Democracy in the Garrison
State
excerpted from the book
The Democratic Facade
by Daniel Hellinger and Dennis
R. Judd Brooks
Cole Publishing Company,
1991, paper
Democracy in the Garrison State
p200
The Limited Reach of Electoral Decisions
To America's economic elites, foreign
policy is considered a straightforward expression of their right
to control decisions about investment, growth, and profits. For
more than a century, American foreign policy has been synonymous
with the building of an empire. Business elites have not tolerated
interference with this process. For this reason, foreign policy
making has been gradually removed from domestic democratic processes.
Since the Second World War, foreign policy making has involved
a relatively small group that routinely operates behind a screen
of secrecy and deception.
These developments were pushed along by
both political parties. Since the anticommunism hysteria in the
years following the Second World War, a bipartisan consensus has
existed on foreign policy, with at least three consequences. First,
meaningful political discourse has been almost absent about foreign
policy issues. At election time, debates about foreign policy
amount to contests to see which of the candidates is "toughest"
on communism or "communist"-sponsored insurgencies in
various countries. Second, as a result voters have never been
presented with alternatives outside the Cold War consensus. And
third, so many foreign policy decisions have been placed beyond
public scrutiny-only surfacing periodically in public "scandals"-that
almost all of what passes as official information about foreign
policy is manufactured by government agencies for its propaganda
effect.
Expanding the Empire
After the Second World War, there was
a fundamental redefinition of "normalcy" in American
political culture, away from an historic distrust of a large standing
military to acceptance of its necessity. From this time forward,
any meaningful debates among political and economic elites over
whether to finance a peacetime military presence were quickly
resolved. The presence of a constantly expanding, well-coordinated
military establishment, together with an industry feeding off
military spending, was thought to be essential for maintaining
American dominance in the postwar world.
Elites made the decision not to return
to prewar levels of spending after the Second World War and the
Korean War. In constant dollars, the military budget increased
by more than ten times between the peacetime years 1940 and 1956.
Much of the post-World War II expenditures went for new armaments-notably,
nuclear weapons and delivery systems and technologically sophisticated
airplanes and ships. The number of military personnel sharply
escalated. In 1940, the Untied States maintained only 485,000
men and women under arms, with an additional 256,000 civilians
to support them. In 1950, there were over 1.5 million persons
in uniform and over 960,000 Defense Department (DOD) civilian
employees. By 1975, about 2.15 million people served in the armed
forces and there were an additional 1.1 million civilian employees.
After falling slightly in the wake of the Vietnam War, civilian
employment rose again by 1985 to a level surpassing that of 1978.
As early as 1939, political and economic
elites, in collaboration with the executive branch of government,
began planning the permanent expansion of the military in order
to make possible systematic U.S. intervention in the Third World.
Lawrence Shoup's underappreciated research into the activity of
a group of business, intellectual, and political elites reveals
how the "responsibilities" of the post-war period were
not thrust upon, but were actively sought by a group of economic
and political elites who wanted to expand and consolidate an American
empire.
In September 1939, more than two years
before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the influential New
York-based Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) approached the State
Department about collaborating on a secret, long-range study of
the implications of the European war and how it would affect the
role of the United States in world affairs after its conclusion.
Financed by the Rockefeller Foundation and with the support of
the State Department, various committees began their work, which
became known as the "War Peace Studies."
The foreign policy planners first tried
to determine whether continued control of the Western Hemisphere
would be sufficient to maintain U.S. prosperity and self-sufficiency
if Germany were able to control Europe. They concluded that only
if the United States expanded its sphere to embrace possessions
of the British Commonwealth and the Far East could sufficient
access to markets and raw materials be guaranteed. In strict secrecy,
the CFR committees and their State Department allies, a group
of elites who would have tremendous influence on foreign policy
for the next thirty years, defined the U.S. national interest
as the economic dominance of two-thirds of the world.
In October 1940 one CFR study group bluntly
declared its purpose "to set forth the political, military,
territorial and economic requirements of the United States in
its potential leadership of the non-German world area including
the United Kingdom itself as well as the Western Hemisphere and
Far East." The same memorandum indicated that from the start
the policy planners considered a permanent military establishment
not as an instrument to deter aggression, but as an instrument
of empire building. It declared that the "foremost requirement
of the United States in a world in which it proposes to hold unquestioned
power is the rapid fulfillment of a program of complete rearmament."
