- Chalmers Johnson is professor emeritus of the University
of California, San Diego where he taught for 30 years as well as at UC,
Berkeley (where he was educated). At Berkeley, he was chairman of the
Center for Chinese Studies and its Department of Political Studies. He's
currently president of the Japan Policy Research Institute (JPRI), a not-for-profit
research and public affairs organization involved in public education relating
to Japan and international relations in the Pacific region. Johnson is
also a prolific writer and author of 17 books, numerous articles and various
other publications.
-
- From 1967 through 1973, he served as well as a consultant
to the Office of National Estimates (ONE) within the CIA, and during the
Cold War years was, by his own characterization, a former "spear-carrier
for the empire." At least since the age of George Bush, however,
Johnson radically transformed himself into one of the nation's sharpest
and most important intellectual critics of the current administration having
now completed the third and last volume of his "inadvertent trilogy"
in his newest book Nemesis that's the subject of this review.
-
- The previous two he refers to are Blowback based on 1953
CIA terminology in the aftermath of the spy agency's first ever engineered
overthrow of a foreign leader - democratically elected Iranian Prime Minister
Mohammad Mossadeq ushering in the 26 year tryannical rule of Shah Reza
Pahlavi who was himself forcibly ousted in the 1979 Iranian Revolution.
Volume two was The Sorrows of Empire - Militarism, Secrecy, and the End
of the Republic. Volume three is Nemesis - The Last Days of the American
Republic and subject of this review that hopefully will encourage readers
to get the book and read the others in Johnson's trilogy to get the full
picture of his powerfully vital message.
-
- Combined, the three volumes show how imperial hubris
and overreach have undermined the republic. Johnson characterizes it as
dealing "with the way arrogant and misguided American policies have
headed us for a series of catastrophes comparable to our disgrace and defeat
in Vietnam or even to the sort of extinction that befell....the Soviet
Union (that he believes is) now unavoidable." In his view, the present
state of the nation is dire, and it's "too late for mere scattered
reforms of our government or bloated military to make much difference."
-
- Our democracy and way of life are now threatened because
of our single-minded pursuit of empire with a well-entrenched militarism
driving it that's become so powerful and pervasive it's now an uncontrollable
state within the state. History is clear on this teaching we can choose
as could all empires before us.
-
-
- We can keep ours and lose our democracy, but we can't
have both. Rome made the wrong choice and perished. Britain chose more
wisely and survived. We must now choose, and so far the signs are ominous.
Our current behavior under all administrations post-WW II requires resources
and commitments abroad that in the end, Johnson believes, "will inevitably
undercut our domestic democracy and....produce a military dictatorship
or its civilian equivalent." We're perilously close already because
a hyper-reactionary statist administration hijacked the government and
is driving the nation to tyranny and ruin.
-
- The evidence post-9/11 shows it:
-
- -- A nation facing no outside threats permanently at
war.
-
- -- Secret torture-prisons around the world with no accountability
to which anyone, anywhere for any reason can be sent never to return or
receive justice.
-
- -- The most secretive, intrusive and repressive government
in our history and a president who's a congenital, serial liar.
-
- -- Social decay at home.
-
- -- An unprecedented wealth disparity and extent of corporate
power. Former US Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis warned years ago:
"We can either have democracy in this country or we can have great
wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both."
-
- -- A de facto one party state with two wings and a president
claiming "unitary executive" powers ignoring the rule of law
and doing as he pleases in the name of national security on his say alone.
-
- -- The absence of checks and balances and separation
of powers with no restraint on a reckless "boy-emperor" Executive
on a "messianic mission."
-
- -- A secret intelligence establishment with near-limitless
funding operating without oversight.
-
- -- A dominant corporate-controlled media serving as a
national thought-control police and collective quasi-state ministry of
information and propaganda glorifying imperial wars to "spread democracy"
without letting on they're for conquest, domination and repression.
-
- -- An omnipotent military-industrial complex Dwight Eisenhower
couldn't have imagined when he warned us nor could George Washington, to
no avail. In his Farewell Address in September, 1796, Washington said:
"Overgrown military establishments are under any form of government
inauspicious to liberty, and are to be regarded as particularly hostile
to republican liberty." He meant large standing armies leading to
an imperial presidency. They destroy our system of checks and balances
and separation of powers and in the end our freedom.
-
- -- A weak, servile Congress acceding to a dominant president
under a system of authoritarian rule keeping a restive population in line
it fears one day no longer will tolerate being denied essential services
so the nation's wealth can go for imperial wars and handouts to the rich.
-
- -- A cesspool of corruption stemming from incestuous
ties between government and business mocking any notions of government
of, for or by the people.
-
- Johnson points out America is plagued with the same dynamic
that doomed other past empires unwilling to change - "isolation, overstretch,
the uniting of local and global forces opposed to imperialism, and in the
end bankruptcy" combined with authoritarian rule and loss of personal
freedom. Hence, the title of the book - Nemesis, the goddess of vengeance
and punisher of hubris and arrogance in Greek mythology. She's already
here among us, unseen and patiently stalking our way of life as a free
nation awaiting the moment she chooses to make her presence known that
won't be pleasant when she does. Johnson compares her to Wagner's Brunnhilde
in his opera cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen. Unlike Nemesis, she collects
heros, not fools and hypocrites. But she and Nemesis both announce themselves
the same way - "Only the doomed see me," even though we'll all
feel her presence and suffer her sting.
-
- Our present crisis isn't just from our military adventurism
in Iraq and Afghanistan. It's from growing international anger and revulsion
that America is no longer trusted with a president showing contempt for
the law including our treaty obligations Article 6 of the Constitution
says are the "supreme Law of the Land." They include the Third
Geneva Convention (GCIII) of 1949 covering the treatment of prisoners in
time of war and Fourth Geneva Convention (GCIV) the same year on protection
of civilians in wartime in enemy hands or under occupation by a foreign
power.
