Wag
the SEAL
by Russ Baker
WhoWhatWhy.com
Recently
by Russ Baker: The
Deaths of JFK, RFK – and the Silence of the Lambs
Everyone but
the emotionally dead had to feel joy at the news that a pretty young
blonde American had been rescued from her Somali pirate kidnappers.
Equally thrilling was to learn that the rescue had been a pinpoint
operation by our courageous Navy SEALS, who managed to snatch the
maiden, and kill nine kidnappers while losing none of their own
team.
That welcome
bit of uplifting news came as our president shared with us the ongoing
struggle that is the State of the Union.
Despite the
continued difficulties many of us face in terms of daily survival,
it was heartening to know that the country was still strong enough
to venture and achieve such a mission in the most dangerous parts
of the world.
It was stirring.
It was downright inspirational.
Remember Wag
the Dog? The 1997 hit comedy featured a spin doctor and
Hollywood producer who, in order to distract the public from a presidential
sex scandal, convince the public of a non-existent war. The tail
wagging the dog. The art of power through distraction.
In light of
the continuation of this sort of spectacle into the Obama era, Id
like to propose a new term for our time: Wag the SEAL.
For this is
the second time and presumably not the last that Obama
has gotten a lift from those daring fellows. And in both cases,
close scrutiny raises the
question of just who is being had.
Each produced
a magnificently advantageous moment for a president sweating a tough
and uncertain re-election. But Obama was hardly the only winner.
Another beneficiary is surely the Pentagon, which is under severe
pressure to restrain itself and cut its size and costs, and could
use a favorable performance. Though the US military seems incapable
of winning the complex and mind-bendingly expensive
foreign adventures it launches almost like clockwork, it does seem
able to execute small, limited operations that please the public.
And of course
there is the retinue that profits from all this, the one percent
who derive substantial profits from the permanent war economy. Not
to mention the oil and mineral companies and all other foreign exploitation,
er, exploration industries, whose continued high profits are largely
dependent on the continued projection of American strength throughout
the world.
Finally, as
always, there is the media. For it is at root about good story-telling.
And was there ever a better story than a pretty maiden rescued by
dashing and clean-cut lads from drooling savages?
They tell us
that the Somali mission was executed by the same Navy SEALs unit
that carried out the biggest coup of the Obama administration if
not the past decade: taking down the man who was Americas
most reviled, and perhaps feared, symbol of danger: Osama bin Laden.
Most people,
reliant on the coverage of major news organizations, rest content
that America justly and efficiently dispatched bin Laden. Only those
with keen antennae or those who read accounts questioning the
contradictory, irrational and unnecessarily opaque explanations
of exactly what happened, realize that something was wrong with
that operation. Something more was going on. What exactly it was whether
that helicopter that crashed did not really manage to disgorge its
SEAL occupants unscathed, whether the man who we are told was hurriedly
dumped into the ocean before proper public verification of his identity
was definitely the man who terrorized the world, whether the people
living in that house in Abbottabad were unavoidable casualties or
executed by design these things we still do not know.
But one thing
is clear: that raid did wonders for Obama and the military. No one
dare call Obama a wimp.
When you look
carefully at the Somali rescue, you see similarly troubling patterns
of manipulation, and the pursuit of propaganda victories cloaked
as legitimate policy.
Consider the
circumstances: an American citizen, albeit one with seemingly the
most admirable intentions, was kidnapped along with a foreign colleague
while leaving a charity mission in a region with heavy pirate activity.
The US began monitoring her situation, and when, we are told, signs
indicated that her health was dangerously deteriorating, the authorities
launched their operation.
What are the
criteria for such operations? At any given time, some Americans
may be being held by kidnapers in various parts of the world. As
far as we know, most do not benefit from the attention of the US
military. In fact, we dont even know how many are being held
because the numbers are kept under wraps try asking the FBI.
In any case, another American was kidnapped in Somalia recently,
and his kidnappers have adopted
dramatic measures to make sure that another raid is not attempted.
The stated
reason for the timing of the rescue of 32-year-old American Jessica
Buchanan and Poul Hagen Thisted, her 60-year-old Danish colleague,
was that Buchanans health had declined precipitously. Yet
concern for the health of Americans is not a settled notion at all.
In fact, the majority of Republican candidates for the presidency,
the same ones who cheered the rescue, oppose guaranteeing the most
basic health needs of all American children.
That Buchanan
was in captivity for some time, and that her release came at a propitious
moment when Obama was under the maximum media spotlight, cannot
be dismissed. Neither can the central role of Obamas discredited
counterterrorism adviser John Brennan, whose shifting
narratives of the bin Laden raid remain unresolved and have
lowered
faith in Obamas veracity among some Americans. It is important
to note Brennans close relationship with the Saudi royal family,
whose survival depends on keeping sea lanes open near the Horn of
Africa where the Somali pirates ply the waters.
So, though
as humans we cheer the good result of this particular adventure,
we must concede that this is not really about health or even saving
lives. It is about sending a message. But does the message
really get sent to those who would harm Americans? There is little
evidence that armed intervention is a deterrent. Indeed, the kidnappers
of the other American being held in Somalia seem to have upped their
threats of violence since the raid.
No, the message
is being sent to us. It is no coincidence that these kinds
of affairs always involve the most, pardon the expression, black
and white of elements. How often do you hear about a person of color
who is being held hostage, has gone missing, or was killed. Or of
someone obese, or physically unattractive? Think back over the tabloid
stories that have sustained the media for months at a time and riveted
the American people. Jessica Lynch. Pat Tillman. Natalee Holloway
and Robyn Gardner. When are the villains more nuanced, run-of-the-mill
criminals without distinguishing stories? Pirates indeed. Its
almost as if the same fictional producer in Wag the Dog now
shuttles permanently between Hollywood and the White House.
Reprinted
from WhoWhatWhy.com.
January
31, 2012
Russ
Baker is an award-winning investigative reporter. He has written
for The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Nation,
The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Village
Voice and Esquire and dozens of other major domestic and
foreign publications. He has also served as a contributing editor
to the Columbia Journalism Review. Baker received a 2005
Deadline Club award for his exclusive reporting on George W. Bush’s
military record. He is the author of Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, the Powerful Forces That Put It in
the White House, and What Their Influence Means for America
(Bloomsbury Press, 2009); it was released in paperback as Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America’s Invisible Government and
the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years. For more information
on Russ’s work, see his sites, www.familyofsecrets.com
and www.russbaker.com.
Copyright
© 2012 WhoWhatWhy.com
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