Emancipating the Military, Containing the Citizenry
By Fred
Reed
January 23,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Those who try to understand military policy often
confuse themselves by focusing on minor matters such
as strategy, tactics, logistics, and armament. Here
they err. For years the central goal of the
military, the brass ring, has been independence from
control by civilians. It has been achieved.
In time of
war, the first concern of the command is to limit
the flow of information to their publics. The
actions of the enemy are an important but secondary
consideration. Thus militaries strive to prevent the
dissemination of photos of mutilated soldiers or, as
in Washington today, of governmentally tortured
prisoners. In the United States, which
characteristically fights wars unrelated to the
safety of the country, the Pentagon must also keep
soldiers from being told that they are being
sacrifice for the benefit of arms manufacturers and
imperialist ambitions. In wars before Vietnam, this
was adroitly effected. You could go to jail for
criticizing a war.
In Vietnam,
something new happened. The press covered the war
freely. Reporters went where they pleased, beyond
the control of the military. Their publications ran
the results. National magazines printed horrific
photographs of what was really happening.
Truth
tells. The coverage was one of the two factors that
forced Washington to quit the war. The other was the
passionate unwillingness of young men to be forced
to fight a war in which they had no interest. The
war, a source of meaning for Washington’s thunderous
hawks and fern-bar Napoleons, was getting them
killed.
The
military of Vietnam wasn’t very good at fighting,
and neither is the military of today. GIs in Asia
would assault a hill, usually of no importance, and,
after three days, with the aid of helicopters, helo
gunships, napalm, artillery, and fighter-bombers,
would capture it. This would be called a triumph.
The astute observed that if the Americans had to
fight on equal terms, without overwhelming material
superiority, they would last perhaps ten minutes.
This is now a recognized pattern. Note that
numerically superior and hugely armed American
forces have been outfought for years by lightly
armed Afghan goat herds. Since neither the wars nor
the soldiers in them are of much importance, this
doesn’t matter.
The
Pentagon learned a lot from Vietnam: It learned that
its greatest enemies are the press and the American
public. The burning question became how to keep the
goddam public from interfering in wars which were
none of its business and, particularly in the award
of large contracts.
The problem
was solved in two major ways. The first was to end
the draft and go to the All Volunteer Army. The
command realized that if they conscripted kids from
Yale and the University of Virginia to come back in
body bags, the prospective conscriptees, their
girlfriends, and their families would take to the
streets. This would threaten the smooth flow of
funds. If volunteer kids from Tennessee died, no one
would care.
The second
step in keeping the public out of the loop was to
control the press. This was done partly by
“embedding” reporters in American military units in
the victim country. The control was furthered, more
by happenstance than plan, by the amalgamation of
the major media in a few large corporations which
then controlled content. It worked.
A third and
crucial element was the quiet and de facto abolition
of the restrictions imposed by the Constitution. As
long as that document was held to be canonical,
Congress would have to declare war before the
military could attack anyone. A congressman voting
for a war would have to explain to his constituents
why he wanted to spend a trillion dollars on killing
remote peasants when his jurisdiction had crumbling
schools. People in Oklahoma might ask, “Can’t we
grow our own goat herds more cheaply and kill them
here?”
Congress
was happy to shed this responsibility, or for that
matter any responsibility. And so it did. The
Commander-in-Chief was now able to send troops
anywhere he pleased. It was his private army. He
could , in effect, contract out the US military to
Israel to crush its enemies or to the
petro-interests to try to capture oil fields.
However,
this happy canvas was not yet raised to Rafaelsesque
perfection. There was still the awkward, though now
minor, matter of body bags. The Presidency did what
it could. It forbade the filming of flag-draped
coffins coming into Dover Air Force Base on grounds
of protecting the privacy of the occupants.
Logicians might question just what intimate private
details a photo of a box might reveal. But the
public wasn’t William of Ockham. The point was to
keep the rubes from knowing what the shrapnel cone
of an RPG does the the head of Jimmy Jack Perkins of
Memphis.
However,
the damage was controllable. Not to Jimmy Jack’s
head, but to the Army’s PR persona. That was what
the Army cared about. Yet…things were not quite
perfect. An awful lot of kids were coming back from
obscure wars with TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury),
which is what happens when seventy-five pounds of C4
in an IED blows. It turns said kid’s brain into the
equivalent of a pudding stirred by an enthusiastic
but poorly trained chef. For the next fifty years he
stumbles, mumbles, drools, shuffles, and has the IQ
of a duckbill platypus.
This was
not a serious difficulty. The corporate media were
in line, so there was no danger that CBS would do a
hostile expose. Besides, with luck the creep would
die early. But it was still a potential source of
political blowback.
A solution
appeared: Drones. They were wonderful, serving
several purposes at once. They cost not as much as
fighter planes, but enough to funnel lots of loot to
contractors.. No body bags ever came back and so
didn’t need to be hidden. Drones could be flown by
wet-lipped sociopaths in air-conditioned comfort in
Colorado. They couldn’t win a war, but neither could
they lose one. This was ideal, since either winning
or losing would slow the award of contracts.
The
remaining bump in the road to full emancipation was
the military budget. This matter was neutralized by
the major media, which had become for practical
purposes minor federal departments. In Mein Kampf,
der Fuehrer pointed out that the masses would
eventually believe any idea repeated often enough. A
corollary was that the masses would ignore any idea
mentioned only once or twice. Hiding financial
grotesquery was not necessary. It sufficed to
mention it briefly in paragraph seventeen or, on the
tube, in passing in tones usually used in reporting
uneventful weather. Done.
Close. Very
close. There was no longer a single columnist in the
major media who actually knew the technology,
bureaucracy, and tactics of the military, or had
been near a rifle. The networks could therefore hire
retired colonels to explain that the military was
dedicated to truth, justice, and the American way.
The final condom in this chain of chastity was the
president asserting that America was a city on a
hill and a beam of light for darkened mankind, who
to reach heaven needed only to give us their oil
fields.
In sum, the
foregoing measures constituted the greatest military
victory since Waterloo. Neither Congress or the
goddam public could any longer meddle where it had
no business meddling. Fewer and fewer troops
actually went to war, so the unpatriotic bastards
couldn’t disrupt the war effort by coming home in
body bags. The Pentagon had achieved its long-sought
emancipation. It looked forward to killing any
peasants who struck its fancy with the insouciant
independence of a trust-fund baby in the fleshpots
of the Orient.
Fred, a
keyboard mercenary with a disorganized past, has
worked on staff for Army Times, The Washingtonian,
Soldier of Fortune, Federal Computer Week, and The
Washington Times.
http://fredoneverything.org/emancipation-of-military-containing-the-citizenry/
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