Neocons: the Echo of
German Fascism
The “f-word” for “fascist” keeps cropping up
in discussing aggressive U.S. and Israeli “exceptionalism,”
but there’s a distinction from the “n-word”
for “Nazi.” This new form of ignoring
international law fits more with an older
form of German authoritarianism favored by
neocon icon Leo Strauss, says retired JAG
Major Todd E. Pierce.
By Todd E. Pierce
March 27, 2015 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - With the
Likud Party electoral victory in Israel, the
Republican Party is on a roll, having won
two major elections in a row. The first was
winning control of the U.S. Congress last
fall. The second is the victory by the
Republicans’ de facto party leader Benjamin
Netanyahu in Israel’s recent election. As
the Israeli Prime Minister puts together a
coalition with other parties “in the
national camp,” as he describes them,
meaning the ultra-nationalist parties of
Israel, it will be a coalition that today’s
Republicans would feel right at home in.
The common thread linking
Republicans and Netanyahu’s “national camp”
is a belief of each in their own country’s “exceptionalism,”
with a consequent right of military
intervention wherever and whenever their
“Commander in Chief” orders it, as well as
the need for oppressive laws to suppress
dissent.
William Kristol,
neoconservative editor of the Weekly
Standard, would agree. Celebrating
Netanyahu’s victory, Kristol
told the New York Times, “It will
strengthen the hawkish types in the
Republican Party.” Kristol added that
Netanyahu would win the GOP’s nomination, if
he could run, because “Republican primary
voters are at least as hawkish as the
Israeli public.”
The loser in both the
Israeli and U.S. elections was the rule of
law and real democracy, not the sham
democracy presented for public relations
purposes in both counties. In both countries
today, money controls elections, and as
Michael Glennon has written in National
Security and Double Government, real
power is in the hands of the national
security apparatus.
Benjamin Netanyahu’s
leadership role in the U.S. Congress was on
full display to the world when he accepted
House Speaker John Boehner’s invitation to
address Congress. Showing their eagerness to
be part of any political coalition being
formed under Netanyahu’s leadership, many
Congressional Democrats also showed their
support by attending the speech.
It was left to Israeli Uri
Avnery to best capture the spirit of
Netanyahu’s enthusiastic ideological
supporters in Congress. Avnery wrote that he
was reminded of something when seeing “Row
upon row of men in suits (and the occasional
woman), jumping up and down, up and down,
applauding wildly, shouting approval.”
Where had he heard that
type of shouting before? Then it came to
him: “It was another parliament in the
mid-1930s. The Leader was speaking. Rows
upon rows of Reichstag members were
listening raptly. Every few minutes they
jumped up and shouted their approval.”
He added, “the Congress of
the United States of America is no
Reichstag. Members wear dark suits, not
brown shirts. They do not shout ‘Heil’ but
something unintelligible.” Nevertheless,
“the sound of the shouting had the same
effect. Rather shocking.”
Right-wing
Politics in Pre-Nazi Germany
While Avnery’s analogy of
how Congress responded to its de facto
leader was apt, it isn’t necessary to go to
the extreme example that he uses to
analogize today’s right-wing U.S. and
Israeli parties and policy to an earlier
German precedent. Instead,
it is sufficient to note how similar the
right-wing parties of Israel and the U.S. of
today are to what was known in 1920s Weimar
Germany as the Conservative Revolutionary
Movement.
This “movement” did not
include the Nazis but instead the Nazis were
political competitors with the party which
largely represented Conservative
Revolutionary ideas: the German National
People’s Party (DNVP).
The institution to which
the Conservative Revolutionaries saw as best
representing German “values,” the
Reichswehr, the German Army, was also
opposed by the Nazis as “competitors” to
Ernst Rohm’s Brownshirts. But the
Conservative Revolutionary Movement, the
DNVP, and the German Army could all be
characterized as “proto-fascist,” if not
Fascist. In fact, when the Nazis took over
Germany, it was with the support of many of
the proto-fascists making up the
Conservative Revolutionary Movement, as well
as those with the DNVP and the Reichswehr.
Consequently, many of the
Reichstag members that Uri Avnery refers to
above as listening raptly and jumping up and
shouting their approval of “The Leader” were
not Nazis. The Nazis had failed to obtain an
absolute majority on their own and needed
the votes of the “national camp,” primarily
the German National People’s Party (DNVP),
for a Reichstag majority.
