Bush The
Empire Slayer
By Bernard Chazelle
01/15/07 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- If you fancy losing
an argument, try shooting down my contention that
Mikhail Gorbachev is the leading historical figure of
our time. Not one to miss a shooting opportunity, Dick
Cheney tried. To my surprise, he won.
Westerners fondly remember Gorbachev for finishing off
an ailing Soviet empire left bleeding from its Afghan
travails. Defusing half a century of nuclear tension can
leave a mark on impressionable minds. On Cheney's—not so
much. The former Defense Secretary had a tender spot for
the Cold War and never forgave Gorbachev for ending it
with not even a kind word for defense contractors.
Cheney is the quintessential warrior, with plenty of
dead quails and birdshot-peppered lawyers to prove it.
He is the gallant hussar—one day greenlighting “Shock
and Awe” to give Guernica a second chance; the next day
apprising US Senator Pat Leahy of his favorite sexual
technique: “Fuck yourself ! ” (1) Quite the martial wag,
the man Maureen Dowd calls Big-Time Dick saluted the
fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 by persuading his boss
to invade Panama (for reasons no one seems able to
remember). And today it is anybody's guess which
Caribbean island the United States will invade to
celebrate its victory in Iraq.
Dick Cheney is a man of war, and a man on a mission: a
crusader who won't rest until the name Bush Jr is etched
in the history books—not lost in the microscopic print
of the endnotes section, mind you, as is destined to be
Senior's fate, but glowing in the radiant typeface of a
chapter heading. That mission, for once, is all but
accomplished. In January of 2001, George W. Bush took—er,
grabbed—the reins of an American Empire at its zenith.
He will soon hand back a smoldering wreckage of broken
lives, enduring hatred, and vanished influence. Michael
Ignatieff has called Pax Americana Empire Lite. (2) A
better phrase would be Empire Short-Lived, or, if you're
William F. Buckley Jr and the vernacular ruffles your
literary feathers, Imperium Brevissimum. At a recent
ceremony for his son Jeb, George H. W. Bush was caught
on national television sobbing uncontrollably. Pity the
man who stands one short letter away from the worst
president in US history. The letter is H, as in H for
hubris.
“We're winning! ” exulted Bush last October. (3) Well...
actually, “We're not winning,” he clarified a few weeks
later, but “We're not losing” either. (4) So “We're
wosing,” quipped the Guardian's cartoonist Steve Bell.
Indeed, we are; and for you, Mr President, I shall count
the wosing ways.
Somewhere, deep in the cold, worm-infested soil that a
mother will keep watered by tears, lies one of 3,000
young Americans. (5) Dispersed across the land,
thousands more will forever carry the scars of war in
their battered bodies and hollowed souls, mutants
battling hellish shadows and silent phantoms. And the
Iraqis, yes those, Mr President, see them spiral into
Dante's lower rings of hell, as they join the
fastest-growing sect in the land: the dead—hundreds of
thousands strong. (6) Watch the White Man's Burden
devolve into an orgy of torture and mayhem. (Has it ever
devolved into anything else?)
The words Abu Ghraib, Guantánamo, detainee bill, and
extraordinary rendition are seared in the world's
consciousness as the badges of shame of a democracy gone
mad. According to Pew's most recent “Global Opinion”
survey, “anti-Americanism is deeper and broader now than
at any time in modern history.” (7) The war effort's
claim on the US treasury will soon exceed $600 billion:
more than Vietnam; (4) more than all the money ever
spent on cancer research; (8) more than enough to “race
for the cure” all the way to Alpha Centauri. We're
wosing big, Mr President.
Historians will ponder how one gangly caveman and
nineteen scrawny associates turned America into the land
of the kind-of-free (53rd freest press in the world,
tied with Botswana (9)) and the home of the
petrified. The sons and daughters of the nation that
stood up to Hitler and Tojo now file through airport
security barefoot, much as they would walk, shoeless,
into a mosque—a mosque, they pray, empty of Muslims.
Cravenness is bigotry's
favorite nourishment, and cynics might expect the
political class to gorge on it by blaming our imperial
agony on the natives. In America, today, cynics rarely
go wrong; and the air, indeed, is thick with talk of
fainthearted hordes of Mesopotamian ingrates, who quail
at the latest bombing and wail at the moon in exotic
garb.
