Everyday is Doomsday in Washington
by
Tom
Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
Secretary
Doomsday and the Empathy Gap: The Everyday Extremism of Washington
A front-page
New York Times headline last week put
the matter politely indeed: "In Pakistan, U.S. Courts Leader
of Opposition." And nobody thought it was strange at all.
In fact, it's
the sort of thing you can read just about any time when it comes
to American policy in Pakistan or, for that matter, Afghanistan.
It's just the norm on a planet on which it's assumed that American
civilian and military leaders can issue pronunciamentos about what
other countries must do; publicly demand various actions
of ruling groups; opt for specific leaders, and then, when they
disappoint, attempt to replace them; and use what was once called
"foreign aid," now taxpayer dollars largely
funneled through the Pentagon, to bribe those who are hard to
convince.
Last week
as well, in a prime-time news conference, President Obama said
of Pakistan: "We want to respect their sovereignty, but we also
recognize that we have huge strategic interests, huge national security
interests in making sure that Pakistan is stable and that you don't
end up having a nuclear-armed militant state."
To the extent
that this statement was commented on, it was praised here for its
restraint and good sense. Yet, thought about a moment, what the
president actually said went something like this: When it comes
to U.S. respect for Pakistan's sovereignty, this country has more
important fish to fry. A look at the historical record indicates
that Washington has, in fact, been frying those "fish" for at least
the last four decades without particular regard for Pakistani sensibilities.
In a week
in which the presidents of both Pakistan and Afghanistan
have, like two satraps, dutifully trekked to the U.S. capital to
be called on the carpet by Obama and his national security team,
Washington officials have been issuing one shrill statement after
another about what U.S. media reports regularly term the "dire
situation" in Pakistan.
Of course,
to put this in perspective, we now live in a thoroughly ramped-up
atmosphere in which "American national security" defined
to include just about anything unsettling that occurs anywhere on
Earth is the eternal preoccupation of a vast national security
bureaucracy. Its bread and butter increasingly seems to be worst-case
scenarios (perfect for our 24/7 media to pounce on) in which something
truly catastrophic is always about to happen to us, and every
"situation" is a "crisis." In the hothouse atmosphere of Washington,
the result can be a feeding frenzy in which doomsday scenarios pour
out. Though we don't recognize it as such, this is a kind of everyday
extremism.
Being Hysterical
in Washington
As the recent
release of more Justice Department torture memos (which were also,
in effect, torture
manuals) reminds us, we've just passed through eight years of
such obvious extremism that the present everyday extremity of Washington
and its national security mindset seems almost a relief.
We naturally
grasp the extremity of the Taliban those floggings, beheadings,
school burnings, bans on music, the medieval attitude toward women's
role in the world but our own extremity is in no way evident
to us. So Obama's statement on Pakistani sovereignty is reported
as the height of sobriety, even when what lies behind it is an expanding
"covert"
air war and assassination
campaign by unmanned aerial drones over the Pakistani tribal
lands, which has reportedly killed hundreds of bystanders and helped
unsettle the region.
Let's stop
here and consider another bit of news that few of us seem to find
strange. Mark Lander and Elizabeth Bumiller of the New York Times
offered
this tidbit out of an overheated Washington last week: "President
Obama and his top advisers have been meeting almost daily to discuss
options for helping the Pakistani government and military repel
the [Taliban] offensive." Imagine that. Almost daily. It's
this kind of atmosphere that naturally produces the bureaucratic
equivalent of mass hysteria.
In fact, other
reports indicate that Obama's national security team has been convening
regular "crisis"
meetings and having "nearly
nonstop discussions" at the White House, not to mention issuing
alarming and alarmist statements of all sorts about the devolving
situation in Pakistan, the dangers to Islamabad, our fears for the
Pakistani nuclear arsenal, and so on. In fact, Warren Strobel and
Jonathan Landy of McClatchy news service quote "a senior U.S. intelligence
official" (from among the legion of anonymous officials who populate
our nation's capital) saying:
"The situation in Pakistan has gone from bad to worse, and no one
has any idea about how to reverse it. I don't think 'panic' is too
strong a word to describe the mood here."
Now, if it
were the economic meltdown, the Chrysler bankruptcy, the bank stress
tests, the potential flu pandemic, or any number of close-to-home
issues pressing in on the administration, perhaps this would make
some sense. But everyday discussions of Pakistan?
You know,
that offensive in the Lower Dir Valley. That's near the Buner District.
You remember, right next to the Swat Valley and, in case you're
still not completely keyed in, geographically speaking, close to
the Malakand Division. I mean, if the Pakistani government were
in crisis over the deteriorating situation in Fargo, North Dakota,
we would consider it material for late night jokesters.
And yet, in
the strange American world we inhabit, nobody finds these practically
Cuban-Missile-Crisis-style, round-the-clock meetings the least bit
strange, not after eight years of post-9/11 national security fears,
not after living with worst-case scenarios in which jihadi
atomic bombs regularly are imagined going off in American cities.
