Tomgram:
Andrew Bacevich, Pseudo-Election 2016
Posted by Andrew Bacevich at
7:50am, August 4, 2016.
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[Note for
TomDispatch Readers: TD is taking this weekend off. Next post:
Tuesday, August 9th. Tom]
If you’re of a
certain age (as I am), there’s something that should have startled you recently
and yet, as far as I know, no one has bothered to mention it: anytime in the
last seven decades, any American politician running for any position from
dogcatcher to president who had called on Russia’s leaders for help in a
domestic campaign (no less for them to release the supposedly cyber-hacked
emails of a former secretary of state) would have been pilloried. His or
her career would have instantly been over; his or her reputation turned to ash;
his or her future life, rubble. No exceptions.
Yet the
immortal Donald, the Incredible Hulk of present-day American politics, did just
that -- not once but twice.
First, he said: “By the way, [the Russians] hacked -- they probably have
her 33,000 [missing] emails. I hope they do. They probably have her
33,000 emails that she lost and deleted because you'd see some beauties
there. So let's see." Then, assumedly just in case anyone had
missed what he was getting at, he put it even more bluntly: “Russia, if you're
listening: I hope you're able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing.
I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press. Let's see if
that happens."
And he lived
to tell the tale and threaten to “hit”
not Russian President Vladimir Putin, but former New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg (who dissed him at the Democratic convention) “so hard his head would
spin.” It’s true that a little flurry of press accounts reported
on the way Trump had inserted himself into an already roiling scandal involving
the possible Russian cyber hacking of the Democratic National Committee’s
computers. It’s also true that various national security state types
leapt, in typical Cold War fashion, to accuse him of engaging in acts that were
“tantamount to
treason,” or of having committed an actual, prosecutable crime.
But they, not The Donald, were clearly the dinosaurs of our post-asteroid
moment.
For the first
time in 70-plus years, an American politician made mockery of the knowns and
givens of the American national security state's definition of The Enemy and
got away scot-free. So consider Trump’s plea to Putin as an announcement
that we’ve all been thrust willy-nilly into a new age, a new era so strange
that we need TomDispatch regular Andrew
Bacevich, author of America’s
War for the Greater Middle East, to begin to
unravel it for us.Tom
The
Decay of American Politics
An Ode to Ike and Adlai
By Andrew J. Bacevich
An Ode to Ike and Adlai
By Andrew J. Bacevich
My earliest
recollection of national politics dates back exactly 60 years to the moment, in
the summer of 1956, when I watched the political conventions in the company of
that wondrous new addition to our family, television. My parents were
supporting President Dwight D. Eisenhower for a second term and that was good
enough for me. Even as a youngster, I sensed that Ike, the former supreme
commander of allied forces in Europe in World War II, was someone of real
stature. In a troubled time, he exuded authority and
self-confidence. By comparison, Democratic candidate Adlai Stevenson came
across as vaguely suspect. Next to the five-star incumbent, he seemed
soft, even foppish, and therefore not up to the job. So at least it
appeared to a nine-year-old living in Chicagoland.
Of the seamy
underside of politics I knew nothing, of course. On the surface, all
seemed reassuring. As if by divine mandate, two parties vied for
power. The views they represented defined the allowable range of opinion.
The outcome of any election expressed the collective will of the people and
was to be accepted as such. That I was growing up in the best democracy
the world had ever known -- its very existence a daily rebuke to the enemies of
freedom -- was beyond question.
Naïve?
Embarrassingly so. Yet how I wish that Election Day in November 2016
might present Americans with something even loosely approximating the
alternatives available to them in November 1956. Oh, to choose once more
between an Ike and an Adlai.
Don’t
for a second think that this is about nostalgia. Today, Stevenson doesn’t
qualify for anyone’s list of Great Americans. If remembered at all, it’s
for his sterling performance as President John F. Kennedy’s U.N.
ambassador during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Interrogating his Soviet
counterpart with cameras rolling, Stevenson barked that he was prepared to
wait “until hell freezes over” to get his questions
answered about Soviet military activities in Cuba. When the chips were down,
Adlai proved anything but soft. Yet in aspiring to the highest office in
the land, he had come up well short. In 1952, he came nowhere close to
winning and in 1956 he proved no more successful. Stevenson was to the
Democratic Party what Thomas Dewey had been to the Republicans: a luckless
two-time loser.
