Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam
and the Pentagon Papers
by Daniel Ellsberg
a review of the book
by Bill Boisvert
In These Times, December
2002
With each new corporate scandal reminding
us how far out of the loop we are, Americans are obsessed with
insiders. We are convinced that inside information is superior
to public information, and lionize whistle-blowers who lay bare
the hidden workings of power. But strangely, when revelations
come, they invariably do no more than affirm what is already common
knowledge. When the secret tobacco company files surfaced in the
'90s, a development hyperbolized in the movie The Insider, the
revelation they contained was that-steady, now-cigarettes are
addictive and bad for your health. And if Congress ever succeeds
in prying loose the secret files of Dick Cheney's Energy Task
Force, will anyone be shocked by the discovery that Enron was
rewriting the nation's energy regulations?
One touchstone of the cult of insiderism-the
idea that what the public knows is a smokescreen of lies, that
what's really going on goes on behind the closed doors of institutional
secrecy-is the Pentagon Papers. When this top-secret government
study of U.S. policy in Vietnam through 1968 was leaked, the legend
goes, it told the real story-the inside story-of Vietnam, documenting
the callousness of policy-makers' calculations and the duplicity
with which they were sold to a gullible Congress and public. The
revelations provoked unprecedented acts of censorship. The Nixon
administration went to court to try to bar newspapers from publishing
the documents, making the Papers a cause célèbre.
The controversy set a template-a conspiracy of the powerful, unmasked
by a crusading press that rouses an enraged populace from its
slumber-that would inform populist iconography for a generation
to come.
But like other insiderist legends, this
tale is a myth. To be sure, the Papers document, across 23 years
and four presidencies, four constants of U.S. policy: that the
unpopular South Vietnamese regime was never anything but the creature
of the United States; that Vietnamese interests always took a
backseat to the imperial goal of securing America's "reputation
as a guarantor"; that the U.S. blocked negotiations among
the Vietnamese that might lead to "neutralism" or "accommodation"
with the Communists; and that the U.S. government consistently
misrepresented its agenda.
Although the Papers stood the official
story on its head, they had virtually no effect on Americans'
perceptions of the war. For all the commotion surrounding their
publication in June 1971, they were yesterday's news. By that
time, six years of stalemated fighting had discredited the government's
claims of progress. TV newscasts had broadcast the devastation
of South Vietnam by U.S. bombing and search-and-destroy missions.
A huge anti-war movement had grown up to contest the government's
pronouncements on the conduct and motives of the war. "We
had to destroy the town to save it" had become the war's
absurdist epitaph. By June 1971, the Tet Offensive had driven
Johnson from office, the My Lai massacre had made the front pages,
students had been shot at Kent State, Jane Fonda had been to Hanoi
and a majority of Americans were telling pollsters the war was
morally wrong. There was no one left to disillusion.
That's the unintended irony of Secrets,
a memoir by Daniel Ellsberg, the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers.
His premise is that "secrets of the greatest import ... can
be kept reliably for decades by the executive branch, even though
they are known to thousands of insiders," to the detriment
of democracy. It's a dubious claim that's hardly borne out by
the evidence in his book, and it's part of a wrongheaded but still
influential idea on the left-that the American people are innocents
whose inchoate anti-imperialism will erupt once the facts about
the government's interventionist schemes are exposed. These misapprehensions
mar Ellsberg's often very perceptive account of the times, causing
him to grossly inflate the relevance of inside information to
the forces that shaped the Vietnam era. Worse, although he was
immersed in it, he misses the bigger story of the vast politico-cultural
effort by the left to convince Americans of a politics of anti-imperialism.
Ellsberg went from high-level berths at
the Pentagon and the Rand Corporation, advising the likes of Robert
McNamara and Henry Kissinger, to center-stage in the peace movement,
getting maced by cops while marching shoulder-to-shoulder with
Noam Chomsky. Along the way, he spent two years in Vietnam, nominally
with the civilian pacification program, but really as a student-at-large
of the war. He witnessed the antagonism between the corrupt and
brutal South Vietnamese regime and the peasantry, who turned to
the Viet Cong as much for protection as out of political sympathy.
An ex-Marine, Ellsberg tagged along on American combat patrols
and even led an assault on a Viet Cong machine-gun nest. He watched
the guerrillas dodge air strikes and run circles around the plodding
Gls, who started shooting up and torching random villages in frustration.
Ellsberg was an insider at the Pentagon,
in the rice paddy and on the picket line. The breadth of his experience
is probably unique and gives him, at times, a sharply insightful
perspective. His take on the Pentagon bureaucracy, while strongly
critical, never lapses into Strangelovian clichés and stays
alive to the human foibles of the policy-making apparat. He has
enough of the Corps in him to condemn the U.S. military as much
for its unsoldierly slackness and incompetence as for its overkill,
and enough of the Rand analyst to avoid grunts-eye-view sentimentality
and pinpoint larger flaws in military doctrine. His chapters from
Vietnam, in particular, are some of the best ever written on the
war.
