Losing the American Republic

Decades of letting neocons dictate a hawkish foreign policy have put the American Republic in profound danger, just as presidents from George Washington to Dwight Eisenhower predicted, warnings that Americans must finally take to heart, says ex-U.S. diplomat William R. Polk.

By William R. Polk

In The Financial Times of April 23, Philip Stephens begins a perceptive article with the obvious statement that “It is easier to say that Obama never gets it right than to come up with an alternative strategy.”

Of course it is. It was never easy to construct a coherent policy, but it was never impossible. The problem we face today is different. It is that for a long time we have not been presented by our leaders with any strategy. So the obvious question a citizen (and a taxpayer) should demand be answered is why, despite all the effort, all the proclamations and all the lives and money we are spending, does almost every observer believe that we do not have a policy that we can afford and that accomplishes our minimal national objectives? In this first part of a two-part essay, I will address that problem.

President George Washington, who warned against the dangers of a large military and an aggressive foreign policy to the Republic.

President George Washington, who warned against the dangers of a large military and an aggressive foreign policy to the Republic.

In short, where is the problem? It is tempting to say that it is our lack of statesmen. Where are the heirs to the men who put the world back together again after the Second World War? By comparison to those who we empower today, those earlier leaders appear heroic figures.

True, they had monumental faults and made costly mistakes, but they thought and acted on an epic scale and tried to cope with unprecedented problems — the reconstruction of Europe, the ending of colonialism in Africa and imperialism in India, the amalgamation of scores of new nations into an acceptable structure of the world community and the containing of unprecedented dangers from weapons of mass destruction.

Today, only half joking, Europeans say that they see only one world-class statesman — German Chancellor Angela Merkel. I seek but find no comparable leaders on the American scene. As Mr. Stephens judged, “Barack Obama has led from behind on the global stage [while] Republicans [are thinking only in terms of] a bumper sticker world.”

We may lament our poverty of leadership, but there are ways to make it function. “Princes,” since long before Machiavelli have always used advisers; some even listened to them. Surely the capable people among us — like the “wise men” who whispered in the ears of those earlier leaders — can guide today’s leaders toward more viable policies and away from the chaos that engulfs us.

Why is this not happening? Is it that what they have to say is not “popular” or that they cannot reach the decision makers? Or that the structures we have built into our political and economic systems block them? Is it the enormity of the problems we face? Or is it that we lack information? Or is it the want of a matrix or framework in which to place what we know and to decide on the feasibility and affordability of what we want?

More fundamentally, could it be that we, the citizenry, the voters and the taxpayers,  simply do not care enough or keep ourselves well enough informed to make our leaders perform the tasks they avidly seek and we pay them to do?

Each of these possible causes of our current malaise urgently demands our attention. Let me briefly look at them and then move, in my second essay, toward a guide to a viable policy.

Complex World

First, let us admit that the world is indeed more complex today than in earlier times. There are more “actors” and at least some of them have to perform in front of audiences that are more “politicized” than they used to be. Nationalism affects more people than a century ago, and today it is laced with religion in an explosive mixture. A spreading and intensifying sense of fairness and minimal rights shapes actions among peoples who used humbly to submit. Bluntly put, fewer people today are willing to suffer or starve than were their grandparents.

Second, nations that hardly existed are caught up in insurgencies, guerrilla wars and various forms of violence. Supra- or non-national religious movements are not new, but they have become very “worldly” and are now sweeping through Africa and Asia. Some are sowing hatred and massacring or driving into exile whole populations. At the same time, corrupt governments and “warlords” impoverish societies while outside manipulation by force of arms and “dirty tricks” further destabilizes or even destroys political order, leaving trails of shattered lives.

The outside quest for “regime change” has plunged many developing countries into chaos. Floods of migrants pour out in desperate quest for safety while many of those who remain will die wretchedly as they watch their children grow to adulthood stunted from sickness and hunger.  We and several “theys” are stirring the pot. But, regardless of who created these problems, they must be faced today. And they are certainly complex.

Third, while events are certainly complex, we know an astonishing amount about them. Never in human affairs have so many studied so much. So our leaders are primed to do their jobs. At least they should be. Information is not lacking.

In the United  States, we employ some 17 intelligence agencies manned by upwards of 100,000 presumably skilled people, a Department of State and associated agencies employing (at my last count) nearly 20,000 officers, a White House staff including the National Security Council numbering in the hundreds, a galaxy of war colleges through which pass most of the senior officers of over half of the world’s military and security services,  dedicated staffs and subsidized “think tanks” like RAND and more or less independent think tanks like the Council on Foreign Relations, Brookings, etc.

The media doesn’t do as much as it used to do to educate us, but it is now augmented by “blogs,” opinion pieces, reports and memoirs. Multiple organizations of the United Nations and hundreds of non-governmental organizations provide almost daily accounts of every human activity. And some people still read and even write books.

Even those of us who, by government criteria, have no “need to know,” have access to most of this flood of information. Some is withheld from those of us our Government does not “clear” to receive it, but most of the withheld or at least delayed information is actually about “us” — the covert activities, foibles, misdemeanors  and crimes of our team.

Our leaders are keen to inform us about the (false) beliefs and (dangerous) actions of foreigners. And even if Government often does not help us to understand other peoples, most of what we need to know about them is available in the public domain beyond the reach of government censorship.

So censorship is not the only reason we are not well informed. We citizens must accept much of the blame. Many of us sit on vast “dry” islands where the floodtide of information does not reach or where we or others have built dykes to keep it out. We have allowed the media to drop the pretense of informing us; its job is to entertain us.

When “news” is read out by attractive “presenters,” it is also a form of entertainment. Television is not conducive to difficult issues. It is best on “sound bytes.” But it is not only the nature of the media that is formative: most observers believe that it is in large part our laziness or lack of concern that keeps us ill-informed and little engaged. We read little and seek reassurance more than knowledge. Above all, we wish to avoid being challenged.

Easy Opinions

As Alex de Tocqueville observed of us, “the majority undertakes to supply a multitude of ready-made opinions for the use of individuals, who are thus relieved from the necessity of forming opinions of their own.”

And it is not just opinions or judgments on contemporary affairs, but even general knowledge that is missing. Surveys show that many Americans do not know where Vietnam, Ukraine and Afghanistan are. Some could not find our national capital on a map. As Aaron Burke remarked in the Feb. 14, 2014 Washington Post, some of our would-be ambassadors knew nothing of the character, politics, language, religious affiliation of even those countries to which they were being sent.

Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, was filmed on C-Span commenting that some of the nominees were “totally unqualified.” In this, sadly, they represent us. [See: Michael X. Delli Carpini and Scott Keeter, What Americans Know About Politics and Why It Matters (1996). Chapter 6, “The Consequences of Political Knowledge and Ignorance.]

Is this ignorance important? The French conservative philosopher, Josef de Maistre answered that it is because “every nation gets the government it deserves.” If citizens are uneducated or passive, they can be controlled, as the Roman emperors controlled their peoples with bread and circuses, or as other dictatorships have with “patriotic” demonstrations or manufactured threats.

Indeed, a people can make themselves willing dupes as the Germans did when they voted Hitler into power in a free election. Ignorance and apathy are the pathogenes of representative government. Under their influence, constitutions are weakened or set aside, legislatures become rubber stamps, courts pervert the law and the media becomes a tool. So, even in a democracy, when we duck our civic duties in favor of entertainment and do not inform ourselves, the political process is endangered.

Danger, as our Founding Fathers told us, is ever present. They thought of our system as an experiment and doubted that we could maintain it over time. We have come close to losing it. And today we see signs of its fragility.

American ignorance and apathy extend even to issues immediately affecting the lives of most of us — like jobs, housing, food and health — and when it comes to devoting attention to such possibly terminal issues as nuclear war, baseball always wins. The choice, as the expression goes, is a “no brainer.”