-
- No authority gives presidents, governments or militaries
the right to ignore them, but this president and government flaunt them
openly, almost gleefully They practically boast about it, enraging people
everywhere including allies and the entire Muslim world this country collectively
demonizes as terrorists, militants and Islamofascists in its concocted
"war on terror" the Pentagon now calls the "Long War"
that won't end in our lifetime.
-
- In early 2003, Johnson warned us about "the sorrows
already invading our lives....to be our fate for years to come: perpetual
war, a collapse of constitutional government, endemic official lying and
disinformation, and finally bankruptcy." Then and now, he still hopes
Americans will see the threat and act before it's too late, but time, he
believes, is short, and overall, he's not hopeful. His newest book explains
how we got here, and what we must do to avoid our appointment with Nemesis
who's very patient, but even hers has limits and we're approaching it.
-
- This review covers the essence and flavor of Johnson's
case he makes in seven powerful chapters. They're not recommended at bedtime.
-
- Militarism and Breakdown of Constitutional Government
-
- Johnson begins by noting other 20th century empires that
rose and fell with parallels to our situation today. He cites among others
the Brits, Soviets, Nazis, Japanese, and Ottomans to press his case that
we like them, and ancient Rome earlier, "are approaching the edge
of a huge waterfall and are about to plunge over it." He quotes historian
Kevin Baker's fear we're perilously close to the day when our Congress,
like the Roman Senate in 27 BC, will use its power for the last time before
turning it over to a military dictator. Based on the past six years, it's
arguable it's already with a civilian one.
-
- The Bush-Cheney administration brought us to this point,
but the crisis didn't start with them. It began at the beginning when
Benjamin Franklin warned us we have a Republic if we can keep it. It advanced
gradually but accelerated post-WW II when we emerged as the only dominant
nation left standing and planned to keep it that way causing the "sorrows"
we now face - an imperial presidency, erosion of checks and balances and
separation of powers, and a culture of militarism that's a power unto itself
that today who would dare challenge.
-
- The Founders tried preventing the kind of tyranny colonists
endured under King George III. They invented a system of constitutionally
mandated republican government with a federal authority sharing power with
the states and three separate branches in Washington able to check and
balance each other with the single most important power put in the hands
of Congress so presidents would never have it - the ability to declare
war. James Madison, Father of the Constitution, said it's because: "Of
all the enemies to liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded, because
it comprises and develops the germ of every other.... (Delegating) such
powers (to the president) would have struck, not only at the fabric of
the Constitution, but at the foundation of all well organized and well
checked governments."
-
- The last times Congress used its sole power were on December
8, 1941 after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and on December 11 after
Germany and Italy declared war on America because their Axis Power obligations
required them to do it and Hitler's and "Il Duce's" imperial
eyes were bigger than their realpolitik stomachs.
-
- Today more than two centuries later, Benjamin Franklin's
warning hits home harder than ever as the Founders' constitutional framework
has nearly disintegrated. The president is more powerful than a monarch.
Along with the military, he has his own private army in the form of a
clandestine CIA plus control of all 15 extraconstitutional intelligence
organizations. They and the military answer to no one including the Congress
because they operate secretly with undisclosed budgets (even the Pentagon
has in part), and the law of the land is just an artifact, powerless to
constrain them.
-
- In Nemesis, Johnson concentrates on the power of the
military and a single intelligence agency, the CIA. He says upfront he
believes "we will never again know peace, nor in all probability survive
very long as a nation, unless we abolish the CIA, restore intelligence
collecting to the State Department, and remove all but purely military
functions from the Pentagon." Even if we do it, he now believes it's
too late as the nation once called a model democracy "may have been
damaged beyond repair (and) it will take a generation or more (at best)
to overcome the image of 'America as torturer'"and rogue state showing
contempt for international law, human rights, and ordinary people everywhere.
It's not what the Founders conceived nor how things should have been in
a democratic state Lincoln said at Gettysburg was "of the people,
by the people, for the people...." Today it's only for the privileged.
-
- It turned out badly because power corrupts those getting
too much of it, and since 1941 that power grew as the nation prepared for
wars it never stopped mobilizing for since. It comes with a price - the
end of democracy and loss of freedoms that can't coexist with imperialism
on the march for conquest and dominance that turned America the beautiful
into a nation to be feared and hated. We emerged from WW II haughty and
confident as the world's unchallengeable economic, political and military
superpower almost like we planned it that way which we did. We weren't
about to give it up and intended taking full advantage to rule the world,
tolerate no outliers, and demand fealty and deference from all nations
with hell to pay to ones that balk.
-
- The mislabeled "good war" launched our global
imperium now on the march for "full-spectrum dominance" meaning
absolute unchallengeable control of all land, surface and sub-surface sea,
air, space, electromagnetic spectrum and information systems - no small
aim indeed for rulers with larger than possible ambitions and no intention
backing off, so help us all.
-
- It makes the cost painfully high with more military spending
than the rest of the world combined, but never enough for a voracious military-industrial
establishment and complicit government going along meaning finding justification
for it. September 11, 2001, dubbed the "New Pearl Harbor," served
it up like room service ushering in an intense and contrived climate of
fear allowing the country to go on a rampage to solidify control through
aggressive wars against enemies always easy to invent to assure we won't
run out of them. Heading the list are resource-rich countries or ones
like Afghanistan because they're strategically located near energy-rich
areas like the Caspian Basin. But any leader forgetting "who's boss"
gets in the target queue for regime change, even model democrats like Hugo
Chavez needing reminders our sovereignty comes ahead of theirs.
