The
Creeping Militarization of American Culture
By Ted
Galen Carpenter
May 16,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "National
Interest"
- In
his 1961 farewell address, President Dwight D.
Eisenhower
warned of the growing influence of the
“military-industrial complex” on American politics
and policy.
Interestingly, Eisenhower’s original formulation
of the menace was the even more accurate
“military-industrial-congressional
complex.” (Emphasis added). Seeing how that network
of special interests has
worked its tentacles into so many aspects
of American political and economic life in the
intervening decades indicates just how prescient was
Eisenhower’s warning.
But there
has been an even more subtle and pervasive
militarization of American culture. It has been
evident since World War II, but it has been
accelerating markedly in recent years. Perhaps the
most corrosive domestic effect of the global
interventionist foreign policy that Washington
adopted after World War II has been on national
attitudes. Americans have come to accept intrusions
in the name of “national security” that they would
have strongly resisted in previous decades. The
various provisions of the Patriot Act and the
surveillance regime and its abuses epitomized by the
NSA are a case in point.
The trend
toward a more intrusive, militaristic state has
become decidedly more pronounced since the September
11 attacks and the government’s response, but there
were unmistakable signs even before that terrible
day. My colleagues at the Cato Institute have done
an excellent job
documenting the gradual militarization of
America’s police forces, beginning in the 1980s,
with the proliferation of SWAT teams and the
equipping of police units with ever more lethal
military hardware.
The terrorism threat simply provides the latest,
most convenient justification to intensify a trend
that was already well underway. Most SWAT raids in
fact have nothing to do with terrorism; they are
used to
serve search or arrest warrants in
low-level drug cases.
Politicians
learned early that the fastest way to overcome
opposition to a pet initiative was to portray it as
essential to national security. Thus, the statute
that first involved the federal government in
elementary and secondary education in the 1950s was
fashioned the National Defense Education Act.
Similarly, the legislation establishing the
interstate highway system was officially the
National Defense Highway Act. In retrospect,
President George W. Bush probably missed an
opportunity when he did not label his legislation
for a Medicare prescription drug benefit the
National Defense Elderly Care Act.
And then
there is the overall militarization of language. The
rise of America’s imperial era coincides with the
popular use of the “war” metaphor. In recent
decades, we’ve had “wars” on everything from cancer
to poverty to illiteracy to obesity. And, of course,
we still have the ever present war on illegal drugs
that Richard Nixon declared more than four decades
ago. Language matters, and the fondness for such
rhetoric is a revealing and disturbing indicator of
just how deeply the garrison state mentality has
become embedded in American culture.
Yet another
sign is the growing tendency to misapply the term
“commander-in-chief.” The Constitution makes it
clear that the president is commander-in-chief
of the armed forces. There were two reasons for
that provision. One was to assure undisputed
civilian control of the military. The other was to
prevent congressional interference with the chain of
command.
One thing,
however, is abundantly clear. The Constitution did
not make the president commander-in-chief of the
country. Unfortunately, that is a distinction
that is increasingly lost on politicians, pundits,
and ordinary Americans The notion that the
president is a national commander who can direct the
country and it is our obligation as subordinates to
salute and follow his lead is an alien and
profoundly un-American concept. It also implicitly
ratifies the perverse doctrine of the imperial
presidency—that the president alone (our
commander-in-chief) gets to decide when the nation
goes to war. Both are thoroughly unconstitutional,
ahistorical, and unhealthy attitudes. Yet they have
become common, if not dominant, attitudes in late
twentieth century and early twenty-first century
America. And that is frightening. Viewing the
president as the commander-in-chief of the nation is
the epitome of a mentally militarized society.
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