But insiderism has its discontents. By
the time he returned from Vietnam in 1967, Ellsberg says, the
policy establishment agreed with him that the war was a lost cause;
but despite his and others' arguments for de-escalation, the war
dragged on. (Ellsberg joined the Pentagon Papers project to try
to understand this conundrum.) And there was a deeper problem,
which Ellsberg points out to Kissinger:
It will become very hard for you to learn
from anybody who doesn't have [super-secret] clearances. Because
you'll be thinking as you listen to them: "What would this
man be telling me if he knew what I know?" ... You'll give
up trying to assess what he has to say....
You'll become something like a moron ...
incapable of learning from most people in the world, no matter
how much experience they may have.
As insiders stopped listening to the world,
the world stopped listening to insiders.
Much of Secrets is an account of Ellsberg's
efforts to escape this hall of mirrors. As his frustration over
the war mounted, he gravitated to the peace movement and began
to experience the paradigm shift that was radicalizing so many
others. Indeed, his was a classic '60s journey of protracted consciousness-raising.
"She was ... beautiful," he stammers of one Indian pacifist
who stayed up all night with him discussing Gandhi. Leaving the
theater after seeing Easy Rider, another date stuns him with the
news that she is smuggling draft dodgers to Canada. A speech by
a draft resister provokes a full-blown conversion experience:
"My sobbing sounded like laughing, at other times like moaning....
It was as though an ax had split my head and my heart broke open."
The tension between his insider and outsider
perspectives led to what was clearly an intellectually and emotionally
traumatic break with the Rand-Pentagon elite. His leaking of the
Papers may have been on some level an atonement for his past association
with it.
But Ellsberg has never quite left the
blinkered mindset of the insider behind, and it continues to distort
his understanding of the Pentagon Papers. His work on the project
was a typical insider strategy-more inside information would illuminate
the failure of insiders-and the analysis of them in Secrets is
in part a vindication of insiders. The files Ellsberg read demolished
the "quagmire theory" that the United States had been
drawn by well-intentioned miscalculations into an unwinnable conflict.
Instead, he found that policy-makers understood
from the outset that South Vietnam was unsalvageable, that U.S.
intervention would require upwards of a million troops (and possibly
nuclear weapons), and that even then victory would be doubtful.
Rather than being misled by bad advice, presidents from Eisenhower
to Johnson had gone against the insider consensus, dragging the
American people along through manipulation and fraud. Ellsberg
therefore decided to breach the wall of secrecy shielding "inordinate,
unchallenged executive power" from accountability for its
"desperate, outlaw behavior" in Vietnam.
The somewhat prim lesson Ellsberg draws
from this-of the need to buttress the constitutional separation
of powers to hobble presidential war-making-is unobjectionable,
but inadequate for understanding Vietnam policy. His portrait
of an executive branch run amok is no more tenable than the quagmire
theory. It downplays serious disagreements among advisers about
the prospects for intervention and gives short shrift to the political
context of presidential decision-making.
Domestic opinion was never uniformly dovish
(Ellsberg admits that the public were usually more hawkish than
the insiders), and presidents acted with an eye to powerful pro-war
constituencies. Kennedy's advisers warned of "bitter domestic
controversies" that would "divide the country and harass
the administration" if South Vietnam fell; as late as the
summer of 1967, Senate hawks held hearings demanding an escalation
of the air war. Far from a "desperate, outlaw" tangent,
presidential policy persistently aligned itself with domestic
political pressures.
Even the Tonkin Gulf incident, exhibit
A in Ellsberg's indictment of executive branch deception, tells
more about congressional acquiescence than presidential perfidy.
Ellsberg quotes Sen. William Proxmire saying he would not have
voted for the Tonkin Gulf Resolution had he known the incident
was a fraud, but lets this self-serving excuse pass without asking
why Proxmire felt a bloodless patrol boat skirmish justified writing
a blank check to the president for unlimited war.
Instead of probing congressional support
for the war, he offers a morality play about a Machiavellian executive
and a bamboozled legislature.
One could argue that the public would
have been more dovish had they possessed inside information; that's
Ellsberg's rationale for leaking the Papers. But secrecy never
impeded a substantive anti-war critique, as Ellsberg's own experience
shows. Writing of an anti-war demo in April 1965, just weeks after
American ground troops landed in Vietnam, he notes that the speakers
"were on solid ground, even if they didn't have inside information."
They had their own sources, no less (and perhaps more) | informed
than the Pentagon; journalists like Jonathan Schell had written
harrowing exposes quite early in the war. Indeed, Ellsberg's own
keenest insights into the war's illegitimacy, he tells us, came
from reading French historians, not the Papers. The truth was
out there-theorized by intellectuals, reported by journalists,
confirmed by veterans, propounded by activists-from the start,
even if it took a while to sink in.
Because Ellsberg still sees the war as
a struggle between policy factions arguing over intelligence estimates,
this larger picture eludes him. Vietnam was not the pet project
of a rogue president or a coterie of planners; it was a product
of the Cold War consensus. It was the long, twilight struggle
Kennedy promised us, a reprise of conflicts over Korea or Berlin
of the sort the country had decided it would fight without a clear-cut
victory. Insider pessimism was matched by a conviction, widely
shared by the body politic and policed by anti-communist ideologues,
that the effort was worth it.