In 1939, elites thought that German hegemony over Europe might
be tolerable, but Japanese competition in the Far East was not.
On this basis the CFR recommended that the government aid China
and embargo Japan, two policies subsequently adopted by President
Roosevelt.
The elites planning postwar foreign policy
conceived a world in which American interests might be compatible
with a continental Europe controlled by the Nazis; after all,
many U.S. leaders regarded Hitler as a useful check on the Soviet
Union, and some admired him. But as Japan brought more of Asia
under its control and as Germany threatened to militarily defeat
Britain and, perhaps, seize control of Britain's vast empire,
the CFR committees concluded, eight months before the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor, that the defeat of the Axis was both inevitable
and necessary. But in preparing for a war with Japan, the Economic
and Financial Study group of the CFR ,suggested to American political
leaders that their actual aims-to build an empire-should be covered
over with the idea that America was seeking only to protect its
immediate interests:
If war aims are stated which seem to be
concerned solely with Anglo-American imperialism, they will offer
little to people in the rest of the world. The interests of other
peoples should be stressed, not only those of Europe, but also
of Asia, Africa and Latin America. This would have a better propaganda
effect.
The actual aims proposed by the group
were manifestly clear. As one member of the project put it in
1940, it would be necessary to "cultivate a mental view toward
world settlement after this war which will enable us to impose
our own terms, amounting perhaps to a pax-Americana.
After the formal entry of the United States
into the war in December 1941 the CFR and the State Department
continued to refine their plans for the postwar period. The work
was carried out in secret because both the Council and the State
Department recognized that public knowledge of U.S. plans to dominate
the Third World (as it was later to be called) could harm America's
relationships with other nations that were helping in the fight
against the Axis. Equally important, the foreign policy elites
knew that it would be damaging to morale at home if the American
public learned that its leaders had much more than the defeat
of fascism in mind.
An elite consensus was forged that unified
the goals of military officers government officials, and corporations
involved in military production. From the very start, the articulation
of a public ideology of idealism was considered to be an essential
feature of foreign policy planning. Henceforth, America's foreign
policies would be rhetorically dedicated to stopping the "international
communist conspiracy" and also rhetorically designed (as
the opposite side of the coin) to foster democracy and freedom.
George Kennan, a significant intellectual
shaper of the postwar order, recognized that a public commitment
to high ideals could boomerang later. In a top-secret memorandum
drafted in 1946, Kennan laid out the rationale for caution:
We have about 50% of the world's wealth
but only 6.3% of its population....We cannot fail to be the object
of envy and resentment. Our real task in the coming period is
to devise a pattern of relationships which will permit us to maintain
this position of disparity without positive detriment to our national
security. To do so, we will have to dispense with all sentimentality
and daydreaming, and our attention will have to be concentrated
everywhere on our immediate national objectives. We need not deceive
ourselves that we can afford today the luxury of altruism and
world benefaction.
In a similar vein, forty years later Lt.
Colonel John Bacevich, a West Point graduate and International
Affairs Fellow with the Council on Foreign Relataions, described
the motives of U.S. foreign policy in 1986:
We can see today that the Army's primary
task down to the present has continued to be precisely what it
was in Korea: the application of force to maintain the global
status quo that emerged from World War II. While the United States
does not claim a formal empire...the Army since 1945 has played
the historical role of an imperial defense force, called on repeatedly
to protect far-flung American interests threatened by global brush
fires by the winds of political change.
Bacevich said that the Army should plan
to act as an interventionist force instead of maintaining the
fiction that it existed to provide national security. But this
would have to be presented to the public "inoffensively,
using terms suited to American political discourse" because
"an American Army proclaiming itself to be an imperial police
force would have difficulty garnering public or congressional
support. That statement holds as true today as it would have for
the 1950s."