This can be disastrous because, as our first president warned us, unscrupulous politicians can manipulate the public. George Washington found this particularly dangerous in foreign affairs. As he wrote in his Farewell Address, the dangers inherent in dealing with other countries may lead to “the necessity of those overgrown military establishments, which under any form of Government are inauspicious to liberty, and which are to be regarded as particularly hostile to Republican Liberty.”

His words demand our attention because we all welcome comfortable simplicity in place of confusing complexity, and it is in military affairs where the lack of statesmanship among the leaders and ignorance among the people is most clear.

In one of the great theatrical gestures known to history (or legend), that eagle among the hawks, Alexander the Great, demonstrated the easiest way to deal with complexity. To untie the Gordian knot — the very symbol of complexity — he simply cut it. His point was that there is no need to understand if one has a sharp knife.

Alas, as the decades of the cutting of knots in Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and other places has shown, no matter how sharp the knife, the knot may not be so neatly sliced as Alexander thought. Indeed, as we have observed in our recent wars, “knots” prove capable of reuniting their coils.

President Washington’s Wisdom

George Washington, judged by today’s standards, was neither so well informed nor so lavishly advised as are modern American leaders, but at least on war and peace his instinct was sure and at the end of his career, he embodied the American myth of national decency.

In his “Farewell Address,” he told us that the only safe — because moral — policy is to “Observe good faith and justice towards all Nations. Cultivate peace and harmony with all. … In the execution of such a plan nothing is more essential than that permanent, inveterate antipathies against particular Nations and passionate attachments for others should be excluded [because] The Nation, prompted by ill will and resentment sometime impels to War the Government, contrary to the best calculations of policy. … The peace often, sometimes perhaps the Liberty, of Nations has been the victim. … Real Patriots … are liable to become suspected and odious; while its tools and dupes usurp the applause and confidence of the people, to surrender their interests.”

Partially echoing the values Washington hoped would underlie American action and reacting to the far stronger forces that have grown as America grew, Dwight Eisenhower proclaimed during the 1956 joint Anglo-French-Israeli attack on Egypt that we must all be governed by “One Law,” not one law for us and our friends and another for other states.

President Dwight Eisenhower delivering his farewell address on Jan. 17, 1961.

President Dwight Eisenhower delivering his farewell address on Jan. 17, 1961.

On the eve of his departure from the White House, Eisenhower picked up and expanded another of Washington’s — and the Founding Fathers’, (who were deeply suspicious of the military and of the people’s ability to control it) — main themes, the danger of “those overgrown military establishments, which under any form of Government are inauspicious to liberty, and which are to be regarded as particularly hostile to Republican Liberty.”

Against the power of “the military-industrial complex, ” Eisenhower memorably warned that “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. The cost of one modern heavy bomber is this: a modern brick school in more than 30 cities. It is two electric power plants, each serving a town of 60,000 population. It is two fine, fully equipped hospitals. It is some 50 miles of concrete pavement. We pay for a single fighter plane with a half million bushels of wheat. We pay for a single destroyer with new homes that could have housed more than 8,000 people. …

“This is not a way of life at all, in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening war, it is              humanity hanging from a cross of iron.”

To judge how little we have heeded his warning, just multiply the figures Eisenhower cites for the costs of the guns, warships, rockets and planes. When he spoke, our aggregate cost of all the tools of war was about $320 billion; today the cost (in inflation adjusted dollars) is more than double that amount and also is larger than the aggregate outlay of all other nations.

And, beyond the monetary cost thus measured is the security cost — the world has become far more dangerous at least in part because of our emphasis on our military role. So, Eisenhower questioned, is this “the best way of life to be found on the road the world has been taking?”

Is anyone who has his hand on the wheel, that is any responsible leader, seriously considering whether there is a smoother, safer, more economical and less painful road? If so, I have failed to identify him or her. And, apparently, neither has Mr. Stephens of The Financial Times.

Bowing to the Military

One aspect of this problem is that the military, drawing on the prestige it gains as our defender, is vastly over funded and catered to by both the Executive Branch and the Legislature. As Washington and Eisenhower feared, they have become a state within our nation. This is evident in almost every aspect of the comparison between the military and civilian parts of our government.

Consider the contrast with the Civil Service. The contrast is as sharp in America as in “tin pot” dictatorships in the Third World. When I served in government, I observed that any general and many colonels could summon up an Air Force plane for a junket whereas even the Under Secretary of State had to get special clearance from the President and then negotiate with the Pentagon for official trips; then there were and still are wildly disproportional side benefits given to the military and what amount to penalties assessed to the civilians.

For example, roughly half of all ambassadorial appointments were removed from the Foreign Service and given to non-professionals. As Edward Luce wrote in the Dec. 7, 2014 Financial Times, “imagine how [much] harder it would be … to recruit talented military officers if plum generalships were handed out to amateurs who had never worn a uniform.”

The transformation of America into a military culture has deep roots. Arguably it began long before the formation of the Republic in the settler wars with the Native Americans. In the “young republic,” it was carried forward in the War of 1812, Andrew Jackson’s push  into “the Floridas” and James K. Polk’s war with Mexico. Then, during and after the Civil War, Americans became truly a warring people. (This is the title of the interpretive history of the American people on which I am at work.)

This legacy was carried forward in two world wars, hundreds of smaller military actions and a half century of Cold War. In 2013, Richard F. Grimmett and Barbara Salazar Torreon reported to Congress on “Instances of Use of United States Armed Forces Abroad” from 1798. They found five declared war, six undeclared wars and hundreds of other military actions. [Washington D.C.: Congressional Research Service.]

Few Americans, I suspect, are fully aware — despite scores of books and hundreds of articles — of the dimensions of our country’s commitment to the military establishment and the “security” culture embedded in it. Eisenhower’s Military-Industrial Complex has grown not only in size but in spread. It now shapes Congressional action, influences media reporting and convinces labor to cooperate in its projects. Indeed, it is built into the fabric of American society and economy to an extent that would have terrified the Founding Fathers.

Beyond the Military-Industrial-Congressional-Media-Labor Complex, as it has become, are three other powerful aspects of the “security state.” The first of these is the creation of a more or less autonomous elite army within the standing army which, itself, is apart from what the Founding Fathers thought of as our prime military force, the state militias.

This Special Operations Force, according to the Congressional Research Service in 2013 (the latest available figures) was composed of some 67,000 troops and operated under a separate budget of about $7.5 billion. It has its own “think tank,” sources of intelligence, school and even its own magazine (Special Warfare) that prints favorable articles by journalists from all over the world on “politico-military” affairs.

The second aspect of the growth of the military is in overseas bases. They are believed to number over 1,000 and are located in about 63 countries. These figures do not include the “floating bases” on aircraft carriers, troopships and “insertion” vessels nor, for the most part, the bases jointly operated with other countries and special intelligence facilities.

The third aspect is the extension of the military into “security” and intelligence fields that are partly or wholly funded by the Defense Department and often are commanded by serving military officers. According to a recent book, 1,074 new federal government organizations, the existence of which is “classified” and generally withheld from public knowledge, and nearly 2,000 private companies work out of at least 17,000 locations within the United States and an unknown number abroad.

Exceeding Authority

More unsettling but not surprising is that with so much power behind them, some senior military commanders feel able to step outside of their statutory roles to pontificate on affairs beyond their competence and authority. One who this year frightened our European allies was U.S. Air Force General Philip Breedlove, the head of NATO’s operational command. He was taken to task by German Chancellor Merkel, as reported in the March 7, 2015 issue of the respected German weekly Der Spiegel, for “dangerous propaganda” in publicly recommending policies verging on warfare with Russia.

German Foreign Minister Frank Walter Steinmeier intervened personally with the NATO General Secretary because of Breedlove’s statements. Breedlove’s action was not unprecedented. General David Petraeus essentially ran American affairs in Afghanistan and Iraq while treating the statutory American authority, the ambassador, as a junior partner.

