Killing Me Softly With Militarism: The Decay Of
Democracy In America
By William J. Astore
October 31, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -When
Americans think of militarism,
they may imagine jackbooted soldiers goose-stepping
through the streets as flag-waving crowds exult; or,
like our
president, they may think of enormous parades
featuring troops and missiles and tanks, with
warplanes soaring overhead. Or nationalist dictators
wearing military uniforms encrusted
with medals, ribbons, and badges like so many
barnacles on a sinking ship of state. (Was Donald
Trump only
joking recently when he said he’d like to award
himself a Medal of Honor?) And what they may also
think is: that’s not us. That’s not America. After
all, Lady Liberty used to welcome newcomers with a
torch, not an AR-15.
We don’t wall
ourselves in while bombing
others in distant parts of the world, right?
But militarism is
more than thuggish dictators, predatory weaponry,
and steely-eyed troops. There are softer forms of it
that are no less significant than the “hard” ones.
In fact, in a self-avowed democracy like the United
States, such softer forms are often more effective
because they seem so much less insidious, so much
less dangerous. Even in the heartland of Trump’s
famed base, most Americans continue
to reject nakedly bellicose displays like
phalanxes of tanks rolling down Pennsylvania Avenue.
But who can object to celebrating “hometown
heroes” in uniform, as happens regularly at
sports events of every sort in twenty-first-century
America? Or polite and smiling military recruiters in
schools? Or gung-ho war movies like the latest
version of Midway, timed for Veterans Day
weekend 2019 and marking America’s 1942 naval
victory over Japan, when we were not only the good
guys but the underdogs?
What do I mean by softer forms of militarism? I’m
a football fan, so one recent Sunday afternoon found
me watching an NFL game on CBS. People deplore
violence in such games, and rightly so, given the
number of injuries among the players, notably
concussions that debilitate lives. But what about violent
commercials during the game? In that one
afternoon, I noted repetitive commercials for SEAL
Team, SWAT,
and FBI,
all CBS shows from this quietly militarized American
moment of ours. In other words, I was exposed to
lots of guns, explosions, fisticuffs, and the like,
but more than anything I was given glimpses of hard
men (and a woman or two) in uniform who have the
very answers we need and, like the Pentagon-supplied
police in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014, are armed
to the teeth. (“Models with guns,” my wife calls
them.)
Got a situation in Nowhere-stan? Send in the Navy
SEALs. Got a murderer on the loose? Send in the SWAT
team. With their superior weaponry and can-do
spirit, Special Forces of every sort are sure to win
the day (except, of course, when they don’t, as in
America’s current series of never-ending wars
in distant lands).
And it hardly ends with those three shows.
Consider, for example, this century’s update of Magnum
P.I., a CBS show featuring a kickass
private investigator. In the original Magnum
P.I. that I watched as a teenager, Tom
Selleck played the character with an easy charm.
Magnum’s military background in Vietnam was
acknowledged but not hyped. Unsurprisingly, today’s
Magnum is proudly billed as an ex-Navy SEAL.
Cop and military shows are nothing new on
American TV, but never have I seen so many of them,
new and old, and so well-armed. On CBS alone you can
add to the mix Hawaii
Five-O (yet more models with guns updated
and up-armed from my youthful years), the three NCIS (Naval
Criminal Investigative Service) shows, and Blue
Bloods (ironically starring a more grizzled
and less charming Tom Selleck) — and who knows what
I haven’t noticed? While today’s cop/military shows
feature far more diversity with respect to gender,
ethnicity, and race compared to hoary classics like Dragnet,
they also feature far more gunplay and other forms
of bloody violence.
Look, as a veteran, I have nothing against
realistic shows on the military. Coming from a
family of first responders — I count four
firefighters and two police officers in my immediate
family — I loved shows like Adam-12 and Emergency! in
my youth. What I’m against is the strange
militarization of everything, including, for
instance, the idea, distinctly of our moment, that
first responders need their very own version of the
American flag to mark their service. Perhaps you’ve
seen those thin
blue line flags, sometimes augmented with a red
line for firefighters. As a military veteran, my gut
tells me that there should only be one American flag
and it should be good enough for all Americans.
