Posted:
09 May 2011 09:19 PM PDT
U.S.
President Barack Obama announces shifts in military and intelligence leadership
in the East Room of the White House in Washington,
DC, on April 27, 2011. UPI/Roger
L. Wollenberg
by: Dr.
Lawrence Davidson
Part
I – Egypt
Last
week I was in Egypt,
a country presently moved by optimism. The optimism reflects a high state of
political consciousness. Almost everyone I met, be they workers (urban and
rural), students, shopkeepers, and the ubiquitous taxi drivers know why their country is beset by problems.
They can itemize the structural flaws that led to massive corruption, economic
deprivation and brutal repression. For instance, they all know that the
“laughing cow” dictator, Hosni Mubarak, had substituted his personal interests,
and that of his friends, for the national interest. Everyone has the same
general notion of what needs to be done: destroy the power of this “party of
thieves” and rid the country of the failed policies it has so long endured. How
all this will play out in the new environment of relative freedom, with its
multiple party formation and emotional debate, is uncertain. However, if the United States
can refrain from its usual level of gross interference, things should end up
better rather than worse. Hence the optimism.
What
are the odds that the US
will leave the Egyptian reform process alone? In the long run, they are not
good. The new Egypt has
already moved to repair ties with Iran
and ease the blockade of Gaza.
The latter, in particular, is immensely popular in Egypt and will be just as unpopular
in the US Congress. Egypt’s
military still exercises ultimate control and is supposedly guiding the nation
on its path of political reform. That same military is the recipient of
billions of US
aid dollars and Congress controls those purse strings. There is a lot of room
for behind the scenes interference here. The pressure to meddle will increase
if the Muslim Brotherhood is successful in the forthcoming parliamentary
elections. They are getting ready to contest up to half the legislative seats
and their prospects look good. However, such particulars are but catalysts that
set in motion a more general, essentially structural, US approach to places
like Egypt.
On-going meddling in the affairs of other “sovereign” nations has become a
veritable part of the culture of the “intelligence” and military bureaucracies
of the United States.
Part
II – The United States
Here
is a depressing example of this attitude. While in Cairo I picked up the 29 April edition of the
International Herald Tribune. The story that caught my eye was entitled “New Missions, Blurred Roles.” In part, the opening
paragraph went like this, “President Barack Obama’s decision to send an
intelligence chief [Leon Penetta] to the Pentagon [as Secretary of Defense] and
a four star general [David Patraeus] to [be head of] the CIA is the latest
evidence of a significant shift…in how the US fights its battles: the blurring
of the lines between soldiers and spies.” What level of awareness does this
maneuver reflect of the problems that have long beset America’s failed Middle
East policies? In relative terms, certainly something short of
that possessed by your average Egyptian cab driver. The Egyptians now boldly
think about and discuss not only what is wrong but also why it is so. A
significant aspect of why their problems persisted so long was the decades of US
support for the country’s dictator. They know that and there is popular
sentiment for avoiding that sort of “aid” in the future. If they can achieve
this the Egyptians have a genuine shot at a better future. On the other hand, America’s
leaders are fixated on what they think confronts them and have relegated the
why of it all to irrelevancy. In other words, when it comes to foreign policy
our leaders, to say nothing of our soldiers and our spies, are dismally
short-sighted. Hence the policy failures.
The
CIA, along with the rest of America’s
so called “intelligence” agencies, are designed to tell the country’s leaders
what is going on in the world. Somewhere buried deep in these information
gathering bureaucracies are people who can also tell them why things are
happening as they are, but these folks carry little or no influence. This is
because the explanations they often give for events conflict with or call into
serious question the special interest motives and ends that drive US policies.
You see, just as in Egypt,
special interests have supplanted national interests. With rare exception,
American foreign policy in the Middle East is
designed to respond to the desires of domestic lobbies such as the Zionists and
not to any national interest, or even to the conditions on the ground in
foreign lands. If foreign opposition develops to what our domestic special
interests desire, we want to know what it is and then destroy it. Why it arises
is a question to avoid because it opens space for the questioning the influence
of the special interests.
If
the CIA is stuck at the ‘what’ stage of things (say, the what of Israeli
security or the what of Iranian nuclear energy development), the Defense
Department is dedicated to designing tactical responses to the ‘what.’ Now the
efforts of these two aggressive government organizations are to be closely
coordinated within a political environment that refuses to look objectively at
the roots of its own policies. So what can this move really mean?
