How
Washington Creates Global Instability
by
Tom Engelhardt and Nick
Turse
Recently
by Tom Engelhardt: Tear
Down the 'Freedom Tower'
It was built for... well, not to put too fine a point on it, victory.
I’m talking, of course, about the ill-named Camp Victory, the massive
military complex, a set of bases really, constructed around an old
hunting lodge and nine of former dictator Saddam Hussein’s opulent
palaces near Baghdad International Airport.
Within months of American troops entering Baghdad in April 2003,
it was already
"the largest overseas American combat base since the Vietnam
War." It would become the grand visiting place for American
politicians – back when the U.S. was still being called the
global "hyperpower" – arriving in what was almost imagined
as our 51st state. It was the headquarters for the American military
effort and later "surge" strategy in Iraq. It was also
the stomping grounds for at least 46,000 U.S. troops stationed there
and who knows how many spooks, contractors, hire-a-guns, Defense
Department civilians, and third-world
workers. It had its own Cinnabon and Burger King, its massive
PXs, and it’s 27-mile perimeter of "blast walls and concertina
wire," as well as its own hospital and water-bottling plant.
It was a "city," a world, unto itself.
American reporters passed through it regularly and yet for most
Americans who didn’t set foot in it, our massive outpost in the
heart of the oil heartlands of the planet (the place we were supposed
to garrison for
decades, if not generations) might as well not have existed.
For all the news about Iraq that, once upon a time, was delivered
to Americans, the humongous Camp Victory itself never struck journalists
as particularly newsworthy, nor generally did the billions of dollars
that went into building the more than 500 U.S. bases, mega to micro,
that we now know were constructed in that country at U.S. taxpayers’
expense.
All this was true until Camp Victory was at the edge of what can
only be called ultimate defeat and finally found, if not its chronicler,
then its obituary
writer in Annie Gowan of the Washington Post. Perhaps
it’s often true that only at a funeral do any of us get our due.
But with the last American slated to leave Camp Victory (though
not Iraq)
in early December, with the gates to be locked and the keys turned
over to the Iraqi government, she quotes Lt. Col. Sean Wilson, an
Army public affairs officer, on the emptying of the base this way:
"This whole place is becoming a ghost town. You get the feeling
you’re the last person on Earth." (Of course, Iraqis might
have a different impression.)
The U.S. military will evidently conduct no final interment ceremonies
in which the base is renamed Camp Defeat before being abandoned.
Nonetheless, even as Washington hangs
on grimly to its remaining militarized toeholds in Iraq, that
should be the one-line summary obit on America’s great Iraq adventure.
In his latest piece
of reportage for TomDispatch, Nick Turse offers us an eye-opening
reminder that, while the U.S. is drawing down to bare bones in Iraq,
it has actually been building up its forces, operations, and infrastructure
in the Greater Middle East. Still, somewhere in the Camp Victory
story, isn’t there a modest lesson that Washington could draw? (Though,
as Turse makes clear, it won't...) ~ Tom
Obama’s Arc of Instability
Destabilizing the World One Region at a Time
By Nick Turse
It’s a story that should take your breath away: the destabilization
of what, in the Bush years, used to be called "the arc of instability."
It involves at least 97 countries, across the bulk of the global
south, much of it coinciding with the oil heartlands of the planet.
A startling number of these nations are now in turmoil, and in every
single one of them – from Afghanistan and Algeria to Yemen and Zambia
– Washington is militarily involved, overtly or covertly, in outright
war or what passes for peace.
Garrisoning the planet is just part of it. The Pentagon and U.S.
intelligence services are also running covert special forces and
spy operations, launching drone attacks, building bases and secret
prisons, training, arming, and funding local security forces, and
engaging in a host of other militarized activities right up to full-scale
war. But while you consider this, keep one fact in mind: the odds
are that there is no longer a single nation in the arc of instability
in which the United States is in no way militarily involved.
Covenant of the Arc
"Freedom is on the march in the broader Middle East,"
the president said in his speech. "The hope of liberty now
reaches from Kabul to Baghdad to Beirut and beyond. Slowly but surely,
we're helping to transform the broader Middle East from an arc of
instability into an arc of freedom."
An arc of freedom. You could be forgiven if you thought that this
was an excerpt from President Barack Obama’s Arab
Spring speech, where he said "[I]t will be the policy of
the United States to… support transitions to democracy." Those
were, however, the words of his predecessor George W. Bush. The
giveaway is that phrase "arc of instability," a core rhetorical
concept of the former president’s global vision and that of his
neoconservative
supporters.