Not long ago, the achingly
earnest Nicholas D. Kristof, a New York Times columnist
whose only sin is to be more virtuous than you—and keep
you informed of this in each and every one of his
bromidic columns—reassured his readers that the trouble
is not with the Muslims but with the Arabs. They are too
violent and they give Islam a bad name. (10)
Well, that settles that. Funny, though, that in the last
twenty years Americans have outkilled Arabs in a ratio
in excess of one hundred to one. But there I go again,
nitpicking, while Saint Kristof is back in Cambodia,
rescuing teenage prostitutes one Pulitzer prize at a
time.
Not to be undone, The Times'
resident flat-earther, Thomas L. Friedman, never tires
of recycling Golda Meir's racist rant about hateful
Arabs. He writes:
“We can't keep asking
Americans to sacrifice their children for people who
hate each other more than they love their own
children.” (11)
The hate-lovers never asked
for anybody's sacrifice, Mr Friedman. To steal a thought
from the heroic Robert Fisk, all they ever craved was
the one freedom you've always refused to grant them:
freedom from you! The Washington Post columnist Richard
Cohen, a man who's never met a heap of moral compost he
did not want to climb, wrote recently that “the
prudent use of violence [against Muslims] could be
therapeutic.” (12) Being a kind soul,
I'll assume that Cohen is unaware of the ideological
pedigree of that phrase and that he doesn't read what he
writes—apparently, a skill highly prized in American
punditry.
To talk the neocolonial talk
from the plush comfort of the imperial capital is easy.
To walk the walk is not. US military expenditures exceed
those of all nations on earth combined. And yet
battling a ragtag band of lightly armed insurgents was
more than the world's mightiest army could take. It is “about
broken,” laments Colin Powell—and, by the way, “We
are losing.” (13) A recent Marine Corps
memo concedes that Coalition Forces “are no longer
capable of militarily defeating the insurgency in al-Anbar.
” (14) Last summer's stabilization push
in Baghdad, Operation Together Forward II, proved a
dismal failure: the violence actually rose by 43
percent! (15)
The US military has been
fighting in Iraq longer than it did in World War II.
What does it have to show for it? Not much. Unlike
Vietnam, Iraq is a country-wide killing field, one giant
Sniper Alley where sporting the Stars and Stripes can
get you killed any time, anywhere. Not a square inch of
Iraqi soil is safe for the Americans outside the high
walls of their fortresses. To borrow from Cheney's vast
repertoire of bons mots, the US counterinsurgency
is in its last throes; hence the “surge” and kindred
shows of desperation. Israel's finest military
historian, Martin van Creveld, does not mince words: “The
American military have proved totally incompetent.”
(16) In Iraq, the world's sole superpower has
been the world's serial superbungler. (I've always
wondered if the trope of the “sole superpower” serves
any purpose other than teaching us how thin the line is
between the sublime and the farcical.)
Whose fault? (The wrong
question for a moral perspective—starting the war was
the sin, not losing it—but the right one here.)
Breathtaking as they were, the majestic vistas of
Rumsfeld's ineptitude were little more than a convenient
excuse for war advocates with egg on their faces. The
grand whining parade has already begun, and
mealy-mouthed apologists are being wheeled in on bloated
floats to proffer lame excuses about inadequate troop
levels, insufficient 4GW training, political
fecklessness, etc. Eventually, the chest beating will
die down as it always does, with the blame for the
debacle pinned on the dirty antiwar hippies.
But hippies don't fight
wars. The Pentagon does. It did, and it lost. One
reason—not even the most important—is the military's
endemic inability to win hearts and minds. Early in the
war, the Guardian sounded the alarm:
“Senior British
military officers on the ground are making it clear
they are dismayed by the failure of US troops to try
to fight the battle for hearts and minds. They also
made plain they are appalled by reports over the
weekend that US marines killed Iraqi civilians,
including women and children, as they seized bridges
outside Nassiriya in southern Iraq.” (17)
The emphasis on force
protection is a far cry from past imperial practices.
The Romans, Spaniards, British, French, and conquerors
of yore seldom agonized over their own casualties. To
their credit, Americans do. But this comes at a moral
cost: US soldiers are brave but the casualty-averse
military doctrine of their commanders is cowardly. That,
in essence, is what Susan Sontag, Arundhati Roy, and
Bill Maher said—right before the lynching began.