-
- And who'll dare challenge the notion that might makes
right so international laws, norms and "supreme Law of the Land"
treaties can be dismissed to get on with the business at hand. It doesn't
matter to a rogue empire on the march and a president believing the law
is what he says it is, the national security is just rhetoric for I'll
do as I please, and the Constitution is "just a goddamned piece of
paper." What he and those around him lack in subtleness, they make
up for big time in brazenness, but that kind of attitude paves the road
to hell we're on for our appointment with Nemesis.
-
- Johnson reviews our campaign against Iraq since the Gulf
war in 1991. That conflict, killer-sanctions for the next dozen years,
and the Iraq war since 2003 all violate international laws and are clear
instances of war crimes and crimes against humanity, but what power will
hold the world's only superpower to account. The toll on Iraq and its
people for the past 16 years has been devastating. The US campaign destroyed
a once prosperous nation and its priceless heritage leaving in its wake
a surreal lawless armed camp wasteland with few or no essential services
including electricity, clean water and sanitation facilities, medical care,
fuel and most everything else needed for sustenance, public safety and
survival.
-
- Johnson quotes experts saying the looting of the National
Museum of Baghdad and burning of the National Library and Archives and
Library of Korans at the Ministry of Religious Affairs and Endowments amounted
to "the greatest cultural disaster of the last 500 years (and some
say since the) Mongol invasion of Baghdad in 1258 to find looting on this
scale." Donald Rumsfeld and the Pentagon went to great pains protecting
the Oil Ministry, but were indifferent, almost gleeful seeing priceless
treasures looted and burned. It detroyed a "whole universe of antiquity"
Iraqis and civilized people everywhere won't ever forgive us for.
-
- In all, the Gulf war and US-imposed sanctions caused
1.5 million or more Iraqi deaths up to March, 2003 plus another 3.5 million
or more refugees to the present outside Iraq or internally displaced.
In addition, the shocking 2006 Lancet published study estimated the joint
US-British invasion caused another 655,000 violent deaths since then through
mid-2006, although they readily admitted the true figure might be as high
as 900,000 because they were unable to survey the most violent parts of
the country or interview thousands of families all of whose members were
killed.
-
- Already the US-inflicted devastation on Iraq and its
people since 1991 amounts to one of the great war/sanctions/and occupation
related crimes in human history. Their effects keep mounting exponentially
with no way to know how great the toll will be when it's over. One day
it will be because Iraqis won't stop fighting for their freedom till it
is, but none of this gets reported in US media and precious little anywhere
in the West. So far, war continues because America's on the march, and
Johnson notes US soldiers in Iraq are only accountable to their superiors
in the field or the Pentagon, and an estimated 100,000 civilian contractors
are only accountable to themselves.
-
- The darkest side of our adventurism is our global network
of military prisons (authorized by the Secretary of Defense and Pentagon)
where physical and mental torture are practiced even though it's known
no useful information comes from it. Instead it's used for social control,
vengeance and a policy of degrading people regarded as sub-human because
they happen to be less-than-white Arab or Afghan Muslims. It's also a symbolic
act of superpower defiance daring the world community to challenge us.
International Geneva Convention laws and the 1984 UN Convention against
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment no
longer matter for the lord and master of the universe. The US is accountable
under them, but clever lawyers and a lawless Attorney General rewrite the
rules of engagement claiming justification even when they don't have a
leg to stand on.
-
- Imperial Pathologies - Comparing America to Rome and
Britain
-
- Johnson makes his case citing ancient Rome to show how
imperialism and militarism destroyed the Republic. He notes after its
worst defeat at the hands of Carthaginian general Hannibal in 216 BC, Romans
vowed never again to tolerate the rise of a Mediterranean power capable
of threatening their survival and felt justified waging preemptive war
against any opponent it thought might try.
-
- That was Paul Wolfowitz's notion as Undersecretary of
Defense for Policy in the GHW Bush administration in 1992 that he began
implementing as Deputy Secretary of Defense in 2001 and made part of the
National Security Strategy in 2002. It was an ancient Roman megalomanic
vision called Pax Romana that post-WW II became Pax Americana with illusions
of wanting unchallengeable dominance to deter any potential rival, and,
like ancient Rome, wage preemptive or preventive war to assure it.
-
- A culture of corruption and militarism eroded the Roman
Republic that effectively ended in 49 BC when Julius Caesar crossed the
Rubicon River in Northern Italy plunging the country in civil war that
left Caesar victorious when all his leading opponents were dead. The Republic
died with them as Caesar became the state exercising dictatorship over
it from 48 to 44 BC when his reign ended on the Ides of March that year
after his fateful meeting in the Roman Senate with Brutus, Cassius and
six other conspirators whose long knives did what enemy legions on battlefields
couldn't. It led to the rise of Caesar's grandnephew Octavian. In 27
BC, the Roman Senate gave him his new title, Augustus Caesar, making him
Rome's first emperor after earlier ceding most of its powers to him. He
then emasculated Rome's system of republican rule turning the Senate into
an aristocratic family club performing ceremonial duties only.
-
- It was much the same in Nazi Germany only much faster.
The German Reichstag made Adolph Hitler Reichschallcellor on January 30,
1933 ceding its power to him March 23 by enacting the Enabling Act or Law
to Remedy the Distress of the People and the Empire establishing a Nazi
dictatorship and allowing the Weimar Republic to pass quietly into history.
With a whimper, not a bang, it gave Hitler absolute power and the right
to enact laws and constitutional changes on his own with little more than
rubber-stamping approval from an impotent Reichstag that anointed him Reichsfuhrer
a year later allowing him supreme power to destroy the state he only got
to rule for 12 years.