The dream of the Bush years was to militarily dominate that arc,
which largely coincided with the area from North Africa to the Chinese
border, also known as the Greater Middle East, but sometimes was
said to stretch from Latin America to Southeast Asia. While the
phrase has been dropped in the Obama years, when it comes to projecting
military power President Obama is in the process of trumping his
predecessor.
In addition to waging more wars in "arc" nations, Obama
has overseen the deployment of greater numbers of special operations
forces to the region, has transferred or brokered the sale of substantial
quantities of weapons there, while continuing to build and expand
military bases at a torrid rate, as well as training and supplying
large numbers of indigenous forces. Pentagon documents and open
source information indicate that there is not a single country in
that arc in which U.S. military and intelligence agencies are not
now active. This raises questions about just how crucial the American
role has been in the region’s increasing volatility and destabilization.
Flooding the Arc
Given the centrality of the arc of instability to Bush administration
thinking, it was hardly surprising that it launched wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq, and carried out limited strikes in three other arc states
– Yemen,
Pakistan
and Somalia.
Nor should anyone have been shocked that it also deployed elite
military
forces and special operators from the Central Intelligence Agency
elsewhere within the
arc.
In his book The One Percent Doctrine, journalist Ron Suskind
reported on CIA plans, unveiled in September 2001 and known as the
"Worldwide Attack Matrix," for "detailed operations
against terrorists in 80 countries." At about the same time,
then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld proclaimed
that the nation had embarked on "a large multi-headed effort that
probably spans 60 countries." By the end of the Bush years,
the Pentagon would indeed have special operations forces deployed
in 60 countries around the world.
It has been the Obama administration, however, that has embraced
the concept far more fully and engaged the region even more broadly.
Last year, the Washington Post reported that U.S. had deployed
special operations forces in 75 countries, from South America to
Central Asia. Recently, however, U.S. Special Operations Command
spokesman Colonel Tim Nye told me that on any given day, America’s
elite troops are working in about 70 countries, and that its country
total by year’s end would be around 120.
These forces are engaged in a host of missions, from Army
Rangers involved in conventional combat in Afghanistan to the
team of Navy
SEALs who assassinated Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, to trainers
from the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines within U.S. Special
Operations Command working globally from the Dominican
Republic to Yemen.
The United States is now involved in wars in six arc-of-instability
nations: Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen.
It has military personnel deployed in other arc states, including
Algeria, Bahrain, Djibouti, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon,
Morocco, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and the United
Arab Emirates. Of these countries, Afghanistan,
Bahrain, Djibouti, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and
the United Arab Emirates all host
U.S. military bases, while the CIA is reportedly building a secret
base somewhere in the region for use in its expanded drone wars
in Yemen and Somalia. It is also using already existing facilities
in Djibouti,
Ethiopia, and
the United
Arab Emirates for the same purposes, and operating a clandestine
base
in Somalia where it runs indigenous agents and carries out counterterrorism
training for local partners.
In addition to its own military efforts, the Obama administration
has also arranged for the sale
of weaponry to regimes in arc states across the Middle East,
including Bahrain,
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia,
the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen.
It has been indoctrinating and schooling indigenous military partners
through the State Department’s and Pentagon’s International Military
Education and Training program. Last year, it provided training
to more than 7,000 students from 130 countries. "The emphasis
is on the Middle East and Africa because we know that terrorism
will grow, and we know that vulnerable countries are the most targeted,"
Kay Judkins, the program’s policy manager, recently told the American
Forces Press Service.
According to Pentagon documents released earlier this year, the
U.S. has personnel – some in token numbers, some in more sizeable
contingents – deployed in 76 other
nations sometimes counted in the arc of instability: Angola,
Botswana, Burundi, Cameroon, Chad, Congo, Cote d'Ivoire, Ethiopia,
Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania,
Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South
Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka,
Syria, Antigua, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Bolivia, Colombia,
Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua,
Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, Uruguay,
Venezuela, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, Romania,
Serbia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan,
Bangladesh, Myanmar, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.
While arrests of 30 members of an alleged CIA
spy ring in Iran earlier this year may be, like earlier incarcerations
of supposed
American "spies", pure
theater for internal consumption or international bargaining,
there is little doubt that the U.S. is conducting covert operations
there, too. Last year, reports
surfaced that U.S. black ops teams had been authorized to run
missions inside that country, and spies and local proxies are almost
certainly at work there as well. Just recently, the Wall Street
Journal revealed
a series of "secret operations on the Iran-Iraq border"
by the U.S. military and a coming CIA campaign of covert operations
aimed at halting the smuggling of Iranian arms into Iraq.