(18—20) In a similar show of disgust
diplomatically stripped of the C-word, this British
officer echoed the sentiment:
“US troops have the
attitude of shoot first and ask questions later.
They simply won't take any risk... Unfortunately,
when we explained our rules of engagement which are
based around the principle of minimum force, the US
troops just laughed.” (21)
Lebanon and Somalia
notwithstanding, the United States rarely cuts and runs.
It did not in Vietnam. It fought to the death—of the
other guy—and then cut and walked when victory proved
elusive. Iraq is too central to US hegemonic fantasies
to allow a speedy retreat: it'll be done cut-and-crawl
style, with enough pit stops to admire the fireworks
over Iran. Bush's playbook: (1) run out the clock; (2)
anoint successor as “the dope who snatched defeat out of
the jaws of victory and handed Iran the victor's crown”;
(3) let the etching in the history books begin.
Could the invasion have
succeeded? Not a chance. All the grousing about
incompetent planning is the age-old excuse-making
prattle of losers. Leave aside the not-so-trifling fact
that the United States never had the proper DNA for
empire (lite or otherwise). It is the incontrovertible
reality of the 21st century that the time for the White
Man's Burden has passed. Not only is the era of empire
gone, but the days of the so-called liberal hegemonic
order are numbered. Even before 9/11, the cumulative
impact of European integration, the rise of Asian
powers, and the resurgence of Muslim identity sounded
the death knell for American hegemony. To hasten the
burial will be one of Bush's legacies. Alas,
incalculable misery in the Middle East, enduring
anti-American hatred, and future terrorist attacks in
London, Paris, and Seattle will be another one.
The same Madeleine Albright
who called the United States “the indispensable
nation”—presumably to avoid confusion with the
dispensable ones—taunted Colin Powell with the wickedest
double-entendre since Mae West: “What's the point of
having this superb military you're always talking about
if we can't use it? ” (22) To paraphrase
an old line, it is better for a big country to keep its
superb army idle and let the world think it's not much
of a superpower than to use it and remove all doubt.
Bush's neoconservative
doctrine seeks to apply Straussian philosophy to the
unfettered pursuit of US energy interests. Its unspoken
motto: “perpetual war for perpetual peace.” The rough
idea—and the idea is, indeed, rough—is to play this
century's Great Game (first prize: control of Mideast
oil supply) under the banner of national security. Until
we whacked them on the head, Iraqis had never expressed
much desire to attack us. To the lesser minds,
therefore, the idea of fighting them there so we
wouldn't have to fight them here always teetered on the
edge of insanity. To the neocons' delight, 9/11 came to
cleanse the public discourse of the yelpings of lesser
minds.
And so, today, we gather to
honor the superior minds, all of these men (they are
mostly men) who so decisively turned out the lights on
the American empire. Heading the roll call is none other
than the Decider himself. If you're among the wise who
chose to sit out the Bush years at the bottom of a well,
you need to know only two things about the man: the
first is that he is President of the United States; the
second is that he said:
“One of the hardest
parts of my job is to connect Iraq to the war on
terror.” (23)
To connect it to the war
for terror would indeed be easier. A self-declared
uniter, Bush is beginning to unite the country around
the belief that he is the worst president in US history.
(24) Whether his reelection,
ipso facto, makes the electorate the dumbest ever is a
logical inference that a political culture drunk with
self-admiration will have trouble getting its woozy head
around.
To call Team Bush a
thundering herd of galloping loons is to be
unnecessarily kind. For rarely has daftness been
elevated to such a lofty plane of power and influence.
The early days of the Iraq adventure set the tone. A
year after Defense strategist Ken Adelman infamously
called the coming liberation of Iraq a “cakewalk,” Paul
Wolfowitz, then Rumsfeld's deputy, used the occasion of
an interview with NPR's Melissa Block to stamp the
prediction with the Pentagon's gold seal.