For decades, principles of human rights,
democracy, and international law have endured as the guiding rhetorical
ideals of America's foreign policy. But the yawning chasm separating
these proclaimed ideals from the actual goals underlying foreign
policy have been difficult to hide. Because of this discrepancy,
soon after the Second World War elites took steps to remove foreign
policy from domestic political processes. The most important devices
employed-destined to grow more elaborate with every presidential
administration-entailed policies of deception and secrecy.
The Foundations of the National Security
State
Unlike the post-World War I "return
to normalcy," the post-World War II period was marked by
the institutionalization of significant "emergency"
measures originally adopted to fight the war. Much of this process
was accomplished through the National Security Act of 1947. The
propaganda apparatus was consolidated in the hands of he U.S.
Information Agency; "covert operations" and intelligence
gathering were brought together into a Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA), though these functions have since spread to all the military
branches and into the National Security Council and even the White
House; a single Defense Department and a Joint Chiefs of Staff
were established to coordinate the independent branches of the
military; and the National Security Council (NSC) was created
to advise the president on foreign affairs.
A less noted feature of the act established
a National Security Resources Board, which, supplemented by the
Armed Forces Procurement Act of 1947 and the National Industrial
Reserve Act of 1948, laid the legal foundations for an intimate
interaction between military agencies and private industry-the
so-called "military-industrial complex." The impact
of this legislation was to institutionalize a permanent condition
of mobilization for war, breaking with the pre-World War II assumption
that the first day of mobilization would be the day that Congress
declared war.
This legislation was enacted even though
government and military planners believed at that time that the
United States would indefinitely maintain an enormous military
superiority over the Soviet Union, a nation that had suffered
22,000,000 casualties during the war and which was incapable,
even if so inclined, of mounting an effective attack on the United
States or Western Europe. The United States alone possessed the
atomic bomb. Although the planners erred in believing that their
own country would maintain an indefinite monopoly over this technology,
not until the late 1960s would the Soviet Union reach any kind
of parity with the United States in nuclear weapons.
The institutionalization of militarism
under the guise of national security was a logical expression
of the aspirations articulated by the Council of Foreign Relations
before and during the Second World War. This development was recognized
by the historian Charles Beard, who charged in 1948 that Franklin
Roosevelt had deliberately led the nation to war and knowingly
violated the Constitution to do so. Beard warned at that time
that Madisonian principles of checks and balances were in Jeopardy
and that the executive branch would gain control of foreign policy
and war making in the postwar period through the expansion of
state secrets.
It is tempting to interpret military growth
and foreign policy adventures after the war as the inevitable
components of a grand conspiracy among elites to build and consolidate
the American empire. But a conspiracy theory must be cautiously
applied even though there is overwhelming evidence that postwar
policies were determined in a conscious and coordinated fashion,
for it must take into account the genuine divisions that existed
among elites about how to handle the Soviet Union. Roosevelt himself
seemed to adopt the position that the Soviet Union was entitled
to a sphere of influence of its own after the war, and he proceeded
to emphasize policies, such as strongly supporting the United
Nations, that would have consolidated a grand area for the United
States excluding Eastern Europe.
To the ideological right of Roosevelt
were influential policy makers like Averill Harriman and George
Kennan, who saw the Soviet Union as an expansionist power that
needed to be contained without the constraints that might be imposed
by a United Nations. Their containment strategy envisioned a military
buildup complemented by aggressive diplomatic and economic initiatives.
More thoroughly conservative advisers like Dean Acheson favored
provocative military measures. Even further to the right stood
fanatical anticommunists and opportunists like Joseph McCarthy
and Richard Nixon, who argued that the Soviets had penetrated
the halls of government within the United States and who advocated
"rolling back" the Soviet area of domination rather
than merely "containing" it. (Nixon, however, became
more pragmatic as his career progressed.)
Even if Roosevelt had not died and been
succeeded by the hawkish Harry Truman, developments at home and
abroad would probably have accelerated militarization and propelled
U.S. foreign policy rightward. The desire by both liberals and
conservatives to purge the labor unions and the Democratic party
of leftist influence undermined elites who favored a pragmatic
orientation towards the Soviets. Stalin's pathological behavior
toward his real and imagined political opponents strengthened
those who sought to recast the Soviets in place of Nazi Germany
as the incarnation of an evil empire that could be deterred only
by an aggressive foreign policy backed by a worldwide military
presence.