Keep in mind
a certain irony here: We essentially know what those crisis meetings
will result in. After all, the U.S. government has been embroiled
with Pakistan for at least 40 years and for just that long, its
top officials have regularly come to the same policy conclusions
to support Pakistani military dictatorships or, in periods
when civilian rule returns, pour yet more money (and support) into
the Pakistani military. That military has long been a power
unto itself in the country, a state within a state. And in moments
like this, part of our weird extremism is that, having spent decades
undermining Pakistani democracy, we bemoan its "fragility" in the
face of threats and proceed to put even more of our hopes and dollars
into its military. (As Strobel and Landy report, "Some U.S. officials
say Pakistan's only hope, and Washington's, too, at this stage may
be the country's army. That, another senior official acknowledged
Wednesday, 'means another coup.'")
In the Bush
years, this support added up to at least $10
billion, with next to no idea what the military was doing with
it. Another $100
million went into making that country's nuclear-weapons program,
about which there is now such panic, safer from theft or other intrusion,
again with next to no idea of what was actually done with those
dollars. And now the Obama administration is rushing to create a
new Pakistan Counterinsurgency Capability Fund that will be controlled
by General David Petraeus, head of U.S. Central Command. If Congress
agrees and in this panic atmosphere, how could it not?
there will be an initial rushed down payment of $400 million to
train the Pakistani military, probably outside that country, in
counterinsurgency warfare. ("The fund would be similar to those
used to train and equip Iraqi and Afghan soldiers and police, Petraeus
said.")
Doomsday
Scenarios
Oh, and speaking
of extremism, the ur-extreme statement of the last few weeks came
from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and was treated like the
most ho-hum news here. In congressional testimony, she insisted
that the situation in Pakistan that Taliban thrust into Swat
and the lower Dir Valley "poses a mortal threat to the security
and safety of our country and the world."
Umm... Okay,
the situation is unnerving certainly for the Pakistanis,
the large majority of whom have not the slightest love for the Taliban,
have opted for democracy and against military dictatorship with
a passion, and yet strongly oppose the destabilizing American air
war in their borderlands. It could even result in the fall of the
elected government or of democracy itself not exactly a rare
event in the annals of recent Pakistani history. It's undoubtedly
unnerving as well for
the American military, intent on fighting a war in Afghanistan
that has spilled disastrously across the open border. (As Pakistan
expert Anatol Lieven wrote
recently: "The danger to Pakistan is not of a Taliban revolution,
but rather of creeping destabilization and terrorism, making any
Pakistani help to the U.S. against the Afghan Taliban even less
likely than it is at present.")
In other words,
it's not a pretty picture. If you happen to live in the tribal borderlands,
or Swat, or the Dir Valley, squeezed between the Taliban, the Pakistani
Army, whose attacks cause great civilian harm, and those drones
cruising overhead, you may be in trouble, if
not in flight or you may simply support the Taliban,
as most of the rest of Pakistan does not. If you happen to live
in India, you might start working up a sweat over what the future
holds on the other side of the border. But all of this is unlikely
to be a "mortal threat" even to Islamabad, the Pakistani military,
or that nuclear arsenal American national security managers spend
so much time fretting about. It is certainly not a "mortal threat
to the security and safety of our country."
So here's
a little common sense. If Pakistan poses a mortal threat to you
in New York, Toledo, or El Paso, well then, get in line. Believe
me, it will be a long one and you'll be toward the back. Despite
constant reports that lightly armed Taliban militants are only 60
miles from the "doorstep" of Islamabad, Pakistan's national capital,
and increasing inside-the-Beltway invocations of Ayatollah Khomeini's
1979 revolution in Iran, you're unlikely
to see a Taliban government in Islamabad anytime soon, or probably
ever. As one unnamed expert commented recently in the insider
Washington newsletter, the Nelson Report, "I find it troubling
that we are hyping the 'security situation' in Pakistan. Pakistan
is not being taken over, the FATA [Federally Administered Tribal
Areas] is. This has been happening since 2004."
Mind you,
when Vice President Joe Biden said something extreme about flu precautions
don't take the subway! the media didn't hesitate to
laugh
him off stage. When Hillary Clinton said what should be considered
the equivalent about Pakistan, everyone treated it as part of a
sober national-security conversation.
Of course,
when it comes to hysteria, nothing helps like a nuclear arsenal,
and in recent weeks nuclear doomsday scenarios
have broken
out like a swine flu pandemic, even though a victorious Taliban
regime in Islamabad with a nuclear arsenal would undoubtedly still
find the difficulties of planting and detonating such devices in
American cities close to insurmountable.
By the way,
for all our kindly talk about how the poor Pakistanis just can't
get it together democracy-wise, the U.S. has a terrible record when
it comes not just to promoting democracy in that country, but to
really giving much of a damn about its people. In fact, not to put
too kindly a point on things, Washington has, over the past decades,
done few favors for ordinary Pakistanis. Having played our version
of the imperial Great Game first vis-à-vis the Soviets and, more
recently, a bunch of jihadist warriors, we are now waging
a most unpopular and destabilizing air war without mercy in parts
of that country, and another deeply unpopular war just across its
mountainous, porous border.
And this brings
us to perhaps the most extreme aspect of the mentality of our national
security managers what might be called their empathy gap.