“We're seeing today
how much the people of Poland and Central and
Eastern Europe appreciate what the United States did
to help liberate them from the tyranny of the Soviet
Union. I think you're going to see even more of that
sentiment in Iraq. There's not going to be the
hostility that you described Saturday. There simply
won't be.” (25)
Hostility? What an idea! On
the eve of the war, in a vice presidential reprise of
Tom Cruise's couch-hopping antics, Cheney stepped on the
set of NBC's “Meet The Press” to share the love: “We
will, in fact, be greeted as liberators.”
(26) For a mere $44 billion a
year,(27) all we got from US
intelligence was a silly update of an old movie script:
Renault: And what
in Heaven's name brought you to Baghdad?
Bush: The sweets and the flowers. I came
to Baghdad for love.
Renault: Love! What love? We're in the Middle
East.
Bush: I was misinformed.
Christmas 2003 came early in
Iraq and WMD-stuffed stockings were spotted everywhere
by late March. Or so Rumsfeld told ABC News' George
Stephanopoulos: “We know where they are. They're in
the area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south
and north somewhat.” (28)
East, west, south and nowhere somewhat. In September of
that year, the part-time AEI scholar, full-time
slimeball Richard Perle got all his neurons firing at
once to produce this marvel of crystal gazing:
“And a year from now,
I'll be very surprised if there is not some grand
square in Baghdad that is named after President
Bush.” (29)
Or perhaps some grand
morgue? Which naturally leads us to the 600-billion
dollar question: where did they find these people? The
answer: in that dank rodent house known as the American
Enterprise Institute. Often found gnawing on the chicken
wire, the rabid ferret Michael Ledeen needs no cage
rattling to work himself into a froth of hysteria:
“Every ten years or
so, the United States needs to pick up some small
crappy little country and throw it against the wall,
just to show the world we mean business.”
(30)
In their knockoff of Mein
Kampf, retitled An End to Evil, Richard Perle
and former Bush speechwriter David Frum give voice to
their full-blown dementia by recommending all-out
attacks on anybody ever so slightly Muslim. Why? Because
“There is no middle way for Americans: It is victory
or holocaust.” (31)
Salon's Gary Kamiya calls the Perle-Frum worldview “a
strange combination of Hobbes and Popeye.”
(32) Harsh on Popeye. Me, I have
no patience for moral midgets who've seen their
Napoleonic hour arrive. Like Alexander in Gordium, I
head straight for the deliciously obvious: to end evil,
end Perle and Frum.
The American Enterprise
Institute serves to mitigate the most glaring defects of
our democracy. Take the current escalation in Iraq, for
example. President Bush alone grasps the full cosmic
immensity of its wisdom, even calling the idea a “surge”
to convey its irresistibility. Alas, the Forces of
Darkness, aka the Pentagon, the Congress, and the
American public, will have none of it. Enter the AEI and
its paunchy, double-chinned warmonger, Frederick W.
Kagan. Faster than a chickenhawk can flap its wings,
Kagan demothballs his fave retired general, Jack Keane,
and whips up The Surge. Voilà. Rasputin would be proud.
It would be unfair to let
Team Bush steal all the credit for the imperial collapse
without a tip of the hat to the White House Dictation
Office, also known as the mainstream media (MSM).
Skipping right over the miniskirted hyena Ann Coulter (a
risky stunt but I've got my spiked pogo shoes on), the
oafish junkie Rush Limbaugh, and the assortment of
one-trick performing fleas hopping mad on the AM dial, I
shall ascend Mount Olympus to gaze at the brainy stars
of the MSM.
Few shine more brightly than
Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol, the supernova of
the Murdoch empire—unless red dwarf is a tighter cosmic
fit for someone known to his friends and pet hamster as
“Dan Quayle's brain.” The day after the 9/11 attacks,
the surrogate brain seized the moment and began pounding
the war drums: “There's a fair amount of evidence
that Iraq had very close associations with Osama bin
Laden in the past.” (33) There was not a
shred of evidence. A year later, Kristol nuzzled up to
The New Republic's Lawrence F. Kaplan to break into a
cakewalk jig on the National Review dance floor: “Having
defeated and then occupied Iraq, democratizing the
country should not be too tall an order for the world's
sole superpower.” (34) Brilliance of
this magnitude is Kristol's trademark. Time magazine
took longer than most to realize that and only this
month got around to adding Kristol to its roster of
columnists.