The theory of "totalitarianism"
helped legitimate the new national security state by providing
the theoretical underpinning for casting the Soviets in the role
of aggressor. Proponents of the theory argued that Stalin's Russia
and Hitler's Germany were alike because both regimes were characterized
by a single party dominated by a charismatic dictator driven by
an imperialistic ideology, who used terror and imposed state control
over the economy and communications system. It did not seem to
matter to promoters of the "Communist conspiracy" theory
that there were fundamental differences between the histories
and regimes of Germany and the Soviet Union (or that many right-wing
policy makers in the United States continued to feel sympathy
for the Nazis). The theory was useful in creating an image of
an aggressor who would this time be deterred, not appeased-a new
enemy that was particularly dangerous because it sought to spread
an anticapitalist ideology.
Within the United States, those who sympathized
with socialism, Marxism, or communism, or even with civil rights
groups, were defined as threats to the security of the nation.
Legislation like the Smith Act of 1940, a wartime act aimed at
Nazi sympathizers, was now turned not only on Communists but on
anyone suspected of holding leftist ideals. In 1950, the Internal
Security Act was passed, requiring communist or "sympathetic"
organizations to register with the Attorney General, who possessed
the authority (under the Smith Act) to declare certain organizations
a threat to national security for allegedly advocating the violent
overthrow of the United States government. This provision was
routinely applied to organizations that had never advocated such
a position. Together with the National Security Act of 1947, these
pieces of legislation remain as the cornerstone of the government's
authority to suppress internal dissent under the guise of national
security.
In 1948, bombers capable of striking the
Soviet Union with atomic weapons were placed in Britain, and General
Lucius Clay, who headed American occupation forces in Germany,
tried to convince President Truman to provoke a war with the Soviets.
But the Soviet explosion of an atomic bomb in 1949 raised doubts
about whether the United States could confront the Soviets without
fear of unleashing atomic warfare. The planners were forced to
return to the drawing boards.
The result was NSC-68, a document that
became the Magna Carta of postwar national security doctrine.
It laid a blueprint for moving beyond the concept of defense to
the idea of aggressively challenging Soviet interests by any means
short of declaring war. In the document, secretly approved by
the National Security Council in 1950, foreign policy planners
argued against negotiating differences with the Soviets until
a new, more terrifying weapon, the hydrogen bomb, could restore
unquestioned U.S. military supremacy. In the meantime, it advocated
an alliance system dominated by the United States and a buildup
of conventional military strength so that U.S. objectives could
be met short of resorting to nuclear arms.
Military planners and political leaders
realized that implementing this grand design would require mobilizing
the American people into a permanent state of quasi-war. Accordingly,
an emotional substitute for an official state of war would have
to be devised. In 1944, Charles E. Wilson, president of General
Electric and later Director of Defense Mobilization under President
Truman and Secretary of Defense under President Eisenhower, warned
in an internal memo that "the revulsion against war not too
long hence will be an almost insuperable obstacle for us to overcome.
For | that reason, I am convinced that we must begin now to set
the machinery in motion for a permanent war economy.'' Almost
forty years later, Richard Perle, Assistant Secretary of Defense
under Ronald Reagan, argued that "democracies will not sacrifice
to protect their security in the absence of a sense of danger.
And every time we create the impression that we and the Soviets
are cooperating and moderating the competition, we diminish that
sense of apprehension."
The Elite Consensus on Militarization
For more than forty years there has been
a remarkable degree of consensus among U.S. elites that the nation
should preserve a high level of readiness to go to war. Presidential
candidates of the two major parties have tried to outdo one another
in advocating military preparedness. In the 1960 presidential
election campaign, John F. Kennedy said there was a "missile
gap" favoring the Soviet Union, twenty years later, the Republicans
claimed that the Democrats had allowed American defenses to decline.
For voters, the choices have been conducted within extraordinarily
narrow limits. From 1945 until 1989, when Soviet Premier Mikhail
Gorbachev declared his policy of perestroika and the Eastern Bloc
governments began to fall, no Democratic or Republican presidential
candidate questioned the premises of the Cold War-that the national
defense must be constantly strengthened to deter the Communists.