The DNVP members would
have been cheering The Leader right
alongside Nazi members of the Reichstag.
DNVP members also voted along with Nazi
members in passing the Enabling Act of 1933,
which abolished constitutional liberties and
dissolved the Reichstag.
Not enough has been
written on the German Conservative
Revolutionary Movement , the DNVP and the
Reichswehr because they have too often been
seen as victims of the Nazis themselves or,
at worst, mere precursors.
The DNVP was the political
party which best represented the viewpoint
of the German Conservative Revolutionary
Movement. The Reichswehr itself, as
described in The Nemesis of Power
by John W. Wheeler-Bennett, has been called
a “state within a state,” much like the
intelligence and security services of the
U.S. and Israel are today, wielding
extraordinary powers.
The Reichswehr was
militaristic and anti-democratic in its
purest form and indeed was “fascist” in the
term’s classic definition of “an
authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing
system of government and social
organization.” Mussolini merely modeled much
of his hyper-militaristic political movement
on the martial values of the Reichswehr.
German Army officers even
had authority to punish civilians for
failing to show “proper respect.” In its
essence, the viewpoint of the DNVP and the
Conservative Revolutionaries was virtually
identical to today’s Republican Party along
with those Democrats who align with them on
national security issues.
These groups have in
common a worshipful attitude toward the
military as best embodying those martial
virtues that are central to fascism. Sister
parties, though they may all prefer to be
seen as “brothers in arms,” would be
Netanyahu’s “national camp” parties.
German
Conservative Revolutionary Movement
The Conservative
Revolutionary Movement began within the
German Right after World War I with a number
of writers advocating a nationalist ideology
but one in keeping with modern times and not
restricted by traditional Prussian
conservatism.
It must be noted that
Prussian conservatism, standing for
militaristic ideas traditional to Prussia,
was the antithesis of traditional American
conservatism, which professed to stand for
upholding the classical liberal ideas of
government embedded in the U.S.
Constitution.
Inherent to those U.S.
constitutional ideas was antipathy toward
militarism and militaristic rule of any
sort, though Native Americans have good
cause to disagree. (In fact, stories of the
American conquest of Native Americans with
its solution of placing them on reservations
were particularly popular in Germany early
in the Twentieth Century including with
Adolf Hitler).
Historians have noted that
when the German Army went to war in World
War I, the soldiers and officers carried
with them “a shared sense of German
superiority and the imagined bestiality of
the enemy.” This was manifested particularly
harshly upon the citizens of Belgium in 1914
with the German occupation. Later, after
their experience in the trenches, the
Reichswehr was nearly as harsh in
suppressing domestic dissent in Germany
after the war.
According to Richard
Wolin, in The Seduction of Unreason,
Ernst Troeltsch, a German Protestant
theologian, “realized that in the course of
World War I the ethos of Germanocentrism, as
embodied in the ‘ideas of 1914,’ had assumed
a heightened stridency.” Under the peace of
the Versailles Treaty, “instead of muting
the idiom of German exceptionalism that
Troeltsch viewed with such mistrust, it
seemed only to fan its flames.”
This belief in German
“exceptionalism” was the common belief of
German Conservative Revolutionaries, the
DNVP and the Reichswehr. For Republicans of
today and those who share their ideological
belief, substitute “American” for “German”
Exceptionalism and you have the identical
ideology.
“Exceptionalism” in the
sense of a nation can be understood in two
ways. One is a belief in the nation’s
superiority to others. The other way is the
belief that the “exceptional” nation stands
above the law, similar to the claim made by
dictators in declaring martial law or a
state of emergency. The U.S. and Israel
exhibit both forms of this belief.
German
Exceptionalism
The belief in German
Exceptionalism was the starting point, not
the ending point, for the Conservative
Revolutionaries just as it is with today’s
Republicans such as Sen. Tom Cotton or Sen.
Lindsey Graham. This Exceptionalist ideology
gives the nation the right to interfere in
other country’s internal affairs for
whatever reason the “exceptional” country
deems necessary, such as desiring more
living space for their population, fearing
the potential of some future security
threat, or even just by denying the
“exceptional” country access within its
borders — or a “denial of access threat” as
the U.S. government terms it.
