The
situation is starting to resemble a Hollywood-style, Wag-the-Dog,
drum-up-a-war-to-distract-the-populace scenario.
April
7, 2018, 10:25
Major
Danny Sjursen, a TomDispatch regular, is a U.S. Army officer and former
history instructor at West Point. He served tours with reconnaissance units in
Iraq and Afghanistan. He has written a memoir and critical analysis of the Iraq
War, Ghost Riders of Baghdad: Soldiers, Civilians, and the Myth of
the Surge. He lives with his wife and four sons in Lawrence, Kansas.
Follow him on Twitter at @SkepticalVet and check out his new podcast Fortress on a Hill, co-hosted with fellow vet Chris ‘Henri’
Henriksen.
Sometimes
I get sick of saying it, but just when you thought it couldn’t get any worse…
Donald
Trump’s continual cabinet reshuffling — otherwise the stuff of reality-TV drama
— has become genuinely frightening. Like so many Russian matryoshki or
nesting dolls, the president has been removing one war hawk after another, only
to reveal yet more extreme versions of the same creature. And rumor has it that such personnel moves have yet to
reach their end point.
In
just the last few weeks, President Trump has fired his secretary of state and
national security adviser, while nominating two fanatical replacements: CIA
Director Mike Pompeo and former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton. The “old” team,
Rex Tillerson and Lieutenant General H.R. McMaster, were flawed choices from
the start, but Pompeo and Bolton seem like an instant formula for a war — or
two or three of them. (And keep in mind that we’re already actively fighting at
least seven wars across the Greater Middle East and Africa.)
Tillerson gutted the State Department and, had he stuck around,
might have gone down as one of the worst secretaries of state ever to walk the halls of
Foggy Bottom. Still, the former ExxonMobil CEO does seem to have tried to restrain Trump’s more extreme positions on the Paris
climate accords and the Obama-era Iran nuclear deal. In addition, as his
infamous “moron” comment suggests, he evidently wasn’t cowed by our
bully-in-chief.
Lieutenant
General McMaster was no prince either. He helped craft a National Defense Strategy that all but
declared a new Cold War on Russia and China. He was also to the right of
reasonable on Iran and North Korea. Nevertheless, he is an intelligent man with
genuine academic bona
fides. I’ve met the guy and, even though we disagree on almost everything,
he’s certainly preferable to a zealot like Bolton. McMaster thinks critically
and wasn’t always reflexively pro-war. However, Trump, a man who likes his
information in tiny doses (and preferably on Fox News), reportedly found H.R.’s detailed briefings insufferable. And McMaster’s recent
suggestion that Russia played an “incontrovertible” role in the 2016 U.S. election evidently didn’t help
him one bit either.
Think
about it for a second. An embattled, scandal-ridden administration suddenly fires two
hawkish, though tenuously mainstream, foreign policy advisers and replaces them
with off-the-grid warmongers. Connect those dots and it gets scary, fast. In
fact, the situation is starting to resemble a Hollywood-style, Wag-the-Dog,
drum-up-a-war-to-distract-the-populace scenario.
With
whom? Given the proclivities of Pompeo and Bolton, the obvious candidate is
Iran. After all, as their records suggest, both the incoming secretary of state
and the national security adviser suffer from acute cases of Iran hysteria and have been beating the Islamic
Republic war drum for years now. So look for Trump and his two new subordinates
to strike a less than substantial deal with nuclear North Korea (to show their
cuddly diplomatic side) and then pivot toward tearing up the Iran nuclear deal
in May and heading for military action against non-nuclear — and so more
vulnerable — nuclear-pact-adhering Iran.
Count
on this, at least: it’s going to be one hell of a ride for America’s
already overstretched military men and women — and one hell of
a cash bonanza for an already flush military-industrial
complex.
The
Bolton Problem
No
question about it: John Bolton is a nightmare. If he
worked for Iran or any other Muslim state, we’d label him a fundamentalist
extremist. But he’s ours and his religion of choice has long been chauvinist
interventionism, so instead he tends to get the lifeless (and perhaps not
even accurate) label “neoconservative.”