The ideas sustaining the "Cold War,"
wherein the superpowers have deterred each other from actually
going to war by maintaining a balance of terror (MAD, or "mutually
assured destruction"), developed only gradually. In the l950s,
foreign policy planners urged a military buildup not as much for
deterring as for preparing for an attack on the Soviet Union.
In 1955, the Air Force adapted the concept of "Force in Being,"
which meant maintaining a permanent state of readiness and logistics
to fight. "Force in Being" included preparations for
initiating a nuclear war. This capacity was supported by a new
document adopted by the National Security Council NSC 162/2, which
said that the United States would "consider nuclear weapons
to be as available for use as other munitions" in the event
of war. President Eisenhower went even further. Concerned that
an indefinite arms race might increase the prospects for dictatorial
government in the United States, the president suggested in a
September 1953 memo to the Secretary of State that we might "consider
whether or not our duty to future generations did not require
us to initiate war at the most propitious moment that we could
designate." When the Army, concerned that emphasis on technology
was reducing its mission and budget, objected at a National Security
Council meeting that nuclear war was not inevitable, Eisenhower
responded, "Since we cannot keep the United States an armed
camp or a garrison state, we must make plans to use atomic bombs
if we become involved in a war." It is in this context that
President Eisenhower delivered an oft-quoted speech about the
dangers of the military-industrial complex.
Eisenhower did not go far enough to satisfy
the growing number of business, academic, and military figures
who advocated and profited from an expanding and permanent military
establishment. Advocates of an accelerated military buildup felt
thwarted by the method of budgeting under which the amount allocated
to military spending was determined after domestic needs were
satisfied. The Korean War provided the necessary pretext for military
expansion in the early 1950s, but with the end of the war in 1954
and the waning of McCarthyism it was becoming more difficult to
maintain momentum. In the late 1950s, a political battle developed
between the advocates of accelerating the arms race and those
moderates, including President Eisenhower, who continued to fear
the impact of a permanent military-industrial complex on domestic
politics.
Though it remained far above prewar levels,
in the aftermath of the Korean War military spending gradually
fell. The militarists vainly struggled to convince Eisenhower
and his key advisors to reverse the trend. An opportunity presented
itself in 1956, when Eisenhower agreed to establish an ad hoc
committee of private citizens to study a proposal for the government
to spend $40 billion over a number of years to erect shelters
to protect the population from nuclear fallout. The committee,
composed of businessmen and academic specialists with close ties
to military personnel and large defense contractors, was chaired
by H. Rowan Gaither, a lawyer who was also chair of both the Ford
Foundation and the Air Force's main "think tank," the
Rand Corporation in California. Almost all members of the committee
were private consultants to the National Security Council.
The committee took upon itself the task
of expanding its mission beyond Eisenhower's mandate by investigating
other uses for the $40 billion. When finished, the "Gaither
Report" used the same arguments originally advanced in NSC
68 to argue for a military buildup and to accuse the Eisenhower
administration of "complacency" in the face of the Soviet
"threat." It exerted pressure on the administration
to maintain not only the capability to initiate a nuclear war,
but to undertake covert actions against guerrilla insurgencies
and to fight a large-scale conventional war. It advocated a boost
in military spending to $48 billion per year, $10 billion more
than the amount recommended by the Eisenhower administration.
The committee said that military "needs," irrespective
of domestic priorities, should henceforth be identified as the
standard for determining the Pentagon's budget.
The Gaither committee's recommendations
were based on its assessment of how much spending would be needed
to offset what it saw as a constantly expanding Soviet military
capacity. The committee, however, vastly overstated the Soviet
buildup. It predicted, for example, that the Soviets would develop
and deploy enough intercontinental ballistic missiles by 1960
to destroy American retaliatory capability In fact, however, by
1961 the Soviets had deployed only ten missiles. The United States,
under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, would be the first country
to massively deploy such missiles.
The Gaither committee s report remained
classified, but militarists discovered that selective disclosure
of military secrets could tilt public debate in their favor. Parts
of the report were deliberately leaked to the media and sympathetic
politicians. Democrats were particularly eager to use the report
s findings to discredit the Republican administration. In the
1960 presidential campaign, John Kennedy invented an alleged missile
gap to embarrass Vice President Nixon. After he was elected, Kennedy
brought the militarists into his administration and put their
recommendations into effect.
