The War to Start All Wars
The 25th Anniversary of the Forgotten
Invasion of Panama
By Greg Grandin
December 23, 2014 "ICH"
- "Tomdispatch"
- As we end another year of endless war in
Washington, it might be the perfect time to
reflect on the War That Started All Wars --
or at least the war that started all of
Washington’s post-Cold War wars: the
invasion of Panama.
Twenty-five years ago this
month, early on the morning of December 20,
1989, President George H.W. Bush launched
Operation Just Cause, sending tens of
thousands of troops and hundreds of aircraft
into Panama to execute a warrant of arrest
against its leader, Manuel Noriega, on
charges of drug trafficking. Those troops
quickly secured all important strategic
installations, including the main airport in
Panama City, various military bases, and
ports. Noriega went into hiding before
surrendering on January 3rd and was then
officially extradited to the United States
to stand trial. Soon after, most of the U.S.
invaders withdrew from the country.
In and out. Fast and
simple. An entrance plan and an exit
strategy all wrapped in one. And it worked,
making Operation Just Cause one of the most
successful military actions in U.S. history.
At least in tactical terms.
There were casualties.
More than 20 U.S. soldiers were killed and
300-500 Panamanian combatants died as well.
Disagreement exists over how many civilians
perished. Washington claimed that few died.
In the “low
hundreds,” the Pentagon’s Southern
Command
said. But others charged that U.S.
officials didn’t bother to count the dead in
El Chorrillo, a poor Panama City
barrio that U.S. planes
indiscriminately bombed because it was
thought to be a bastion of support for
Noriega. Grassroots human-rights
organizations
claimed thousands of civilians were
killed and tens of thousands displaced.
As Human Rights Watch
wrote, even conservative estimates of
civilian fatalities suggested “that the rule
of proportionality and the duty to minimize
harm to civilians… were not faithfully
observed by the invading U.S. forces.” That
may have been putting it mildly when it came
to the indiscriminant bombing of a civilian
population, but the point at least was made.
Civilians were given no notice. The Cobra
and Apache helicopters that came over the
ridge didn’t bother to announce their
pending arrival by blasting Wagner’s "Ride
of the Valkyries" (as in Apocalypse Now).
The University of Panama’s seismograph
marked 442 major explosions in the first
12 hours of the invasion, about one major
bomb blast every two minutes. Fires engulfed
the mostly wooden homes, destroying about
4,000 residences. Some residents began to
call El Chorrillo “Guernica” or “little
Hiroshima.” Shortly after hostilities ended,
bulldozers excavated mass graves and
shoveled in the bodies. “Buried like dogs,”
said the mother of one of the civilian
dead.
Sandwiched between the
fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989,
and the commencement of the first Gulf War
on January 17, 1991, Operation Just Cause
might seem a curio from a nearly forgotten
era, its anniversary hardly worth a mention.
So many earth-shattering events have
happened since. But the invasion of Panama
should be remembered in a big way. After
all, it helps explain many of those events.
In fact, you can’t begin to fully grasp the
slippery slope of American militarism in the
post-9/11 era -- how unilateral, preemptory
“regime change” became an acceptable foreign
policy option, how “democracy promotion”
became a staple of defense strategy, and how
war became a branded public spectacle --
without understanding Panama.
Our Man in Panama
Operation Just Cause was
carried out unilaterally,
sanctioned neither by the United Nations
nor the Organization of American States
(OAS). In addition, the invasion was the
first post-Cold War military operation
justified in the name of democracy --
“militant democracy,” as George Will
approvingly
called what the Pentagon would
unilaterally install in Panama.
The campaign to capture
Noriega, however, didn’t start with such
grand ambitions. For years, as Saddam
Hussein had been Washington’s man in Iraq,
so Noriega was a CIA asset and Washington
ally in Panama. He was a key player in the
shadowy
network of anti-communists, tyrants, and
drug runners that made up what would
become
Iran-Contra. That, in case you’ve
forgotten, was a conspiracy involving
President Ronald Reagan’s National Security
Council to
sell high-tech missiles to the
Ayatollahs in Iran and then divert their
payments to support anti-communist rebels in
Nicaragua in order to destabilize the
Sandinista government there. Noriega’s
usefulness to Washington came to an end in
1986, after journalist Seymour Hersh
published an investigation in the
New York Times linking him to drug
trafficking. It turned out that the
Panamanian autocrat had been working both
sides. He was “our
man,” but apparently was also passing on
intelligence about us to Cuba.
Still, when George H.W.
