Bannon
Down, Pentagon Up, Neocons In?
By Jim Lobe
April 22,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
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The apparent and
surprisingly abrupt demise in Steve Bannon’s
influence
offers a major potential opening
for neoconservatives,
many of whom opposed
Trump’s election precisely because of his
association with Bannon and the “America
Firsters,” to return to power after so many
years of being relegated to the sidelines.
Bannon’s decline suggest that he no longer
wields the kind of veto power that
prevented the
nomination of
Elliott Abrams
as deputy secretary of state. Moreover, the
administration’s ongoing failure to fill key
posts at the undersecretary, assistant
secretary, and deputy assistant secretary levels
across the government’s foreign-policy apparatus
provides a veritable cornucopia of opportunities
for aspiring neocons who didn’t express their
opposition to the Trump campaign too loudly.
Ninety days into the administration, the
military brass—whose interests and general
worldview are well represented by National
Security Advisor Gen. H.R. McMaster and Pentagon
chief Gen. James Mattis (ret.), not to mention
the various military veterans led by National
Security Council (NSC) chief of staff Gen.
Kenneth Kellogg (ret.) who are taking positions
on the NSC—appears to be
very much in the driver’s seat on key foreign
policy issues, especially regarding the Greater
Middle East.
Their influence is evident not only in the
attention they’ve paid to mending ties with NATO
and northeast Asian allies, but also in the more
forceful actions in the Greater Middle East of
the past two weeks. These latter demonstrations
of force seem designed above all to reassure
Washington’s traditional allies in the region,
who had worried most loudly about both Obama’s
non-interventionism and Trump’s “America First”
rhetoric, that the U.S. is not shy about
exerting its military muscle.
Nor could it be lost on many observers that
Bannon’s expulsion from the NSC took place
immediately after Jared Kushner returned from
his
surprise visit to Iraq
hosted by Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Joseph
Dunford—reportedly the culmination of a
calculated strategy of seduction by the Pentagon.
Kushner has emerged as the chief conduit to
Trump (aside, perhaps, from Ivanka). The timing
of Bannon’s fall from grace—and Kushner’s
reported role in it—was particularly remarkable
given that Kushner and Bannon were allied in
opposing McMaster’s
effort to fire Ezra Cohen-Watnick
from the NSC just a
week before Kushner flew to Baghdad.)
The
Ascendance of the Military
The
military’s emergence—at least, for now—has a
number of implications, some favorable to
neocons, others not so much.
On the
favorable side of the ledger, there are clear
areas of convergence between both the brass and
the neocons (although it’s important to
emphasize that neither is monolithic and that
there are variations in opinion within both
groups). Although both the military and the
neocons give lip service to the importance of
“soft power” in promoting U.S. interests abroad,
they share the belief that, ultimately, hard
power is the only coin of the realm that really
counts.
With
substantial experience in counter-insurgency
(COIN) doctrine in Iraq and Afghanistan, both
McMaster and Mattis appreciate the importance of
politics in military strategy in principle. But
they are ultimately military men and hence
naturally inclined to look in the first instance
to military tools to pound in any loose nails,
whether in the form of failing states or failing
regional security structures. (That hammer will
likely look even more compelling as the Trump
administration follows through on its budgetary
proposals to deplete U.S. diplomatic and
development capabilities.) Like
neoconservatives, they also appreciate large
military budgets, and although they certainly
oppose, in principle, the idea that the U.S.
should play globocop for fear of overextension,
they have no problem with the notion of U.S.
global military primacy and the necessity of
maintaining hundreds of military bases around
the world to uphold it.
Moreover, the military and neoconservatives
share to some extent an enduring hostility
toward certain states. The Pentagon is quite
comfortable with an adversarial relationship
with Russia, if only because it is familiar and
ensures European adherence to NATO, which the
United States will dominate for the foreseeable
future. This applies in particular to
McMaster, who
spent the last couple of years planning for
conflict with Russia. For similar reasons, the
military is generally comfortable with a mostly
hostile relationship toward Iran. Such a stance
ensures close ties with Washington’s traditional
allies/autocrats in the Gulf (whose insatiable
demand for U.S. weaponry helps sustain the
industrial base of the U.S. military as well as
the compensation for retired flag officers who
serve on the boards of the arms sellers). And,
as Mattis has made clear
on any number of occasions, he sees Iran as the
greatest long-term threat to U.S. interests in
the region and welcomes an opportunity to “push
back” against what he has claimed are Tehran’s
hegemonic ambitions there. All of this is
clearly encouraging to neocons whose antipathy
toward both the Islamic Republic and Russia is
deeply ingrained and of long standing.
