of
their
intelligence
services,
but it also
"speaks
volumes abut
the
gullibility
or cupidity
of the U.S.
governing
elite." That
note follows
a text
comment on
"what can
only be
describes as
superbly
effective
covert
political
action by
Israel's
intelligence
services
[remember
the author's
CIA
experience
for this
perspective]."
The issue of
foreign
policy with
Israel is
"perhaps the
only one
that is
certainly
immune to
challenge or
change."
American
policy
towards
Israel is
"absolutely
irrelevant
and
manifestly
counterproductive
to the
national-security
interest of
the United
States," and
further
"Americans
and their
future are
put
increasingly
at risk," as
Israel
"contributes
nothing to
America's
economic
welfare or
strategic
security but
is a drain
on both."
Scheuer also
recognizes
the
contradiction
in Israel
demanding
that the
"fairly and
democratically
elected
Hamas
government...must
renounce a
large part
of the basis
for its
election."
Accordingly
it seems
clear that
the "right
to exist is
based not on
a right at
all but on
one side's
ability to
coerce
abject
surrender
from the
other."
Americans
themselves
do not
demand a
right to
exist, and
"has no more
right to
exist than
does Israel,
Palestine,
Bolivia,
Saudi
Arabia,
Belgium or
Russia."
All this on
Israel is
the first
part of the
"shackles"
placed on
American
foreign
policy.
Oil, Saudi
Arabia, and
bin Laden
The second
shackle is
oil. What
common sense
is there to
a foreign
policy that
after the
Saudi
demonstration
of intent
with the oil
embargo in
1973,
continued to
rely on that
same country
for its
energy
sources? In
his usual
bold
strongly
worded
manner of
criticism,
Scheuer says
"shortsightedness,
negligence,
and
stupidity
were and are
blatant in
Washington's
decisions to
tie U.S.
national
security to
that of
another
nation-state,
and to
acquiesce in
ceding to
the
anti-American
Saudis
control over
U.S. access
to the
strategic
commodity of
oil,"
leaving
American
governments
with
"virtually
no room to
manoeuvre in
the Muslim
world,"
leading
directly
into "bin
Laden's
well-laid
trap."
Unlike the
popular
media that
echoes the
mindless
semi-theological
name calling
from the
elite - use
of the words
such as
"evil",
"wickedness",
"savages",
"immoral" -
Scheuer does
not
underestimate
his
opponent.
Quite the
opposite as
he says of
bin Laden
that his
"focus on
the impact
of U.S.
foreign
policies in
the Muslim
world
suggest
either
genius or
extraordinary
good luck."
Not having
much belief
in the
significance
of luck he
continues,
"I think it
is best to
give
America's
most
dangerous
enemy the
benefit of
the doubt
and judge
bin Laden to
be a near
political
genius."
Scheuer's
position
arises from
examining
the
consistent
wording,
demands, and
actions from
bin Laden
himself.
Well before
9/11 the CIA
had
information
on the
tactics and
whereabouts
of bin
Laden,
information
not utilized
to capture
or kill him
because, as
Scheuer sees
it, the
leaders, the
elite,
always had
other
"nuances in
international
politics"
that trumped
any actual
attack on
bin Laden
himself. It
might need
to be
considered
that the
elite needed
someone like
bin Laden in
order to
push forward
with their
own designs,
however
misguided
they might
be. Bin
Laden,
unlike the
Iranian
Ayatollahs
who have
played the
American
game of
labelling
the other
"evil" and
"wicked",
has
consistently
put forth
several
demands that
are the
‘trap' into
which the
Americans
have
stepped.
Bin Laden's
demands are
quite
explicit and
clear, and
unlike the
projections
from Bush
and his
coterie of
neocons, it
has nothing
to do with
"They hate
us because
of our
freedoms."
Scheuer
lists them
as "precise,
limited, and
consistent":
U.S.
presence on
the Arab
Peninsula;
unqualified
support of
Israel;
support for
states
oppressing
Muslims
(e.g.
Russia);
exploitation
of oil
resources;
military
presence
throughout
Islamic
world; and
U.S. support
and funding
of Arab
police
states. Each
step the
U.S. has
taken with
its foreign
policy in
the Middle
East and
elsewhere in
Asia and
Africa has
only
provided
support for
bin Laden's
contentions
and "have
strengthened
bin Laden's
argument in
the minds of
hundreds of
million of
Muslims."
The focus on
U.S. foreign
policy
produces a
"glue of
unity" for
the
"diversity
of a highly
fragmented
Islamic
civilization";
"those who
argue that
hatred of
U.S.
lifestyles
and
electoral
process
motivates
our Islamist
enemies....is
either sadly
stupid or a
studied
liar."