They are, it seems, incapable of seeing the situations they deal
through the eyes of those being dealt with. They lack, that is,
all empathy, which means, in the end, that they lack understanding.
They take it for granted that America's destiny is to "engineer"
the fates of peoples half a world away and are incapable of imagining
that the United States could, in almost any situation, be part of
the problem, not a major part of its solution. This is surely folly
of the first order and, year after year, has only made the "situation"
in Pakistan worse.
Closing
the Empathy Gap?
To complete
our picture of this over-the-top moment, we have to leave the heated
confines of Washington and head for California's China Lake. That's
where the U.S. military tests some of its advanced weapons.
On April 20th,
Peter Pae of the Los Angeles Times reported
the following: "A 5-pound missile the size of a loaf of French bread
is being quietly tested in the Mojave Desert north of Los Angeles
as the military searches for more deadly and far more precise robotic
weapons for modern warfare."
This tiny
missile called the Spike will someday replace the 100-pound Hellfire
missiles mounted on our Predator and more advanced Reaper unmanned
aerial drones flying those assassination missions over the tribal
lands of Pakistan. New weaponry like this is invariably promoted
as being more "precise," and so capable of causing less "collateral
damage," than whatever we've been using; that is, as an advance
for humanity. But in this case, up to 12 of these powerful micro-weapons
will someday replace the two Hellfires now capable of being mounted
on a Predator, which means a future drone will have to come home
far less often as it cruises the badlands of the planet looking
for targets.
According to
Pae, this new development is considered a "milestone" in weaponizing
robot planes. Chillingly, he quotes Steven Zaloga, a military analyst
with the Teal Group Corporation as saying, "We're sort of at the
same stage as we were in 1914 when we began to arm airplanes."
Not only that
but the Spike may someday soon be mounted on a new generation of
more deadly drones, one of which, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems'
Avenger or Predator C, is already
being tested. It will be able to fly 50% faster than the Reaper
and at up to 60,000 feet for 20 hours before returning to base.
In other words,
the decisions to be made in future panicky "crisis" meetings in
Washington, when "American security" once again faces a "mortal
threat," are already being predetermined in the Mojave desert and
elsewhere. In the Pentagon's eternal arms
race of one, a major vote is being cast at China Lake for future
Terminator wars. In a crisis mood of desperation, we tend to fall
back on what we know. This, too, plays into Washington's national-security
extremism.
By now it
should be obvious enough that the military approaches to Afghanistan
and Pakistan (or the newly merged Af-Pak battlefield) have been
in the process of failing for years. Take just our drone wars: they
are not only killing significant numbers of civilians, but also
destabilizing Pakistan's tribal lands military and civilian
officials there have long begged
us to ground them and so creating an anti-American atmosphere
throughout that country. Recently, former advisor to Gen. David
Petraeus and counterinsurgency expert David Kilcullen told
Congress:
"We
need to call off the drones... Since 2006, we've killed 14 senior
Al Qaeda leaders using drone strikes; in the same time period, we've
killed 700 Pakistani civilians in the same area. The drone strikes
are highly unpopular. They are deeply aggravating to the population.
And they've given rise to a feeling of anger that coalesces the
population around the extremists and leads to spikes of extremism...
The current path that we are on is leading us to loss of Pakistani
government control over its own population."
Sage advice.
If President Obama temporarily suspended the Bush-era drone war,
which his administration has recently escalated, it would represent
a start down a different path, one not already strewn with the skeletons
of failed policies. And while he's at it and here's a little
touch of extremism by American standards why not declare
a six-month moratorium on all drone research of any sort, a brief
period to reconsider whether we really want to pursue such "solutions"
ad infinitum?
Why
not, in fact, call for a six-month moratorium on all weapons research?
A long Pentagon holiday. Militarily, the U.S. is in no danger of
losing significant military ground globally by shutting down its
R&D machine for a time, while reconsidering whether it actually
wants to lead the planet into a future filled with Spikes and Avengers.
If, however,
nothing else was done, at least the president should order his national
security team to calm down, skip those crisis meetings on Pakistan,
tamp down the doomsday scenarios, and try to take a few minutes
to imagine what the world looks like if you're not in Washington
or the skies over our planet. Are there really no solutions anywhere
that don't need to be engineered first in our national capital?
Note:
You could easily drown in the tsunami of recent semi-hysterical
pieces about the Pakistan or Af-Pak situation. Fortunately, I have
Juan Cole's Informed Comment,
Paul Woodward's The War in Context,
and Antiwar.com to depend
on to help me sort through the crucial reportage of this moment.
What would I do without them? Let me thank as well Christopher Holmes,
TomDispatch Tokyo bureau chief, whose keen eye keeps these posts
relatively free of goofs. Note as well the appearance of the first
TD author photo in this piece. Site photographer Tam Turse took
it. We'll probably be phasing in more of her author photos over
the coming months.
May
8, 2009
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
co-founder
of the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), an alternative history of the mad Bush years. To catch
an audio interview in which he discusses our airborne assassins,
click here.
Copyright
© 2009 Tom Engelhardt
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