Part
III – Assassination as a Panacea
In
the post Cold War era the decision was made that ability to carry on classical
warfare, the warfare between fielded armies, is a less immediate priority than
“special operations” designed to“penetrate, disrupt, defeat and destroy” small
militant groups which stand against US policy positions in the Third World.
Beyond the supporting of dictators and their armies, how does this presently
translate into practice? Well, under Leon Panetta, the CIA oversaw “a sharp
escalation” of the agency’s “bombing campaign in Pakistan
using armed drone aircraft and an increase in the number of secret bases and
covert operations in remote parts of Afghanistan.” On the Defense
Department side, in 2009 General Patreaus, acting as head of the US Central
Command signed a classified order “authorizing US special operations troops to
collect intelligence in Saudi Arabia,
Jordan, Iran and other places outside of
traditional war zones.” The intelligence gathered is to be used to “prepare the
environment for future military attacks.”
What
we have here is an admission that both the CIA and the Defense Department have
taken up the tactic
of assassination as a major adjunct to the support the dictator policy. These
are not like the horridly romanticized James Bond “license to kill” actions,
nor even the cruder, but still selective, operations of the 11th
century Assassins. What Washington has elevated to the level of high tactics is
the extraordinarily messy fighter bomber and predator drone attacks that are as
likely to massacre entire families, wedding parties, mosque gatherings and café
crowds as they are any intended victims. And now the fighter bombers of the
Defense Department and the predator drones of the CIA will be oh so better
coordinated. Of course, none of this touches on the question of why the “bad
guys” are out there, in so determined a fashion, in the first place.
The
refusal to consider why opposition to American foreign policy in the Middle
East has grown steadily since the end of World War II and finally, on September
11, 2001, reached an unparalleled level of destructiveness, suggests that this
latest tactical maneuver will be of little long term worth. It will not alter
the US
policy of allying with dictators and oppressors. It will not alter the US
policy of destructive economic exploitation. It will only intensify American
violence against the innocent people who happen to be in the vicinity of those
we decide are guilty. And, in doing so, drive them into the arms of extremists
– that is those who stand against the US by pursuing tactics as extreme as
those used by the US itself. Keep in mind that the violence of the oppressed
tends to raise to the level of the violence of the oppressor.
Part
IV – Conclusion
There
is a difference between being smart or clever, and being truly intelligent. The
men and women who run the United
States are very clever, but they are not
equally intelligent. They are clever enough to design deadly responses to
specific situations. However, the responses are almost always bounded by a
priori domestic political positions. Our leaders never display the intelligence
and the political courage to challenge those positions no matter how disastrous
they prove to be.
The
most recent example of this stuck in a rut scenario is the national hoopla that
followed the assassination of Osama bin Laden. In the president’s speech
announcing this action, and the subsequent media discussion about what it might
mean for the future, no attention was paid to why the 9/11 attacks were originally launched. President
Obama solemnly declared that “justice had been served” but he dared not note
the fact that bin Laden had launched the attacks of 2001 in order to obtain
“justice” for what American policy in the Muslim world had wrought.
Unless
the US changes its policies
in the Middle East the so-called War On Terror
cannot be won. There is a symbiotic relationship between our policies and the
resistance we encounter, between our state terrorism and their non-state
terrorism. You cannot bludgeon the connection away by simply honing your
tactical abilities to “penetrate and disrupt” because doing so does not
“destroy” the reasons for continuing opposition. That is the truth that comes
from an objective consideration of the ‘why’ of things. Unlike the Cairo taxi drivers, America’s leadership just does not
get it.
Lawrence
Davidson
Department of History
West Chester University
West Chester, Pa 19383
USA
Department of History
West Chester University
West Chester, Pa 19383
USA
DR.
LAWRENCE DAVIDSON is professor of Middle East history at
West Chester University in West Chester, PA, and the author of America’s
Palestine: Popular and Official Perceptions from Balfour to Israeli Statehood
(University of Florida Press, 2001), Islamic Fundamentalism (Greenwood Press,
2003), and Foreign Policy, Inc.: Privatizing American National Interest
(University of Kentuck Press, 2009).


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