The
Killer-in-Chief
By Tom Engelhardt
April 30, 2020
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Clearing House"
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“Be assured of one thing:
whichever candidate you choose at the polls in November,
you aren’t just electing a president of the United
States; you are also electing an assassin-in-chief.” So
I
wrote back in June
2012, with a presidential election approaching.
I was
referring then to the war on terror’s CIA and military
drone assassination programs, which first revved up in
parts of the Greater Middle East in the years of George
W. Bush’s presidency and only spread thereafter. In the
process, such “targeted killings” became, as I wrote at
the time, “thoroughly institutionalized, normalized, and
bureaucratized around the figure of the president.” In
Barack Obama’s years in the Oval Office, they were
ramped up further as he joined White House “Terror
Tuesday” meetings to
choose individual targets for those attacks. They often
enough turned out to
involve “collateral
damage”; that is, the deaths of innocent civilians,
including children. In
other words, “commander-in-chief” had, by then, gained a
deadly new meaning, as the president personally took on
the role of a global assassin.
I had
little doubt eight years ago that this wouldn't end soon
-- and on that I wasn’t wrong. Admittedly, our present
commander-in-chief probably doesn’t have the time (given
how much of his day he's spent
watching Fox News,
tweeting his
millions of followers,
and,
until recently,
holding two hour
press-briefings-cum-election-rallies on the coronavirus
pandemic) or the attention span for “Terror Tuesday”
meetings. Still, in his own memorable fashion, he’s
managed to make himself America’s assassin-in-chief par
excellence.
After
all, not only have those drone programs continued to
target people in distant lands (including
innocent civilians),
but they have yet again been
ramped up in the Trump
years. Meanwhile, still in our pre-Covid-19 American
world, President Trump embraced the role of
assassin-in-chief in a newly public, deeply enthusiastic
way. Previously, such drones had killed non-state
actors, but he
openly ordered the
drone assassination of Major General Qassim Suleimani,
the top military figure and number-two man in Iran, as
he left Baghdad International Airport for a meeting with
the prime minister of Iraq.
Of
course, for American presidents such a role was not
unknown even before the development of
Hellfire-missile-armed drones. Think of John F. Kennedy
and the CIA’s (failed) attempts on the life of Cuban
leader
Fidel Castro or the
successful killings of Congolese leader
Patrice Lumumba, South
Vietnamese leader Ngo Dinh Diem, and Dominican Republic
head
Rafael Trujillo. Or,
for a change of pace, consider the Vietnam War-era CIA
assassination campaign known as the
Phoenix Program in
which tens of thousands of supposed “Vietcong”
supporters (often enough, civilians swept up in the
murderous chaos of the moment) were murdered in that
country, a program that was no secret to President
Lyndon Johnson.
And it’s
true as well that, in this century, our
commanders-in-chief have overseen endless conflicts in
distant lands from Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria to
Yemen, Somalia, Niger, and beyond, none of them
congressionally declared wars. As a result, they had the
ultimate responsibility for the deaths of, at a minimum,
tens of thousands of
civilians, as well as for the uprooting of millions of
their compatriots from settled lives and their flight,
as desperate refugees, across significant parts of the
planet. It’s a grim record of death and destruction.
Until recently, however, it remained a matter of distant
deaths, not much noted here.
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A New
Kind of Drone War on the Pandemic Front
However, the
assassin-in-chief may now be coming home, big time, in
the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. Little did I
imagine that, by 2020, an American president without a
lick of empathy for other human beings, even Americans
who loved him to death (so to speak), would be targeting
not just civilians here in “the homeland” (as it came to
become known after the 9/11 attacks), but his most
fervent followers. In the age of Donald Trump, the
assassin-in-chief now seems to be in the process of
transforming himself into a domestic killer-in-chief.