How
bad is he? Well, we’d all undoubtedly be far better served
if Michael Bolton were national security adviser and just sang
“How Am I Supposed to Live Without You” throughout his term in office.
The
national security adviser holds an incredibly influential position and doesn’t
even require Senate confirmation hearings. Need proof? The establishment’s
favorite statesman-cum-war criminal Henry Kissinger started out in that
position for President Richard Nixon. The thought of Bolton’s voice being the
final one Trump hears (and he’s well-known to be prone to whatever last catches his attention) before making decisions about
war and peace should chill us all.
How
dangerous is Bolton, who came to Trump, like so many others, via
his position as a commentator at Fox News? Back in 2005, he couldn’t even
pass muster among Republicans in Senate confirmation
hearings to become President George W. Bush’s ambassador to the United Nations.
Dubya had to slip him in with a recess appointment (a decision even he came to regret). But give Bolton credit, at least, for
consistency. He’s been wrong about every significant foreign policy move since
9/11. Of course, he was hardly alone in that in Washington politics, but he
does stand out for his unapologetic regime-change enthusiasm. He’s
repeatedly called for preventive war with North Korea. He’s long called for regime change in Iran by force of arms
and, back in distant 2017, even placed a time stamp on that event (the end of 2018)!
He
still insists that the 2003 invasion of Iraq, which shattered that country and the entire region, was
justified, a fact that ought in itself to have disqualified him in the eyes of
a president who, on the campaign trail, repeatedly called that war “dumb.”
A
man who hasn’t learned from or even accepted the failure of regime change in
Iraq is now to take the helm coordinating U.S. military policy for the future.
If Iraq didn’t constitute a mistake, then what would? It’s hard to imagine. If
preventive war — not exactly street legal in international law — is A-okay, why not, say,
regime change in Syria (another country the president recently claimed he wanted to get out of) and risk war with
Turkey, Iran, and Russia as well? Or how about directly taking on Iran, an
event that could make the invasion of Iraq look like the “cakewalk” it was billed as back in early 2003? There are
plenty of nasty regimes out there and you can bet on one thing: Bolton will
advise the president to use his $716 billion military for more than just parades.
The
Pompeo Problem
In
1986, Mike Pompeo was the class valedictorian at West Point and he then spent
some time in the pre-9/11 Army. You might think that, all these years later, he
would have at least a hint or two about the real-life costs of unwinnable,
unnecessary wars in the Greater Middle East. Still, he’s clearly on the
war-with-Iran crazy train. He’s even bragged that it would only take 2,000 air sorties to
wipe out Iran’s nuclear capabilities. The million-dollar question that should
follow evidently doesn’t even occur to him: What then? A ground
invasion? An indefinite blockade and/or no fly zone? How would Israel respond?
What about Russia? Would Shia militias turn on American troops elsewhere in the
region?
If
James Mattis keeps his job (an open question these days for the man who
has confided to ever-ready-to-leak colleagues that he
doubts he can even work with John Bolton), Pompeo could become the nation’s
first top diplomat in memory to be more hawkish than the secretary of defense,
himself a former four-star general. Foggy Bottom could then be renamed War Department 2.0.
Pompeo
is a staunch Islamophobe and has even received an
award from the extremist anti-Muslim hate group ACT for America. The
presumptive secretary of state possesses the anti-Islamic, Christian zealotry of Vice President Mike Pence combined with
the bombast of Trump and the (dangerous) intellect of the purported “adults” in (or now leaving) the “room,” Mattis and
McMaster.
No
less unsettling: Pompeo’s actions at his last job as CIA director. While there,
for example, he fought to release documents that were designed to intimate
alleged collusion between Iran and al-Qaeda. Forget all you
know about the Middle East in these last years; forget that Osama bin Laden and
Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei were on opposite sides of an ongoing,
regional sectarian war; forget that Iran is actively fighting al-Qaeda-linked
groups in Syria, Yemen, and Iraq. Pay attention to Pompeo, a man ready to
insist that Iran equals al-Qaeda and so is, in fact, the sort of
9/11-associated culprit to which Congress meant to apply its 2001 Authorization
for the Use of Military Force.