The fundamental ideas of
the Conservative Revolutionaries have been
described as vehement opposition to the
Weimar Republic (identifying it with the
lost war and the Versailles Treaty) and
political “liberalism” (as opposed to
Prussia’s traditional authoritarianism).
This “liberalism,” which
offended the Conservative Revolutionaries,
was democracy and individual rights against
state power. Instead, the Conservative
Revolutionaries envisaged a new reich of
enormous strength and unity. They rejected
the view that political action should be
guided by rational criteria. They idealized
violence for its own sake.
That idealization of
violence would have meant “state” violence
in the form of military expansionism and
suppression of “enemies,” domestic and
foreign, by right-thinking Germans.
The Conservative
Revolutionaries called for a “primacy of
politics” which was to be “a reassertion of
an expansion in foreign policy and
repression against the trade unions at
home.” This “primacy of politics” for the
Conservative Revolutionaries meant the
erasure of a distinction between war and
politics.
Citing Hannah Arendt,
Jeffrey Herf, a professor of modern European
history, wrote: “The explicit implications
of the primacy of politics in the
conservative revolution were totalitarian.
From now on there were to be no limits to
ideological politics. The utilitarian and
humanistic considerations of
nineteenth-century liberalism were to be
abandoned in order to establish a state of
constant dynamism and movement.” That sounds
a lot like the “creative destruction” that
neoconservative theorist Michael Ledeen is
so fond of.
Herf wrote in 1984 that
Conservative Revolutionaries were
characterized as “the intellectual advance
guard of the rightist revolution that was to
be effected in 1933,” which, although
contemptuous of Hitler, “did much to pave
his road to power.”
Unlike the Nazis, their
belief in German superiority was based in
historical traditions and ideas, not
biological racism. Nevertheless, some saw
German Jews as the “enemy” of Germany for
being “incompatible with a united nation.”
It is one of the bitterest
of ironies that Israel as a “Jewish nation”
has adopted similar attitudes toward its
Arab citizens. Israeli Foreign Minister
Avigdor Lieberman recently proclaimed:
“Those who are with us deserve everything,
but those who are against us deserve to have
their heads chopped off with an axe.”
Within Israel, these
“Conservative Revolutionary” ideas were
manifested in one of their founding
political parties, Herut, whose founders
came out of the same central European
political milieu of interwar Europe and from
which Netanyahu’s Likud party is descended.
Ernst Junger
Author Ernst Junger was
the most important contributor to the
celebration of war by the Conservative
Revolutionaries and was an influence and an
enabler of the Nazis coming to power. He
serialized his celebration of war and his
belief in its “redeeming” qualities in a
number of popular books with “war porn”
titles such as, in English, The Storm of
Steel, The Battle as an Inner
Experience, and Fire and Blood.
The title of a collection
of Junger essays in 1930, Krieg und
Krieger (War and the Warriors) captures
the spirit of America in the Twenty-first
Century as much as it did the German spirit
in 1930. While members of the U.S. military
once went by terms such as soldier, sailor
and marine, now they are routinely
generically called “Warriors,” especially by
the highest ranks, a term never before used
to describe what were once “citizen
soldiers.”
Putting a book with a
“Warrior” title out on the shelf in a Barnes
and Noble would almost guarantee a
best-seller, even when competing with all
the U.S. SEALS’ reminiscences and American
sniper stories. But German philosopher
Walter Benjamin understood the meaning of
Junger’s Krieg und Krieger,
explaining it in the appropriately titled
Theories of German Fascism.
Fundamental to Junger’s
celebration of war was a metaphysical belief
in “totale Mobilmachung” or total
mobilization to describe the functioning of
a society that fully grasps the meaning of
war. With World War I, Junger saw the
battlefield as the scene of struggle “for
life and death,” pushing all historical and
political considerations aside. But he saw
in the war the fact that “in it the genius
of war permeated the spirit of progress.”
According to Jeffrey Herf
in Reactionary Modernism, Junger
saw total mobilization as “a worldwide trend
toward state-directed mobilization in which
individual freedom would be sacrificed to
the demands of authoritarian planning.”
Welcoming this, Junger believed “that
different currents of energy were coalescing
into one powerful torrent. The era of total
mobilization would bring about an
‘unleashing’ (Entfesselung) of a
nevertheless disciplined life.”