As for
Eisenhower, although there is much in his presidency to admire, his errors of
omission and commission were legion. During his two terms, from Guatemala
to Iran, the CIA overthrew governments, plotted assassinations, and embraced
unsavory right-wing dictators -- in effect, planting a series of IEDs destined
eventually to blow up in the face of Ike’s various successors. Meanwhile,
binging on nuclear weapons, the Pentagon accumulated an arsenal far beyond what
even Eisenhower as commander-in-chief considered prudent or necessary.
In addition,
during his tenure in office, the military-industrial complex became a rapacious
juggernaut, an entity unto itself as Ike himself belatedly acknowledged.
By no means least of all, Eisenhower fecklessly committed the United States to
an ill-fated project of nation-building in a country that just about no
American had heard of at the time: South Vietnam. Ike did give the nation
eight years of relative peace and prosperity, but at a high price -- most of
the bills coming due long after he left office.
The
Pathology of American Politics
And yet, and
yet...
To contrast
the virtues and shortcomings of Stevenson and Eisenhower with those of Hillary
Rodham Clinton and Donald Trump is both instructive and profoundly
depressing. Comparing the adversaries of 1956 with their 2016 counterparts
reveals with startling clarity what the decades-long decay of American politics
has wrought.
In 1956, each
of the major political parties nominated a grown-up for the highest office in
the land. In 2016, only one has.
In 1956, both
parties nominated likeable individuals who conveyed a basic sense of
trustworthiness. In 2016, neither party has
done so.
In 1956,
Americans could count on the election to render a definitive verdict, the vote
count affirming the legitimacy of the system itself and allowing the business
of governance to resume. In 2016, that is unlikely to be the case.
Whether Trump or Clinton ultimately prevails, large numbers of Americans will
view the result as further proof of “rigged” and irredeemably corrupt political
arrangements. Rather than inducing some semblance of reconciliation, the
outcome is likely to deepen divisions.
How in the
name of all that is holy did we get into such a mess?
How did the
party of Eisenhower, an architect of victory in World War II, choose as its
nominee a narcissistic TV celebrity who, with each successive Tweet and verbal
outburst, offers further evidence that he is totally unequipped for high
office? Yes, the establishment media are ganging up on Trump, blatantly
displaying the sort of bias normally kept at least nominally under wraps.
Yet never have such expressions of journalistic hostility toward a particular
candidate been more justified. Trump is a bozo of such monumental
proportions as to tax the abilities of our most talented satirists. Were
he alive today, Mark Twain at his most scathing would be hard-pressed to do
justice to The Donald’s blowhard pomposity.
Similarly, how
did the party of Adlai Stevenson, but also of Stevenson’s hero Franklin
Roosevelt, select as its candidate someone so widely disliked and mistrusted
even by many of her fellow Democrats? True, antipathy directed toward
Hillary Clinton draws some of its energy from incorrigible sexists along with
the “vast right wing conspiracy” whose members thoroughly loathe both
Clintons. Yet the antipathy is not without basis in fact.
Even by
Washington standards, Secretary Clinton exudes a striking sense of entitlement
combined with a nearly complete absence of accountability. She shrugs off
her misguided vote in
support of invading Iraq back in 2003, while serving as senator from New
York. She neither explains nor apologizes for pressing to depose Libya’s
Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, her most notable “accomplishment”
as secretary of state. “We came, we saw, he died,” shebragged back
then, somewhat prematurely given that Libya has since fallen into anarchy and
become a haven for ISIS.
She clings to
the demonstrably false claim that her use of a private server for State
Department business compromised no classified
information. Now opposed to the Trans Pacific Partnership
(TTP) that she once described as
the “gold standard in trade agreements,” Clinton rejects charges of political
opportunism. That her change of heart occurred when attacking the TPP was
helping Bernie Sanders win one Democratic primary after another is merely
coincidental. Oh, and the big money accepted from banks and Wall Street as
well as the tech sector for
minimal work and the bigger
money still from leading figures in the Israel lobby?