On the more negative side, however, the military
as an institution naturally harbors a distrust
of neoconservatives, a distrust established by
the Iraq debacle in which the military still
finds itself bogged down with no clear exit.
“Regime change” and “nation-building”—much
touted by neocons in the post-Cold War era—are
dirty words among most of the brass, for whom
such phrases have become synonymous with
quagmire, over-extension, and, as much as they
resist coming to terms with it, failure. Of
course, many active-duty and retired senior
military officers, of whom
McMaster may well be one,
consider the 2007-08 “Surge”—a plan heavily
promoted by neoconservatives—to have been a
great success (despite its manifest failure to
achieve the strategic goal of political and
sectarian reconciliation) that was undone by
Obama’s “premature” withdrawal. But even the
most ardent COINistas are aware that, absent a
catastrophic attack on the U.S. mainland, the
American public will have very limited patience
for major new investments of blood and treasure
in the Middle East, especially given the general
perception that Russia and China pose increasing
threats to more important U.S. interests and
allies in Europe and East Asia, respectively,
compared to five or six years ago.
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The prevailing wisdom among the brass remains
pretty much as former Defense Secretary Bob
Gates
enunciated it
before his retirement in 2011: “In my opinion,
any future defense secretary who advises the
president to again send a big American land army
into Asia or into the Middle East or Africa
should ‘have his head examined,’ as General
MacArthur so delicately put it.” The military
may indeed escalate its presence and loosen its
rules of engagement in Mesopotamia, Afghanistan,
and even Yemen in the coming months, but not so
much as to attract sustained public attention
and concern, despite the wishes of
neocons like Bloomberg columnist Eli Lake,
Gen. Jack Keane (ret.),
or the
Kagans. The
desirability of a “light footprint” has become
conventional wisdom at the Pentagon, while some
neocons still believe that the U.S. occupation
of post-World War II Germany and Japan should be
the model for Iraq.
Besides Iraq’s legacy, the military has other
reasons to resist neocon efforts to gain
influence in the Trump administration. As
successive flag officers, including one of their
heroes, Gen. David Petraeus (ret.),
have testified,
the virtually unconditional U.S. embrace of
Israel has long made their efforts to enlist
Arab support for U.S. military initiatives in
the region more difficult. Of course, like Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, neocons argue that
circumstances have changed over the last decade,
that the reigning regional chaos and the fear of
a rising Iran shared by both Israel and the
Sunni-led Arab states have created a new
strategic convergence that has made the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict virtually
irrelevant. According to this view, Washington’s
perceived acquiescence in, if not support for,
expanding Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem
and the West Bank and its quarantine of Gaza are
no longer a big deal for Arab leaders.
But this perception runs up against the reality
that the Pentagon and CENTCOM have always faced
in the region. Even the most autocratic Arab
leaders, including those who have intensified
their covert intelligence and military
cooperation with Israel in recent years, are
worried about their own public opinion, and,
that until Israel takes concrete steps toward
the creation of a viable and contiguous
Palestinian state pursuant to the solution
outlined in the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative
(API), their cooperation will remain limited, as
well as covert. In the meantime, the
ever-present possibility of a new Palestinian
uprising or another armed conflict in Gaza
threatens both continuing cooperation
as well as the U.S. position in the region to
the extent that Washington is seen as backing
Israel.
There are other differences. Despite the
experience in Iraq and Afghanistan, neocons have
long believed that states necessarily constitute
the greatest threat to U.S. national security,
while the military tends to take relatively more
seriously threats posed by non-state actors,
such as the Islamic State and al-Qaeda or, for
that matter, al-Shabaab or Boko Haram to which
neocons pay almost no attention. Although some
neocons are clearly Islamophobic and/or
Arabophobic (in major part due to their Likudist
worldview), the military, as shown most recently
by
McMaster’s opposition
to the use of the phrase “radical Islamic
terrorism,” sees that attitude as
counter-productive. And although neocons and the
military share a strong antipathy toward Iran,
the latter, unlike the former, appears to
recognize that both countries share some common
interests. Mattis, in particular, sees the
nuclear deal as imperfect but very much worth
preserving. Most neocons want to kill it, if not
by simply tearing it up, then indirectly, either
through new congressional sanctions or other
means designed to provoke Iran into renouncing
it.