-
- Like Nazi Germany and other empires, Johnson explains
the "Roman Republic failed to adjust to the unintended consequences
of its imperialism (and militaristic part of it) leading to drastic alterations
in its form of government" that was transformed into dictatorship.
It's constitution became undermined along with genuine political and human
rights its citizens once had but lost under imperial rule. Rome's military
success made made it very rich and its leaders arrogant leading to what
Johnson calls "the first case of what today we call imperial overstretch."
It didn't help that a citizen army of conscripts got transformed into
professional military warriors. It grew large and unwieldy becoming a
state within a state like our Pentagon today. It created a culture of militarism
that turned into a culture of moral decay leading to the empire's decline
and fall.
-
- The US Republic has yet to collapse, but an imperial
presidency now places great strain on it with a dominant Pentagon and culture
of militarism undermining Congress, the courts and our civil liberties.
Ancient Rome proved republican checks and balances aren't compatible with
imperial dreams and a powerful military on the march for them. The US
may have crossed its own Rubicon on September 18, 2001 with the passage
of the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) by joint House-Senate
resolution authorizing "the use of United States Armed Forces against
those responsible for the recent attacks launched against the United States
(and) giving the President....authority under the Constitution to take
action to deter and prevent acts of international terrorism against the
United States...."
-
- By this act alone, George Bush got congressional authority
to seize near dictatorial power in the name of national security, ignore
constitutional and international law, be able to wage aggressive war to
protect the nation, and get repressive laws passed threatening citizens
and others alike with loss of our freedoms. Then in October, 2002, Congress
voted the president unrestricted power to preemptively strike Iraq whenever
he believed it "appropriate" meaning he was free to wage aggressive
war against Iraq or any other nation he henceforth called a threat using
tactical nuclear weapons if he chooses.
-
- This kind of unrestricted power isn't just dictatorial
authority. It's insanity courtesy of the Congress and supportive right
wing courts. It's taking us the same way as ancient Rome assuring our
fate will be no different unless it's stopped and reversed. It's the inevitable
price of imperial arrogance making leaders feel invulnerable till they
no longer are, and it's too late.
-
- We may still have a choice, and Johnson cites the one
Britain took to explain. They sacrificed empire to preserve democracy
knowing they couldn't have both. They earlier took up the "White Man's
Burden" in a spirit of imperial "goodness" we now call "spreading
democracy" believing Anglo-Saxons deserved to rule other nations,
especially ones of color they thought inferior. Johnson explains "successful
imperialism requires that a domestic republic change into a tyranny."
It happened to Rome, and he sees it happening here under an imperial presidency
with militarism taking ever greater root in society. Britain was spared
by a democratic resurgence followed WW II. People finally freed from the
scourge of Nazism said never again and chose democracy to assure it.
-
- We must now choose whether to return to our founding
roots or stay on our present path heading to imperial tyranny. For Johnson,
Rome and Britain are the "archtypes" defining where we stand
and what we face. Rome chose empire, lost its Republic and then everything.
Britain went the other way choosing democracy despite the Blair government's
disgraceful post-9/11 imperial indiscretions acting as Washington's pawn
in service to our adventurism. Now late in the game, we must choose one
way or the other. We can either have our democratic "cake" or
"eat it" and suffer the consequences. We can't have it both ways.
-
- The CIA - The President's Private Army
-
- Imperial Rome had its elite praetorian guard to protect
and serve its emperors. The CIA here works the same way as a private army
for the president that in the end will go his way as it did producing phony
intelligence the Bush administration used to justify war with Iraq. It
proved its loyalty by its willingness to lie, but it does lots more than
that - the kinds of extrajudicial things it gets away with because everything
about "the company" is secret, including its budget. It puts
CIA beyond the law making it unaccountable to the public and Congress that
have every right to know in a "democracy" but none under imperial
rule. Johnson stresses that US presidents have "untrammeled control
of the CIA (and it's) probably (their) single most extraordinary power"
as it puts them beyond the check and balancing powers of Congress and courts
constitutionally required in republican systems of government. Not in
our "Republic," at least since 1947 when the National Security
Act created the CIA under Harry Truman to succeed the wartime OSS dissolved
in 1945.
-
- Johnson explains CIA originally had five missions. Four
dealt with collection, coordination and dissemination of intelligence.
The fifth one was vague allowing the agency to "perform such other
functions and duties related to intelligence affecting the national security
as the National Security Council (overseeing it) may....direct."
This mandate caused the problem turning "CIA into the personal, secret,
unaccountable army of the president" and making secret covert, often
mischievous illegal, operations its main function. Their duties include
overthrowing democratically elected governments, assassinating foreign
heads of state and key officials, propping up friendly dictators, and snatching
targeted individuals for "extraordinary rendition" on privately-leased
aircraft to secret torture-prisons for not too gracious treatment on arrival
that may include "destroying" the evidence after completing interrogation.
-
- We claimed justification for it during the Cold War even
though extrajudicial activities are never permissible under republican
constitutional government. Today under George Bush, things are further
complicated as CIA is one of 15 intelligence agencies under a director
of National Intelligence (DNI). But even with this realignment, CIA remains
the president's private praetorian guard army accountable only to him with
tens of billions of secret budget power to do plenty of damage.