Considering that the Democrats and liberals
were as committed to military spending as the Republicans and
conservatives, it is hardly surprising that Eisenhower s warnings
about the growing power of the military-industrial complex have
fallen on deaf ears. Today, over 30,000 companies are engaged
in military production. During the Second World War, production
was carried out in 1,600 federally owned plants; only fifty-eight
currently are owned by the government. Each year, more than 15
million contracts (over 52,000 each day) are signed between government
and private companies. In fiscal 1985, the United States spent
almost $1,100 per person on the military, in contrast to its European
allies, which spent an average of $250 per person. In the mid-1980s,
about $146 billion in private military business was generated
by the Pentagon each year. During the Reagan administration, spending
for military research increased 62 percent above the rate of inflation,
while funding for civilian research fell by 10 percent.
Grossly exaggerating the Soviet buildup
long has comprised the principal strategy for building political
support for military spending. In the 1950s, the public was told
that the Soviets would have 600 to 700 long-range bombers by 1960.
When 1960 came, the USSR had 190. It was said that the Soviets
would have 500 to 1,000 intercontinental ballistic missiles by
1961; the USSR had only ten by that time. In the 1960s, the warning
went out that the USSR would soon have 10,000 interceptors in
a nationwide antiballistic missile system. But the Soviets actually
deployed sixty-four, almost all of them designed to hit bombers
rather than missiles. In the 1970s the official government line
was that new highly accurate Soviet SS-l9 missiles could destroy
all U.S. land-based missiles. Actually, the SS-l9 proved far less
accurate than originally claimed.
Estimating actual Soviet military expenditures
likewise has been a politically loaded enterprise. The U.S. Arms
Control and Disarmament Agency estimated Soviet spending at $233
billion for 1980 and $248 billion for 1983, but the respected
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute estimated Soviet
military spending at $154 billion for 1980 and $162 billion for
1983. The source book World Military and Social Expenditure utilizes
a method that results in somewhat higher estimates than those
of the Stockholm Institute, but these comparisons still show that
U.S. military spending far exceeds Soviet spending. For 1982,
the sourcebook estimated U.S. expenditures at $196 billion, 6.2
percent of the Gross National Product. Soviet expenditures were
estimated to be $170 billion, amounting to 10.9 percent of the
USSR s smaller GNP. Total NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
expenditures were estimated at $310 billion, 5 percent of combined
GNP, compared to Warsaw Pact total expenditures of $187 billion,
9 percent of GNP.' In 1983, the CIA admitted that earlier estimates
ran about double its new, revised estimate and that the USSR had
not actually increased its military spending during the Carter
years (1977-1981) at all.
Even if Mikhail Gorbachev continues to
deprive American hawks of a convenient enemy, the militarization
of the economy has created a complex system of dependence on military
spending that will not easily be broken. Only nine of the 3,041
counties in the United States received less than $1,000 from the
Defense Department in 1984. With so many constituents on the military
payroll, few congressional representatives can afford to attack
waste and fraud vigorously or to I challenge the Pentagon s priorities
without fear of retribution. In 1983, Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger accused Congress of tacking nearly $3 billion worth
of unnecessary items onto the Pentagon budget. Roughly 3,275,000
jobs in the United States are in defense industries, up from 314,000
in 1940. There are almost 1.5 million military retirees in addition
to the 3,295,000 people on the civilian and active military payrolls.
The link between corporations and the military is solidified by
the retention of retired officers as employees of private contractors.
Employed by 157 major military contractors were 1,350 former high-ranking
military officers, plus 316 former high-ranking officials of the
Defense Department.
The boom in military expenditures and
the extraordinary profits to be made have shifted the priorities
of many companies not previously associated with military production.
Profits for arms suppliers rose from an average of 19.4 percent
from 1970 to 1979 to 23.3 percent from 1980 to 1983; for durable
goods as a whole, in contrast, profits fell from 14.4 percent
in the 1970s to 10.6 percent in 1980 to 1983. Thus, the profits
gap between commercial and military businesses widened enormously.
