The Politics
of Military Ascendancy
By James
Petras
September 16,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Clearly
the US has escalated the pivotal role of the
military in the making of foreign and, by extension,
domestic policy. The rise of ‘the Generals’ to
strategic positions in the Trump regime is evident,
deepening its role as a highly autonomous force
determining US strategic policy agendas.
In this paper
we will discuss the advantages that the military
elite accumulate from the war agenda and the reasons
why ‘the Generals’ have been able to impose
their definition of international realities.
We will
discuss the military’s ascendancy over Trump’s
civilian regime as a result of the relentless
degradation of his presidency by his political
opposition.
The Prelude to
Militarization: Obama’s Multi-War Strategy and Its
Aftermath
The central
role of the military in deciding US foreign policy
has its roots in the strategic decisions taken
during the Obama-Clinton Presidency. Several
policies were decisive in the rise of unprecedented
military-political power.
1. The
massive increase of US troops in Afghanistan and
their subsequent failures and retreat weakened
the Obama-Clinton regime and increased animosity
between the military and the Obama’s
Administration. As a result of his failures,
Obama downgraded the military and weakened
Presidential authority.
2. The
massive US-led bombing and destruction of Libya,
the overthrow of the Gadhafi government and the
failure of the Obama-Clinton administration to
impose a puppet regime, underlined the
limitations of US air power and the
ineffectiveness of US political-military
intervention. The Presidency blundered in its
foreign policy in North Africa and demonstrated
its military ineptness.
3. The
invasion of Syria by US-funded mercenaries and
terrorists committed the US to an unreliable
ally in a losing war. This led to a reduction in
the military budget and encouraged the Generals
to view their direct control of overseas wars
and foreign policy as the only guarantee of
their positions.
4. The US
military intervention in Iraq was only a
secondary contributing factor in the defeat of
ISIS; the major actors and beneficiaries were
Iran and the allied Iraqi Shia militias.
5. The
Obama-Clinton engineered coup and power grab in
the Ukraine brought a corrupt incompetent
military junta to power in Kiev and provoked the
secession of the Crimea (to Russia) and Eastern
Ukraine (allied with Russia). The Generals were
sidelined and found that they had tied
themselves to Ukrainian kleptocrats while
dangerously increasing political tensions with
Russia. The Obama regime dictated economic
sanctions against Moscow, designed to compensate
for their ignominious military-political
failures.
The
Obama-Clinton legacy facing Trump was built around a
three-legged stool: an international order based on
military aggression and confrontation with Russia; a
‘pivot to Asia’ defined as the military
encirclement and economic isolation of China – via
bellicose threats and economic sanctions against
North Korea; and the use of the military as the
praetorian guards of free trade agreements in Asia
excluding China.
The Obama
‘legacy’ consists of an international order of
globalized capital and multiple wars. The continuity
of Obama’s ‘glorious legacy’ initially depended on
the election of
Hillary Clinton.
Donald Trump’s
presidential campaign, for its part, promised to
dismantle or drastically revise the Obama Doctrine
of an international order based on multiple wars,
neo-colonial ‘nation’ building and free trade. A
furious Obama ‘informed’ (threatened) the
newly-elected President Trump that he would face the
combined hostility of the entire State apparatus,
Wall Street and the mass media if he proceeded to
fulfill his election promises of economic
nationalism and thus undermine the US-centered
global order.
Trump’s bid to
shift from Obama’s sanctions and military
confrontation to economic reconciliation with Russia
was countered by a hornet’s nest of accusations
about a Trump-Russian electoral conspiracy, darkly
hinting at treason and show trials against his close
allies and even family members.
The concoction
of a Trump-Russia plot was only the first step
toward a total war on the new president, but
it succeeded in undermining Trump’s economic
nationalist agenda and his efforts to change Obama’s
global order.
Trump
Under Obama’s International Order
After only 8
months in office President Trump helplessly gave
into the firings, resignations and humiliation of
each and every one of his civilian appointees,
especially those who were committed to reverse
Obama’s ‘international order’.
Trump was
elected to replace wars, sanctions and interventions
with economic deals beneficial to the American
working and middle class. This would include
withdrawing the military from its long-term
commitments to budget-busting ‘nation-building’
(occupation) in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya and
other Obama-designated endless war zones.
Trump’s
military priorities were supposed to focus on
strengthening domestic frontiers and overseas
markets. He started by demanding that NATO partners
pay for their own military defense responsibilities.
Obama’s globalists in both political parties were
aghast that the US might lose it overwhelming
control of NATO; they united and moved immediately
to strip Trump of his economic nationalist allies
and their programs.