In practical terms,
Junger’s metaphysical view of war meant that
Germany had lost World War I because its
economic and technological mobilization had
only been partial and not total. He lamented
that Germany had been unable to place the
“spirit of the age” in the service of
nationalism. Consequently, he believed that
“bourgeois legality,” which placed
restrictions on the powers of the
authoritarian state, “must be abolished in
order to liberate technological advance.”
Today, total mobilization
for the U.S. begins with the Republicans’
budgeting efforts to strip away funding for
domestic civilian uses and shifting it to
military and intelligence spending. Army
veteran, Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas,
exemplifies this belief in “total
mobilization” of society with his calls for
dramatically increased military spending and
his belief that “We must again show the U.S.
is willing and prepared to [get into] a war
in the first place” by making clear that
potential “aggressors will pay an
unspeakable price if they challenge the
United States.”
That is the true purpose
of Twenty-first Century Republican
economics: total mobilization of the economy
for war. Just as defeated German generals
and the Conservative Revolutionaries
believed that Germany lost World War I
because their economy and nation was only
“partially mobilized,” so too did many
American Vietnam War-era generals and
right-wing politicians believe the same of
the Vietnam War. Retired Gen. David Petraeus
and today’s neoconservatives have made
similar arguments about President Barack
Obama’s failure to sustain the Iraq War.
[See, for instance, this fawning Washington
Post
interview with Petraeus.]
What all these militarists
failed to understand is that, according to
Clausewitz, when a war’s costs exceed its
benefits, the sound strategy is to end the
costly war. The Germans failed to understand
this in World War II and the Soviet Union in
their Afghan War.
Paradoxically in the
Vietnam War, it was the anti-war movement
that enhanced U.S. strength by bringing that
wasteful war to an end, not the American
militarists who would have continued it to a
bitter end of economic collapse. We are now
seeing a similar debate about whether to
continue and expand U.S. military operations
across the Middle East.
Carl Schmitt
While Ernst Junger was the
celebrant and the publicist for total
mobilization of society for endless war,
including the need for authoritarian
government, Carl Schmitt was the ideological
theoretician, both legally and politically,
who helped bring about the totalitarian and
militaristic society. Except when it
happened, it came under different ownership
than what they had hoped and planned for.
Contrary to Schmitt’s
latter-day apologists and/or advocates, who
include prominent law professors teaching at
Harvard and the University of Chicago, his
legal writings weren’t about preserving the
Weimar Republic against its totalitarian
enemies, the Communists and Nazis. Rather,
he worked on behalf of a rival fascist
faction, members of the German Army General
Staff. He acted as a legal adviser to
General Kurt von Schleicher, who in turn
advised President Paul von Hindenburg,
former Chief of the German General Staff
during World War I.
German historian
Eberhard Kolb observed, “from the
mid-1920s onwards the Army leaders had
developed and propagated new social
conceptions of a militarist kind, tending
towards a fusion of the military and
civilian sectors and ultimately a
totalitarian military state (Wehrstaat).”
When General Schleicher
helped bring about the political fall of
Reichswehr Commander in Chief, General von
Seekt, it was a “triumph of the ‘modern’
faction within the Reichswehr who favored a
total war ideology and wanted Germany to
become a dictatorship that would wage total
war upon the other nations of Europe,”
according to Kolb.
When Hitler and the Nazis
outmaneuvered the Army politically, Schmitt,
as well as most other Conservative
Revolutionaries, went over to the Nazis.
Reading Schmitt gives one
a greater understanding of the Conservative
Revolutionary’s call for a “primacy of
politics,” explained previously as “a
reassertion of an expansion in foreign
policy.”
Schmitt said: “A world in
which the possibility of war is utterly
eliminated, a completely pacified globe,
would be a world without the distinction of
friend and enemy and hence a world without
politics. It is conceivable that such a
world might contain many very interesting
antitheses and contrasts, competitions and
intrigues of every kind, but there would not
be a meaningful antithesis whereby men could
be required to sacrifice life, authorized to
shed blood, and kill other human beings. For
the definition of the political, it is here
even irrelevant whether such a world without
politics is desirable as an ideal
situation.”
As evident in this
statement, to Schmitt, the norm isn’t peace,
nor is peace even desirable, but rather
perpetual war is the natural and preferable
condition.