In response, such companies as Singer, IBM, Goodyear Tire, AT&T,
and Westinghouse turned to military production. In 1975, Singer,
famous for sewing machines, earned only 15 percent of its revenues
from aerospace electronics; by 1985, it earned 80 percent from
that source. Morton, once famous for salt, has become Morton-Thiokol,
builder of rocket engines.
The considerable influence of the military-industrial
complex with Congress has been reinforced by the system of campaign
financing. Political action committees representing the largest
twenty defense contractors increased their contributions 225 percent
during the first six years of the Reagan administration. Military
agencies are prevented by law from forming their own lobbies,
but they have found functional substitutes in legislative liaisons,
maintained at taxpayer expense. The influence of the military
lobby is further enhanced by the fragmentation of congressional
oversight and the presence of hidden subgovernments that bring
lawmakers, contractors, and military agencies into mutually beneficial
alliances. Public scandals about contractors defrauding the government
have led to proposals to consolidate congressional oversight,
but this is unlikely to be successful because of the desire of
senators and representatives to chair key committees and win elections.
Even the most seamy, costly, and threatening
political scandals since the Second World War have so far failed
to slow the transformation of American society into a garrison
state. This was demonstrated in the political aftermath of the
Vietnam
The "Vietnam Syndrome"
By 1945, Indochina had been a part of
the French empire for almost three-fourths of a century. After
the war, the French colonialists faced a determined effort by
Vietnamese patriots, led by the Communist party and Ho Chi Minh,
to resist a reimposition of colonial rule. The fact that the Communist
party dominated the anticolonial forces made the rebels entirely
unacceptable to U.S. political and military leaders. The United
States committed itself to supporting France, and after France's
military defeat in 1954 the United States initiated a gradual
process of intervention.
Against all logic and evidence, some military
planners and foreign policy specialists in the Reagan administration
asserted that an inadequate military effort had brought about
the American defeat in Vietnam. More than 3 million U.S. soldiers
served in Vietnam, including 524,000 at the peak of the war in
1969 (plus 86,000 additional air force and naval personnel based
offshore and in Thailand). From 1965 to 1975, the U.S. spent between
$159.4 billion (DOD's estimate) and $239.6 billion (U.S. Senate
estimate) on the war. The 14,392,302 tons of explosives (more
than used against Japan in the Second World War) left more than
25 million craters in a country smaller than the state of California
and reduced all North Vietnamese cities south of Hanoi to rubble.
More than 400,000 tons of napalm and 19 million gallons of herbicides
(including 11 million gallons of Agent Orange) were used to destroy
the croplands and half the forests in the country. Some 58,655
U.S. troops were killed. More than 2,000,000 Vietnamese-one-ninth
of the population-were killed.
The Vietnam War differed from the Korean
War in a crucial respect: Conscription and the high cost in lives
generated discontent at home, but an antiwar movement also emerged.
Ordinary citizens, at first led by college students and youth
became dissenters. They were followed by large numbers in the
intellectual community, then Journalists, and finally by liberal
politicians. The FBI, the CIA, and other units of the national
security apparatus selectively persecuted protesters. Unlike the
McCarthy crusades of the 1950s, however, open and systematic repression
backfired. The antiwar protests threatened to mushroom into a
broader movement for social change that might have knit together
civil rights activists, feminists, the youth movement, and liberal
elements in the labor unions and the Democratic party. This was
too high a price to pay for continuing the war. Even Richard Nixon,
who built his early career on the political hysteria of McCarthyism,
eventually accepted the necessity of a strategic retreat.
The political fallout from the war troubled
elites. A rising cynicism and distrust of basic institutions threatened
political stability. Especially undermined was the linchpin institution
of the national security state, the presidency. To justify the
war, Presidents Johnson and Nixon had resorted to "secrecy,
control and manipulation of information, deceit, and spying on
and interference with the legitimate exercise of the political
rights of American citizens." This was a judgment offered
not by critics of U.S. policy but by the authors of a study conducted
by the National Defense University. These actions constituted
logical extensions of past governmental strategies to keep foreign
policy secret and beyond citizen influence This time, however,
the pattern of deceit became boldly illuminated by media publicity.