Trump quickly
capitulated and fell into line with Obama’s
international order, except for one proviso – he
would select the Cabinet to implement the old/new
international order.
A hamstrung
Trump chose a military cohort of Generals, led by
General James Mattis (famously nicknamed ‘Mad
Dog’) as Defense Secretary.
The Generals effectively
took over the Presidency. Trump abdicated his
responsibilities as President.
General Mattis: The Militarization of America
General Mattis
took up the Obama legacy of global militarization
and added his own nuances, including the
‘psychological-warfare’ embedded in Trump’s
emotional ejaculations on ‘Twitter’.
The ‘Mattis
Doctrine’ combined high-risk threats with
aggressive provocations, bringing the US (and the
world) to the brink of nuclear war.
General Mattis
has adopted the targets and fields of operations,
defined by the previous Obama administration as it
has sought to re-enforce the existing imperialist
international order.
The junta’s
policies relied on provocations and threats against
Russia, with expanded economic sanctions. Mattis
threw more fuel on the US mass media’s already
hysterical anti-Russian bonfire. The General
promoted a strategy of low intensity diplomatic
thuggery, including the unprecedented seizure
and invasion of Russian diplomatic offices and the
short-notice expulsion of diplomats and consular
staff.
These military
threats and acts of diplomatic intimidation
signified that the Generals’ Administration under
the Puppet President Trump was ready to sunder
diplomatic relations with a major world nuclear
power and indeed push the world to direct nuclear
confrontation.
What Mattis
seeks in these mad fits of aggression is nothing
less than capitulation on the part of the Russian
government regarding long held US military
objectives – namely the partition of Syria (which
started under Obama), harsh starvation sanctions on
North Korea (which began under Clinton) and the
disarmament of Iran (Tel Aviv’s main goal) in
preparation for its dismemberment.
The Mattis
junta occupying the Trump White House heightened its
threats against a North Korea, which (in
Vladimir Putin’s
words) ‘would rather eat grass than disarm’.
The US mass media-military megaphones portrayed the
North Korean victims of US sanctions and
provocations as an ‘existential’ threat to the US
mainland.
Sanctions have
intensified. The stationing of nuclear weapons on
South Korea is being pushed. Massive joint military
exercises are planned and ongoing in the air, sea
and land around North Korea. Mattis twisted Chinese
arms (mainly business comprador-linked bureaucrats)
and secured their UN Security Council vote on
increased sanctions. Russia joined the Mattis-led
anti-Pyongyang chorus, even as Putin warned of
sanctions ineffectiveness! (As if General ‘Mad
Dog’ Mattis would ever take Putin’s advice
seriously, especially after Russia voted for the
sanctions!)
Mattis further
militarized the Persian Gulf, following Obama’s
policy of partial sanctions and bellicose
provocation against Iran.
When he worked
for Obama, Mattis increased US arms shipments to the
US’s Syrian terrorists and Ukrainian puppets,
ensuring the US would be able to scuttle any ‘negotiated
settlements’.
Militarization: An Evaluation
Trump’s resort
to ‘his Generals’ is supposed to counter any
attacks from members of his own party and
Congressional Democrats about his foreign policy.
Trump’s appointment of ‘Mad Dog’ Mattis, a
notorious Russophobe and warmonger, has somewhat
pacified the opposition in Congress and undercut any
‘finding’ of an election conspiracy between Trump
and Moscow dug up by the
Special
Investigator Robert Mueller. Trump’s
maintains a role as nominal President by adapting to
what Obama warned him was ‘their international
order’ – now directed by an unelected military
junta composed of Obama holdovers!
The Generals
provide a veneer of legitimacy to the Trump regime
(especially for the warmongering Obama Democrats and
the mass media). However, handing presidential
powers over to ‘Mad Dog’ Mattis and his
cohort will come with a heavy price.
While the
military junta may protect Trump’s foreign policy
flank, it does not lessen the attacks on his
domestic agenda. Moreover, Trump’s proposed budget
compromise with the Democrats has enraged his own
Party’s leaders.
In sum, under
a weakened President Trump, the militarization of
the White House benefits the military junta and
enlarges their power. The ‘Mad Dog’ Mattis
program has had mixed results, at least in its
initial phase: The junta’s threats to launch a
pre-emptive (possibly nuclear) war against North
Korea have strengthened Pyongyang’s commitment to
develop and refine its long and medium range
ballistic missile capability and nuclear weapons.
Brinksmanship failed to intimidate North Korea.
Mattis cannot impose the Clinton-Bush-Obama doctrine
of disarming countries (like Libya and Iraq) of
their advanced defensive weapons systems as a
prelude to a US ‘regime change’ invasion.
