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    In 1947, Hanson W. Baldwin, the hawkish military correspondent of this newspaper, warned that the demands of preparing America for a possible war would “wrench and distort and twist the body politic and the body economic . . . prior to war.” He wondered whether America could confront the Soviet Union “without becoming a ‘garrison state’ and destroying the very qualities and virtues and principles we originally set about to save.”

    It is that same dread of a martial America that drives Andrew J. Bacevich today. Bacevich forcefully denounces the militarization that he says has already become a routine, unremarked-upon part of our daily lives — and will only get worse as America fights on in Afghanistan and beyond. He rips into what he calls a postwar American dogma “so deeply embedded in the American collective consciousness as to have all but disappeared from view.” “Washington Rules” is a tough-minded, bracing and intelligent polemic against some 60 years of American militarism.

    This outrage at a warlike America has special bite coming from Bacevich. No critic of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan could have brighter conservative credentials. He is a blunt-talking Midwesterner, a West Point graduate who served for 23 years in the United States Army, a Vietnam veteran who retired as a colonel, and a sometime contributor to National Review. “By temperament and upbringing, I had always taken comfort in orthodoxy,” he writes. But George W. Bush’s decision to invade Iraq in 2003, Bacevich says, “pushed me fully into opposition. Claims that once seemed elementary — above all, claims relating to the essentially benign purposes of American power — now appeared preposterous.”

    From Harry S. Truman’s presidency to today, Bacevich argues, Americans have trumpeted the credo that they alone must “lead, save, liberate and ultimately transform the world.” That crusading mission is implemented by what Bacevich caustically calls “the sacred trinity”: “U.S. military power, the Pentagon’s global footprint and an American penchant for intervention.” This threatening posture might have made some sense in 1945, he says, but it is catastrophic today. It relegates America to “a condition of permanent national security crisis.”

    Bacevich has two main targets in his sights. The first are the commissars of the national security establishment, who perpetuate these “Washington rules” of global dominance. By Washington, he means not just the federal government, but also a host of satraps who gain power, cash or prestige from this perpetual state of emergency: defense contractors, corporations, big banks, interest groups, think tanks, universities, television networks and The New York Times. He complains that an unthinking Washington consensus on global belligerence is just as strong among mainstream Democrats as among mainstream Republicans. Those who step outside this monolithic view, like Dennis Kucinich or Ron Paul, are quickly dismissed as crackpots, Bacevich says. This leaves no serious checks or balances against the overweening national security state.

    Bacevich’s second target is the sleepwalking American public. He says that they notice foreign policy only in the depths of a disaster that, like Vietnam or Iraq, is too colossal to ignore. As he puts it, “The citizens of the United States have essentially forfeited any capacity to ask first-order questions about the fundamentals of national security policy.”

    Bacevich is singularly withering on American public willingness to ignore those who do their fighting for them. He warns of “the evisceration of civic culture that results when a small praetorian guard shoulders the burden of waging perpetual war, while the great majority of citizens purport to revere its members, even as they ignore or profit from their service.” Here he has a particular right to be heard: on May 13, 2007, his son Andrew J. Bacevich Jr., an Army first lieutenant, was killed on combat patrol in Iraq. Bacevich does not discuss his tragic loss here, but wrote devastatingly about it at the time in The Washington Post: “Memorial Day orators will say that a G.I.’s life is priceless. Don’t believe it. I know what value the U.S. government assigns to a soldier’s life: I’ve been handed the check.”

    Bacevich is less interested in foreign policy here (he offers only cursory remarks about the objectives and capabilities of countries like China, Russia, North Korea and Iran) than in the way he thinks militarism has corrupted America. In his acid account of the inexorable growth of the national security state, he emphasizes not presidents, who come and go, but the architects of the system that envelops them: Allen W. Dulles, who built up the C.I.A., and Curtis E. LeMay, who did the same for the Strategic Air Command. Both of them, Bacevich says, would get memorials on the Mall in Washington if we were honest about how the capital really works.

    The mandarins thrived under John F. Kennedy, whose administration “was fixating on Fidel Castro with the same feverish intensity as the Bush administration exactly 40 years later was to fixate on Saddam Hussein — and with as little strategic logic.” The Washington consensualists were thrown badly off balance by defeat in Vietnam but, Bacevich says, soon regained their stride under Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton — setting the stage for George W. Bush. Barack Obama campaigned on change and getting out of Iraq, but when it comes to the war in Afghanistan or military budgets, he is, Bacevich insists, just another cat’s-paw for the Washington establishment: “Obama would not challenge the tradition that Curtis LeMay and Allen Dulles had done so much to erect.”

    Bacevich writes, “The folly and hubris of the policy makers who heedlessly thrust the nation into an ill-defined and open-ended ‘global war on terror’ without the foggiest notion of what victory would look like, how it would be won and what it might cost approached standards hitherto achieved only by slightly mad German warlords.”

    Bacevich admires Dwight D. Eisenhower for his farewell address warning against the forces of the *“military-industrial complex,” he slams Eisenhower for enabling those same forces as president. Yet the political scientist Aaron L. Friedberg and other scholars credit Eisenhower for resisting demands for huge boosts in defense spending.

    Bacevich, in his own populist way, sees himself as updating a tradition — from George Washington and John Quincy Adams to J. William Fulbright and Martin Luther King Jr. — that calls on America to exemplify freedom but not actively to spread it. It isn’t every American’s tradition but it’s one that’s necessary to keep the country from going off the rails. As foreign policy debates in the run-up to the November elections degenerate into Muslim-bashing bombast, the country is lucky to have a fierce, smart peacemonger like *Bacevich.

