http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article31312.htm
America
as a Shining Drone Upon a Hill
On Staring Death in the Face and Not Noticing
By Tom Engelhardt
May 14, 2012 "Information Clearing House" -- Here’s the essence of it: you can trust America’s crème de la crème, the most elevated, responsible people, no matter what weapons, what powers, you put in their hands. No need to constantly look over their shoulders.
On Staring Death in the Face and Not Noticing
By Tom Engelhardt
May 14, 2012 "Information Clearing House" -- Here’s the essence of it: you can trust America’s crème de la crème, the most elevated, responsible people, no matter what weapons, what powers, you put in their hands. No need to constantly look over their shoulders.
Placed in
the hands of evildoers, those weapons and powers could create a
living nightmare; controlled by the best of people, they lead to
measured, thoughtful, precise decisions in which bad things are
(with rare and understandable exceptions) done only to truly
terrible types. In the process, you simply couldn’t be better
protected.
And in
case you were wondering, there is no question who among us are
the best, most lawful, moral, ethical, considerate, and
judicious people: the officials of our national security state.
Trust them implicitly. They will never give you a bum steer.
You may be
paying a fortune to maintain their world -- the
30,000 people hired to listen in on conversations and other
communications in this country, the 230,000 employees of the
Department of Homeland Security, the
854,000 people with top-secret clearances, the
4.2 million with security clearances of one sort or another,
the
$2 billion, one-million-square-foot data center that the
National Security Agency is constructing in Utah, the gigantic
$1.8 billion headquarters the National Geospatial
Intelligence Agency recently built for its 16,000 employees in
the Washington area -- but there’s a good reason. That’s what’s
needed to make truly elevated, surgically precise decisions
about life and death in the service of protecting American
interests on this dangerous globe of ours.
And in
case you wondered just how we know all this, we have it on the
best authority: the people who are doing it -- the only ones,
given the obvious need for secrecy, capable of judging just how
moral, elevated, and remarkable their own work is. They deserve
our congratulations, but if we’re too distracted to give it to
them, they are quite capable of high-fiving themselves.
We’re
talking, in particular, about the use by the Obama
administration (and the Bush administration before it) of a
growing armada of remotely piloted planes, a.k.a. drones,
grimly labeled Predators and Reapers, to fight a nameless,
almost planet-wide war (formerly known as the Global War on
Terror). Its purpose: to destroy al-Qaeda-in-wherever and all
its wannabes and look-alikes, the Taliban, and anyone affiliated
or associated with any of the above, or just about anyone else
we believe might
imminently endanger our “interests.”
In the
service of this war, in the midst of a
perpetual state of war and of wartime,
every act committed by these leaders is, it turns out,
absolutely, totally, and completely legal. We have their say-so
for that, and they have the documents to prove it, largely
because the best and most elevated legal minds among them have
produced that documentation in secret. (Of course, they dare
not show it to the rest of us, lest lives be endangered.)
By their
own account, they have, in fact, been covertly exceptional,
moral, and legal for more than a decade (minus,
of course, the odd
black site and
torture chamber) -- so covertly exceptional, in fact, that
they haven’t quite gotten the credit they deserve. Now, they
would like to make the latest version of their exceptional
mission to the world known to the rest of us. It is finally in
our interest, it seems, to be a good deal better informed about
America’s covert wars in a year in which the widely announced
“covert” killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan is a major
selling point in the president’s reelection campaign.
No one
should be surprised. There was always an “overt” lurking in the
“covert” of what now passes for “covert war.” The CIA’s global
drone assassination campaign has long been a
bragging point in Washington, even if it
couldn’t officially be discussed directly before, say,
Congress. The covertness of our drone wars in the Pakistani
tribal borderlands, Somalia, Yemen, and elsewhere really turns
out to have less to do with secrecy --
just about every covert drone strike is reported, sooner or
later, in the media -- than assuring two administrations that
they could pursue their drone wars without accountability to
anyone.
A
Classic of Self-Congratulation
Recently,
top administration officials seem to be
fanning out to offer rare peeks into what’s truly on-target
and exceptional about America’s drone wars. In many ways, these
days, American exceptionalism is
about as unexceptional as apple pie. It has, for one thing,
become the everyday language of the presidential
campaign trail. And that shouldn’t surprise us either.
After all, great powers and their leaders tend to think well of
themselves. The French had their “mission civilisatrice,”
the Chinese had the “mandate of heaven,” and like all imperial
powers they inevitably thought they were doing the best for
themselves and others, sadly benighted, in this best of all
possible worlds.
Sometimes,
though, the American version of this does seem... I hate to use
the word, but exceptional. If you want to get a taste of just
what this means, consider as Exhibit One a
recent speech by the president’s counterterrorism
“tsar,” John Brennan, at the Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars. According to his own account, he was
dispatched to the center by President Obama to provide greater
openness when it comes to the administration’s secret drone
wars, to respond to critics of the drones and their legality,
and undoubtedly to put a smiley face on drone operations
generally.
Ever since
the Puritan minister John Winthrop first used the phrase in a
sermon on shipboard on the way to North America, “a
city upon a hill” has caught something of at least one
American-style dream -- a sense that this country’s fate was to
be a blessed paragon for the rest of the world, an exception to
every norm. In the last century, it became “a shining city upon
a hill” and was regularly cited in presidential addresses.
Whatever
that “city,” that dream, was once imagined to be, it has
undergone a largely unnoticed metamorphosis in the twenty-first
century. It has become -- even in our dreams -- an up-armored
garrison encampment, just as Washington itself has become the
heavily fortified bureaucratic heartland of a war state. So
when Brennan spoke, what he offered was a new version of
American exceptionalism: the first “shining drone upon a hill”
speech, which also qualifies as an instant classic of
self-congratulation.