This dream of a Martial
State is not isolated to German history. A
Republican aligned neoconservative, Thomas
Sowell, expressed the same longing in 2007
in a National Review article, “Don’t Get
Weak.” Sowell wrote; “When I see the
worsening degeneracy in our politicians, our
media, our
educators, and our
intelligentsia, I can’t help wondering if
the day may yet come when the only thing
that can save this country is a military
coup.”
Leo Strauss,
Conservative Revolutionaries and Republicans
Political philosopher Leo
Strauss had yearned for the glorious German
Conservative Revolution but was despondent
when it took the form of the Nazi Third
Reich, from which he was excluded because he
was Jewish regardless of his fascist
ideology.
He wrote to a German
Jewish friend, Karl Loewith: “the fact that
the new right-wing Germany does not tolerate
us says nothing against the principles of
the right. To the contrary: only from the
principles of the right, that is from
fascist, authoritarian and imperial
principles, is it possible with seemliness,
that is, without resort to the ludicrous and
despicable appeal to the droits
imprescriptibles de l’homme [inalienable
rights of man] to protest against the shabby
abomination.”
Strauss was in agreement
politically with Schmitt, and they were
close friends.
Professor Alan Gilbert of
Denver University has written: “As a Jew,
Strauss was forbidden from following Schmitt
and [German philosopher Martin] Heidegger
into the Nazi party. ‘But he was a man of
the Right. Like some other Zionists, those
who admired Mussolini for instance, Strauss’
principles, as the 1933 letter relates, were
‘fascist, authoritarian, imperial.’”
Strauss was intelligent
enough when he arrived in the U.S. to
disguise and channel his fascist thought by
going back to like-minded “ancient”
philosophers and thereby presenting fascism
as part of our “western heritage,” just as
the current neocon classicist Victor Davis
Hanson does.
Needless to say, fascism
is built on the belief in a dictator, as was
Sparta and the Roman Empire and as
propounded by Socrates and Plato, so turning
to the thought of ancient philosophers and
historians makes a good “cover” for fascist
thought.
Leo Strauss must be seen
as the Godfather of the modern Republican
Party’s political ideology. His legacy
continues now through the innumerable
“Neoconservative Revolutionary” front groups
with cover names frequently invoking
“democracy” or “security,” such as Sen.
Lindsey Graham’s “Security Through
Strength.”
Typifying the Straussian
neoconservative revolutionary whose hunger
for military aggression can never be
satiated would be former Assistant Secretary
of State Elliott Abrams of Iran-Contra fame
and practitioner of the “big lie,” who
returned to government under President
George W. Bush to push the Iraq War and is
currently promoting a U.S. war against Iran.
In a classic example of
“projection,” Abrams writes that “Ideology
is the raison d’etre of Iran’s regime,
legitimating its rule and inspiring its
leaders and their supporters. In this sense,
it is akin to communist, fascist and Nazi
regimes that set out to transform the
world.” That can as truthfully be said of
his own Neoconservative Revolutionary
ideology and its adherents.
That ideology explains
Bill Kristol’s crowing over Netanyahu’s
victory and claiming Netanyahu as the
Republicans’ de facto leader. For years, the
U.S. and Israel under Netanyahu have had
nearly identical foreign policy approaches
though they are at the moment in some
disagreement because President Obama has
resisted war with Iran while Netanyahu is
essentially demanding it.
But at a deeper level the
two countries share a common outlook,
calling for continuous military
interventionism outside each country’s
borders with increased exercise of authority
by the military and other security services
within their borders. This is no accident.
It can be traced back to joint right-wing
extremist efforts in both countries with
American neoconservatives playing key roles.
The best example of this
joint effort was when U.S. neocons joined
with the right-wing, Likud-connected
Institute for Advanced Strategic and
Political Studies in 1996 to publish their
joint plan for continuous military
interventionism in the Mideast in “A
Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the
Realm,” which envisioned “regime
change” instead of negotiations. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “How
Israel Outfoxed U.S. Presidents.”]
While ostensibly written
for Netanyahu’s political campaign, “A Clean
Break” became the blueprint for subsequent
war policies advocated by the Project for
the New American Century, founded by neocons
William Kristol and Robert Kagan. The chief
contribution of the American neocons in this
strategy was to marshal U.S. military
resources to do the heavy lifting in
attacking Israel’s neighbors beginning with
Iraq.