Rest assured that her acceptance of such largesse won’t reduce by one iota her
support for “working class families” or her commitment to a just peace
settlement in the Middle East.
Let me be
clear: none of these offer the slightest reason to vote for Donald Trump.
Yet together they make the point that Hillary Clinton is a deeply flawed
candidate, notably so in matters related to national security. Clinton is
surely correct that allowing Trump to make decisions related to war and peace
would be the height of
folly. Yet her record in that regard does not exactly
inspire confidence.
When it comes
to foreign policy, Trump’s preference for off-the-cuff utterances finds him
committing astonishing gaffes with metronomic regularity. Spontaneity
serves chiefly to expose his staggering ignorance.
By comparison, the carefully scripted Clinton commits
few missteps, as she recites with practiced ease the pabulum that passes for
right thinking in establishment circles. But fluency does not necessarily
connote soundness. Clinton, after all, adheres resolutely to the highly
militarized “Washington playbook” that President Obama himself has disparaged --
a faith-based belief in American global primacy to be pursued regardless of how
the world may be changing and heedless of costs.
On the latter
point, note that Clinton’s acceptance speech in Philadelphia included not a
single mention of Afghanistan. By Election Day, the war there will have
passed its 15th anniversary. One might think that a prospective
commander-in-chief would have something to say about the longest conflict in
American history, one that continues with no end in sight. Yet, with the
Washington playbook offering few answers, Mrs. Clinton chooses to remain silent
on the subject.
So while a
Trump presidency holds the prospect of the United States driving off a cliff, a
Clinton presidency promises to be the equivalent of banging one’s head against
a brick wall without evident effect, wondering all the while why it hurts so
much.
Pseudo-Politics
for an Ersatz Era
But let’s not
just blame the candidates. Trump and Clinton are also the product of
circumstances that neither created. As candidates, they are merely
exploiting a situation -- one relying on intuition and vast stores of
brashness, the other putting to work skills gained during a life spent studying
how to acquire and employ power. The success both have achieved in
securing the nominations of their parties is evidence of far more fundamental
forces at work.
In the pairing
of Trump and Clinton, we confront symptoms of something pathological.
Unless Americans identify the sources of this disease, it will inevitably
worsen, with dire consequences in the realm of national security. After
all, back in Eisenhower’s day, the IEDs planted thanks to reckless presidential
decisions tended to blow up only years -- or even decades -- later. For
example, between the 1953 U.S.-engineered coup that restored the Shah to his
throne and the 1979 revolution that converted Iran overnight from ally to
adversary, more than a quarter of a century elapsed. In our own day,
however, detonation occurs so much more quickly -- witness the almost
instantaneous and explosively unhappy consequences of Washington’s post-9/11
military interventions in the Greater Middle East.
So here’s a
matter worth pondering: How is it that all the months of intensive fundraising,
the debates and speeches, the caucuses and primaries, the avalanche of TV ads
and annoying robocalls have produced two presidential candidates who tend to
elicit from a surprisingly large number of rank-and-file citizens disdain,
indifference, or at best hold-your-nose-and-pull-the-lever acquiescence?
Here, then, is
a preliminary diagnosis of three of the factors contributing to the erosion of
American politics, offered from the conviction that, for Americans
to have better choices next time around, fundamental change must occur -- and
soon.
First,
and most important, the evil effects of money: Need
chapter and verse? For a tutorial, see this essential 2015 book by
Professor Lawrence Lessig of Harvard: Republic
Lost, Version 2.0. Those with no time for
books might spare 18 minutes for Lessig’s brilliant and deeply disturbing TED talk.
Professor Lessig argues persuasively that unless the United States radically
changes the way it finances political campaigns, we’re pretty much doomed to
see our democracy wither and die.
Needless to
say, moneyed interests and incumbents who benefit from existing arrangements
take a different view and collaborate to maintain the status quo. As a
result, political life has increasingly become a pursuit reserved for those
like Trump who possess vast personal wealth or for those like Clinton who
display an aptitude for persuading the well to do to open their purses, with
all that implies by way of compromise, accommodation, and the subsequent
repayment of favors.