The
military tends to appreciate the importance of
mobilizing multilateral and especially allied
support for U.S. policies, especially the use of
force. Many neocons, however, don’t accord such
support so much importance. Indeed, some are
openly contemptuous of multilateralism and
international law in general, believing that
they unduly constrain Washington’s freedom of
action (to do good for the world). Neocons see
themselves above all as moral actors in a world
of good and evil; the brass is more grounded in
realism, albeit of a pretty hardline nature.
Thus,
to the extent that the military’s worldview
emerges as dominant under Donald Trump,
neoconservatives may have a hard time gaining
influence. However, on some issues, such as
lobbying for a larger Pentagon budget, taking a
more aggressive stance against Moscow, aligning
the U.S. more closely with the Sunni-led Gulf
states, and promoting a more confrontational
stance vis-à-vis Iran in the Middle East,
neocons may gain an entrée.
Other
Avenues of Influence
Just as the
Pentagon deliberately courted Kushner—who
appears, like his father-in-law, to be something
of an empty vessel on foreign policy issues
despite the rapid expansion of his international
responsibilities in the first 90 days—so others
will. Indeed, Abrams himself appears to have
gotten the message. In
his interview last week
with Politico, he unsurprisingly praises Trump’s
cruise-missile strikes against Syria and
Kushner’s modesty. (“I don’t view him at all as
an empire builder.”) At the end of the article,
the author notes,
As
for his own future with Trump, Abrams teased
that it may still be in front of him,
depending on how things shape up with Bannon
and Kushner, the latter of whom he
kept going out of his way to praise. [
Emphasis added.]
Although the deputy secretary of state position
now appears to be taken,
Abrams was also careful to laud his erstwhile
promoter, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Now
reportedly coordinating increasingly with Mattis
and McMaster, Tillerson
seems to have gained significant ground with
Trump himself
in recent weeks. Neocons may yet find a home at
State, although I think Tillerson’s initial
promotion of Abrams as his deputy was due
primarily to the latter’s experience and skills
as a bureaucratic infighter rather than for his
ideological predispositions. Meanwhile, UN Amb.
Nikki Haley, who was promoted to the NSC’s
Principals Committee on the same day that Bannon
was expelled, appears to have become a neocon
favorite for her
Kirkpatrickesque
denunciations of Russia, Syria, and the UN
itself. That she initially supported neocon
heartthrob Sen. Marco Rubio for president and
has been aligned politically with Sen. Lindsey
Graham, who stressed Haley’s commitment to
Israel when she was nominated as ambassador,
also offers hope to neocons looking for avenues
of influence and infiltration.
Yet another avenue into the
administration—indeed, perhaps the most
effective—lies with none other than casino king
Sheldon Adelson,
the single biggest donor to the Trump campaign
and
inaugural festivities
(as well as to
Haley’s political action committee).
As we noted in January,
Kushner himself, along with
Israeli Amb. Ron Dermer,
had become a critical, pro-Likud conduit between
Trump and Adelson beginning shortly after
Trump’s rather controversial appearance
before the
Republican Jewish Coalition
(RJC) at the beginning of the presidential
campaign. Although Adelson has maintained a low
profile since the inauguration, he clearly
enjoys unusual access to both Kushner and Trump.
Indeed, the fact that Sean Spicer reportedly
apologized personally to Adelson,
of all people, almost immediately after his
“Holocaust center” fiasco last week serves as a
helpful reminder that, as much as the various
factions, institutions, and individuals jockey
for power in the new administration,
money—especially campaign cash—still talks in
Washington. This is a reality that
neoconservatives absorbed long ago.
Jim
Lobe served for some 30 years as the Washington
DC bureau chief for Inter Press Service and is
best known for his coverage of U.S. foreign
policy and the influence of the neoconservative
movement.
http://lobelog.com
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.