Bush was inaugurated president in January
1989, Panama was not high on his foreign
policy agenda. Referring to the process by
which Noriega, in less than a year, would
become America’s most wanted autocrat,
Bush’s National Security Advisor Brent
Scowcroft
said: “I can’t really describe the
course of events that led us this way...
Noriega, was he running drugs and stuff?
Sure, but so were a lot of other people. Was
he thumbing his nose at the United States?
Yeah, yeah.”
The Keystone
Kops...
Domestic politics provided
the tipping point to military action. For
most of 1989, Bush administration officials
had been half-heartedly calling for a coup
against Noriega. Still, they were caught
completely caught off guard when, in
October, just such a coup started unfolding.
The White House was, at that moment,
remarkably in the dark. It had no clear
intel about what was actually happening.
''All of us agreed at that point that we
simply had very little to go on,'' Secretary
of Defense Dick Cheney later
reported. “There was a lot of confusion
at the time because there was a lot of
confusion in Panama.''
“We were sort of the
Keystone Kops,” was the way Scowcroft
remembered it, not knowing what to do or
whom to support. When Noriega regained the
upper hand, Bush came under intense
criticism in Congress and the media. This,
in turn, spurred him to act. Scowcroft
recalls the momentum that led to the
invasion: “Maybe we were looking for an
opportunity to show that we were not as
messed up as the Congress kept saying we
were, or as timid as a number of people
said.” The administration had to find a way
to respond, as Scowcroft put it, to the
“whole wimp factor.”
Momentum built for action,
and so did the pressure to find a suitable
justification for action after the fact.
Shortly after the failed coup,
Cheney claimed on PBS’s Newshour
that the only objectives the U.S. had in
Panama were to “safeguard American lives”
and “protect American interests” by
defending that crucial passageway from the
Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans, the Panama
Canal. “We are not there,” he emphasized,
“to remake the Panamanian government.” He
also noted that the White House had no plans
to act unilaterally against the wishes of
the Organization of American States to
extract Noriega from the country. The “hue
and cry and the outrage that we would hear
from one end of the hemisphere to the
other,” he said, “…raises serious doubts
about the course of that action.”
That was mid-October. What
a difference two months would make. By
December 20th, the campaign against Noriega
had gone from accidental -- Keystone Kops
bumbling in the dark -- to transformative:
the Bush administration would end up
remaking the Panamanian government and, in
the process, international law.
...Start a Wild
Fire
Cheney wasn’t wrong about
the “hue and cry.” Every single
country other than the United States in the
Organization of American States voted
against the invasion of Panama, but by then
it couldn’t have mattered less. Bush acted
anyway.
What changed everything
was the fall of the Berlin Wall just over a
month before the invasion. Paradoxically, as
the Soviet Union’s influence in its
backyard (eastern Europe) unraveled, it left
Washington with more room to maneuver in its
backyard (Latin America). The collapse of
Soviet-style Communism also gave the White
House an opportunity to go on the
ideological and moral offense. And at that
moment, the invasion of Panama happened to
stand at the head of the line.
As with most military
actions, the invaders had a number of
justifications to offer, but at that moment
the goal of installing a “democratic” regime
in power suddenly flipped to the top of the
list. In adopting that rationale for making
war, Washington was in effect radically
revising the terms of international
diplomacy. At the heart of its argument was
the idea that democracy (as defined by the
Bush administration) trumped the principle
of national sovereignty.
Latin American nations
immediately recognized the threat. After
all,
according to historian John Coatsworth,
the U.S. overthrew 41 governments in Latin
America between 1898 and 1994, and many of
those regime changes were ostensibly carried
out, as Woodrow Wilson once put it in
reference to Mexico, to teach Latin
Americans “to elect good men.” Their
resistance only gave Bush’s ambassador to
the OAS, Luigi Einaudi, a chance to up the
ethical ante. He quickly and explicitly tied
the assault on Panama to the wave of
democracy movements then sweeping Eastern
Europe. “Today we are... living in historic
times,” he
lectured his fellow OAS delegates, two
days after the invasion, “a time when a
great principle is spreading across the
world like wildfire. That principle, as we
all know, is the revolutionary idea that
people, not governments, are sovereign.”
Einaudi’s remarks hit on
all the points that would become so familiar
early in the next century in George W.
Bush’s “Freedom Agenda”: the idea that
democracy, as defined by Washington, was a
universal value; that “history” represented
a movement toward the fulfillment of that
value; and that any nation or person who
stood in the path of such fulfillment would
be swept away.