In “The Killing Machines” (The Atlantic, September 2013), Mike Bowden recounts the argument between U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan Cameron Munter in 2011 and CIA Director Leon Panetta over the ambassador’s authority to veto assassinations. Munter quoted Title 22 of the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations that made the ambassador the chief American authority in the country to which he was appointed. “That means,” commented Bowden, “no American policy should be carried out in any country without the ambassador’s approval.”

Panetta took the dispute to President Obama who ruled in favor of the CIA. Elsewhere also, senior military officers have frequently violated the word and the intent of the Framers of the Constitution in forming and proclaiming policies. In the most famous case of assumption of such powers in the past, President Harry Truman fired General Douglas MacArthur. That was long ago.

It isn’t only, as the American psychologist Abraham Maslow is quoted as saying, “if you only have a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail,” but also that ambitious men naturally seek opportunities. In business, they seek money; in the military they seek promotion. Pursuing these goals is often admirable but unchecked it also creates dangers or harms the public interest.

History writings are full of accounts of generals who destroyed civilian regimes and often destroyed republican liberty. A prudent people will insist that its government both use its military when necessary and always control it. Fear that the people would fail to do so animated the discussions of our Founding Fathers when they were writing our Constitution in 1787. [Madison, Notes, passim.] Our first military leader warned us of the danger as I have quoted him above.

The Iraq War Disaster

So now consider what we have been doing on the two major American wars of the post-Vietnam years. Because I have written on them in detail elsewhere, I will only touch on those aspects that will flesh-out the skeleton I have sketched above or illustrate why we need to avoid tactical lunges and adopt strategic thinking.

I begin with Iraq. Iraq illustrates failure to understand the context in which we act, our propensity to jump before looking and our role in creating a security threat. [I have dealt with Iraq intensively in Understanding Iraq (New York: HarperCollins, 2005).]

Consider first the context:  Iraq was one of the many countries that evolved from the collapse of imperialism. Put together by the British at the end of the First World War from three provinces of the Ottoman Empire under an imported and British-controlled monarchy, it never found a secure political identity. To control the country, the British built a military organization that in comparison with other aspects of the regime and the society was strong. Consequently, Iraq suffered military coup after coup.

Most incoming dictators were simply predatory, but the last in the sequence, Saddam Hussein, made Iraq socially and economically one of the most advanced countries in Africa and Asia. Profiting from increasing oil wealth, he promoted the growth of a middle class, secularized the regime and provided the public with free health services and free education. Whereas in 1920, under the British, only 30 Iraqis were receiving secondary education (and the British thought that was too many), in 1985 the student population reached nearly one and a half million.

The number of doctors went from 1:7,000 to 1:1,800 and life expectancy rose from 40 to 57 years. Schools, universities, hospitals, factories, theaters and museums proliferated. Saddam’s aim was power, and like many Third World leaders he was not an attractive person, but perhaps without meaning to do so, he set in motion events that would have forced Iraq to become a more democratic society. “Would have,” that is, had development not been short-circuited by war.

The first war began in September 1980 with an Iraqi attack on America’s enemy, the revolutionary Iranian government led by Ayatollah Khomeini, that had overthrown the government of America’s ally, the Shah. The American government took a short-sighted view of the war and assisted the Iraqis with provision of the most sophisticated intelligence then available (which enabled the outnumbered Iraqis to defeat the Iranians in crucial battles), but at the same time it supplied Iran with lethal military equipment (in the Iran-Contra affair).

Both the Iraqis and the Iranians realized that America was playing a cynical game. Henry Kissinger summed it up by saying, “It’s a pity they both can’t lose.” It does not seem, in retrospect, that serious thought was given to how war would impact on both societies and on American interests. This is borne out by the extension of the war to Kuwait.

Kuwait was another of the legacies of imperialism. In the eyes of every Iraqi leader, including its British-installed and American-favored three kings, Kuwait was an Iraqi province. It was the British who had forced the Ottoman Empire to give it quasi-autonomous status in 1913 — and in 1923 got both the puppet Iraqi government and the precursor of the Saudi state to recognize its frontiers.

Initially, Britain was interested in using it to block any threat to its Indian empire. Following Indian independence in 1947, that interest was replaced by the special relationship under which newly oil-rich Kuwait invested heavily in cash-starved England. Additionally, both Britain and America were keen that it keep its separate status so that no one Middle Eastern power dominate oil production. Then, for reasons that are still obscure but certainly evinced a lack of strategic thinking, the American government gave the impression that it would not oppose the Iraqi attempt to take over Kuwait.

It happened like this: The war with Iran lasted eight years, killed tens of thousands Iraqis and cost about $15 billion yearly. (Proportionally, the Iraq-Iran war was more costly than the American war in Vietnam.)  Saddam Hussein proclaimed that he was fighting Iran on behalf of the Arabs and particularly of the Kuwaitis who had a deep fear of Iranian aggression. [For more background on Iraq’s invasion of Iran, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Saddam’s Green Light.”]

Souring on Saddam

Initially at least, the Kuwaitis (and other Arab leaders) agreed with him and supported his war effort.  But as the fighting stalemated, they not only stopped their aid to Iraq but demanded repayment of what they had lent. Saddam had used up all of Iraq’s reserves. The price of oil fell below what could sustain his regime. He became desperate. He begged and pleaded but to no avail.

A violent man, Saddam decided to take what the Kuwaitis would not give, but, himself a crafty politician, Saddam sought American approval. He probably thought America “owed him one” for having fought its enemy, Iran. So he thought America might agree to his reclaiming Kuwait.

When he met with U.S. Ambassador April Glaspie, she (on orders) told him that the U.S. Government “took no position on Arab frontiers.” Saddam took this to be a “green light” — like President Gerald Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger given to Indonesia’s General Suharto to reclaim East Timor — and invaded. [Kissinger and others denied it at the time, but we now have access to the documents and know that they condoned and conspired a few years before, in 1975,  with the Indonesian dictator General Suharto, certainly no more attractive a figure than Saddam, on the invasion. (See Briefing book 62 in the nsarchive.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB62/‎)]

The American ambassador told The New York Times that no one thought (with no sense of history and apparently no appreciation of Saddam’s desperation) the Iraqis would take “all of Kuwait!”

The Americans and others, including the Russians, reacted sharply. Kuwait’s assets were frozen out of Saddam’s reach. The UN demanded an Iraqi withdrawal. And Saddam became even more desperate. Some in the American government apparently believed that the Iraqis might plunge into Saudi Arabia eastern province where its oil fields are located. So America put together a coalition, including Saudi Arabia and Syria, to chase the Iraqis out of Kuwait. It was successful. President George H.W. Bush ordered the invading forces to break Saddam’s army but not to occupy the country.

However, the war against Saddam was allowed to spill over into actions that were not then foreseen by American leaders and for which the United States and Iraq would pay a fearful price. The U.S. acted in ways that increased Saddam’s desperation and increased his sense of humiliation. It also allowed or perhaps even condoned actions that promoted sectarian — Sunni-Shiite — hostilities to a level not experienced in the Islamic world for centuries.

And, by giving the impression of hostility toward all aspects of Islam, the U.S. shifted such previously anti-Saddam activists as Osama bin Laden into leaders of a jihad against America. Little or no thought was given, apparently, to how the initial objective of getting the Iraqis out of Kuwait could be turned into a stable and constructive result.

President George W. Bush in a flight suit after landing on the USS Abraham Lincoln to give his "Mission Accomplished" speech about the Iraq War.

President George W. Bush in a flight suit after landing on the USS Abraham Lincoln to give his “Mission Accomplished” speech about the Iraq War.

Much worse, of course, was to follow a decade later in the George W. Bush administration. The U.S.-led invasion of Iraq was not caused by Saddam’s attack on Kuwait but was a deliberate act of aggression. It was justified to the American public by the allegation that Iraq was developing nuclear weapons and allegation that Bush knew to be false; he simply ordered his Secretary of State, General Colin Powell, to lie to the public and America’s allies.

