Too Many
Generals Spoil the Democracy
Trump’s Push to “Win” with Warriors is a Loss for
America
By William J. Astore
December 21, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
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Dispatch"
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America has always had a love affair with its generals.
It started at the founding of the republic with George
Washington and continued with (among others) Andrew
Jackson,
Zachary Taylor, Ulysses S. Grant, and Dwight D.
Eisenhower. These military men shared something in
common: they were winning generals. Washington
in the Revolution; Jackson in the War of 1812; Taylor in
the Mexican-American War; Grant in the Civil War; and
Ike, of course, in World War II. Americans have always
loved a hero in uniform -- when he wins.
Yet
twenty-first-century America is witnessing a new and
revolutionary moment: the elevation of losing
generals to the highest offices in the land. Retired
Marine Corps General
James “Mad Dog” Mattis, known as a tough-talking
“warrior-monk,” will soon be the nation’s secretary of
defense. He’ll be joined by a real mad dog, retired
Army Lieutenant General
Michael Flynn as President-elect Donald Trump’s
national security adviser. Leading the Department of
Homeland Security will be recently retired
General John Kelly, another no-nonsense Marine. And
even though he wasn’t selected, retired Army General
David Petraeus was seriously considered for
secretary of state, further proof of Trump’s
starry-eyed fascination with the brass of our losing
wars. Generals who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan to
anything but victory --
pyrrhic ones don’t count -- are again being
empowered. This time, it’s as “civilian” advisers to
Trump, a business tycoon whose military knowledge begins
and ends with his invocation of two World War II
generals, George S. Patton and Douglas MacArthur, as his
all-time favorite military leaders.
Let’s pause for
a moment to consider those choices. Patton was a
skilled commander of armored forces at the divisional
and corps level, but lacked the political acumen and
temperament to succeed at higher levels of command
during World War II. MacArthur, notoriously
vainglorious and -- does this ring a bell? -- completely
narcissistic, was fired by President Harry Truman for
insubordination during the Korean War. And yet these
are the generals Trump professes to admire most. Not
Omar Bradley, known as the GI’s general; not Dwight
Eisenhower, the man who led the D-Day invasion in 1944;
and not, most of all,
George C. Marshall, a giant of a man and the
architect of military victory in World War II, who did
indeed make a remarkably smooth transition to civilian
service both as secretary of state and defense after the
war.
If Truman
appointed Marshall,
what’s wrong, one might ask, with Trump surrounding
himself with retired generals? Consider two obvious
problems. First, the president already has a team of
uniformed generals to advise him: the Joint Chiefs of
Staff. By selecting career military men like Mattis and
Flynn as his senior civilian advisers on military
matters, Trump is in essence creating a rival Joint
Chiefs, his own tight circle of generals trained and
acculturated to think about the world as primarily a
realm of conflict and to favor military solutions to
geopolitical problems. Second, though it’s getting ever
harder to remember in increasingly
militarized America, this nation was founded on the
fundamental principle of civilian control over the
military, a principle that will be seriously eroded if
the president’s senior civilian advisers on
defense-related matters are men who self-identify as
warriors and
warfighters.
Having taken
off the uniform only a short time ago, career military
men like Mattis, Flynn, and Kelly are not truly
civilians. In fact, when they served, they weren’t even
citizen-soldiers; quite the opposite, those in America’s
post-Vietnam military self-identify as professional
warriors. For Mattis and Kelly, it’s once a Marine,
always a Marine (especially since each served 40-plus
years in the Corps). Flynn occupies a spot all his own,
since he specifically fancies himself as a
warrior-crusader against Islam. These are the men who
will soon occupy the highest civilian offices in
America’s colossal national security state.
The bottom line
is this: a republic -- or should I say, former republic?
-- founded on civilian control of the military needs
true civilians as a counterweight to militarism as well
as military adventurism. Recently retired generals are
anything but that; they’re not even speed bumps on the
road to the next set of misbegotten military
“adventures.” They are likely to be only one thing:
enablers of and accelerants to military action. Their
presence in the highest civilian positions represents
nothing short of a de facto military coup in
Washington, a coup that required no violence since the
president-elect simply anointed and exalted them as
America’s security saviors.