That
reality -- at least for me -- came into focus only
recently. True, until then, even beyond those drone
strikes, American presidents have had the ultimate
responsibility for the deaths of startling numbers of
civilians in faraway lands where the U.S. military has
been making war (remarkably fruitlessly) for almost 19
years. The devastating use of American air power
generally has only increased during the Trump years in,
for instance, both
Afghanistan and
Somalia, where U.S. airstrikes have hit new levels of
destructiveness, as Nick Turse
reported recently at
the Intercept -- more of them in the first four
pandemic months of 2020 than in all of the Obama years
combined.
Still,
historically speaking, killing Afghans or Iraqis or
Syrians or Yemenis or Somalis has always been one thing,
but Americans? That’s another story entirely, no?
As it
happens, the answer is indeed no, not in 2020, and once
again, in a sense, air power is at the heart of the
matter. In this case, though, we’re talking about the
spread of Covid-19, in part through
respiratory droplets
(think of them as microscopic Hellfire missiles). In
that new air-powered context, with the equivalent of a
drone virus in the hands of one Donald J. Trump, the
president is bringing the role of assassin-in-chief
home. He is, in fact, in the process of becoming a
killer-in-chief for his very own base -- anyone, that
is, who listens to what he says and believes fervently
in him.
Set aside for a moment
the deaths he’s undoubtedly responsible for because of,
as Juan Cole
put it recently at his
Informed Comment website, “those two months he
pissed away calling [Covid-19] a hoax and setting up the
country for Vietnam War-level death tolls.” Put aside as
well his repeated and dangerous
medical advice to find
and take
anti-malarial drugs.
Put aside as well his suggestion that perhaps people
fearing they have the coronavirus should try to inject
or internally take disinfectants (which, a recent study
showed, do kill that virus on surfaces and in the air),
an act medical experts assure us could
result in death.
Think of each
of those potential death sentences for his most fervent
believers as a striking combination of grotesque
ignorance and narcissism. But what about an actual
decision, as commander-in-chief and president, to kill
off members of his base?
Until a
couple of weeks ago, that would have been harder to
imagine -- until, that is, President Trump noticed the
first demonstrations against state shutdowns focused on
preventing the deadly Covid-19 virus from spreading.
Those protests against “stay-at-home” orders, organized
or encouraged by what the New York Times
describes as “an
informal coalition of influential conservative leaders
and groups, some with close connections to the White
House,” have continued to bring out demonstrators in
Trump-election-like rallies by the dozens, hundreds, or
even (in a few cases) thousands.
Often,
the demonstrators are not wearing the very masks that
the president has
recommended for other
people (but not himself); nor are they keeping the
social distance he has also officially backed (but
continues to find it
impossible to keep).
They sport
bizarre signs (“Don’t
cancel my golf season,” “My body/my choice, Trump 2020”
[with an image of a face mask crossed out], “Give me
liberty or give me Covid-19,” “We demand haircuts”),
carry American flags and occasional
Confederate ones, and
are sometimes armed to the teeth (not exactly
surprising, given that the protests have been
supported by
conservative
pro-gun or armed
militia groups).
The
Donald was clearly pleased with the earliest of those
demonstrations, being so eager himself to “reopen”
America and “the
greatest economy in the
history of our country” (then headed for the pandemic
subbasement). It mattered little that, despite the grim
pressures of the moment,
polling showed
significant numbers of Americans, including Republicans,
preferred to keep the U.S. largely shut down for now. In
response, he
tweeted: “LIBERATE
MINNESOTA,” “LIBERATE MICHIGAN,” and then “LIBERATE
VIRGINIA, and save your great 2nd Amendment. It is under
siege!” All were states run by Democratic governors. And
his focus on supporting such demonstrations quickly got
the media’s attention, as they began to spread
elsewhere.
At one of
his nightly coronavirus briefings, the president then
said this of the
demonstrators: “These are people expressing their views.
I see where they are and I see the way they’re working.
They seem to be very responsible people to me, but
they’ve been treated a little bit rough.”