Never,
according to him, has a country with such an advanced weapon
system as the drone used it quite so judiciously, quite so -- if
not peacefully -- at least with the sagacity and skill usually
reserved for the gods. American drone strikes, he assured his
listeners, are “ethical and just," "wise," and "surgically
precise” -- exactly what you’d expect from a country he refers
to, quoting the president, as the preeminent “standard
bearer in the conduct of war.”
Those
drone strikes, he assured his listeners, are based on
staggeringly “rigorous standards” involving the individual
identification of human targets. Even when visited
on American citizens outside declared war zones, they are
invariably “within the bounds of the law,” as you would expect
of the preeminent “nation of laws.”
The
strikes are never motivated by vengeance, always target someone
known to us as the worst of the worst, and almost invariably
avoid anyone who is even the most mediocre of the mediocre.
(Forget the fact that, as Greg Miller of the Washington Post
reported, the CIA has recently received permission from the
president to launch drone strikes in Yemen based only on the
observed “patterns of suspicious behavior” of groups of
unidentified individuals, as was already true in the Pakistani
tribal borderlands.)
Yes, in
such circumstances innocents do unfortunately die, even if
unbelievably rarely -- and for that we couldn’t be more
regretful. Such deaths, however, are in some sense salutary,
since they lead to the most rigorous reviews and reassessments
of, and so improvements in, our actions. “This too,” Brennan
assured his audience, “is a reflection of our values as
Americans.”
“I would
note,” he added, “that these standards, for identifying a target
and avoiding... the loss of lives of innocent civilians, exceed
what is required as a matter of international law on a typical
battlefield. That’s another example of the high standards to
which we hold ourselves.”
And that’s
just a taste of the tone and substance of the speech given by
the president’s leading counterterrorism expert, and in it he’s
no outlier. It catches something about an American sense of
self at this moment. Yes, Americans may be
ever more down on the Afghan war, but like their leaders,
they are high on drones. In a February Washington Post/ABC
News poll,
83% of respondents supported the administration’s use of
drones. Perhaps that’s not surprising either, since the drones
are generally presented here as the
coolest of machines, as well as cheap alternatives (in money
and lives) to sending more armies onto the Eurasian mainland.
Predator Nation
In these
last years, this country has pioneered the development of the
most advanced killing machines on the planet for which the
national security state has
plans decades into the future. Conceptually speaking, our
leaders have also established their “right” to send these robot
assassins into any airspace, no matter the
local claims of national sovereignty, to take out those we
define as evil or simply to protect American interests. On
this, Brennan couldn’t be clearer. In the process, we have
turned much of the rest of the planet into what can only be
considered an American
free-fire zone.
We have,
in short, established a remarkably expansive set of drone-war
rules for the global future. Naturally, we trust ourselves with
such rules, but there is a fly in the ointment, even as
the droniacs see it. Others far less sagacious, kindly, lawful,
and good than we are do exist on this planet and they may soon
have their own fleets of drones. About
50 countries are
today buying or
developing such robotic aircraft, including Russia, China,
and Iran, not to speak of Hezbollah in Lebanon. And who knows
what terror groups are looking into suicide drones?
As the
Washington Post’s David Ignatius
put it in a column about Brennan’s speech: “What if the
Chinese deployed drones to protect their workers in southern
Sudan against rebels who have killed them in past attacks? What
if Iran used them against Kurdish separatists they regard as
terrorists? What if Russia used them over Chechnya? What
position would the United States take, and wouldn’t it be
hypocritical if it opposed drone attacks by other nations that
face ‘imminent’ or ‘significant’ threats?”
This is
Washington’s global drone conundrum as seen from inside the
Beltway. These are the nightmarish scenarios even our leaders
can imagine others producing with their own drones and
our rules. A deeply embedded sense of American exceptionalism,
a powerful belief in their own special, self-evident goodness,
however, conveniently blinds them to what they are doing right
now. Looking in the mirror, they are incapable of seeing a mask
of death. And yet our proudest export at present, other than
Hollywood
superhero films, may be a stone-cold robotic killer with a
name straight out of a
horror movie.
Consider
this as well: those “shining drones” launched on campaigns of
assassination and slaughter are increasingly the “face” that we
choose to present to the world. And yet it’s beyond us why it
might not shine for others.
In
reality, it’s not so hard to imagine what we increasingly look
like to those others: a Predator nation. And not just to the
parents and relatives of the more than
160 children the Bureau of Investigative Journalism has
documented as having died in U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan.
After all, war is now the only game in town. Peace? For the
managers of our national security state, it’s neither a word
worth mentioning, nor an imaginable condition.
In truth,
our leaders should be in mourning for whatever peaceful dreams
we ever had. But mention drones and they light up. They’re
having a love affair with those machines. They just can’t get
enough of them or imagine their world or ours without them.
What they
can’t see in the haze of exceptional self-congratulation is
this: they are transforming the promise of America into a
promise of death. And death, visited from the skies, isn’t
precise. It isn’t glorious. It isn’t judicious. It certainly
isn’t a shining vision. It’s hell. And it’s a global future
for which, someday, no one will thank us.
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the
American Empire Project and the author of
The American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s
as well as
The End of Victory Culture, runs the Nation Institute's
TomDispatch.com. His latest book is
The United States of Fear
(Haymarket Books).
Follow TomDispatch on Twitter @TomDispatch and join us on
Facebook.
This
article was first published at
TomDispatch
Copyright
2012 Tom Engelhardt
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