    WASHINGTON RULES

    America’s Path to Permanent War

    By Andrew J. Bacevich
    286 pp. Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt & Company. $25

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/05/bo...s%20war&st=cse





  • #2
    Re: End...Less...War

    Originally posted by don View Post
    For the curious, the caption from the linked NYTimes article identifying the above three images reads:

    From left: U.S. Air Force via Getty Images; Keystone/Getty Images; and Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

    An Air Force B-52 Stratofortress over South Vietnam in 1965; Gen. Curtis LeMay in 1963; and Allen Dulles in the 1950s.
    Most folks are good; a few aren't.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: End...Less...War

      Bacevich is very compelling to me and demonstrates that there is a good deal of overlap between the best informed and most thoughtful people at each end of the commonly accepted political poles, as suggested by the references to both Kucinich and Paul.

      Another might be Kevin Philips, author of the Southern Strategy for the Republicans in the 70s and 80s and a scathing critic of the resulting governments and the worldview they have fostered.

      I'm sure it will occur only when "all other options have been exhausted" but I do think there's more than enough sense available to get America out of this mess.

      Third party please.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: End...Less...War

        Hear, hear. It is difficult to take seriously the outcry against federal government spending run amok without taking a hard look at the rathole of defense spending. Reasonable people can disagree over the size of various parts of the US government, but it is impossible to defend the current levels of spending on defense. The last figures I found, for 2002, put the US defense budget at 47% of total global defense spending. Isn't that a bit like putting a $1,000 lock on a $50 bike in one's own living room?
        "The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much it is whether we provide enough for those who have little." - Franklin D. Roosevelt

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        • #5
          Re: End...Less...War

          Thanks to American militarism, we now have a chance to secure peace and democracy in the Middle East. Saudi-Arabia has become secure, if not democratic. The Gulf states have become secure and more democratic. The cesspool in Syria is now being isolated. Same isolation strategy in Lebanon. Egypt is now democratic, prosperous, and secure. Israel is secure, still democratic, and heading for a final peace with Palestine. The cesspool in Gaza is being isolated, and Hamas is being forced to account for the misery there. Iran is being isolated, and its totalitarian regime is being put at-risk. Iraq has been democratized and liberated from a tyrant. Afghanistan is isolated and now occupied by the Western Allies. And Pakistan is about to be held-to-account for its drug-dealing, its sheltering of Bin Laden, and its alliance with the Taliban.... So things are looking-up.

          The best move now would be to knock the life out of the regime running Iran, and to bring that entire bunch to trial. Then hang the entire lot of them in a mass-hanging in public.

          We need the American military now, more than ever before. If the U.S. uses just a small bit of its military might, not only would the Allies win this war, but the dollar would rise and confidence in it would be restored. A hidden bonus would be even more oil dumped onto the world's oil market because OPEC's monopoly and clout would be in jeopardy.

          And what is the risk of a military show-down with the terrorist states? The risk is to not act now and to not exercise our air- power now when we can do so to our advantage and win this war, in a decisive victory. The Islamic world respects the use of military might, more than anything else.
          Last edited by Starving Steve; September 05, 2010, 11:03 PM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: End...Less...War

            Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
            Thanks to American militarism, we now have a chance to secure peace and democracy in the Middle East. Saudi-Arabia has become secure, if not democratic. The Gulf states have become secure and more democratic. The cesspool in Syria is now being isolated. Same isolation strategy in Lebanon. Egypt is now democratic, prosperous, and secure. Israel is secure, still democratic, and heading for a final peace with Palestine. The cesspool in Gaza is being isolated, and Hamas is being forced to account for the misery there. Iran is being isolated, and its totalitarian regime is being put at-risk. Iraq has been democratized and liberated from a tyrant. Afghanistan is isolated and now occupied by the Western Allies. And Pakistan is about to be held-to-account for its drug-dealing, its sheltering of Bin Laden, and its alliance with the Taliban.... So things are looking-up.

            The best move now would be to knock the life out of the regime running Iran, and to bring that entire bunch to trial. Then hang the entire lot of them in a mass-hanging in public.

            We need the American military now, more than ever before. If the U.S. uses just a small bit of its military might, not only would the Allies win this war, but the dollar would rise and confidence in it would be restored. A hidden bonus would be even more oil dumped onto the world's oil market because OPEC's monopoly and clout would be in jeopardy.

            And what is the risk of a military show-down with the terrorist states? The risk is to not act now and to not exercise our air- power now when we can do so to our advantage and win this war, in a decisive victory. The Islamic world respects the use of military might, more than anything else.
            Nonsense. Dogma. Arm-chair philosophy and chicken-hawk talk.
            After 9 years in Afghanistan and 7 years in Iraq, all we have to show is

            a trillion dollars spent
            4000 dead soldiers
            30,000 seriously wounded soldiers
            uncounted thousands of dead people who lived there.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: End...Less...War

              "Bacevich’s second target is the sleepwalking American public."

              Nixon's legacy will be that he ended the draft.

              American was not sleepwalking when I was 18.

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              • #8
                Re: End...Less...War

                The Celtic people (Much of Northern Europe) were freedom loving and lived in decentralised towns and villages with highly developed trade networks and a sophisticated culture. The Romans were freedom loving and lived in a centalised (all roads lead to Rome) highly organised and militarised society that invaded other lands including the Celts to conquer and collect rents to promote their freedom. The US based their governance on Rome, a good decision to promote freejom when you consider how the independent trading celts faired..... the maths seems pretty simple to me

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