In
other words, while at the CIA, Pompeo continued to peddle an updated version of
the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld playbook that sold their invasion of choice — in that
case, falsely linking Iraqi autocrat Saddam Hussein to al-Qaeda — to an
uninformed citizenry. Or to put it another way, Pompeo and Bolton are on the same
page, both ready to replay an old script one more time.
If
John Bolton is still a true believer when it comes to the doctrine of crusading regime change, then Mike Pompeo is exactly
the diplomat-in-chief to sell it to an intellectually unengaged president, a
largely AWOL Congress, and a distracted public. All the pieces
will soon be in place for the next disaster.
From
Hawkish Generals to Chickenhawks
So
what’s really going on here? Two disturbing trends seem to be at work: the move
from rule by general to rule by civilian chickenhawk and the end of dissent (or
even debate) within Trump’s inner circle.
The
president’s initial record of appointing not one but three of “his” generals to run the national security team and the
White House was itself a threat to the republic and its time-honored tradition
of civilian primacy over the military. Those three flag officers — McMaster,
Mattis, and retired general John Kelly — already inhabited their own echo
chamber when it came to America’s wars. All of them were still wedded to
the myth of the Iraq surge to “victory” of 2007-2008.
According to this fable (still widely accepted in military circles), the U.S.
military could’ve/would’ve/should’ve won in Iraq after General David
Petraeus’s famed “surge” there, if only feckless Barack Obama had
left the troops in Iraq just a bit longer (by which they meant, as in South
Korea after 1953, for more or less ever).
In
addition, appointing highly decorated veterans in an era in which all things
military are adulated in this country had its own potential for squelching
dissent. Witness Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders taunting a reporter
that it would be “highly inappropriate” to question White House Chief of
Staff John Kelly because he had once been a four-star Marine general. Still,
Mattis and McMaster are at least intelligent, somewhat principled men who
haven’t always toed the Trump line or kissed the proverbial ring. (McMaster had
been bucking authority inside the Army for three decades, even writing a book arguing that the joint chiefs should have stood
up to President Lyndon Johnson in the Vietnam War years.)
The
president’s new appointees, civilians though they are, will out-hawk the
generals any day of the week. Bolton, in particular, had made a name as a Fox
News commentator calling for war with North Korea and Iran in the sort
of language one doesn’t — in my experience — even hear in the military ranks.
So, big picture, the national security state seems now to be moving from one
threat to democracy, a politicized military, to another: the frenzied
chickenhawkery of even more extreme civilians.
What
President Trump seems to value most is sycophantic loyalty not to the nation
but to himself, a quality that’s the most essential aspect of any cult of personality. Which means one thing: outright
dissent of any real sort inside the administration is a thing of the past (an
autocratic mood that could, sooner or later, spread to the larger society).
What did McMaster and Tillerson ultimately have in common? Simply put, both
attempted to restrain Trump’s more extreme impulses and neither truly clicked with the president on a personal level. Big
mistake. What this president wants above all else isn’t critical thinking or
informed debate on crucial issues but total allegiance.
The
defining characteristics of this White House are nepotism and sycophancy. John Bolton is never going to
temper Trump’s most bellicose instincts and Pompeo is already a Trump
sycophant. When defending Pompeo’s appointment, Trump’s two main arguments were
that he was a West Point graduate and that they are “always on the same wavelength.” It’s been widely reported that the two men have hit it off on a
personal and professional level, as Pompeo personally delivered daily oral CIA
intel briefs in the Oval Office (since Trump loathes reading). Pompeo grasped
just how to get what he wanted in such a situation: stay in the boss’s good graces.
Mind-melding with the president is the path to promotion in this
administration.
As
America enters the second spring of the Trump era, it’s creeping ever closer to
yet more war. McMaster and Mattis may have written the National Defense Strategy that over-hyped the threats on this planet, but Bolton and
Pompeo will have the opportunity to address these inflated threats in the worst
way possible: by force of arms.
Trump
finally has the minions he wants: devoted and fervently militaristic.
And
while the public remains focused on the man’s outlandish shenanigans, his team
will be cooking up something far worse: a new war to put all the others to
shame.
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