With these policy
preferences goes a belief inside each
country’s political parties, across the
spectrum but particularly on the Right, that
Israel and the United States each stand
apart from all other nations as
“Exceptional.” This is continuously repeated
to ensure imprinting it in the population’s
consciousness in the tradition of fascist
states through history.
It is believed today in
both the U.S. and Israel, just as the German
Conservative Revolutionaries believed it in
the 1920s and 1930s of their homeland,
Germany, and then carried on by the Nazis
until 1945.
Israeli Herut
Party
The Knesset website
describes the original Herut party
(1948-1988) as the main opposition party
(against the early domination by the Labor
Party). Herut was the most right-wing party
in the years before the Likud party came
into being and absorbed Herut into a
coalition. Its expansionist slogan was “To
the banks to the Jordan River” and it
refused to recognize the legitimacy of the
Kingdom of Jordan. Economically, Herut
supported private enterprise and a reduction
of government intervention.
In “A Clean Break,” the
authors were advising Netanyahu to reclaim
the belligerent and expansionist principles
of the Herut party.
Herut was founded in 1948
by Menachem Begin, the leader of the
right-wing militant group Irgun, which was
widely regarded as a terrorist organization
responsible for killing Palestinians and
cleansing them from land claimed by Israel,
including the infamous Deir Yassin massacre.
Herut’s nature as a party
and movement was best explained in a
critical letter to the
New
York Times on Dec. 4, 1948,
signed by over two dozen prominent Jewish
intellectuals including
Albert Einstein and
Hannah Arendt.
The letter read: “Among
the most disturbing political phenomena of
our times is the emergence in the newly
created state of Israel of the ‘Freedom
Party’ (Tnuat Haherut), a political party
closely akin in its organization, methods,
political philosophy and social appeal to
the Nazi and Fascist parties.
“It was formed out of the
membership and following of the former Irgun
Zvai Leumi, a terrorist, right-wing,
chauvinist organization in Palestine. (…) It
is inconceivable that those who oppose
fascism throughout the world, if correctly
informed as to Mr. Begin’s political record
and perspectives, could add their names and
support to the movement he represents. …
“Today they speak of
freedom, democracy and anti-imperialism,
whereas until recently they openly preached
the doctrine of the Fascist state. It is in
its actions that the terrorist party betrays
its real character; from its past actions we
can judge what it may be expected to do in
the future.”
According to author
Joseph Heller, Herut was a
one-issue party intent on expanding Israel’s
borders. That Netanyahu has never set aside
Herut’s ideology can be gleaned from his
book last revised in 2000, A Durable
Peace. There, Netanyahu praises Herut’s
predecessors – the Irgun paramilitary and
Lehi, also known as the Stern Gang, a
self-declared “terrorist” group. He also
marginalizes their Israeli adversary of the
time, the Hagana under Israel’s primary
founder and first Prime Minister David
Ben-Gurion.
Regardless of methods
used, the Stern Gang was indisputably
“fascist,” even receiving military training
from Fascist Italy. One does not need to
speculate as to its ideological influences.
According to Colin
Shindler, writing in
Triumph of Military Zionism: Nationalism
and the Origins of the Israeli Right,
“Stern devotedly believed that ‘the enemy of
my enemy is my friend’ so he approached Nazi
Germany. With German armies at the gates of
Palestine, he offered co-operation and an
alliance with a new totalitarian Hebrew
republic.”
Netanyahu in his recent
election campaign would seem to have
re-embraced his fascist origins, both with
its racism and his declaration that as long
as he was prime minister he would block a
Palestinian state and would continue
building Jewish settlements on what
international law recognizes as Palestinian
land.
In other words,
maintaining a state of war on the
Palestinian people with a military
occupation and governing by military rule,
while continuing to make further territorial
gains with the IDF acting as shock troops
for the settlers.
Why Does This
Matter?
Sun-Tzu famously wrote “If
you know the enemy and know yourself, you
need not fear the result of a hundred
battles. If you know yourself but not the
enemy, for every victory gained you will
also suffer a defeat. If you know neither
the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in
every battle.”
When we allow our
“Conservative Revolutionaries” (or
neoconservative militarists or
proto-fascists or whatever term best
describes them) to make foreign policy, the
United States loses legitimacy in the world
as a “rule of law” state. Instead, we
present a “fascist” justification for our
wars which is blatantly illicit.