Two influential Canadians
with a nasty case of empire envy, Mark Steyn and Michael
Ignatieff pulpiteered the good news—one from his stool
at the Chicago Sun-Times, the other from his booster
seat at the Harvard Kennedy School. From Steyn we
learned that “Imperialism is the answer”
(35) and from Ignatieff that “The case for
empire is that it has become, in a place like Iraq, the
last hope for democracy and stability alike.”
(2) (I don't know about you, but the dazzling
acumen of the expert never fails to give me goosebumps!)
Former TNR editor Andrew Sullivan, another heavy smoker
of the imperialist's hookah pipe, found his knees wobbly
after 9/11 and his left flank badly exposed: “The
decadent Left in its enclaves on the coasts is not
dead—and may well mount what amounts to a fifth column.”
(36)
Of course, no account of MSM
malfeasance would be fitting without at least a passing
glance at the yapping chihuahuas. Newsweek's Howard
Fineman woofed a few choice words of his own: “We had
controversial wars that divided the country. This war
united the country and brought the military back.”
(37) Well said, Howard. His colleague Chris
Matthews yaks at such vertiginous speeds that his brain
emits exotic particles of synchrotronic quirkiness. One
month into the war, he blurted out, “We're all
neocons now.” A few weeks later, Matthews
highlighted a side of war that too often gets short
shrift: what great, clean fun it is! “Check it out.
The women like this war! I think we like having a hero
as our president.” (37) Must a TV show
be pornographic just because it's called “Hardball”?
The war has given the
American mainstream media a brilliant opportunity to
prove its essential worthlessness. It has shown itself
to be little more than a circus of entertainers and
cheerleaders for whom every season is the silly season.
Tragically, the media has failed in its sacred duty to
keep a vigilant, skeptical, critical eye on the centers
of power. Who is the American Robert Fisk, Gideon Levy,
or Amira Hass? Whoever they are (and Sy Hersh proves
they exist), why are their writings not filling the
op-ed pages of the great American newspapers? How can
the nation that produces the bulk of Nobel prize winners
be stuck with such a sullen bunch of journalistic
mediocrities? The sycophantic enablers of the Fourth
Estate have blood on their hands.
The unfolding catastrophe in
Iraq had a single cause: the reassertion of US hegemony
after 9/11. Its trigger was a rare astral alignment. Big
Oil, the neocons, the Christian fundamentalists, the
liberal hawks, AIPAC, the MSM, and 9/11 all formed
cosmic dots in the sky that only one power could—and
did—successfully align: the president of the United
States. No American leader has so much owned a war.
And none has so little owned
up to it. Victors are never war criminals. That's
because they get to write the history books. Bush won't
have that chance. The die has been cast and the hour is
too late for him or anyone to alter the unforgiving
judgment of posterity. Therein, paradoxically, lies our
quandary. For, if freedom is just another word for
nothing left to lose, then Bush is a free man—free to
pursue the most malignant policies, heedless of the
consequences to his unworsenable presidential standing.
Beware the desperation of a cornered man.
The apostle of imperial
dominance, Bush slew the “last empire.” The towering
figure of our time, he is a piteously small man. The
self-anointed emissary of a “higher father,” he is
servant to no power but himself. The captain of the
sinking ship has laid his command upon his fellow
Americans: “Ask not what your country can do for you;
ask what you can do for me.” No sacrifice of life
shall be too great, no damage to civil liberties too
high, no expenses too vast for a vainglorious man
deluded by fantastic dreams of redemption by force.
But who besides the bereaved
will mourn? Who besides the orphan will whimper? Who
besides the humiliated will stare back? Who besides the
thugs and the craven will lead? Patriotism is a lovely
thing. In its name, some go dying by the side of an
Iraqi road in twitching agony; others go shopping in
oversized automobiles festooned with yellow ribbons. We
all play our part—and nobody else's.
Yeats bemoaned an era when
the best lacked all conviction, while the worst were
full of passionate intensity. Today, Kristol blusters
and hectors, Cheney scolds and forebodes, Bush struts
and smirks. Meanwhile, the giant, timid chorus listens
politely to the deafening silence of the outraged—and
the mad march of war goes on.
Bernard Chazelle,
Professor of Computer Science, Princeton University.