Think of the proliferation of flags as another soft
type of up-armoring (this time of patriotism).
Speaking of which, whatever happened to Dragnet’s
Sergeant Joe Friday, on the beat, serving his fellow
citizens, and pursuing law enforcement as a calling?
He didn’t need a thin blue line battle flag. And in
the rare times when he wielded a gun, it was .38
Special. Today’s version of Joe looks a lot more
like G.I. Joe, decked out in body armor and carrying
an assault rifle as he exits a tank-like vehicle,
maybe even a surplus
MRAP from America’s failed imperial
wars.
Militarism in the USA
Besides TV shows, movies, and commercials, there
are many signs of the increasing embrace of
militarized values and attitudes in this country.
The result: the acceptance of a military in places
where it shouldn’t
be, one that’s over-celebrated, over-hyped,
and given far
too much money and cultural authority, while
becoming virtually
immune to serious criticism.
Let me offer just nine signs of this that would
have been so much less conceivable when I was a
young boy watching reruns of Dragnet:
1. Roughly two-thirds of
the federal government’s discretionary budget for
2020 will, unbelievably enough, be devoted to the
Pentagon and related military functions, with each
year’s “defense” budget coming ever closer to a trillion
dollars. Such colossal sums are rarely debated
in Congress; indeed, they enjoy wide bipartisan
support.
2. The U.S. military remains the most
trusted institution in our society, so say 74%
of Americans surveyed in a Gallup poll. No other
institution even comes close, certainly not the
presidency (37%) or Congress (which recently rose to
a monumental 25% on
an impeachment high). Yet that same military has
produced disasters or quagmires in Afghanistan,
Iraq, Libya, Syria, Somalia, and elsewhere. Various
“surges” have repeatedly failed. The Pentagon itself
can’t even pass an
audit. Why so much trust?
3. A state of permanent war is considered
America’s new normal. Wars are now automatically
treated as multi-generational with little concern
for how permawar might
degrade our democracy. Anti-war protesters are rare
enough to be lone
voices crying in the wilderness.
4. America’s generals continue to be treated,
without the slightest irony, as “the adults in the
room.” Sages like former Secretary of Defense James
Mattis (cited
glowingly in the recent debate among 12
Democratic presidential hopefuls) will save
America from unskilled and tempestuous
politicians like one Donald J. Trump. In the 2016
presidential race, it seemed that neither candidate
could run without being endorsed by a screaming
general (Michael
Flynn for Trump; John
Allen for Clinton).
5. The media routinely embraces retired U.S.
military officers and uses them as talking
heads to explain and promote military action to
the American people. Simultaneously, when the
military goes to war, civilian journalists are
“embedded” within those forces and so are dependent
on them in every way. The result tends to be a
cheerleading media that supports the military in the
name of patriotism — as well as higher ratings and
corporate profits.
6. America’s foreign aid is increasingly military
aid. Consider, for instance, the current controversy
over the aid to Ukraine that President Trump blocked
before his infamous phone call, which was, of
course, partially
about weaponry. This should serve to remind us
that the United States has become the world’s
foremost merchant of death, selling far more
weapons globally than any other country. Again,
there is no real debate here about the morality of
profiting from such massive sales, whether abroad ($55.4
billion in arms sales for this fiscal year alone,
says the Defense Security Cooperation Agency) or at
home (a staggering 150 million new guns produced
in the USA since 1986, the vast majority remaining
in American hands).
7. In that context, consider the militarization
of the weaponry in those very hands, from .50
caliber sniper
rifles to various military-style assault rifles.
Roughly 15
million AR-15s are currently owned by ordinary
Americans. We’re talking about a gun designed for
battlefield-style rapid shooting and maximum damage
against humans. In the 1970s, when I was a teenager,
the hunters in my family had bolt-action rifles for
deer hunting, shotguns for birds, and pistols for
home defense and plinking. No one had a
military-style assault rifle because no one needed
one or even wanted one. Now, worried suburbanites
buy them, thinking they’re getting their “man
card” back by toting such a weapon of mass
destruction.