As the American political
establishment has become so enamored with
war and the “warriors” who fight them, it
has become child’s play for our militarists
to manipulate the U.S. into wars or foreign
aggression through promiscuous economic
sanctions or inciting and arming foreign
groups to destabilize the countries that we
target.
No better example for this
can be shown than the role that America’s
First Family of Militarism, the Kagans,
plays in pushing total war mobilization of
the U.S. economy and inciting war, at the
expense of civilian and domestic needs, as
Robert Parry
wrote.
This can be seen with
Robert Kagan invoking the martial virtue of
“courage” in demanding greater military
spending by our elected officials and a
greater wealth transfer to the Military
Industrial Complex which funds the various
war advocacy projects that he and his family
are involved with.
Kagan recently wrote:
“Those who propose to lead the United States
in the coming years, Republicans and
Democrats, need to show what kind of
political courage they have, right now, when
the crucial budget decisions are being
made.”
But as Parry pointed out,
showing “courage,” “in Kagan’s view – is to
ladle ever more billions into the
Military-Industrial Complex, thus putting
money where the Republican mouths are
regarding the need to ‘defend Ukraine’ and
resist ‘a bad nuclear deal with Iran.’” But
Parry noted that if it weren’t for Assistant
Secretary of State for European Affairs
Victoria Nuland, Kagan’s spouse, the Ukraine
crisis might not exist.
What must certainly be
seen as neo-fascist under any system of
government but especially under a nominal
“constitutional republic” as the U.S. claims
to be, is Sen. Lindsey Graham’s threat that
the first thing he would do if elected
President of the United States would be to
use the military to detain members of
Congress, keeping them in session in
Washington, until all so-called “defense
cuts” are restored to the budget.
In Graham’s words, “I
wouldn’t let Congress leave town until we
fix this. I would literally use the military
to keep them in if I had to. We’re not
leaving town until we restore these defense
cuts.”
And he would have that
power according to former Vice President
Dick Cheney’s “unitary
executive theory” of
Presidential power, originally formulated by
Carl Schmitt and adopted by Republican
attorneys and incorporated into government
under the Bush-Cheney administration. Sen.
Tom Cotton and other Republicans would no
doubt support such an abuse of power if it
meant increasing military spending.
But even more dangerous
for the U.S. as well as other nations in the
world is that one day, our militarists’
constant incitement and provocation to war
is going to “payoff,” and the U.S. will be
in a real war with an enemy with nuclear
weapons, like the one Victoria Nuland is
creating on Russia’s border.
Today’s American
“Conservative Revolutionary” lust for war
was summed up by prominent neoconservative
Richard Perle, a co-author of “A Clean
Break.” Echoing the views on war from Ernst
Junger and Carl Schmitt, Perle once
explained U.S. strategy in the
neoconservative view, according to John
Pilger:
“There will be no stages,”
he said. “This is total war. We are fighting
a variety of enemies. There are lots of them
out there . . . If we just let our vision of
the world go forth, and we embrace it
entirely, and we don’t try to piece together
clever diplomacy but just wage a total war,
our children will sing great songs about us
years from now.”
That goal was the same
fantasy professed by German Conservative
Revolutionaries and it led directly to a
wartime defeat never imagined by Germany
before, with all the “collateral damage”
along the way that always results from
“total war.”
Rather than continuing
with this “strategy,” driven by our own
modern Conservative Revolutionaries and
entailing the eventual bankrupting or
destruction of the nation, it might be more
prudent for Americans to demand that we go
back to the original national security
strategy of the United States, as expressed
by early presidents as avoiding “foreign
entanglements” and start abiding by the
republican goals expressed by the Preamble
to the Constitution:
“We the People of the
United States, in Order to form a more
perfect Union, establish Justice, insure
domestic Tranquility, provide for
the common
defence, promote the general
Welfare, and secure the Blessings
of Liberty to ourselves and our
Posterity, do
ordain and establish this
Constitution for the United States of
America.”
Todd E. Pierce retired as a
Major in the U.S. Army Judge Advocate
General (JAG) Corps in November 2012. His
most recent assignment was defense counsel
in the Office of Chief Defense Counsel,
Office of Military Commissions. In the
course of that assignment, he researched and
reviewed the complete records of military
commissions held during the Civil War and
stored at the National Archives in
Washington, D.C.