With the fall of the
Berlin Wall, Einaudi said, democracy had
acquired the “force of historical
necessity.” It went without saying that the
United States, within a year the official
victor in the Cold War and the “sole
superpower” left on Planet Earth, would be
the executor of that necessity. Bush’s
ambassador reminded his fellow delegates
that the “great democratic tide which is now
sweeping the globe” had actually started in
Latin America, with human rights movements
working to end abuses by military juntas and
dictators. The fact that Latin American’s
freedom fighters had largely been fighting
against U.S.-backed anti-communist rightwing
death-squad states was lost on the
ambassador.
In the case of Panama,
“democracy” quickly worked its way up the
shortlist of casus belli.
In his December 20th
address to the nation announcing the
invasion, President Bush gave “democracy” as
his second reason for going to war, just
behind safeguarding American lives but ahead
of combatting drug trafficking or protecting
the Panama Canal. By the next day, at a
press conference, democracy had leapt to the
top of the list and so the president
began his opening remarks this way: “Our
efforts to support the democratic processes
in Panama and to ensure continued safety of
American citizens is now moving into its
second day.”
George Will, the
conservative pundit, was quick to realize
the significance of this new post-Cold War
rationale for military action. In a
syndicated column headlined, “Drugs
and Canal Are Secondary: Restoring Democracy
Was Reason Enough to Act,” he praised
the invasion for “stressing… the restoration
of democracy,” adding that, by doing so,
“the president put himself squarely in a
tradition with a distinguished pedigree. It
holds that America’s fundamental national
interest is to be America, and the nation’s
identity (its sense of its self, its
peculiar purposefulness) is inseparable from
a commitment to the spread -- not the
aggressive universalization, but the
civilized advancement -- of the proposition
to which we, unique among nations, are, as
the greatest American said, dedicated.”
That was fast. From
Keystone Kops to Thomas Paine in just two
months, as the White House seized the moment
to radically revise the terms by which the
U.S. engaged the world. In so doing, it
overthrew not just Manuel Noriega but what,
for half a century, had been the bedrock
foundation of the liberal multilateral
order: the ideal of national sovereignty.
Darkness Unto
Light
The way the invasion was
reported represented a qualitative leap in
scale, intensity, and visibility when
compared to past military actions. Think of
the illegal bombing of Cambodia ordered by
Richard Nixon and his National Security
Advisor Henry Kissinger in 1969 and
conducted for more than five years in
complete secrecy, or of the time lag between
actual fighting in South Vietnam and the
moment, often a day later, when it was
reported.
In contrast, the war in
Panama was covered with a you-are-there
immediacy, a remarkable burst of
shock-and-awe journalism (before the phrase
“shock and awe” was even invented) meant to
capture and keep the public’s attention.
Operation Just Cause was “one of the
shortest armed conflicts in American
military history,”
writes Brigadier General John Brown, a
historian at the United States Army Center
of Military History. It was also
“extraordinarily complex, involving the
deployment of thousands of personnel and
equipment from distant military
installations and striking almost two-dozen
objectives within a 24-hour period of time…
Just Cause represented a bold new era in
American military force projection: speed,
mass, and precision, coupled with immediate
public visibility.”
Well, a certain kind of
visibility at least. The devastation of El
Chorrillo was, of course, ignored by the
U.S. media.
In this sense, the
invasion of Panama was the forgotten warm-up
for the first Gulf War, which took place a
little over a year later. That assault was
specifically designed for all the world to
see. “Smart bombs” lit up the sky over
Baghdad as the TV cameras rolled. Featured
were new night-vision equipment, real-time
satellite communications, and cable TV (as
well as former U.S. commanders ready to
narrate the war in the style of football
announcers, right down to instant replays).
All of this allowed for public consumption
of a techno-display of apparent omnipotence
that, at least for a short time, helped
consolidate mass approval and was meant as
both a lesson and a warning for the rest of
the world. “By God,” Bush said in triumph,
“we’ve kicked the Vietnam syndrome once and
for all.”
It was a heady form of
triumphalism that would teach those in
Washington exactly the wrong lessons about
war and the world.
Justice Is Our
Brand
In the mythology of
American militarism that has taken hold
since George W. Bush’s disastrous wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq, his father, George H.W.