Whereas George Washington had warned in his Farewell Address that “The Nation [that is, the public], prompted by ill will and resentment sometime impels to War the Government, contrary to the best calculations of policy,” George W. Bush’s Government deceived the Nation. As Washington also warned, the “Real Patriots” — who, in the Iraq case, realized what was happening and spoke out — “are liable to become suspected and odious; while its tools and dupes usurp the applause and confidence of the people, to surrender their interests.”

Those interests included preservation of the lives of at least 4,500 soldiers who died and the several hundred thousand American soldiers who were wounded. Also of interest were the expenditure of some $2 trillion in treasure, the 2.6 million men and women whose labor could have contributed to the American economy. Less tangible but no less real was the goodwill that America had long enjoyed among all Iraqis and other peoples and a peace that has been lost in unending war.

This was all predicted and much could have been avoided. It is notable that even David Kilcullen, Bush’s strategist who had been recruited by Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and relied upon by General David Petreaus, was quoted as saying that “Perhaps the most stupid thing about Iraq was invading the country in the first place.” [Ken Sengupta, “David Kilcullen: The Australian helping to shape a new Afghanistan strategy,” The Independent, July 9, 2009.]

The Afghan Quagmire

I turn now to the failure of American policy in Afghanistan.

The people of Afghanistan at least since the time of Alexander the Great had repeatedly and violently demonstrated their determination not to be ruled by foreigners. In 1842, they inflicted the worst defeat the British army suffered in the Nineteenth Century. Soberly, the British then recognized that they were not going to transform the Afghans and that attempting to do so was not worth the cost.

So, essentially, they played their new version of “the Great Game” by Afghan rules. They bribed, cajoled and flattered the Afghan rulers and where they could and at little cost fought a sort of French-Moroccan Beau Geste or American-style “Wild West” campaign on the Northwest Frontier against the tribal peoples. They recognized that what they really wanted — to keep the Russians out of South Asia — didn’t require more.

When their turn came, the Russians were not willing to take such a detached approach. In 1979, they dived into Afghanistan and tried, as they were doing in their Turkish Central Asian provinces, to Russify and partially to Communize it. Their policy was more than a failure; it was a catastrophe. [The best account is Rodric Braithwaite, Afghantsy: The Russians in Afghanistan 1979-89 (London: Profile Books, 2011).  Also see William R. Polk, Violent Politics (New York: HarperCollins,2007) Chapt. 11.]

The war was a catastrophe both for the USSR,  which the Afghans played a major role in destroying, and also for Afghanistan, which became a “failed state.” It was that failed state — a shattered, warlord-plagued maelstrom — the Russians had left behind that the Taliban movement tried to overcome with a violent assertion of primitive “Afghanism.”

Objectively, America never had any compelling interest in Afghanistan. It had no known major resources, was poor, backward and remote. Moreover, anyone with a slight knowledge of history would know that  it had proven to be one of the most difficult countries in the world to rule, much less to “regime change” or “nation build.”

Not only had the Afghans defeated the British and the Russians but they tolerated only a modicum of control by their own government. Each village or small neighborhood of villages ruled itself and was rigidly locked into traditional culture. Largely based on Islamic law but including elements that were pre-Islamic, the social code featured segregation of women, revenge for insult (badal), protection of refugees (melmastia) and absolute independence. In the south, it was known as the Pukhtunwali. That culture was not to America’s liking, but it was Afghan’s culture. Slowly and cautiously, it had been evolving toward a more “enlightened” and liberal pattern.

Evolving, that is,  when left more or less to its own devices. When under attack, Afghan society closed upon itself and reverted to customs that the Russians had found (and Americans would find) objectionable. Generally, however, at least the Americans have not found disapproval of customs to be a sufficient reason to invade other societies. What caused the American invasion was, ironically, a playing out of two commands of the Pushtunwali, the Afghan “way.”

Misunderstanding Afghanistan

First was the absolute imperative of the Afghan way, the granting of  protection (malmastia) to fleeing warriors. The Taliban honored this tradition by giving sanctuary to Osama bin Laden whose followers in the al-Qaeda movement had attacked America in 2001. The U.S. Government demanded that Osama be handed over. The Afghan Government refused. To have done so would have been, in Afghan eyes, a mortal sin.

So, second, America itself employed another recognized part of the Afghan code, badal, or revenge. It attacked. As the then Taliban Minister of War later told me, “we understood your desire for revenge. … It is also our way.”

It was the Afghan way, but was it either necessary or useful to America? Put another way, could American objectives have been accomplished at lesser cost in another way?           

To answer that question requires a definition of objectives: First was the objective of the American political leaders. They believed that they had to demonstrate toughness. About nine in 10 Americans (and between six and seven Britons) favored the invasion. It was easy for President Bush to ride the popular surge. Indeed, he not only rode but spurred on war fever.

Second, as George Washington had long before warned, “The Government sometimes … adopts through passion what reason would reject.” Reason would have avoided a ruinous war. But instead of adopting the course demanded by the national interest, or trying to think with the public through the options, Bush played on popular emotion. The Taliban were bad and America had to punish them.

Third, on their side, the Taliban leaders knew that a war would be ruinous for them. They were not very adroit, but they tried to find a way to avoid it. They could do so only within the code by which they lived. To have met the American demand to surrender Bin Laden would have been a mortal sin, but they had some flexibility in applying  malmastia — they had to protect Bin Laden but need not to allow him to act as he might wish. So they took him into “protective” custody and proclaimed that they would prevent him and his followers from engaging in further foreign activities. It is not clear that the Bush administration even considered any possible variation of that option.

So Bush ordered the attack. Despising the ragged, ill-armed guerrillas, the Americans struck. The war might have ended in a bloody but limited raid. Instead, without much thought, it morphed into a conflict that, so far, has lasted nearly 14 years, has cost America 2,357 dead, perhaps 50,000 wounded and at least $1 trillion.

The number of Afghans killed or wounded is not known but is certainly in the hundreds of thousands; the sick and malnourished amount to nearly half the population;  a whole generation of children have been “stunted” and will never grow to full potential; the traditional civic order has been replaced by a corrupt and brutal collection of mafias that both engage in the largest drug business in the world and also steal (and ship abroad) billions of U.S. aid dollars.  There is no light at the end of that tunnel.

I find no evidence that the U.S. government at any point from before the invasion to the present carefully considered whether or not it really had any  strategic interest (the Russians were in full retreat and we no longer had a compelling interest in protecting India) in Afghanistan. It simply took whatever seemed to be the next step as the trajectory of events seemed to dictate and, since other than bribery it had little to offer, those steps were military.

During the last 14 years, we have relied almost exclusively on military action. At first, the action was “boots on the ground.” Recently, in our attempt to cut American casualties, we have shifted largely to “coercive air power.” [Robert Pape, New York Times. April 21, 2015.]

Our aim has been to “decapitate” the guerrilla forces and to beat down insurgent attacks. Both have failed. On the one hand, as we have killed more senior and experienced leaders, younger and more ambitious or violent men have replaced them, and, on the other hand, surveys show that guerrilla action has increased — not been  suppressed — in and around areas that have been attacked by drones or special forces.

If we cannot win, have we tried negotiation? No, in fact we have made any form of negotiation virtually impossible. Among our moves, one stands out baldly: the American military and the CIA have maintained a “kill list” of insurgents to be shot on sight. Because the list is secret, no Talib can know if he is on the list. So he is apt to suspect that any offer of negotiation is really a trap, designed both to kill him and to divide and weaken his movement. [As discussed by Jo Becker and Scott Shane in the New York Times, May 29, 2012. I have discussed this and other aspects of the Afghan conflict in a series of essays in my book Distant Thunder (Washington 2011).]

The cost of our failure to win or negotiate is still being paid: we are still engaged in combat, still striking targets, still shoveling in billions of dollars to a failed puppet government. And in this unending war, we have created far more enemies than we have “pacified” or killed. Now they come not only from Muslim Asia and Africa, but even from Europe and America. They are enemies we helped to create. We were sold a phony policy and self-defeating means to implement it: counterinsurgency never worked anywhere and certainly has not worked in Afghanistan.