Second,
the perverse impact of identity politics on policy:
Observers make much of the fact that, in capturing the presidential nomination
of a major party, Hillary Clinton has shattered yet another glass
ceiling. They are right to do so. Yet the novelty of her candidacy
starts and ends with gender. When it comes to fresh thinking, Donald
Trump has far more to offer than Clinton -- even if his version of “fresh”
tends to be synonymous with wacky, off-the-wall, ridiculous, or altogether
hair-raising.
The essential
point here is that, in the realm of national security, Hillary Clinton is
utterly conventional. She subscribes to a worldview (and view of
America’s role in the world) that originated during the Cold War, reached its
zenith in the 1990s when the United States proclaimed itself the planet’s “sole
superpower,” and persists today remarkably unaffected by actual
events. On the campaign trail, Clinton attests to her bona fides by
routinely reaffirming her belief in American exceptionalism,
paying fervent tribute to “the world’s
greatest military,” swearing that she’ll be “listening to our generals
and admirals,” and vowing to get tough on America’s adversaries. These
are, of course, the mandatory rituals of the contemporary Washington stump
speech, amplified if anything by the perceived need for the first female
candidate for president to emphasize her pugnacity.
A Clinton
presidency, therefore, offers the prospect of more of the same --
muscle-flexing and armed intervention to demonstrate American global leadership
-- albeit marketed with a garnish of diversity. Instead of different
policies, Clinton will offer an administration that has a different look,
touting this as evidence of positive change.
Yet while
diversity may be a good thing, we should not confuse it with
effectiveness. A national security team that “looks like America” (to use
the phrase originally coined by Bill Clinton) does not necessarily govern more
effectively than one that looks like President Eisenhower’s. What matters
is getting the job done.
Since the
1990s women have found plentiful opportunities to fill positions in the upper
echelons of the national security apparatus. Although we have not yet had
a female commander-in-chief, three women have served as secretary of state and
two as national security adviser. Several have filled Adlai Stevenson’s
old post at the United Nations. Undersecretaries, deputy
undersecretaries, and assistant secretaries of like gender abound, along with a
passel of female admirals and generals.
So the
question needs be asked: Has the quality of national security policy improved
compared to the bad old days when men exclusively called the shots? Using
as criteria the promotion of stability and the avoidance of armed conflict
(along with the successful prosecution of wars deemed unavoidable), the answer
would, of course, have to be no. Although Madeleine Albright, Condoleezza
Rice, Susan Rice, Samantha Power, and Clinton herself might entertain a
different view, actually existing conditions in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya,
Syria, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen, and other countries across the Greater Middle
East and significant parts of Africa tell a different story.
The abysmal
record of American statecraft in recent years is not remotely the
fault of women; yet neither have women made a perceptibly positive
difference. It turns out that identity does not necessarily signify
wisdom or assure insight. Allocating positions of influence in the State
Department or the Pentagon based on gender, race, ethnicity, or sexual
orientation -- as Clinton will assuredly do -- may well gratify previously
disenfranchised groups. Little evidence exists to suggest that doing so
will produce more enlightened approaches to statecraft, at least not so long as
adherence to the Washington playbook figures as a precondition to employment.
(Should Clinton win in November, don’t expect the redoubtable ladies of Code Pink to
be tapped for jobs at the Pentagon and State Department.)
In the end,
it’s not identity that matters but ideas and their implementation. To
contemplate the ideas that might guide a President Trump along with those he
will recruit to act on them -- Ivanka as national security adviser? -- is
enough to elicit shudders from any sane person. Yet the prospect of Madam
President surrounding herself with an impeccably diverse team of advisers who
share her own outmoded views is hardly cause for celebration.
Putting a
woman in charge of national security policy will not in itself amend the
defects exhibited in recent years. For that, the obsolete principles with
which Clinton along with the rest of Washington remains enamored will have to
be jettisoned. In his own bizarre way (albeit without a clue as to a
plausible alternative), Donald Trump seems to get that; Hillary Clinton does
not.