8. Paradoxically, even as Americans slaughter
each other and themselves in large numbers via mass
shootings and suicides (nearly 40,000 gun
deaths in 2017 alone), they largely ignore
Washington’s overseas wars and the continued
bombing of numerous countries. But ignorance is
not bliss. By tacitly giving the military a blank
check, issued in the name of securing the homeland,
Americans embrace that military, however loosely,
and its misuse of violence across significant parts
of the planet. Should it be any surprise that a
country that kills so wantonly overseas over such a
prolonged period would also experience mass
shootings and other forms of violence at home?
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
9. Even as Americans “support our
troops” and celebrate them as “heroes,”
the military itself has taken on a new “warrior
ethos” that would once — in the age
of a draft army — have been contrary to
this country’s citizen-soldier
tradition, especially as articulated
and exhibited by the “greatest
generation” during World War II.
What these nine items add up to is a paradigm
shift as well as a change in the zeitgeist. The U.S.
military is no longer a tool that a democracy funds
and uses reluctantly. It’s become an alleged force
for good, a virtuous entity, a band of brothers (and
sisters), America’s foremost missionaries overseas
and most lovable and admired heroes at home. This
embrace of the military is precisely what I would
call soft militarism. Jackbooted troops may not be
marching in our streets, but they increasingly seem
to be marching unopposed through — and occupying —
our minds.
The Decay of Democracy
As Americans embrace the military, less violent
policy options are downplayed or disregarded.
Consider the State Department, America’s diplomatic
corps, now a tiny,
increasingly defunded branch
of the Pentagon led by Mike Pompeo (celebrated by
Donald Trump as a tremendous leader because he did
well at West Point). Consider President Trump as
well, who’s been labeled an isolationist, and his stunning
inability to truly withdraw troops or end wars.
In Syria, U.S. troops were recently redeployed, not
withdrawn, not from the region anyway, even as more
troops are being sent to Saudi Arabia. In
Afghanistan, Trump sent a few thousand more troops
in 2017, his own modest version of a mini-surge and
they’re still there, even as peace negotiations with
the Taliban have been abandoned. That decision, in
turn, led to a new surge (a “near
record high”) in U.S. bombing in that country in
September, naturally in the name of advancing peace.
The result: yet higher levels of civilian
deaths.
How did the U.S. increasingly come to reject
diplomacy and democracy for militarism and
proto-autocracy? Partly, I think, because of the
absence of a military draft. Precisely because
military service is voluntary, it can be valorized.
It can be elevated as a calling that’s uniquely
heroic and sacrificial. Even though most troops are
drawn from the working class and volunteer for
diverse reasons, their motivations and their
imperfections can be ignored as politicians praise
them to the rooftops. Related to this is the
Rambo-like cult of the warrior and warrior
ethos, now celebrated as something desirable in
America. Such an ethos fits seamlessly with
America’s generational wars. Unlike conflicted
draftees, warriors exist solely to wage war. They
are less likely to have the questioning attitude of
the citizen-soldier.
Don’t get me wrong: reviving the draft isn’t the
solution; reviving democracy is. We need the active
involvement of informed citizens, especially
resistance to endless
wars and budget-busting
spending on American weapons of mass
destruction. The true cost of our previously soft
(now possibly hardening) militarism isn’t seen only
in this country’s quickening march toward a
militarized authoritarianism. It can also be
measured in the dead and wounded from our wars,
including the dead,
wounded, and displaced in
distant lands. It can be seen as well in the rise of
increasingly well-armed, self-avowed nationalists
domestically who promise solutions via walls and
weapons and “good guys” with guns. (“Shoot them in
the legs,” Trump is alleged to
have said about immigrants crossing America’s
southern border illegally.)
Democracy shouldn’t be about celebrating
overlords in uniform. A now-widely accepted belief
is that America is more divided, more partisan than
ever, approaching perhaps a new civil
war, as echoed in the rhetoric of our current
president. Small wonder that inflammatory rhetoric
is thriving and the list of this country’s enemies
lengthening when Americans themselves have so softly
yet fervently embraced militarism.
With apologies to the great Roberta
Flack, America is killing itself softly with war
songs.
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