General Milley’s Imaginary Coup
The soldier's irrational fear of President
Trump inspired him to defy his duly elected
commander-in-chief.
By Peter Van Buren
August 02, 2021"Information
Clearing House" -
"The
American Conservative"
-- We need to
clear some things up before they get any
further out of hand, as the Dems insist on
making this stuff every day’s front page.
For starters, stop saying “Reichstag
moment.” And when Grandpa Simpson and Kamala
“Silent Shadow” Harris tottered into the
White House, they became president. Between
the two of them they’ll get their four
years. Done.
Some 500
protesters taking selfies inside the Capitol
building is a tantrum, not a
coup. Among
other things, a coup must have some path
towards success, in this case, preventing
Joe Biden from becoming president. The
rioters at best might have delayed the
largely
ceremonial
counting of the Electoral College votes
until the next day. Done.
Not done. The
latest addition to Coup Canon comes from
then—and somehow still—Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs General Mark Milley. Milley was so
shaken Trump
might attempt a coup or take other illegal
measures after the election that he and
other top officials
planned to stop
Trump. Neither Milley nor any of the others
actually spell out what Trump might have
realistically done in some
Calvinball-like
way to make said coup happen. Milley’s
Strangelovian performance art is based on
nothing but the spittle running down his
chin. American soldiers have been
required to refuse illegal orders at
least since Biden wore diapers, so Milley’s
histrionics are just that.
No Advertising - No Government Grants - This Is
Independent Media
Milley
nonetheless felt “growing concern” after
Trump placed “loyalists” in positions of
power after the November 2020 election,
replacing Defense Secretary Mark Esper and
Attorney General William Barr. He feared,
based on his own sizable gut, these moves
“were the sign of something sinister to
come” (Update: Nothing sinister came.)
Milley failed to recognize that all
presidential appointees are “loyalists” and
that somehow Trump did not replace Milley
himself, who clearly had not read his oath
recently, especially the part about taking
orders from the civilian head of government.
In fact, if
anyone is a threat to democracy it is
nutjobs like Milley, who feel free to weave
in and out of answering to the commander in
chief based on their personal
“concerns.” The general’s tough love for the
Constitution apparently did not include the
right to assemble, as he
referred to a
pro-Trump march protesting election results
as “the modern American equivalent of
brownshirts in the streets.”
While Milley
was rewriting 230 years of military prudence
in late 2020, Paul Krugman from the New
York Times bunker
wrote there were
“substantial odds America as we know it will
be damaged or even destroyed” by the
election (Update: it was not.) He told us to
“expect violence from Trump supporters,
maybe lots of it, both to disrupt voting on
Election Day and in the days that follow”
until Trump “stops counting of absentee
ballots, claims massive fraud, and probably
tries to get the Supreme Court to overturn
the result.” (Update: none of that
happened.)
Over at the Nation
they simply
assumed Trump
would illegally remain in power. The
writer’s real concern was that at least “we
have the moral high ground. But we don’t
have, frankly, the military leadership in
place to direct a guerrilla campaign against
an illegitimate regime. We don’t have a
government-in-exile waiting to take power.
We don’t have international allies. We don’t
have an underground network of spies and
saboteurs. . . but we can lay our bodies
down in front of the tanks.” Any hope for
the rule of law? Nope. “The Supreme Court
too is, fundamentally, an anti-democratic
institution run by people who are not
subject to the popular will of our diverse
society.”
The Nation
should not have worried about having to go
Red Dawn unarmed. General Milley
said, “They may
try [a coup] but they’re not going to
f**king succeed. You can’t do this without
the military. You can’t do this without the
CIA and the FBI. We’re the guys with the
guns.” An interesting take on where power
lies in a nation whose founding document
begins with “We the People.”
Milley’s real
plan was to prevent Trump from using the
military in a coup by using the military in
a coup against civilian leadership to gun
down American citizens. CNN
reports that
after January 6 Milley feared an attack on
the presidential inauguration, telling
senior military leaders: “Here’s the deal,
guys: These guys are Nazis, they’re Boogaloo
Boys, they’re Proud Boys. These are the same
people we fought in World War II. We’re
going to put a ring of steel around this
city and the Nazis aren’t getting in.”
But Milley is
also a
liar, claiming
publicly at the same time, “I foresee no
role for the U.S. armed forces in this
election process. We will not turn our backs
on the Constitution of the United States,”
while planning his Ring of Steel (it sounds
better in the original German, Ring aus
Stahl.)
And so on to
the Reichstag. With as little knowledge of
history as they have of coups, the
mainstream media have turned the Reichstag
fire into shorthand for everything they fear
Trump would do but somehow never did. The
1933 Reichstag fire was a false-flag arson
attack on the home of the German parliament
in Berlin. The Nazi Party used this as a
pretext to claim communists were ready to
overthrow the elected government.
Left out of
the current misuse of the incident is the
fact Hitler had already become chancellor
before the fire. More importantly, missing
when trying to connect 1933 to modern
America, is any amount of context. Hitler
had already achieved power on promises to
conquer the world, implement the Final
Solution, and all sorts of other Mein
Kampf stuff. He had announced plans to
abolish democracy via the Enabling Act,
which gave him power to pass laws by decree
without the involvement of parliament. That
next step needed an excuse, a trigger, to
crack down on his opposition—not a prime
mover to seize power.
Unlike modern
America, the Germany around Hitler had had
only a few years’ taste of a wimpy
democracy, and a long history of autocracy.
No matter how dramatically someone wants to
portray Trump’s non-actions, none of what
never happened came within miles of what the
real Nazis did.
So if there
was no coup on January 6, and no possible
road to a coup, why are we still talking
about all this? We should be mocking, not
raising up, those who have no basic
understanding of current events, never mind
history.
But we are
still talking about all this (with Nancy
Pelosi’s stacked-deck “investigation”
grinding along) because the Biden agenda is
stalled. He has
decreed a few
things to un-decree a few things Trump
decreed, but is unlikely to make much
progress on all those promises of
infrastructure, immigration reform, or
student loans. Inflation is at a 13 year
high even as gas prices eat away at what’s
left of our middle class. There is no vision
to end the Covid-19 panic. The social
justice and culture war issues which
dominate the Democrats’ minds seem ever more
flaccid. So what do Democrats have left to
run on?
Trump. The
Democratic message for the midterms and
beyond is Trump, coups, January 6, white
supremacy, racism-a-go-go, militias,
domestic terrorism, a veritable Nazi
renaissance. As one progressive journalist
put it “The
Capitol riot Committee… is a potent
political weapon. Democrats have a massive
opportunity: Shove it down the GOP’s
throat.” A New York Times reporter
called Trump and
his 74 million supporters “enemies of the
state.”
Why not? Dems
have little else but fear of things that
never happened to work with, and so they
hope to milk the “we’re not Trump” cow one
more time. They amplify voices that have
been wrong in the past and make heroes of
those who would replace the Constitution
with their own judgment.
As for a real
threat to democracy: It is General Milley
preparing to disobey the Constitution and
take a patriot-sized dump on his chain of
command; it is progressive rag the Nation
telling their readers they will fight a
guerrilla war against other Americans, and
that the Supreme Court, the third branch of
our republican government, is an
illegitimate, antidemocratic institution.
Who again is the threat? Trump is out of
office, but Milley still holds command of
the entire U.S. military.
Peter Van
Buren is the author of We
Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for
the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People, Hooper’s
War: A Novel of WWII Japan, and Ghosts
of Tom Joad: A Story of the 99 Percent.