Lessons Needed Learning

It would be rewarding if one could say that our experience in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan has made us wiser in our approaches to Somalia, Syria, Libya and Yemen, but it is hard to substantiate that conclusion. Yet the lessons are there to be learned. There are more, but consider just these few:

–Military action can destroy but it cannot build;

–Counterinsurgency does not work and creates new problems;

–Nation building is beyond the capacity of foreigners;

–Piecemeal, uncoordinated actions often exacerbate rather than solve problems;

–The costs of military action are multifold and usually harm not only the attacked but also the attacker’s society and economy;

–Reliance on military action and supply of weapons to the client state encourages it to undertake actions that make peace-seeking harder rather than easier;

–War radiates out from the battlefield so that whole societies are turned into refugees. In desperation they flee even far abroad and create unforeseen problems.

–The sense that the attacker is a bully spreads and converts outsiders into enemies;

–Failure to understand the society and culture even of the enemy is self-defeating;

–Angry, resentful people eventually strike back where they can and so create a climate of perpetual insecurity.

The result of such actions is deforming to the central objective of an intelligent, conservative and constructive American foreign policy — the preservation of our well-being. So, in the second part of this essay, I propose to show how we might begin to approach strategic thinking to accomplish our central national objective.

William R. Polk is a veteran foreign policy consultant, author and professor who taught Middle Eastern studies at Harvard. President John F. Kennedy appointed Polk to the State Department’s Policy Planning Council where he served during the Cuban Missile Crisis. His books include: Violent Politics: Insurgency and Terrorism; Understanding Iraq; Understanding Iran; Personal History: Living in Interesting Times; Distant Thunder: Reflections on the Dangers of Our Times; and Humpty Dumpty: The Fate of Regime Change.

27 comments for “Losing the American Republic

  1. historicus
    May 20, 2015 at 09:57

    I think liberals forget that it was FDR who created the military-industrial complex that
    Republican Ike warned about. It is well documented that FDR did everything imaginable
    to provoke Germany and Japan into hostilities. He originated the modern imperial
    presidency, breaking numerous U.S. laws with impunity to get his war on. He ignored the
    opinion of the American people who were overwhelmingly opposed to new foreign
    bloodshed, blatantly lying in his 1940 campaign promise (for one example) to “keep
    yours sons out of war.” He was the first to use to power of the IRS to go after critics of
    his policies as well.

    Why he did this is still hotly debated among historians. Personally I favor the explanation
    offered in the book “The People As Enemy: The Leaders’ Hidden Agenda in World War
    II” by John Spritzler. He makes the case that war is always the elite’s most powerful tool
    for suppressing domestic dissent. Labor’s defiance of economic injustice in the United
    States had been extreme since the end of the Great War; pitched battles had been fought
    across the nation as government repression intensified throughout the 1930’s. New
    foreign enemies were needed to bring the people back under control. This winning
    strategy has been successfully employed ever since, in the perpetual war state that has
    replaced the American republic.

  2. paul wichmann
    May 18, 2015 at 02:45

    Mr. Polk is guilty of over-thinking things here. On these very pages, Robert Parry, in the article “Enforcing the Ukraine ‘Group Think’”, details the abuse raining on Prof. Stephen Cohen, for his daring to consider the Ukraine from an objective, as well the Russian, point of view:
    “He (Cohen) also noted that young scholars in the field have expressed fear for their professional futures if they break from the herd. Cohen mentioned the story of one young woman scholar who dropped off a panel to avoid risking her career in case she said something that could be deemed sympathetic to Russia.”

    My comment (sharpened) under the piece:
    Isn’t this just US. Spend years getting your credentials – and going deep into debt for the effort – to the exclusive end of parroting the party line. Of filling a role, of just doing your job. It’s one hell of a mystery that we’re so screwed up.

    Mr. Polk, we are morally bankrupt, thanks to the ideological triumph of Blank-You Capitalism. From this it follows directly that we are intellectually totalitarian; some like to tag it inverted totalitarianism, but I go for three-hundred sixty degree totalitarianism, on all three axes, for it is enforced from above and below, from the left and the right, and from in front and behind.

  3. CJ Overman
    May 17, 2015 at 21:58

    The writer asks if there are any leaders with an alternative vision to war-as-policy, says he doesn’t see one and neither does FT…to which I say ” Rand Paul? Anyone? Anyone?”.

    Maybe it is time to put ones support where ones ideals are instead of party and give the guy a chance.

  4. a nurse
    May 17, 2015 at 16:39

    In the U.S.:

    FightGangStalking.com

    Imagine that. (Victims of these crimes don’t have to imagine — it’s their reality. And it’s the truth.)

  5. Anthony Shaker
    May 17, 2015 at 07:00

    Dr. Polk,

    At the very least, I believe, your essay distinguishes Americans’ willing ignorance from cultural and media-contrived ignorance. True, but now somewhat academic perhaps.

    You will probably agree that ignorance on the scale you describe it can be interpreted in two ways, either as a means of control or as a harbinger of historic defeat.

    In the so-called liberal and progressive view of the world, especially regarding the US position on the world stage, this signals America’s towering, aggressive domination. I frankly do not see that at all, and I suspect you do not, either.

    What you describe are not even signs of malaise, but of advanced decomposition. Worse, I sense a shipwreck a short distance away for the United States, in particular, especially if it does not quickly cut its two anchors in the Middle East, Israel (a spent race colony) and Saudi Arabia (a Wahhabi Paradise so “religiously” repressive that a third of its youth suffer, we learn from psychologists and sociologists, from a loss of sexual identity). Just those two articial gifts of the British Empire will sink the Statue of Liberty forever. The United States is no longer an island.

    When terrorism and state demolition become official government policy, then everything else has clearly failed. Marxists, both revoltuonary and academics, used to claim the “monopoly capitalism” was the last phase of capitalism.

    No, the last phase of the “Western” yoke (US, UK and France), not just the United States–which yoke has effectively lasted no more than a century and a half old–is this developing Reign of Terror, which was inaugurated so prophetically at the dawn of our “modern age” by the sickly ringleaders of the French Revolution. The present horror will make the last war seem like an evening stroll.

    Terror, as you know, was the only option left in half of Europe a little more than a century after the French Revolution, when groups of Nazi and fascist cutthroats seized Spain, Italy and Germany and went on for bigger kill, thanks to those same wily French and their insistence to bankrup Germany after WWI. But those killers merely triggered the second Western collapse, after WWI. Nearly one hundred million people died in those two world wars.

    Something has clearly gone wrong with the so-called Western rise to world domination, which has been nothing but a steamroller in a sleeping world–military, of course, but primarily culturally, socially, economically, politically, and technologically.

    We need to think–educated, specialists, regular folks–about a new path to take in the face of the challenges we face on multiple fronts–topmost, the environment. It is much more feasible today in than in decades, to my utter amazement, or than only five years ago!

    The major Western powers today at loggerheads with practically every other power center and culturally autonomous nation, are like a dead star–still shining but cold dead inside, I am afraid.

    • Bertrand Renaud
      May 17, 2015 at 21:32

      Mr. Shaker,

      …”Terror, as you know, was the only option left in half of Europe a little more than a century after the French Revolution, when groups of Nazi and fascist cutthroats seized Spain, Italy and Germany and went on for bigger kill, thanks to those same wily French and their insistence to bankrup Germany after WWI. But those killers merely triggered the second Western collapse, after WWI. Nearly one hundred million people died in those two world wars.’…

      Blaming the French and (selectively chosen) elements of the French Revolution for every ill in the past. present and future is an intellectual crutch of no merit considering the issues at hand.

      In W.R. Polk’s essay, today’s issue is what can American citizens do to move their republic in the right direction?