Bush, is often held up as a paragon of
prudence -- especially when compared to the
later reckless lunacy of Vice President Dick
Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, and Deputy Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz. After all, their agenda held
that it was the messianic duty of the United
States to rid the world not just of “evil-doers”
but “evil”
itself. In contrast, Bush Senior, we are
told, recognized the limits of American
power. He was a realist and his
circumscribed Gulf War was a “war of
necessity” where his son’s 2003 invasion of
Iraq was a catastrophic “war of choice.” But
it was H.W. who first rolled out a “freedom
agenda” to legitimize the illegal invasion
of Panama.
Likewise, the moderation
of George W. Bush’s Secretary of Defense,
Colin Powell, has often been contrasted
favorably with the rashness of the neocons
in the post-9/11 years. As the chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1989, however,
Powell was hot for getting Noriega. In
discussions leading up to the invasion, he
advocated forcefully for military action,
believing it offered an opportunity to try
out what would later become known as “the
Powell Doctrine.” Meant to ensure that there
would never again be another Vietnam or any
kind of American military defeat, that
doctrine was to rely on a set of test
questions for any potential operation
involving ground troops that would limit
military operations to defined objectives.
Among them were: Is the action in response
to a direct threat to national security? Do
we have a clear goal? Is there an exit
strategy?
It was Powell who first
let the new style of American war go to his
head and pushed for a more exalted name to
brand the war with, one that undermined the
very idea of those “limits” he was
theoretically trying to establish. Following
Pentagon practice, the operational plan to
capture Noriega was to go by the meaningless
name of “Blue Spoon.” That, Powell
wrote in My American Journey,
was “hardly a rousing call to arms… [So] we
kicked around a number of ideas and finally
settled on... Just Cause. Along with the
inspirational ring, I liked something else
about it. Even our severest critics would
have to utter ‘Just Cause’ while denouncing
us.”
Since the pursuit of
justice is infinite, it’s hard to see what
your exit strategy is once you claim it as
your “cause.” Remember, George W. Bush’s
original name for his Global War on Terror
was to be the less-than-modest
Operation Infinite Justice.
Powell
says he hesitated on the eve of the
invasion, wondering if it really was the
best course of action, but let out a “whoop
and a holler” when he learned that Noriega
had been found. A new Panamanian president
had already
been sworn in at Fort Clayton, a U.S.
military base in the Canal Zone, hours
before the invasion began.
Here’s the lesson Powell
took from Panama: the invasion, he
wrote, confirmed all his “convictions over
the preceding twenty years, since the days
of doubt over Vietnam. Have a clear
political objective and stick to it. Use all
the force necessary, and do not apologize
for going in big if that is what it takes...
As I write these words, almost six years
after Just Cause, Mr. Noriega, convicted on
the drug charges contained in the
indictments, sits in an American prison
cell. Panama has a new security force, and
the country is still a democracy.”
That assessment was made
in 1995. From a later vantage point,
history’s judgment is not so sanguine. As
George H.W. Bush’s ambassador to the United
Nations, Thomas Pickering
said about Operation Just Cause: “Having
used force in Panama... there was a
propensity in Washington to think that force
could provide a result more rapidly, more
effectively, more surgically than
diplomacy.” The easy capture of Noriega
meant "the notion that the international
community had to be engaged... was ignored."
"Iraq in 2003 was all of
that shortsightedness in spades,” Pickering
said. “We were going to do it all
ourselves." And we did.
The road to Baghdad, in
other words, ran through Panama City. It
was George H.W. Bush’s invasion of that
small, poor country 25 years ago that
inaugurated the age of preemptive
unilateralism, using “democracy” and
“freedom” as both justifications for war and
a branding opportunity. Later, after 9/11,
when George W.
insisted that the ideal of national
sovereignty was a thing of the past, when he
said nothing -- certainly not the opinion of
the international community -- could stand
in the way of the “great mission” of the
United States to “extend the benefits of
freedom across the globe,” all he was doing
was throwing more fuel on the “wildfire”
sparked by his father. A wildfire some in
Panama likened to a “little Hiroshima.”
Greg Grandin, a
TomDispatch
regular, is the author of a number of
books including, most recently,
The Empire of Necessity: Slavery, Freedom,
and Deception in the New World,
which was a finalist for the Samuel Johnson
Prize, was anointed by Fresh Air’s
Maureen Corrigan as the
best book of the year, and was also on
the “best of” lists of the Wall Street
Journal, the Boston Globe, and
the Financial Times. He
blogs for the Nation
magazine and teaches at New York University.
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Copyright 2014 Greg
Grandin
See also -
The Panama Deception:
This film shows how the U.S. attacked Panama
and killed 3 or 4 thousand people in an
invasion that the rest of the world was
against. (Sound familiar?) It won the
Academy Award for best documentary.