-
- It now lets CIA be more active than ever as under Bush
it's got double the number of covert operatives making Johnson believe
the spy agency's original purpose is history with DNI now handling most
intelligence gathering functions. CIA is now a mostly global hit squad
Mafia with Bush its resident Godfather sending it off to do "assassinations,
dirty tricks, renditions, and engineering foreign coups. In the intelligence
field it will be restricted to informing our presidents and generals about
current affairs." In all it does, the agency's secrecy shields the
chief executive from responsibility giving him plausible deniability if
anything leaks out. Johnson explains "CIA's bag of dirty tricks....is
a defining characteristic of the imperial presidency. It is a source of
unchecked power that can gravely threaten the nation....(Its) so-called
reforms....in 2006 have probably further shortened the life of the American
republic." "The company" is a menace to democratic rule.
Either it goes or our freedoms do.
-
- US Military Bases Around the World
-
- People in US cities would be outraged if another country
garrisoned its troops close by with all the resulting fallout: unacceptable
noise, pollution, environmental destruction, appropriation of valued public
real estate along with drunken soldiers on the loose violating laws, causing
damage and raping local women. Not the kinds of neighbors we choose, especially
when they're mostly unaccountable for their actions.
-
- We don't generally give other nations basing rights here.
But the Pentagon practically demands other countries allow us the right
to put our troops on choice parts of their real estate around the world.
That's real heavy-handed imperial arrogance mindful of an earlier time
when imperialism could be measured by an empire's colony count. Military
outposts are our version set up to operate by our own rules when we show
up. Locals have no say and neither does the host country once a Status
of Forces Agreement (SOFA) is finalized that gives the US "guest"
freedom from host country laws and restraints governing civilian life and
exemption from any inconvenient environmental cleanup obligations. That
subject is covered in the next section.
-
- Only one superpower remained after the Soviet Union dissolved
in 1991, and the Russians never posed a serious challenge before it did.
All along we greatly outclassed and outgunned them, and Moscow only wanted
a standoff if it came to that. During the Cold War, we had many military
outposts around the world supposedly aimed at them, but how do we justify
them now. They're not for defense. They're for offense in contrast to
home-based ones to defend the nation.
-
- Johnson reviews the known number of US bases in other
countries by size and branch of service. According to the Department of
Defense's Base Structure Report through 2005, the official total of all
sizes is 737, but so many were built in recent years, Johnson believes
the actual number exceeds 1000 and is rising. Unlisted ones includes dozens
in Iraq, 106 garrisons in Afghanistan, the gigantic Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo
built after the Yugoslav war in 1999, and others in Eastern Europe, Israel,
Qatar and other Gulf states plus ongoing negotiations all the time to build
new bases in new locations in new and currently "occupied" countries.
-
- It takes a lot of resources maintaining an operation
this sized. Just the facilities and staff alone make the cost truly staggering.
Included are the number of military, civil service and locally hired personnel,
facilities, acreage, weaponry and munitions (including thousands of nuclear
weapons) and everything else needed to keep a worldwide operation this
size functioning. And this only covers what's open to the public and Congress
excluding what the Pentagon and host countries keep secret. There's plenty
of that including information about bases the US uses to eavesdrop on global
communications or our nuclear deployments violating treaty obligations.
The Pentagon keeps much of this hidden deploring any oversight as part
of its culture of secrecy concealing from Congress and our NATO allies
the true extent of our strength, breath and intentions.
-
- Once Donald Rumsfeld got to the Pentagon he fit right
in and served there once before under Gerald Ford. He didn't hide how
he wanted to restructure the military to make it lighter, more agile and
high tech but no less secret. The result was Department of Defense's Global
Posture Review first mentioned by George Bush in November, 2003. It divides
military installations into three types:
-
- -- (1) Main Operating Bases (MOBs) having permanently
stationed combat forces, extensive infrastructure, command and control
headquarters and extensive accommodations for families including hospitals,
schools and recreational facilities. The Pentagon calls these bases "little
Americas."
-
- -- (2) Forward Operation Sites (FOSs) that are major
installations smaller than MOBs and over which the Pentagon tries maintaining
a low profile. They exclude families, and troop rotations in and out are
for six months, not three years as at MOBs.
-
- -- (3) Cooperative Security Locations (CSLs) - they're
the smallest, most austere and are called "lily pads" to cover
the entire planet's "arc of instability" that could include countries
earmarked for future military action. Preparation here includes prepositioned
weapons and munitions.
-
- The new global repositioning plan comes with a huge price
tag. The Overseas Basing Commission estimates it at $20 billion and would
be much higher but for the Pentagon's standard practice getting host countries
to pay their share of the tab allowing us basing rights on their territory.
It's called "burden sharing" or our notion of a country we occupy
helping pay the cost of deterring potential common enemies. At a time
when only US militarism poses a threat to world peace, one day countries
like Germany, Japan, South Korea, Spain and others no longer will tolerate
our garrisoning troops on their soil. Ecuador under its new president,
Raphael Correa, already served notice his country won't renew the US base
lease in Manta when it expires in 2009 unless Washington allows his country
comparable basing rights in Miami that's impossible. Other countries may
follow suit just like the East Europeans kicked out the Soviets after their
nations broke away in 1991.
-
- Today the Middle East commands center stage with the
Pentagon building major military installations in Iraq similar to the permanent
kind in Germany and Japan. Iraq is key to US imperial plans because of
its vast and easily accessible oil reserves but for a covert reason as
well. Johnson believes it's part of our "empire building" -
to shift major Saudi bases to the country making it a "permanent Pentagon
outpost" to control the area's "arc of instability" and
region's oil reserves that comprise 60% or more of the world's proven total.
-
- Add together all Muslim nations everywhere and their
combined known oil reserves are between two-thirds to three-quarters of
total world supply. If we control it all, it gives Washington enormous
veto power over all nations wanting accessing to the vital juice economies
run on. And if we keep demonizing Muslims as enemies and people believe
it, it's easy justifying our state-sponsored terror wars on them for all
the wrong reasons we say are the right ones.