Any US attack
against North Korea will lead to massive retaliatory
strikes costing tens of thousands of US military
lives and will kill and maim millions of civilians
in South Korea and Japan.
At most, ‘Mad
Dog’ managed to intimidate Chinese and Russian
officials (and their export business billionaire
buddies) to agree to more economic sanctions against
North Korea. Mattis and his allies in the UN and
White House, the loony
Nikki Haley and a miniaturized President
Trump, may bellow war – yet they cannot apply the
so-called ‘military option’ without threatening the
US military forces stationed throughout the Asia
Pacific region.
The Mad Dog Mattis
assault on the Russian embassy did
not materially weaken Russia, but it has revealed
the uselessness of Moscow’s conciliatory diplomacy
toward their so-called ‘partners’ in the Trump
regime.
The end-result
might lead to a formal break in diplomatic ties,
which would increase the danger of a military
confrontation and a global nuclear holocaust.
The military
junta is pressuring China against North Korea with
the goal of isolating the ruling regime in Pyongyang
and increasing the US military encirclement of
Beijing. Mad Dog has partially succeeded in
turning China against North Korea while securing its
advanced THAAD anti-missile installations in South
Korea, which will be directed against Beijing. These
are Mattis’ short-term gains over the excessively
pliant Chinese bureaucrats. However, if Mad Dog intensifies
direct military threats against China, Beijing can
retaliate by dumping tens of billions of US Treasury
notes, cutting trade ties, sowing chaos in the US
economy and setting Wall Street against the
Pentagon.
Mad
Dog’s military build-up,
especially in Afghanistan and in the Middle East,
will not intimidate Iran nor add to any military
successes. They entail high costs and low returns,
as Obama realized after the better part of a decade
of his defeats, fiascos and multi-billion dollar
losses.
Conclusion
The
militarization of US foreign policy, the
establishment of a military junta within the Trump
Administration, and the resort to nuclear
brinksmanship has not changed the global balance of
power.
Domestically
Trump’s nominal Presidency relies on militarists,
like General Mattis. Mattis has tightened the US
control over NATO allies, and even rounded up stray
European outliers, like Sweden, to join in a
military crusade against Russia. Mattis has played
on the media’s passion for bellicose headlines and
its adulation of Four Star Generals.
But for all
that – North Korea remains undaunted because it can
retaliate. Russia has thousands of nuclear weapons
and remains a counterweight to a US-dominated globe.
China owns the US Treasury and its unimpressed,
despite the presence of an increasingly
collision-prone US Navy swarming throughout the
South China Sea.
Mad
Dog laps up the media
attention, with well dressed, scrupulously manicured
journalists hanging on his every bloodthirsty
pronouncement. War contractors flock to him, like
flies to carrion. The Four Star General ‘Mad Dog’ Mattis
has attained Presidential status without winning any
election victory (fake or otherwise). No doubt when
he steps down, Mattis will be the most eagerly
courted board member or senior consultant for giant
military contractors in US history, receiving
lucrative fees for half hour ‘pep-talks’ and
ensuring the fat perks of nepotism for his family’s
next three generations. Mad Dog may even run
for office, as Senator or even President for
whatever Party.
The
militarization of US foreign policy provides some
important lessons:
First of all,
the escalation from threats to war does not succeed
in disarming adversaries who possess the capacity to
retaliate. Intimidation via sanctions can succeed in
imposing significant economic pain on oil
export-dependent regimes, but not on hardened,
self-sufficient or highly diversified economies.
Low intensity
multi-lateral war maneuvers reinforce US-led
alliances, but they also convince opponents to
increase their military preparedness. Mid-level
intense wars against non-nuclear adversaries can
seize capital cities, as in Iraq, but the occupier
faces long-term costly wars of attrition that can
undermine military morale, provoke domestic unrest
and heighten budget deficits. And they create
millions of refugees.
High intensity
military brinksmanship carries major risk of massive
losses in lives, allies, territory and piles of
radiated ashes – a pyrrhic victory!
In sum:
Threats and
intimidation succeed only against conciliatory
adversaries. Undiplomatic verbal thuggery can arouse
the spirit of the bully and some of its allies, but
it has little chance of convincing its adversaries
to capitulate. The US policy of worldwide
militarization over-extends the US armed forces and
has not led to any permanent military gains.
Are there any
voices among clear-thinking US military leaders,
those not bedazzled by their stars and idiotic
admirers in the US media, who could push for more
global accommodation and mutual respect among
nations? The US Congress and the corrupt media are
demonstrably incapable of evaluating past disasters,
let alone forging an effective response to new
global realities.
James
Petras is a Bartle Professor (Emeritus) of Sociology
at Binghamton University, New York.
http://petras.lahaine.org
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