      Personally, what I really fear the most is the now explicit (and self-serving) buildup of the US military’s animosity against China in all its military publications. . Christopher Clark’s “The Sleepwalkers” about the origins of WW1 that permanently crippled Europe has made a strong impression on me. My gut feeling is that current “American” values may now lead a sleepwalking US into another disaster for the world.

      • Anthony Shaker
        May 18, 2015 at 07:27

        Thank you, Mr. Renaud, but that was not quite what I was saying. The French Revolution is certainly a key event in Western European history, but it reflected (and of course reinforced) larger forces at work…and the coming world catasrophe.

        Dr. Polk gives us a sense of history. Sadly too many Americans live in the present–constantly. As a culture, America walks blind. But is Is it the terror of facing the future and its responsibilities? From its childhood it has barely grown up.

        Iran alone is telling us: Calm down, sit down and reflect about what we kind of world you want. Decide.

        My reference to the French Revolution was just for symbolism. No historian can point to a single cause for all the mayhem of the Western takeover, any more than one can blame Free Masons, Catholics, Protestants, God, atheists, or Brigitte Bardot. There was a whole other world before this takeover. Not a utopia or a paradise lost, but a civilized medieval world, stretching from the Iberian Peninsula to China and the Pacific. But not in Europe. Yes, it was “Islamic,” which defined the medieval period, but Islamic civilization was multiconfessional and multidimensional, not a “religion” warped by the Wahhabi heresy installed by the British and sustained by the Bushes and the US government (though for how long, who knows?). That’s where we received our so-called “modern” sciences from–algebra, trigonometry, medicine, historiography, atronomy, social science, hygiene, soap, the tooth brush, even the concept of algorithm (deformed from al-Khwarizmi, the founder of algebra).

        This is what we lost, but it took more than just the French Revolution to destroy. Now we’re losing the ancient heritage sites in Syria nad Iraq. The barbarian period is not over, but let’s hope this is the last stretch. The star is already dead.

        All that conspiracy theorizing is part of the disease. But symbols can be enlighten us. Besides, the French Revolution was a techtonic shift.

  6. Christopher Currie
    May 16, 2015 at 20:32

    Mr. William R. Polk’s claim that “counterinsurgency never worked anywhere” isn’t true, but perhaps it might be true more often than not. Counterinsurgency tactics worked for the British in the Boer War and in Malaysia, and such tactics successfully squelched Che Quevara’s attempt to export a Cuban-style insurgency. One might even say that every “failed rebellion” (especially in Latin American and Africa) was a “victory” for the use of counterinsurgency tactics of one kind or another.

    On the other hand, I agree with just about every other point made in William Polk’s (Part I) essay and with the points made in the comments which have been posted so far.

    Ronald Reagan’s claim that “government IS the problem” is a corporately-sponsored BOLD-FACED LIE! Stock-owned CORPORATIONS are inherently the real problem, because in the US (at least) they are legally required to “have no god but money” (i.e. to “maximize profits” above all other considerations). That love-of-money principal is defined in the Old Testament as EVIL (“worshiping a golden calf”) and the SOURCE OF MANY KINDS OF EVIL in the New Testament (1 Timothy 6:10). So one of the things we definitely need to do in order to protect our democracy from ruin is to change that “fiduciary responsibility” law to redefine that “fiduciary responsibility” criterion in a way that subordinates “maximizing profit” considerations to more humane considerations.

  7. May 16, 2015 at 20:26

    William R. Polk’s claim that “counterinsurgency never worked anywhere” isn’t true, but perhaps it might be true more often than not. Counterinsurgency tactics worked for the British in the Boer War and in Malaysia, and such tactics successfully squelched Che Quevara’s attempt to export a Cuban-style insurgency. One might even say that every “failed rebellion” (especially in Latin American and Africa) was a “victory” for the use of counterinsurgency tactics of one kind or another.

    On the other hand, I agree with just about every other point made in William Polk’s (Part I) essay and with the points made in the comments which have been posted so far.

    Ronald Reagan’s claim that “government IS the problem” is a corporately-sponsored BOLD-FACED LIE! Stock-owned CORPORATIONS are inherently the real problem, because in the US (at least) they are legally required to “have no god but money” (i.e. to “maximize profits” above all other considerations). That love-of-money principal is defined in the Old Testament as EVIL (“worshiping a golden calf”) and the SOURCE OF MANY KINDS OF EVIL in the New Testament (1 Timothy 6:10). So one of the things we definitely need to do in order to protect our democracy from ruin is to change that “fiduciary responsibility” law to redefine that “fiduciary responsibility” criterion in a way that subordinates “maximizing profit” considerations to more humane considerations.

  8. Anthony F. Shaker
    May 16, 2015 at 17:57

    Dr. Polk,

    At the very least, I believe, your essay distinguishes Americans’ willing ignorance from cultural and media-contrived ignorance. True, but now somewhat academic perhaps.

    You will probably agree that ignorance on the scale you describe it can be interpreted in two ways, either as a means of control or as a harbinger of historic defeat.

    In the so-called liberal and progressive view of the world, especially regarding the US position on the world stage, this signals America’s towering, aggressive domination. I frankly do not see that at all, and I suspect you do not, either.

    What you describe are not even signs of malaise, but of advanced decomposition. Worse, I sense a shipwreck a short distance away for the United States, in particular, especially if it does not quickly cut its two anchors in the Middle East, Israel (a spent race colony) and Saudi Arabia (a Wahhabi Paradise so “religiously” repressive that a third of its youth suffer, we learn from psychologists and sociologists, from a loss of sexual identity). Just those two articial gifts of the British Empire will sink the Statue of Liberty forever. The United States is no longer an island.

    When terrorism and state demolition become official government policy, then everything else has clearly failed. Marxists, both revoltuonary and academics, used to claim the “monopoly capitalism” was the last phase of capitalism.

    No, the last phase of the “Western” yoke (US, UK and France), not just the United States–which yoke has effectively lasted no more than a century and a half old–is this developing Reign of Terror, which was inaugurated so prophetically at the dawn of our “modern age” by the sickly ringleaders of the French Revolution. The present horror will make the last war seem like an evening stroll.

    Terror, as you know, was the only option left in half of Europe a little more than a century after the French Revolution, when groups of Nazi and fascist cutthroats seized Spain, Italy and Germany and went on for bigger kill, thanks to those same wily French and their insistence to bankrup Germany after WWI. But those killers merely triggered the second Western collapse, after WWI. Nearly one hundred million people died in those two world wars.

    Something has clearly gone wrong with the so-called Western rise to world domination, which has been nothing but a steamroller in a sleeping world–military, of course, but primarily culturally, socially, economically, politically, and technologically.

    We need to think–educated, specialists, regular folks–about the new path for the challenges we face on multiple fronts, including the environment. This has now become much more feasible, to my utter amazement, than only five years ago!

    The major Western powers today at loggerheads with practically every other power center and culturally autonomous nation, are like a dead star–still shining but cold dead inside, I am afraid.

  9. Mark
    May 16, 2015 at 17:04

    I would agree with Mr. Polk that it’s ignorance on a number of aspects that enabled those who’ve financially and morally looted America from the inside out. It’s not about ethics, morality or the ethical morality of the law itself.

    It is about influence. When a foreign interest has enough influence with the US press and government officials, essentially coercing them to compromise principles of ethics and law, then we get exactly what we have now – the country being run for the interests of someone other than our own electorate who ultimately accepted propaganda as truth.

    Foreign interests were put ahead of American interests even before the Bush Jr. administration when foreign agents within enacted Israel’s 1996 war plans that used 9/11 as the excuse to launch the Israeli attack on 2003 Iraq through their US proxy, which continues to this day as directed against Syria and Iran (while Obama has relatively recently began to balk at some of those neocon-Zionist tangled web supremacist plans).

    http://www.salon.com/2004/03/10/osp_moveon/

    https://www.google.com/search?q=PNAC+clean+break:+new+strategy+for+securing+the+realm&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&client=safari#q=PNAC+clean+break:+new+strategy+for+securing+the+realm&hl=en&start=0

    The willful intent of the US and Western press to help mislead the public and world into backing the illegal 2003 invasion of Iraq is well enough documented to be accepted as truth by all but the most uninformed (most Americans) or those in the deepest denial of reality after having succumbed to generations of propaganda and/or any other bias eliciting factor or traitorous inducing loyalty.