All of this suggests that there may, in fact, not be a single nation
within the arc of instability, however defined, in which the United
States is without a base or military or intelligence personnel,
or where it is not running agents, sending weapons, conducting covert
operations – or at war.
The Arc of History
Just after President Obama came into office in 2009, then-Director
of National Intelligence Dennis Blair briefed the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence. Drawing special attention to the arc
of instability, he summed up the global situation this way: "The
large region from the Middle East to South Asia is the locus for
many of the challenges facing the United States in the twenty-first
century." Since then, as with the Bush-identified
phrase "global war on terror," the Obama administration
and the U.S. military have largely avoided using "arc of instability,"
preferring to refer to it using far vaguer formulations.
During a speech at the National Defense Industrial Association's
annual Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict Symposium earlier
this year, for example, Navy Admiral Eric Olson, then the chief
of U.S. Special Operations Command, pointed toward a composite satellite
image of the world at night. Before September 11, 2001, said Olson,
the lit portion of the planet – the industrialized nations of the
global north – were considered the key areas. Since then, he told
the audience, 51 countries, almost all of them in the arc of instability,
have taken precedence. "Our strategic focus," he said, "has
shifted largely to the south... certainly within the special operations
community, as we deal with the emerging threats from the places
where the lights aren't."
More recently, in remarks at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced
International Studiesin Washington, D.C., John O. Brennan, the assistant
to the president for homeland security and counterterrorism, outlined
the president’s new National
Strategy for Counterterrorism, which highlighted carrying out
missions in the "Pakistan-Afghanistan region" and "a
focus on specific regions, including what we might call the periphery
– places like Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, and the Maghreb [northern Africa]."
"This does not," Brennan insisted, "require a ‘global’
war" – and indeed, despite the Bush-era terminology, it never
has. While, for instance, planning for the 9/11 attacks took place
in Germany and would-be shoe-bomber Richard Reid hailed from the
United Kingdom, advanced, majority-white Western nations have never
been American targets. The "arc" has never arced out of
the global south, whose countries are assumed to be fundamentally
unstable by nature and their problems fixable through military intervention.
Building Instability
A decade’s evidence has made it clear that U.S. operations in the
arc of instability are destabilizing. For years, to take one example,
Washington has wielded military aid, military actions, and diplomatic
pressure in such a way as to undermine
the government of Pakistan, promote
factionalism within its military and intelligence services,
and stoke anti-American
sentiment to remarkable levels among the country’s population.
(According to a recent
survey, just 12% of Pakistanis have a positive view of the United
States.)
A semi-secret drone war in that nation’s tribal borderlands, involving
hundreds of missile strikes and significant, if unknown levels,
of civilian casualties, has been only the most polarizing of Washington’s
many ham-handed efforts. When it comes to that CIA-run effort, a
recent Pew
survey of Pakistanis found that 97% of respondents viewed it
negatively, a figure almost impossible to achieve in any sort of
polling.
In Yemen, long-time support – in the form of aid, military training,
and weapons, as well as periodic air or drone strikes – for dictator
Ali Abdullah Saleh led to a special relationship between the U.S.
and elite Yemeni forces led by Saleh’s relatives. This
year, those units have been instrumental in cracking down on
the freedom struggle there, killing
protesters and arresting dissenting officers who refused
orders to open fire on civilians. It’s hardly surprising that,
even before Yemen slid into a leaderless
void (after Saleh was wounded in an assassination attempt),
a survey of Yemenis found – again a jaw-dropping polling figure
– 99% of respondents viewed the U.S. government’s relations with
the Islamic world unfavorably, while just 4% "somewhat"
or "strongly approved" of Saleh’s cooperation with Washington.
Instead of pulling back from operations in Yemen, however, the
U.S. has doubled down. The CIA,
with support from Saudi Arabia’s intelligence service, has been
running local agents as well as a lethal drone campaign aimed at
Islamic militants. The U.S.
military has been carrying out its own air strikes, as well
as sending in more trainers to work with indigenous forces, while
American black
ops teams launch lethal missions, often alongside Yemeni allies.
These efforts have set the stage for further ill-will, political
instability, and possible blowback. Just last year, a U.S. drone
strike accidentally killed Jabr al-Shabwani, the son of strongman
Sheikh Ali al-Shabwani. In an act of revenge, Ali repeatedly attacked
of one of Yemen's largest oil pipelines, resulting in billions of
dollars in lost revenue for the Yemeni government, and demanded
Saleh stop cooperating with the U.S. strikes.