-
- Headquarters for what's planned in the Middle East are
now on four or more permanent Iraq "super-bases" with possible
others to come. Many billions of dollars went into them, and they're anchor
fixtures in the country along with 100 or more others ranging from mega
to micro showing the extent of our digging in for the long haul in a country
and region we're not planning to leave in a hurry.
-
- It also shows in the kind of embassy we're building inside
the four square mile Green Zone in central Baghdad. Critics call it "Fortress
Baghdad" because it's to be the largest US embassy in the world by
far, encircled by 15-foot thick concrete walls and rings of concertina
wire along with protective surface-to-air missiles. Large numbers of private-sector
bodyguards and US military guard its vast facilities, there's modern infrastructure
comparable to any large US city with all the comforts and luxuries of home,
Saddam's private swimming pool is for GIs and others to frolic in, hometown
comfort food abounds, and staff and officials are planned to number around
1000. It's larger than Vatican City, six times the size of the UN New
York compound, and has become a hated symbol of imperial occupation, death
and destruction it caused, and the oppressive dominance Iraqis are committed
to end.
-
- Iraqi history shows an intolerance to occupation, and
Iraqis are convinced they'll maintain tradition proving again that notions
of permanency are in the eyes of the beholder and their end may come sooner
than planned. Our super-facilities may end up just like their mega-predecessors
in Danang, Cam Rahn Bay and the Saigon embassy housing the last remnants
of US presence helicoptered off its rooftop in defeat and humiliation.
We left them and much more behind when the Vietmanese kicked us out, even
though we never go anywhere planning to leave in a hurry if ever.
-
- US Imperialism at Work - Status of Force Agreements (SOFAs)
and How They Work
-
- SOFAs are formal contractual arrangements the US negotiates
with other countries implementing basic agreements we first agree to with
host nations allowing us the right to garrison troops and civilian personnel
there either on a new base we build or an existing one. They follow once
the Pentagon arranges a contractual "alliance" with a host country
usually based on "common objectives" and "international
threats to peace." In final form, they're intended to put US personnel
as far outside domestic law as possible and spell out host nation obligations
to us. Except for our reciprocal NATO agreements with member countries,
they also give our military and civilian personnel special privileges unavailable
to ordinary citizens of the host nation. It doesn't work that way with
western European states. They have collective clout and won't tolerate
the types of one-way deals we impose on smaller, weaker nations that can't
stand up to our kind of bullying.
-
- For host nations, SOFAs come with problems along with
perceived benefits. They result in unacceptable noise, pollution, environmental
damage with no remediation obligation, and they use valuable real estate
unavailable to the host or their people who can't avoid the kinds of fallout
problems showing up after we do. They include foreigners on their soil
accountable to US military rules and justice but not to theirs even when
crimes are committed against innocent civilians like local women being
abused and raped by drunken unruly troops believing away from home they
can do as they please and get away with it. They nearly always can.
-
- Johnson cites between 1998 and 2004 in Japan, US military
personnel were involved in 2,024 reported crimes or accidents on duty.
Only one led to a court-martial, 318 to "administrative discipline,
and the remainder were apparently absolved even though at least some of
these crimes involved robberies, rapes, reckless homicide, assaults and
other kinds of abuses no one would get away with at home. The result abroad
is growing public anger and discontent Johnson illustrates with a prominent
example.
-
- It's on the island of Okinawa, Japan's southern-most
and poorest prefecture and a place Johnson knows well from his time in
the Navy and as an expert on the country and region that includes a book
he co-wrote and edited called Okinawa: Cold War Island. The US has its
way with Japan having defeated its empire in 1945, wrote its constitution
in the aftermath, and has occupied the country ever since. It's well dug
in for the long haul with 88 bases on the Japanese islands, a country smaller
than California. Thirty-seven of those bases are on Okinawa, a tiny sliver
of land about the size of a large US city. It's easy understanding why
Okinawans are justifiably angry. They've been practically pushed into
the Pacific to make way for US occupation of their island taking over most
of its valued real estate and not treating it too well or the people.
-
- Okinawans' greatest outrage, however, is over SOFA-related
article 17 covering criminal justice. It states "The custody of an
accused member of the United States armed forces or the civilian component
(shall) remain with the United States until he is charged." It means
when US personnel commit crimes, Japanese investigative authorities have
no exclusive access to suspects until they're indicted in court. That
hamstrings investigations enough to make prosecutors often reluctant to
press charges because they can't get enough evidence to go to trial.
-
- Johnson cites a particularly grievous example he calls
the "most serious incident to influence Japanese-American relations
since the Security Treaty was signed in 1960." It happened in September,
1995 when two marines abducted a 12-year old girl, beat and raped her,
then left her on a beach going back to their base in a rented car. In
October, 85,000 Okinawans protested in a park demanding Japanese and American
authorities address their grievances after the US military refused to hand
over the suspects to Japanese police. This may be a notable example, but
it illustrates what Okinawans have endured for over 60 years. The US military
runs their territory without accountability to Japanese law. As a result,
US personnel get away with rapes, drunken brawling, muggings, drug violations,
arson and criminal homicide - because they're superior white-skinned Americans,
not yellow-skinned Japanese judged inferior.
-
- Things likely can't get much worse for Okinawans, but
if the US gets its way they probably will for all Japanese. It relates
to Washington's growing concern over China's explosive growth and increasing
dominance in the Pacific region. That makes the Chinese a major US regional
rival and potential superpower challenger some day. Bush officials won't
tolerate it and are pressuring Japan to revise article 9 of its constitution
renouncing force except for self-defense. The US wants Japan to be our
"Britain of the Far East" or "cop on the beat" to use
the country as a front line regional proxy against China, North Korea or
any other East Asian state forgetting "who's boss."