    What informed American would choose that the country be looted from within, while the constitution was gutted for the sake of foreign interests and corporate profits all at the expense of the American public and the entire world’s population? If anyone did choose that, then they certainly are not and were not an American patriot regardless of whatever convoluted rationalizations they used to arrive at their conclusions.

  10. Brad Owen
    May 16, 2015 at 07:36

    I too, look forward to Part II; what is to be done. Within hours of the Sept. 11th event, I already assumed the “usual suspects” were the guilty ones, guilty of taking down their own property (regardless of the murder involved) in order to finally set their long-planned-for Coup in motion (starting with the electoral Coup of Gore vs. Bush). So…we’re dealing with what essentially is a very powerful group of ruthless, murdering “mafia Dons” and all of their allies they’ve managed to bribe or black-mail, not-to-mention all of the hired guns they command. So how do we take THIS formidable Foe of the Republic down? Remember they have Allies in other Countries, long-used to these kind of Imperial Games (who may even be THEIR senior partners in this Crime against the Republic.)

    • Brad Owen
      May 16, 2015 at 07:51

      And I do believe this is a Crime specifically aimed at the Idea and organizing principles of; a Republic.

  11. Joe
    May 15, 2015 at 19:58

    The thesis is perhaps a suggestion to readers less thoughtful than most here:
    “we, the citizenry…do not care enough …to make our leaders perform”

    But the problem is that we no longer have a democracy at all. Mass media, elections, and judiciary are controlled by economic concentrations, a takeover not foreseen. Economic force is now the primary means of warfare, and such influence is making war upon the US, the definition of treason in the Constitution. Restoring democracy would require widespread ghetto rebellions, infiltration of enforcement and National Guard, and a generation of suicide bombers taking out the oligarchy. That would require widespread suffering and moral strength, no longer endemic, so it will not happen. The tyrants just arrange stable enforcement pay, militarized police, widespread surveillance, etc. Look for a century of decline and increasing tyranny, isolation, etc. And good riddance of the US.

  12. Zachary Smith
    May 15, 2015 at 15:24

    We may lament our poverty of leadership, but there are ways to make it function. “Princes,” since long before Machiavelli have always used advisers; some even listened to them.

    I’d submit that BHO not only didn’t know anything about foreign policy, but also that his ignorance was such that he didn’t even know how to choose competent advisers. Retaining the Bush Holdovers was the easiest path, and was the one he took.

    More fundamentally, could it be that we, the citizenry, the voters and the taxpayers, simply do not care enough or keep ourselves well enough informed to make our leaders perform the tasks they avidly seek and we pay them to do?

    I can’t deny that the levels of US apathy and ignorance are high, but IMO that’s not entirely the fault of the citizens. There are so many distractions. “What are the Kardashians doing?” “Did you hear the latest about ….? (football/basketball player, actor, idiot politician) The endless hours spent on the Facebook soap opera. All massive distractions. Supposing somebody actually does try to learn about a topic, they run into the Bodyguard Of Lies effect. (a special sort of way to hide reality by submerging it with surging waves of BS)

    So our leaders are primed to do their jobs. At least they should be. Information is not lacking.

    Obama’s “job” is to provoke endless war for the Empire? The answer to that depends upon who he is working for. Him and the Republicans and most of the Democrats are working for Big Corporations and want to pass TPP. No matter how much or how little I know about that and similar issues, my opinion doesn’t matter. In a recent call to my Republican Congressman he informed me that TPP will be great for Indiana. The same congressman doesn’t see climate change as any sort of problem. I’m in no position to give the man huge bribes disguised as campaign contributions. I’m not able to offer him a Golden Parachute Landing after he leaves office. Those he ‘really’ works for most assuredly can do both.

    In the United States, we employ some 17 intelligence agencies manned by upwards of 100,000 presumably skilled people,…

    Just because their paychecks come from “our” taxes doesn’t mean they’re working for us. Like most everything else, National Intelligence has been privatized. The unlimited information these agencies have vacuumed up means they have the dirt on every single person in the US, and most especially members of both houses of Congress. They’d better put out, or else! And of course they do.

    During WW2 a relative of mine was in the US Army. What he did back then is now handled by Halliburton, less efficiently and at many times the price. Other agencies have been hollowed out. Billionaires now have their own space programs, and NASA is in the process of being reduced to a front for them and their agendas.

    We citizens must accept much of the blame.

    With all due respect to Mr. Polk, this is BS. My knowing something needs to be done – or not done – doesn’t matter to the people holding the levers of power. With their unlimited resources they’ll smother any efforts I make with well-publicized counter-propaganda or they’ll sic the FBI on my group because we’re Potential Domestic Terrorists. Ask the folks trying to stop the Keystone Pipeline as well as many others. The crappy little state of Israel is working to make BDS illegal all over the world. A harsh word about the murderous little apartheid state could soon get you prison time in some places.

    Time to close this rant, but I really do resent being blamed as a big part of the problem merely because I’m a US citizen. My vote in Indiana doesn’t matter because it’s taken on easily manipulated computer devices. Even if that wasn’t the case, I have no choices. Vote for the Crappy Republican or the Crappy Democrat or batshit crazy Libertarian – at every level. Back in 2008 there was the choice between a smooth-talking ‘backwoods’ lawyer from Illinois and a privileged former ‘First Lady’. Come the general election, the unknown Illinois lawyer looked good compared with the Warmongering Geezer/Pretty Idiot the Republicans ran against him.

    By 2012 the Illinois lawyer had proven himself to be a disaster, so to ensure his re-election I was offered the Super-rich *****/fanatical loon combo.

    And look at what’s on the table for 2016. The billionaires now run the US, and however much I dislike the situation, there just isn’t anything I can do about it.

    • Peter Loeb
      May 16, 2015 at 06:08

      “…THIS IS BS…”

      William Polk uses his well-learned “skills” of diplomatic miscommunication.
      It gives dissenting liberal/progressives so many soothing excuses in
      eloquent diplomatic boilerplate.

      The evil of the Zionist enterprise is not even mentioned.

      One might think that this was the first time in many millenia that there were
      “religious overtones” and perhaps that such overtones are invariably the
      sole property of the resistance. who seem always to be Muslim. (What about
      the wars and slaughter on Christian theological issues such as iconocalsm etc?)

      Like Zachary Smith, I object to the lecture about the presumed ignorance and
      “apathy” of “the public”. Hogwash (an old-fashioned substitute for “BS”)!

      I would recommend narratives by Bob Parry and others found frequently in
      this newsletter. There are others.

      The “heroism” of leaders after World War Two has been questioned in depth
      but since the results were not to liberal/progressive myth, such material
      has been successfully hidden away. See Joyce and Gabriel Kolko’s many
      works, in particular on these issues Joyce and Gabriel Kolko, THE LIMITS OF
      power…..)

      —–Peter Loeb, Boston, MA, USA

  13. theo
    May 15, 2015 at 15:21

    I think that the USA never were intended to be a true republic or a true country; I think that it always was meant to be more of a protectorate to exploit weaker countries (Especially those from South America.) for the benefit of the USA’s elite than anything else. It is just much more difficult to hide today than it was.

    Not that anybody cares anymore: This is not the 60’s and the 70’s abundance anymore and the USA’s economy is entering recession. Americans must focus on finding way to sustain their families and nobody has time to invest to protest against their own country. Furthermore, being an activist has the potential to put one on employers’ blacklists.