Another
additional
fear factor
dispelled is
that of
global
jihad. None
of bin
Laden's
focus as
presented
above has
anything to
do with
Muslim
global
domination,
and this as
well fits
into the
recognition
of his
activities
of a
defensive
jihad
against
transgressions
on Muslim
territory,
not against
American
activities
in other
parts of the
world.
Solutions
explicit but
undefined
The shackles
of oil and
Israel, the
elitist
ignorance of
the American
government,
the
antagonism
of the
Muslim world
supported by
the
predictions
and
indictments
of bin Laden
have created
a losing
position for
the
Americans no
matter what
they attempt
to do. The
height of
the
hypocrisy
and
ignorance
are
Americans
blaming the
Iraqis and
Afghanis for
not being
able to put
together a
decent
democratic
society in
the American
image.
Scheuer
works within
the realm of
American
exceptionalism
with one
major
qualification,
"American
democracy
and
republicanism
are unique
and largely
unexportable.[italics
added]" The
theme of
"arrogance...ignorance
and naiveté"
of the elite
is
reiterated
for American
leaders
"trying to
install
America's
system in
devoutly
Islamic
lands."
His answers
are not as
well
developed as
his
testament to
the losing
cause of the
current
foreign
policy based
on the six
elements of
bin Laden's
basic
demands
listed
above.
However, he
is quite
explicit in
saying
America
first
(domestic
policy
trumps
foreign
policy,
let's do
something
about our
own class
divisions
first),
forget about
supporting
Israel and
being
dragged into
any war it
wants;
physically
secure the
U.S. (border
fences,
trenches,
watch
towers,
minefields)
- a bit of a
paradox in
his
arguments
here as
means of
separation
are highly
porous and
expensive,
and in this
case, in my
mind, only
reinforce
the militant
insularity
of the
American
elite; state
control over
militias;
congressional
control over
declarations
of war
rather than
the
"tyranny...where
the decision
to go to war
rests with
one
individual;"
energy
independence;
and finally,
a foreign
policy
toward the
Islamic
world that
is
"noninterventionist,
commerce
oriented,
non-ideological,
focussed on
life and
death
national
interests."
The latter
statement is
a weakness
throughout
the work, in
that while
advocating
to leave the
Muslim world
alone,
Scheuer does
not define
what his
perceived
"life and
death
interests"
are,
certainly
not domestic
policy of an
American
firster, one
would hope.
He does not
indicate
what the
national
security
interests of
the U.S.
are. All
U.S.
presidents
since
Eisenhower
have
indicated
that oil is
of strategic
interest to
the U.S. How
will that be
handled,
other than
the vague
reference to
energy
independence?
What then
are the U.S.
national
interests
that would
lead to
American
intervention
abroad, if
any?
Commercial
interests in
the past as
with Latin
America? And
what of the
CIA's own
role in
undermining
various
governments
and
associations
since the
1950s, will
that
continue?
A final note
on Scheuer's
position
with the
CIA. He
admits that
he is one to
have
initiated
the
rendition
program but
says that
the way it
was intended
to be used
is not how
it actually
was used - a
valid idea,
good
intentions,
with
different
outcomes. As
one of his
underlying
themes
throughout
his book is
that of
"unintended
but
predictable
consequences"
regardless
of intent,
he loses his
argument in
this case,
as he does
not seem to
have been
able to
predict or
foresee that
a rendition
program, to
states that
do use
torture and
do not have
the legal
protections
as provided
by U.S. law,
would have
many
negative
consequences,
both for the
individual
and for the
reality and
perceptions
of American
foreign
policy as
well.
There are
moments of
Scheuer's
own
America-centrism
that are not
easy to
accept but
do not
detract
validity
from his
arguments to
any degree
(as with
Ronald
Reagan being
the
unqualified
conquering
hero of the
Soviet
Union).
Otherwise
"Marching
Toward Hell"
is a readily
accessible
read and
Scheuer has
supported
well his
ideas on bin
Laden and
why America
has lost the
wars in the
Middle East.
He does not
mince his
words, and
will
probably
make many
enemies at
home, but
his
arguments
will not be
defeated by
rhetoric and
hubris
alone, the
main weapons
the elite
would have
against him.
- Marching
Toward Hell
- America
and Islam
after Iraq.
Michael
Scheuer.
Free Press
(Simon &
Schuster),
New York,
2008.
Jim Miles
is a
Canadian
educator and
a regular
contributor/columnist
of opinion
pieces and
book reviews
for The
Palestine
Chronicle.
Miles' work
is also
presented
globally
through
other
alternative
websites and
news
publications.