Earlier this year, in Egypt and Tunisia, long-time U.S. efforts
to promote what it liked to call "regional stability"
– through military alliances, aid, training, and weaponry – collapsed
in the face of popular movements against the U.S.-supported dictators
ruling those nations. Similarly, in Bahrain,
Iraq,
Jordan,
Kuwait,
Morocco,
Oman,
Saudi
Arabia, and the United
Arab Emirates, popular protests erupted against authoritarian
regimes partnered with and armed courtesy of the U.S. military.
It’s hardly surprising that, when asked in a recent survey whether
President Obama had met the expectations created by his 2009
speech in Cairo, where he called for "a new beginning between
the United States and Muslims around the world," only 4% of
Egyptians answered yes. (The same poll found only 6% of Jordanians
thought so and just 1% of Lebanese.)
A recent Zogby poll of respondents in six Arab countries
– Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, and the United
Arab Emirates – found that, taking over from a president who had
propelled anti-Americanism in the Muslim world to an all-time
high, Obama managed to drive such attitudes even higher.
Substantial majorities of Arabs in every country now view the
U.S. as not contributing "to peace and stability in
the Arab World."
Increasing
Instability Across the Globe
U.S. interference in the arc of instability is certainly nothing
new. Leaving aside current wars, over the last century, the United
States has engaged in military interventions in the global south
in Cambodia, Congo, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Egypt,
Grenada, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Iraq, Kuwait, Laos, Lebanon,
Libya, Panama, the Philippines, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Somalia,
Thailand, and Vietnam, among other places. The CIA has waged covert
campaigns in many of the same countries, as well as Afghanistan,
Algeria, Chile, Ecuador, Indonesia,Iran, and Syria, to name just
a few.
Like George W. Bush before him, Barack Obama evidently looks out
on the "unlit world" and sees a source of global volatility
and danger for the United States. His answer has been to deploy
U.S. military might to blunt instability, shore up allies, and protect
American lives.
Despite the salient lesson of 9/11 – interventions abroad beget
blowback at home – he has waged wars in response to blowback that
have, in turn, generated more of the same. A recent Rasmussen poll
indicates that most Americans differ with the president when it
comes to his idea of how the U.S. should be involved abroad. Seventy-five
percent of voters, for example, agreed
with this proposition in a recent poll: "The United States
should not commit its forces to military action overseas unless
the cause is vital to our national interest." In addition,
clear majorities of Americans are against defending Afghanistan,
Iraq, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and a host of other arc of instability
countries, even if they are attacked by outside powers.
After decades of overt and covert U.S. interventions in arc states,
including the last 10 years of constant warfare, most are still
poor, underdeveloped, and seemingly even more unstable. This year,
in their annual failed
state index – a ranking of the most volatile nations on the
planet – Foreign Policy and the Fund for Peace placed the
two arc nations that have seen the largest military interventions
by the U.S. – Iraq and Afghanistan – in their top ten. Pakistan
and Yemen ranked 12th and 13th, respectively, while Somalia – the
site of U.S. interventions under President Bill Clinton in the 1990s,
during the Bush
presidency in the 2000s, and again under Obama – had the dubious
honor of being number one.
For
all the discussions here about (armed) "nation-building efforts"
in the region, what we’ve clearly witnessed is a decade of nation
unbuilding that ended only when the peoples of various Arab lands
took their futures into their own hands and their bodies out into
the streets. As recent polling in arc nations indicates, people
of the global south see the United States as promoting or sustaining,
not preventing, instability, and objective measures bear out their
claims. The fact that numerous popular uprisings opposing authoritarian
rulers allied with the U.S. have proliferated this year provides
the strongest evidence yet of that.
With Americans balking at defending arc-of-instability nations,
with clear indications that military interventions don’t promote
stability, and with a budget crisis of epic proportions at home,
it remains to be seen what pretexts the Obama administration will
rely on to continue a failed policy – one that seems certain to
make the world more volatile and put American citizens at greater
risk.
September
20, 2011
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. His new book
is The
American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s. Nick
Turse is a historian, investigative
journalist, the associate editor of TomDispatch.com,
and a senior editor at Alternet.org. His latest book is The
Case for Withdrawal from Afghanistan (Verso Books). You can
follow him on Twitter @NickTurse,
on Tumblr,
and on Facebook.
This article is a collaboration between Alternet.org
and TomDispatch.com.
Copyright
© 2011 Nick Turse
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