    This country is hopeless just as the current paradigms we’re living in. Change is about to come, but it probably won’t be the good kind. A hammer is all that the USA will have left to deal with its problems in the end.

    • Cal
      May 16, 2015 at 12:23

      theo

      May 15, 2015 at 3:21 pm

      I think that the USA never were intended to be a true republic or a true country; I think that it always was meant to be more of a protectorate to exploit weaker countries (Especially those from South America.) for the benefit of the USA’s elite than anything else. It is just much more difficult to hide today than it was

      • Cal
        May 16, 2015 at 12:33

        ..excuse me my finger slipped before I finished that reply to theo who evidenlty hasnt studied any US founders or history at all.

        What did Ben Franklin say to a citizen who asked him what they had now after the constitution was just finished?

        Franklin said ….’a republic, if you can keep it”.

        So people like theo who insert their own obvious personal grudges against the US arent helpful in the fight to return the US to a republic or democracy by the people.

        That we ‘didnt keep it’ doesnt mean it wasnt the original goal of the founders–it clearly was.

        • theo
          May 19, 2015 at 15:58

          Franklin was a democrat, sure, but the rest of the founding fathers were more comfortable with the concept of Monarchism and only gave up this idea to the popular pressure. They founded a “Republic” where them, the “elite”, would rule the commoners and not a democracy.

          Elitism only lead to crimes of hubris as it creates rigid vertical structures. USA’s more democratic components, which manifested themselves allot during the 50-80 were this country’s strength and now that it is all gone, it has nowhere to go but down.

          The USA will never recognize that their problem lies within their own power structure and will blame the rest of the world for it.

    • Brad Owen
      May 17, 2015 at 13:04

      “I think that the USA were never intended to be a true republic, or a true country…”

      That can be honestly answered “No…and Yes”. It depends upon which Faction of Americans to which you are referring; Patriots or Tories. You see, the Tories never disappeared from the scene; they are still here, wealthy and powerful as always, and willing Agents-for-Empire, as always. The USA was not like other European Empires, sending out a few hundred thousand hardy explorers and agents for Royally-Chartered COMPANIES (like “East India”, “Hudson’s Bay” and so on). Britain experienced a violent rupture in their Society, a Civil War, and MILLIONS of exiles came over here to escape the Royal Wrath, and try again to destroy the Ancient Regime, the Crown, and all Crowns plaguing European MotherLands, forever. This is the place where republicans, Parliamentarians, RoundHeads, Puritan Independents, Refugees from the Celtic Fringe nations, and other such-like folks, came. Also, the Loyalist/Royalist Chartered COMPANY folks also came here, in THEIR MILLIONS to claim this Continent for The Crown, for the British Empire (4th incarnation of the Roman Empire; after the Byzantines, Holy Romans, Venetians some-of-whom migrated to the Netherlands and England, respectively), to set up their Baronies, Plantations and COMPANY Towns, and do their damnedest to STOP the Patriot/exiles from carrying out their plans to destroy the Ancient Regime that plagues Western Civilization to this day (in covert form now-a-days). This centuries-old war is still going on as we speak, and the Loyalist/Royalists (now generally called Oligarchs and their loyal retainers and the unwitting, or some such thing as that) have usually dominated “the Chessboard” of this on-going war, have usually held the upper hand, sad-to-say. Probably not even 10% of the folks realize this continuous, hidden Theme in the World’s history, and USA’s history. The Revolution didn’t start in 1776; didn’t end at Yorktown, is still on-going, and the Patriot/exiles have LOST more battles than won. So, yeah, we look rather stupid, in our efforts, but only because we face overwhelming opposition, with the opposition completely “off the radar” of most folks, and sometimes regarded as “The Good Guys”. That my take on the situation, anyway.

      • Bob Loblaw
        May 17, 2015 at 19:19

        I appreciate your point here.
        Rather than melting into the landscape and endure in a guerrilla existence, the Crown melted into financial structure and wages war upon us with invisible weapons from their central banks.
        Fooling the subjects with grand illusions like land of the free, and exceptionalism make fertile ground for the seeds of violence and oppression. Ongoing jingoism blinds us to the blatant agenda of death we must support, otherwise we face reprisals for lack of ‘patriotism’.
        America is the land of the afraid and home of the serfs.

        • Brad Owen
          May 18, 2015 at 04:21

          They are indeed the cleverest opposition to the World’s democratic aspirations, that the World has ever seen, due to their wealth and power, and MANY centuries of practice at “dueling with, and playing off, The Mob”. They’ve generally had greater ability at “controlling The Message”, from the classroom to the computer screen. Hell, they INVENTED “Madison Avenue” psych-op/Mob Control techniques. They can make an Einstein look stupid, if they wished to.

        • BradOwen
          May 21, 2015 at 04:37

          One can also say America is The BattleGround., in The War between The Republic with its’ democratic institutions, and The Empire (ie. “The Crown”) with its’ oligarchic institutions. The Crown knows If USA falls, the rest of the World follows. If The Republic prevails, it is all over for the MANY-centuries-old Empire. We are the MOST hindered-n-harrassed (from within) of all democratic Republics in the World, because the World is the Prize, for the Winner (a U.N. of democratic Republics…or Global Empire, what The Crown calls “Globalization and Free Trade”for their fellow Pirates).

  14. May 15, 2015 at 14:41

    “… why, despite all the effort, all the proclamations and all the lives and money we are spending, does almost every observer believe that we do not have a policy that we can afford and that accomplishes our minimal national objectives?”

    WE DON’T HAVE ANY “MINIMAL OBJECTIVES”.

    THE PEOPLE RUNNING THE U.S. WANT TO RUN THE WHOLE DAMNED PLANET AND THEY INTEND TO.

    OUR PROBLEM IS WE NEED TO TAKE THEM ALL DOWN–
    ALL TOGETHER–IN ONE FELL SWOOP–A VERY DOABLE THING. BUT NOT ENOUGH OF US HAVE SEEN THAT OR ARE WILLING TO DO THE VERY MINIMAL ORGANIZING THAT WOULD ACCOMPLISH IT.

    2LT Dennis Morrisseau USArmy [armor – Vietnam era] retired. POB 177 W Pawlet, VT 05775. 802 645 9727 [email protected]

    • Anonymous
      May 16, 2015 at 12:19

      ” OUR PROBLEM IS WE NEED TO TAKE THEM ALL DOWN–
      ALL TOGETHER–IN ONE FELL SWOOP–A VERY DOABLE THING. BUT NOT ENOUGH OF US HAVE SEEN THAT OR ARE WILLING TO DO THE VERY MINIMAL ORGANIZING THAT WOULD ACCOMPLISH IT.”

      I agree this must be done by some means. And I doubt that it is possible to do it thru democratic political means any longer.

      Since Polk writes this:

      ” If citizens are uneducated or passive, they can be controlled, as the Roman emperors controlled their peoples with bread and circuses, or as other dictatorships have with “patriotic” demonstrations or manufactured threats.”

      Then I want to see what he says in Part II about what must be done about our media and press which lie to and keep Americans in the dark about the agendas and the who, what and why of the special interest running the government and country.

      Human nature is the only thing that never changes, its always the same—-and If americans ever did get the full and straight truth from the media outlets about how they are being raped they would be in the streets with torches and nooses.

  15. D505
    May 15, 2015 at 14:15

    Two matters strike me as lying along the periphery of attention instead of in the center. First, that, by admission from founders of this country, it was conceived as “experiment” and “may not survive.” Second, within that experiment, we have not reconciled the problem of sanity versus greed. Sanity includes prescriptions on how to deal with world relations to assure safety at home first. Washington saw this need as a problem for humans, in human relations, to keep under control. Eisenhower saw its vulnerability–the big bucks war machine in which the human is secondary, submerged, denied, eviscerated.
    A foreign policy emphasizing global domination, fortune, and power has steamrolled over the globe. We need to wake up out of this nightmare, but is it likely? I look forward to hearing what might be done–or at least begun–to wake us up.

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