With his
future election campaign undoubtedly in his sightlines
and his base in the forefront of his brain, he then
began to encourage more of the same from both protesters
and governors -- and the Republican governor of Georgia
broke the ice, so to
speak, by attempting to reopen everything down to nail
salons and movie theaters (something even the president
would
later criticize), while
the Republican governor of Florida
reopened
that state’s beaches.
Targeting His Base
Now,
here’s the obvious thing in this pandemic moment: if
you’re the president of the United States (no less the
governor of Georgia, Florida, or other Republican
administrations or
legislatures in a hurry
to reopen the country), you’re encouraging people to
sicken and die. To support citizens turning out to
protest without either protection or any sense of social
distancing is to support people potentially giving each
other Covid-19, a disease which clearly spreads best in
close quarters like
nursing homes,
prisons, crowded
housing of any sort, or assumedly protests of this very
kind. As one epidemiologist
put it in response to a
gathering of perhaps 2,500 protesters in Seattle,
Washington, “I predict a new epidemic surge (incubation
time -- 5-7 days before onset [of] symptoms, if any, and
transmission to associates around that time, even among
asymptomatics)... so increase in 2-4 weeks from now.”
At this
point, in a country leading the world by a long shot in
known cases of, and deaths from, Covid-19, none of this
should exactly be rocket science. It’s beyond obvious
that if you encourage such demonstrations, you’re
increasing the odds that the protesters will both catch
and pass on a disease that’s already killed
60,000 Americans, more
than U.S.
fatalities from 20
years of war in Vietnam.
And that, of
course, makes the president of the United States a
killer, too. Or thought of another way, the
assassin-in-chief in distant lands has just transformed
himself into an assassin-in-chief right here at home, a
man who might as well have fired Hellfire missiles into
such crowds or put a gun to the head of some of those
protesters and their wives or husbands or lovers or
parents or children (to whom the disease will
undoubtedly be spread once they go home) and pulled the
trigger.
The act of
encouraging members of his base to court death is
clearly that of a man without an ounce of empathy, even
for those who love and admire him most -- and so of a
stone-cold killer. You couldn’t ask for more proof that
the only sense of empathy he has lies overwhelmingly in
his deep and abiding pity for himself (which matches his
staggering sense of self-aggrandizement) and perhaps for
his children, other billionaires, and fossil-fuel
executives. Them, he would save; the rest of us, his
base included, are expendable. He’d sacrifice any of us
without a second thought if he imagined that it would
benefit him or his reelection in any way.
But there’s no
point in leaving it at that. After all, as he pushes for
a too-swiftly reopened country, he’s declaring open
season on Americans of all sorts. And every one of us
who will die too soon should be considered another
Covidfire missile death and chalked up to a president
who, by the time this is over, will truly have given a
new meaning to the phrase assassin-in-chief.
You could
say, I suppose, that he’s just been putting his stamp of
approval on the recent statement of Texas Lieutenant
Governor Dan Patrick, another politician in a rush to
reopen his state not to business, but to the business of
pandemics. Patrick classically summed up the president’s
position (and those of the protesters as well) in
this fashion: “there
are more important things than living.” Indeed, how
true, though not, of course, for Donald Trump, or the
Trump Organization, or
that hotel of his in
Washington, or his other presently sinking properties,
or for his reelection in November 2020.
As for the rest
of us, in Covid-19 America, we are all now potential
Suleimanis.
Tom
Engelhardt is a co-founder of the
American Empire Project
and the author of a history of the Cold War,
The End of Victory Culture.
He runs
TomDispatch.com and
is a fellow of the Type Media Center. His sixth and
latest book is
A Nation Unmade by War.
Follow
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and Tom Engelhardt's
A Nation Unmade by War,
as well as Alfred McCoy's
In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and
Decline of U.S. Global Power
and John Dower's
The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World
War II.
Copyright 2020
Tom Engelhardt
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