The war would therefore end not with the
revelation of secrets but with a revolution in consciousness that
repudiated the Cold War consensus-one grounded in public weariness
with the material and moral costs of "twilight struggles"
and swayed by the New Left's overt anti-imperialism and nonviolence.
Ellsberg's own change of heart on the war was a microcosm of how
that revolution reoriented public attitudes. The revolution penetrated
the Pentagon Papers themselves. "A feeling is widely and
deeply held," wrote Assistant Defense Secretary John McNaughton,
"that 'the Establishment' is out of its mind ... that we
are trying to impose some U.S. image on distant peoples we cannot
understand (any more than we can the younger generation here at
home)."
The Papers were an anti-climax. The war
continued; six months after their publication, Ellsberg glumly
notes, "he had accomplished "nothing." Thus Ellsberg's
hopes that the Papers would help thwart Nixon's secret intentions
to expand the war in Indochina proved illusory. (Although he tries
to justify them with this tortured causal chain: in trying to
smear Ellsberg after the Papers came out, the Nixon administration
ordered the burglary of his psychiatrist's office, which came
to light and added fuel to the Watergate scandal which depleted
Nixon's political capital so much that when Congress finally cut
off funding for the bombing of Indochina, Nixon did not veto the
measure.)
But the Papers' effects were illusory
largely because Nixon's plans were not secret-even the "secret"
bombing of Cambodia was rather promptly reported in the New York
Times-and not out of line with public opinion. Indeed, the Nixon
administration, for all its skulduggery, shows quite dramatically
the irrelevance of insiderism. Nixon deliberately cultivated a
reputation for desperate outlawry to frighten the Communists.
Unlike the Papers, his secret tapes, which Ellsberg generously
quotes, are unsettling to this day:
NIXON: I still think we ought to take
the [North Vietnamese] dikes out now. Will that drown people?
KlSSINGER: About two hundred thousand
people.
N: ... I'd rather use the nuclear bomb.
Have you got that, Henry?
K: That, I think, would just be too much.
N: The nuclear bomb, does that bother
you? ... I just want you to think big, Henry, for Christsakes.
Nixon settled for conventional bombing,
with the proviso that "we're gonna bomb those bastards all
over the place. Let it fly, let it fly." But despite his
deranged bunker mentality, his overall policy was one of dutiful
de-escalation and withdrawal cannily calibrated to undercut opposition
to the war and win re-election in a landslide. As much as he longed
to, he could not ignore the new consensus that the country would
not bear any burden or oppose any foe, and that some things would
just be too much-the unfinished revolution in consciousness we
call the "Vietnam syndrome."
BY focusing public ire on corporate evildoers
and corrupt politicians, by deflecting attention from bad policy
to the coverup of bad policy, the cult of insiderism has left
a pernicious legacy. Take the 2000 presidential election, a textbook
case of an insider cabal-the Jeff Bush-Katherine Harris cabal,
the cult of insiderism implicitly derides democracy itself, and
lets both corrupt legislators and cynical voters off the hook.
Supreme Court Five cabal, take your pick-thwarting
the popular will, and also a textbook case of insiderist obtuseness.
The firestorm over a few hundred Florida ballots took the spotlight
off Core's extra half-million ballots; while in the debate over
which gang had betrayed the Constitution, the Constitution's betrayal
of democracy by way of the Electoral College was swept under the
rug. Thus an opportunity for systemic reform, embedded in a priceless
teachable moment of constitutional crisis, was dissipated in a
trivial search for villains.
Even worse are the insidious long-term
effects of insiderism. By deriding the machinery of democratic
governance as a sham that disguises the behind-the-scenes machinations
of insiders, it implies that democratic government is for suckers,
that democracy is inescapably the captive of well-connected interests
at odds with the public good. The result is to further a political
culture of irresponsibility and uninvolvement that lets everyone
off the hook-legislators, who ratify bad policy behind feigned
ignorance and belated outrage, and the public at large, who retreat
from the hard work of political engagement into free-floating
cynicism.
Ellsberg's concerns about the constitutional
separation of powers and abuses by the executive branch are pertinent
today, as an undeclared war gathers under the most venal and secretive
administration in recent history. The Republicans' wholesale auction
of policy to campaign donors, their lockdown on formerly public
information and their penchant for incognito detentions make such
anxieties plausible again. And unlike the witch hunts of the Clinton
years, suspicions about the Bush administration are well-founded
in real damage done to the public weal.
But it would be a mistake to revive the
cult of insiderism. All of Bush's misdeeds are done in the glare
of press coverage, with the informed consent of Congress. And
they are in no way a departure from our national culture of heedless,
oil-addicted crony capitalism. Bush comes from Texas; Texas doesn't
come from Bush. What we need is not secret information, but a
revolution in consciousness that will, as in the '60s, challenge
the national consensus in far-reaching ways.
Bill Boisvert is an In These Times contributing
editor.
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