NOTES
[1]
Cheney Dismisses Critic With Obscenity, by Helen
Dewar and Dana Milbank, Washington Post, June 25,
2004.
[2]
America's Empire Is an Empire Lite, by Michael
Ignatieff, The New York Times, Jan. 10, 2003.
[3]
Press Conference by the President, The White
House, Oct. 25, 2006.
[4]
U.S. Not Winning War in Iraq, Bush Says for 1st Time,
by Peter Baker, The Washington Post, Dec. 20, 2006.
[5]
War in Iraq, CNN, 2006.
[6]
The Human Cost of the War in Iraq, by G.
Burnham, S. Doocy, E. Dzeng, R. Lafta, L. Roberts,
Lancet, 2006.
[7]
Global Opinion: The Spread of Anti-Americanism,
Pew Global Attitudes Project, Jan. 24, 2005.
[8]
Cancer Research Funding, National Cancer
Institute, May 19, 2006.
[9]
Worldwide Press Freedom Index 2006, Reporters
Without Borders, 2006.
[10]
The Muslim Stereotype, by Nicholas D. Kristof,
The New York Times (firewalled
original), Dec. 10, 2006.
[11]
Insurgency Out, Anarchy In, by Thomas L.
Friedman, The New York Times (firewalled
original), June 2, 2006.
[12]
The Lingo Of Vietnam, by Richard Cohen, The
Washington Post, Nov. 21, 2006.
[13]
Powell Says U.S. Losing in Iraq, Calls for Drawdown
by Mid-2007, by Karen DeYoung, The Washington
Post, Dec. 18, 2006.
[14]
Anbar Picture Grows Clearer, and Bleaker, by
Dafna Linzer and Thomas E. Ricks, The Washington
Post, Nov. 28, 2006.
[15]
The Iraq Study Group Report, by James A. Baker,
III and Lee H. Hamilton, Co-Chairs, United States
Institute of Peace, 2006.
[16]
Closer to the Abyss, by Christopher Dickey,
Newsweek, Dec. 6, 2006.
[17]
Coalition divided over battle for hearts and minds,
by Richard Norton-Taylor and Rory McCarthy, The
Guardian, Apr. 1, 2003.
[18]
The Talk of the Town, by Susan Sontag, The New
Yorker, Sept. 24, 2001.
[19]
The Most Cowardly War in History, by Arundhati
Roy, Global Research, June 28, 2005.
[20]
Politically Incorrect, Wikipedia.
[21]
Trigger-happy US troops ‘will keep us in Iraq for
years’, by Sean Rayment, Telegraph, May 15,
2005.
[22]
Madeleine's War, by Walter Isaacson, Time, May
9, 1999.
[23]
Bush: ‘We Don't Torture’, CBS News, Sept. 6,
2006.
[24]
He's The Worst Ever, by Eric Foner, The
Washington Post, Dec. 3, 2006.
[25]
United States Department of Defense, by Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, Feb. 19, 2003.
[26]
Upbeat Tone Ended With War, by Dana Milbank, The
Washington Post, March 29, 2003.
[27]
Official Reveals Budget for U.S. Intelligence,
by Scott Shane, The New York Times, Nov. 8, 2006.
[28]
United States Department of Defense, by
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, March 30,
2003.
[29]
Turkey at the Crossroads, by Richard Perle,
Sept. 22, 2003.
[30]
Baghdad Delenda Est, Part Two, by Jonah
Goldberg, National Review Online, April 23, 2002.
[31]
An End to Evil: How to Win the War on Terror, by
David Frum and Richard Perle, Random House
(excerpt), Dec. 2003.
[32]
“An End to Evil” by David Frum and Richard Perle,
by Gary Kamiya, Salon, Jan. 30, 2004.
[33]
Their War, Too, by Harold Meyerson, The American
Prospect, Sept. 1, 2005.
[34]
Closing In, by Lawrence Kaplan and Bill Kristol,
National Review Online, Feb. 24, 2003.
[35]
Imperialism is the Answer, by Mark Steyn,
Chicago Sun-Times, Oct. 14, 2001.
[36]
A British View of the US Post-September 11, by
Andrew Sullivan, The London Times, Oct. 15, 2001.
[37]
‘The Final Word Is Hooray!’, FAIR, March 15,
2006.
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