Third,
the substitution of “reality” for reality: Back in
1962, a young historian by the name of Daniel Boorstin published The Image:
A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America. In
an age in which Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton vie to determine the nation’s
destiny, it should be mandatory reading. The Image remains, as
when it first appeared, a fire bell ringing in the night.
According to
Boorstin, more than five decades ago the American people were already living in
a “thicket of unreality.” By relentlessly indulging in ever more
“extravagant expectations,” they were forfeiting their capacity to distinguish
between what was real and what was illusory. Indeed, Boorstin wrote, “We
have become so accustomed to our illusions that we mistake them for
reality.”
While ad
agencies and PR firms had indeed vigorously promoted a world of illusions,
Americans themselves had become willing accomplices in the process.
“The American
citizen lives in a world where fantasy is more real than reality, where the
image has more dignity than its original. We hardly dare to face our
bewilderment, because our ambiguous experience is so pleasantly iridescent, and
the solace of belief in contrived reality is so thoroughly real. We have
become eager accessories to the great hoaxes of the age. These are the
hoaxes we play on ourselves.”
This, of
course, was decades before the nation succumbed to the iridescent allure of
Facebook, Google, fantasy football, “Real Housewives of_________,”
selfies, smartphone apps, Game of Thrones, Pokémon GO -- and, yes,
the vehicle that vaulted Donald Trump to stardom, The Apprentice.
“The making of
the illusions which flood our experience has become the business of America,”
wrote Boorstin. It’s also become the essence of American politics, long
since transformed into theater, or rather into some sort of (un)reality show.
Presidential
campaigns today are themselves, to use Boorstin’s famous term, “pseudo-events”
that stretch from months into years. By now, most Americans know better
than to take at face value anything candidates say or promise along the
way. We’re in on the joke -- or at least we think we are.
Reinforcing that perception on a daily basis are media outlets that have
abandoned mere reporting in favor of enhancing the spectacle of the moment.
This is especially true of the cable news networks, where talking heads
serve up a snide and cynical complement to the smarmy fakery that is the
office-seeker’s stock in trade. And we lap it up. It matters little
that we know it’s all staged and contrived, as long as -- a preening Megyn
Kelly getting under Trump’s skin, Trump himself denouncing “lyin’ Ted” Cruz,
etc., etc. -- it’s entertaining.
This emphasis
on spectacle has drained national politics of whatever substance it still had
back when Ike and Adlai commanded the scene. It hardly need be said that
Donald Trump has demonstrated an extraordinary knack -- a sort of post-modern
genius -- for turning this phenomenon to his advantage. Yet in her own
way Clinton plays the same game. How else to explain a national
convention organized around the idea of “reintroducing to
the American people” someone who served eight years as First Lady, was elected
to the Senate, failed in a previous high-profile run for the presidency, and
completed a term as secretary of state? The just-ended conclave in
Philadelphia was, like the Republican one that preceded it, a pseudo-event par
excellence, the object of the exercise being to fashion a new “image” for the
Democratic candidate.
The thicket of
unreality that is American politics has now become all-enveloping. The
problem is not Trump and Clinton, per se. It’s an identifiable set of
arrangements -- laws, habits, cultural predispositions -- that have
evolved over time and promoted the rot that now pervades American
politics. As a direct consequence, the very concept of self-government is
increasingly a fantasy, even if surprisingly few Americans seem to mind.
At an earlier
juncture back in 1956, out of a population of 168 million, we got Ike and
Adlai. Today, with almost double the population, we get -- well, we get
what we’ve got. This does not represent progress. And don’t kid
yourself that things really can’t get much worse. Unless Americans rouse
themselves to act, count on it, they will.
Andrew
J. Bacevich, a TomDispatch regular,
is the author most recently ofAmerica’s War
for the Greater Middle East: A Military History.
Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and
join us on Facebook.
Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Nick Turse’s Next Time
They’ll Come to Count the Dead, and Tom
Engelhardt's latest book, Shadow
Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global Security State in a
Single-Superpower World.
Copyright 2016 Andrew J. Bacevich
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