But here’s a
question for you: If these men and their three- and
four-star colleagues couldn’t win decisive military
victories while in uniform, what makes Trump and the
Washington establishment think they’ll do any better
while wearing mufti?
Of
Highly Groomed (and Flawed) Generals
Americans, who
strongly admire their military, like to think that
its most senior leaders rise on merit. This is not,
however, the way the military promotion system actually
works. Officers who reach the rank of general have
usually been identified and sponsored at a young age,
often when they are still company-grade officers in
their mid-twenties. They are, in a word,
groomed. Their careers are carefully “curated,” as
a friend of mine (and colonel in the Air Force) reminded
me recently. They’re placed on a fast track for early
promotion and often given jobs in Washington at the
Pentagon or as liaisons to Congress. Their sponsors and
patrons, flying “top cover” for them, have found them
worthy and they may indeed be talented and
hard-charging. They are also judged to be “safe” -- in
the sense of being
true believers in the professional military way of
life.
As my
colonel-friend put it, “There’s little room for
innovation [in today’s military] because the next
generation of GOs [general officers] has been incubating
for ten years, learning all the talking points and
preparing to venerate the sacred cows. It’s why when a
truly innovative idea breaks through and the colonel
behind it is publicly commended, there’s no answer to
‘Wow, he’s great. I wonder why he’s retiring as a
colonel?’”
True mavericks
in the military often stall out at that rank. By
disrupting the status quo, they make powerful enemies.
A sterling example is Colonel
John Boyd. Arguably the finest strategist the U.S.
Air Force has produced in the last half-century, Boyd
originated the
OODA loop concept and fought hard against the brass
for more maneuverable and affordable fighter jets like
the F-16. Stymied within the ranks, he only
gained influence after retirement as a Pentagon
consultant.
General
officers, by the way, have come to resemble a
self-replicating organism. The grooming process,
favoring homogeneity as it does, is partly to blame.
Disruptive creativity and a reputation for outspokenness
can mark one as not being a “team player.” Political
skills and conformity are valued more highly. It’s a
mistake, then, to assume that America’s generals are the
best and the brightest. “The curated and the
calculating” is perhaps a more accurate description.
With that in
mind, let’s take a closer look at Trump’s chosen
threesome, starting with General Mattis. He has his
virtues: a distinguished career in the Marine Corps, a
sensible stance against torture, a dedication to all
ranks within the military. Yet like
so many high-ranking military retirees -- take
General Mark Welsh of the Air Force, for example --
Mattis quickly cashed in on his career, reputation, and
continuing influence via the military-industrial
complex. Despite a six-figure pension, he joined
corporate boards, notably that of military-industrial
powerhouse General Dynamics where he quickly earned or
acquired
nearly $1.5 million in salary and stock options.
Mattis is also on the board at Theranos, a
deeply troubled company that failed to deliver on
promises to develop effective blood-testing technologies
for the military.
And then, of
course, there was his long military career, itself a
distinctly mixed bag. As head of U.S. Central Command
under President Obama, for instance, his hawkish stance
toward Iran led to his removal and forced retirement in
2013. Almost a decade earlier in 2004, the aggressive
tactics he oversaw in Iraq as commanding general of the
1st Marine Division during the Battle of Fallujah have
been characterized by some as
war crimes. For Trump, however, none of this
matters. Mattis, much like General Patton (in the
president-elect’s view), is a man who “plays
no games.”
And Mattis
seems like the voice of reason and moderation compared
to Flynn, whose
hatred of Islam is as virulent as it is
transparent. Like Trump, Flynn is a fan of tweeting,
perhaps his
most infamous being “Fear of Muslims is RATIONAL.”
A brusque man convinced of his own rectitude, who has a
reputation for
not playing well with others, Flynn was forced from
his position as director of the Defense Intelligence
Agency in 2014, after which he became a harsh critic of
the Obama administration.
In his brief
retirement, Flynn served as a
paid lobbyist to a Turkish businessman with close
ties to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, while
running a business consultancy that is due to profit by
providing
surveillance drones to patrol the U.S.-Mexican
border. Rising to prominence during the Trump campaign,
he led the chant against Hillary Clinton (“Lock her
up!”) at the Republican National Convention in July.