-
-
- But that notion doesn't set well with Japanese people
resulting in mass protests throughout the country in opposition. They
know how destructive WW II was and want no reoccurrences of it even though
already Japan again is a military power. It has the most powerful navy
in the world after the US, a total force size of nearly one-quarter million
in uniform, 452 combat aircraft and a military budget equalling China's.
-
- After long and difficult negotiations, the Japanese cabinet
finally agreed to approve a planned US realignment of forces in their country
that won't please its neighbors or its own people. Former prime minister
Koizumi and his right-wing supporters yearn to make their country a formidable
power again and thus agreed to various unpalatable US basing decisions
despite popular opposition to them. It shows Japanese and US officials'
insensitivity to deep-seated feelings on the ground that will only lead
to further heightened tensions in the region with China and North Korea
facing off against their US and Japanese rivals.
-
- The Ultimate Imperial Project in Space
-
- The notion of "full spectrum dominance" spelled
it out. The US considers outer space part of its territory, claims sole
right to dominate it, and won't tolerate a challenger interfering with
our plans to militarize the heavens reigning supreme over planet earth
from them. The whole idea is chilling having grown out of Ronald Reagan's
March 23,1983 speech calling for greater defense spending during the Cold
War. He wanted a huge R & D program for what became known as "Star
Wars" - an impermeable anti-missile shield in space called the Strategic
Defense Initiative (SDI). It hardly mattered that the whole idea was fantasy,
but a glorious one for defense contractors who've profited hugely on it
since. From inception, the program's funding ebbed and flowed with a tsunami
now going into it for an administration addicted to all things military
and a friendly Federal Reserve acting as "pusher" printing up
all the ready cash to do it.
-
- The Clinton administration only gave it modest support,
but that all changed once George Bush became president and Donald Rumsfeld
returned to the Pentagon for his second tour as Secretary of Defense with
fewer restraints than the first time. He wanted the US prepared for space
warfare as insane as the idea is. What's not insane is how hugely defense
contractors profit from an open-ended boondoggle padding their bottom lines
as long as no future president and Congress halt the madness. Rumsfeld
had his own ideas about committing the country to building and deploying
space-based weapons to destroy nuclear-armed missile launches even though
it can't be done now or ever.
-
- MIT's Theodore Postal is a leading authority on ballistic
missile defenses. He's spent years debunking notions that any useful defensive
shield will ever work. He flatly states: "the National Missile Defense
System has no credible scientific chance of working (and) is a serious
abuse of our security system." Nonetheless, the program is ongoing
and running strong under Robert Gates' new management at the Pentagon as
he's not known as one to buck his White House bosses that's one reason
he got the job.
-
- Johnson says all the "rhetoric about a future space
war is ideological posturing" similar to the "missile gap"
nonsense beginning in the Kennedy years. The notion of wars from or in
space are self-defeating because the adverse consequences from them affect
us as well as any adversary. Waging one would be like firing a gun exploding
in our face harming us as much as anyone hit by it. Dangerous orbiting
space debris, already a growing problem, is just one of many serious consequences
space wars would produce. Enough of it would threaten military and commercial
spacecraft that, in turn, would threaten activities in space. Johnson notes
the Air Force currently tracks 13,400 man-made space objects, only a few
hundred of which are orbiting satellites. We also know of more than 100,000
smaller pieces of untrackable junk, each the size of a marble and millions
more even smaller fragments.
-
- The problem isn't their size. It's the speed they travel
at - up to 17,500 miles per hour (same as the space shuttle), meaning when
they strike an object they pack a wallop that can be lethal if large enough
debris hits an orbiting spacecraft or satellite. Johnson quotes UC Santa
Cruz professor of physics Joel Primack saying: "Weaponizing of space
would make the debris problem much worse, and even one war in space could
encase the entire planet in a shell of whizzing debris that would thereafter
make space near the Earth highly hazardous for peaceful as well as military
purposes....(and) will jeopardize the possibility of space exploration."
-
- Johnson concurs on how ill-conceived our missile defense
schemes and notions of real star wars are that need to come off the table
but won't under warrior leadership. He says: "The conclusion is unavoidable:
Washington has given us the best illusion of protection against nuclear
attack without reducing the odds of such an attack." He goes on adding
the whole program is fraught with insurmountable problems from space debris
to the inability to distinguish between a hostile missile launch and a
decoy plus a record of endless test failures proving they'll only continue
as long as the charade does. He then speculates about what's likely true.
The whole business of missile defense is just a PR ploy plus another scheme
to enrich defense contractors who return the favor with big campaign contributions
and plush job offers whenever politicians retire to move on to "greener"
pastures.
-
- The amount of money spent since the 1980s has been enormous
without a single success to show for it - between $92 and $130 billion
with an estimated cost by a theoretical completion date of 2015 of $1.2
trillion. One analyst called it "Pork Barrel in the Sky," but
it boils down to one of the most extreme cases of corruption in Washington
adding to the vast cesspool of it there. It played heavy on voters' minds
in mid-term elections with public outrage a major factor in them demanding
change that always ends up getting none. Voters never learn new faces
don't mean new policies, at least not in Washington where the criminal
class is bipartisan and one back gets scratched to assure others do.
-
- It adds up to further trouble ahead and the greatest
danger we now face - our imperial adventurism heading from one conflict
to another in an endless cycle harming us as much as any adversary. The
longer it continues, the worse things get making only one solution obvious.