(His son recently helped
spread the false rumor that Clinton was involved in
a child sex trafficking ring involving a Washington,
D.C., pizzeria.) Flynn, who sees Islam as a political
conspiracy rather than a legitimate religion, is an
angry warrior, a dyed-in-the-wool crusader. That
Trump sees such a figure as qualified to serve as the
nation’s senior civilian security adviser speaks volumes
about the president-elect and the crusading militarism
that is likely to be forthcoming from his
administration.
Serving in a
supporting capacity to Flynn as chief of staff of the
National Security Council (NSC) is yet another
high-ranking military man (and early supporter of
Trump's presidential run), Army retired
Lieutenant General Keith Kellogg. Almost a
generation older than Flynn, Kellogg served as chief
operations officer for the ill-fated Coalition
Provisional Authority in Iraq, which badly
mismanaged the U.S. military’s
occupation of the country after the fall of Baghdad
in 2003. Like most retired generals, Kellogg has
profited from close links to defense-related industries,
including
CACI International, Oracle Corporation (Homeland
Security Division), and
Cubic, where he was senior vice president for ground
combat programs. It’s hard to see fresh ideas coming
from the NSC with long-serving military diehards like
Flynn and Kellogg ruling the roost.
General John Kelly,
the last of the quartet and soon to be head of the
Department of Homeland Security, is yet another
long-serving Marine with a reputation for bluntness. He
opposed efforts by the Obama administration to close
the prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, claiming that the
remaining detainees were “all
bad boys,” both guilty and dangerous. He also ran
afoul of the administration by criticizing efforts to
open combat positions to qualified servicewomen,
claiming such efforts were “agenda-driven”
and would lead to lower standards and decreased military
combat effectiveness. Despite these views, or perhaps
because of them, Kelly, who served as senior military
assistant to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and has been
well vetted by the system, is likely to be confirmed
with little real debate.
Of
Coups and Crusades
Collectively,
the team of Mattis, Flynn, and Kelly could not be more
symbolic of the ongoing process of subversion of
civilian control of the military. With Trump holding
their reins, these self-styled warriors will soon take
charge of the highest civilian positions overseeing the
military of the world’s sole superpower. Don’t think of
this, however, as a "Seven
Days in May" scenario in which a hard-headed general
mounts a coup against an allegedly soft-hearted
president. It’s far worse. Who needs a coup when
generals are essentially to be given free rein by a
president-elect who fancies himself a military expert
because, as a teenager, he spent a few years at a
military-themed boarding school?
In all of this,
Trump represents just the next (giant) step in an
ongoing process. His warrior-steeds, his “dream team”
of generals, highlight America’s striking
twenty-first-century embrace of militarism. At the same
time, the future of U.S. foreign policy seems
increasingly clear: more violent interventionism against
what these men see as the existential threat of radical
Islam. In the process, one radical idea will be pitted
against another: American exceptionalism, armed to the
teeth and empowered by war-lovers (some deeply involved
in an evangelizing Christianity) against Islamic
jihadist extremism. Rather than a "clash of
civilizations," it's a clash of warring creeds, of what
should essentially be seen as fundamentalist cults.
Both embrace their own exceptionalism, both see
themselves as righteous warriors, both represent ways of
thinking steeped in patriarchy and saturated with
violence, and both are remarkably resistant to any
thought of compromise.
Put another
way, under Trump’s team of “civilian” warrior-generals,
it looks like the crusades may be back -- with a
vengeance. Yet for all the president-elect’s tough talk
about winning, count on the next four years, like the
last 15, being filled to the brim with military
frustrations rather than victory. And fear a second
possibility as well. Whatever else they do, Trump and
his generals are likely to produce one historically
stunning result:
the withering away of what’s left of the American
democratic experiment.
William J. Astore, a
TomDispatch regular, is a historian and
retired lieutenant colonel (USAF). His personal blog is
Bracing Views.
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Engelhardt's latest book,
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a
Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.
Copyright 2016
William J. Astore
The views
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