On responsibly using space Johnson puts it this way, but it applies to
all our actions if we plan on surviving: "....we must relearn how
to cooperate with our fellow inhabitants of the planet and take the lead
in crafting international agreements on the rules of the road in space....We
should outlaw all weapons that are designed to destroy other nations' (space
assets). If one side blinds the other," it will conclude the worst
and retaliate, and one way would be to detonate a nuclear weapon in space
that would have an electromagnetic pulse instantly "fry(ing) the electronics
in all orbiting satellites."
-
-
- That would produce a level global playing field the hard
way meaning - no more "smart bombs," electronic battlefields,
global positioning systems, secure communications from field to commanders
or any satellite communications. Instead of crafting multilateral agreements
to prevent this, the US instead continues acting hostilely by pushing full
steam ahead on space-based antisatellite weapons and driving the nation
to bankruptcy doing it. Johnson notes space is another "arena for
American hubris and one more piece of evidence that Nemesis is much closer
than most of us would care to contemplate."
-
- The Crisis of the American Republic
-
- George Bush wasn't our first president to abuse his power.
Other far more notable predecessors also did it like Lincoln suspending
habeas rights during the Civil War and FDR's home front war against the
Japanese - the ones who were honorable, decent Americans whose only "crimes"
were their ancestry and skin color. It made them less human and denied
them justice. Instead, it got them incarcerated for the remainder of the
war they had nothing to do with or wanted, even though the ones allowed
to fight against the Nazis did it courageously and honorably.
-
- The difference between then and now was checks and balances
were in place and the separation of powers worked restraining presidents
from abusing their authority. That ended the day five arrogant Supreme
Court justices annulled the popular vote letting George Bush steal the
office Al Gore won at the polls including in Florida. It's been straight
downhill since the way it was for Rome when it passed from Republic to
repressive empire. The freedoms we've long take for granted have eroded
and democracy in America is an endangered species hovering somewhere between
life support and the crematorium unless a way is found to resurrect it.
-
- As things now stand, Bush and Cheney rule a rogue state
working cooperatively in a corrupted two-party alliance assuring the skids
are greased and fix is in. The US Congress is no different than the kind
of social club for aristocrats the Roman Senate became when it gave its
power to the Caesar it hailed. It lets the administration conduct affairs
of state according to what it calls the "unitary executive theory
of the presidency" that's a simple "ball-faced assertion of presidential
supremacy....dressed up in legal mumbo jumbo" written by clever lawyers
easily finding lots of ways getting around pesky laws in the name of national
security for a nation at war against enemies invented to justify schemes
now playing out around the world.
-
- It boils down to despotic rule or a national security
police state all repressive regimes become in the end including the fascist
kinds we're now on the tipping edge of. Unless it's stopped, things won't
be pretty when the final mask comes off and jackboots are in the streets
along with tanks when needed. And when the public resists, as it surely
will, expect South Chicago to look like Baghdad today and its North side
too.
-
- Johnson notes it's possible the US military one day will
usurp authority and declare a military dictatorship the way it happened
in Rome, but he thinks it's unlikely. If dictatorship comes, he expects
the civilian kind with military power backing it up. Most likely, Johnson
thinks things will muddle along and continue drifting under an illusion
of constitutional cover until fiscal insolvency unravels it all. But that
won't end the nation state any more than it did to Germany in 1923 or Argentina
in 2001-02. It might even herald a new beginning even though transitioning
to it would mean lots of turbulence, a lower standard of living and a much
different relationship between this country and others including ones supplanting
us as most dominant.
-
- Johnson concludes his narrative returning to where it
all began starting with volume one of his unintended trilogy. He says
in "Blowback" he tried explaining why people around the world
hate us. It's not just our government's actions against others but refers
to retaliation for the kinds of acts we commit like ousting outlier regimes
not willing to play by our imperial management rules meaning we're "boss,"
and what we say goes. It's a simple law of physics that there's no action
without reaction. If we slap them enough, they start slapping back. Volume
two was "The Sorrows of Empire" written while America prepared
the public for wars against Afghanistan and Iraq. It covered the country's
militarization since WW II best symbolized by our sprawl of bases across
the planet assuring hegemony over it but guaranteeing more blowback from
our "indiscretions" any time we decide reminders are needed who's
"boss" and those reminded get cranky.
-
- Volume three is Nemesis and the subject of this review.
In it, Johnson "tried to present historical, political, economic,
and philosophical evidence of where our current behavior is likely to lead."
He believes our present course is a road to perdition in the form of fiscal
insolvency and a military or civilian dictatorship. Our Founders knew
the risk and tried preventing it with our constitutional republican government
now in jeopardy. It's come from our commitment to large standing armies,
constant war, reckless stimulative military Keynesianism spending causing
an erosion of democracy and growth of an imperial presidency. Once a nation
goes this way, its fate is the same as all others that tried - "isolation,
overstretch, the uniting of forces opposed to imperialism, and bankruptcy."
It's symbol is that patient Greek goddess now visiting our shores awaiting
the tribute she'll demand - "our end as a free nation."
-
- It's now our choice. We can continue the same way as
imperial Rome and lose our democracy or chose the British model keeping
it at the expense of sacrificing empire. Johnson ends his book citing Japanese
scholar and journalist Hotsumi Ozaki as a role model example. Ozaki understood
his country's occupation of China would fail and lead to the kind of blowback
caused by the Chinese Communist revolution. He tried warning his government,
but was hanged as a traitor for his efforts late in WW II. Johnson hopes
he won't meet a similar fate but is as certain as Ozaki "that my country
is launched on a dangerous path that it must abandon or else face the consequences."
We should hope we never see them, but wishing alone won't make it so.
-
- Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
<mailto:lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net>lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
-
- Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to The Steve Lendman News and Information Hour on The Micro Effect.com
each Saturday at noon US central time.
|