Under normal circumstances this would not have happened ... but
the exposure of government secrets and spying became one component
of the Watergate scandal.
In 1971, secret documents were leaked
to the New York Times revealing that President Johnson and other
people in the government had repeatedly lied about Vietnam. Congress
reacted to the "Pentagon Papers" scandal by imposing
new legal constraints on the president's war-making authority,
most notably in the War Powers Act of 1973, which required the
president to report to Congress when U.S. forces were committed
to activities in which combat was a strong possibility. The act
also required congressional approval to maintain troops in such
a combat position for more than ninety days and authorized Congress
to demand their immediate withdrawal by means of a resolution.
Other legislation placed new restrictions
on the activities of the FBI and the CIA. Congressional oversight
of the CIA was strengthened after Senate investigations revealed
extensive domestic spying, involvement in the overthrow of the
democratically elected government of Chile, a CIA-directed "secret
war" in Laos, use of assassination in covert operations,
and CIA activities to undermine elections in Chile and in several
other countries.
These new restrictions on the executive
branch's ability to conduct foreign policy making in secret endangered
the carefully constructed post-World War II elite consensus about
the need for a big military budget, unrestricted executive authority,
and the legitimacy of intervening in the affairs of other countries.
Elites were convinced that foreign policy simply could not be
opened up to public debate. If this happened, their freedom to
pursue interventionist strategies would surely be compromised.
The defeat in Vietnam was a learning experience
for the American people that left them with little enthusiasm
for more wars. In 1974, only 48 percent of those responding to
a national poll were willing to defend Japan with military force
in case of Soviet attack and only 37 percent was willing to defend
other major allies. By 1980, the figures would rise to 74 percent
and 68 percent, respectively, but even as late as 1982 enthusiasm
for intervention in the Third World was notably lacking-for example,
only 20 percent of the public favored the use of military force
to prevent a guerrilla victory in El Salvador.
President Carter attempted to adjust to
this new atmosphere by recognizing the limits of what could be
accomplished by military force. Carter found himself under attack
from conservatives for having negotiated the eventual return of
the Panama Canal to Panama and for concluding a new arms control
agreement (SALT 2) with the Soviets. A combination of his own
confused ideology, major revolutions in Iran and Nicaragua, economic
recession at home, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan hastened
Carter's conversion to militarism. In the last two years of his
term, Carter cut domestic spending and increased military expenditures,
planned new missile deployments in Western Europe, announced a
new doctrine committing the United States to war in the Middle
East in case revolutions threatened any Western allies, and began
training a "rapid deployment force" for use against
Third World revolutions.
Carter's presidency was still on the skids
when an Iranian mob, angered by years of U.S. support for the
Shah's violent dictatorship in their country and encouraged by
an opportunistic, fundamentalist religious elite, seized the American
embassy in Iran and held its inhabitants hostage for more than
a year. The media kept the hostage story before the public night
after night (this was the origin of ABC's program Nightline).
A botched rescue attempt during the 1980 campaign contributed
to Carter's difficulties. There can be little doubt that the episode
contributed to his defeat.
The hostages were released literally as
Ronald Reagan took the oath of office (There is some evidence
that Reagan struck a deal with the Ayatollah during the 1980 campaign
not to release the hostages until after the election in exchange
for a promise of future arms shipments. This may have been the
first step in what emerged later as the Iran-contra scandal. The
new president and his handlers recognized that the affair was
an excellent catalyst for rallying public opinion behind an aggressive
policy agenda that involved reversing the tendency toward congressional
influence in foreign affairs, drastically increasing military
spending, and waging counterinsurgency warfare through surrogates
or mercenary armies in Africa, Southeast Asia Afghanistan, and
(most forcefully) Central America.
The Reagan administration came into office
determined to reassert the executive branch's ability to conduct
foreign policy as it saw fit. A threefold strategy was devised.
First, new strategies of intervention were utilized to ensure
that foreign policy could be conducted as far from public view
as possible. Second, the public was subjected to a carefully orchestrated
propaganda campaign. And third, the administration undertook to
revitalize the military as an instrument of foreign policy.
Government Secrecy and the Reeducation
of the Public
Since 1981, an avalanche of literature
on so-called "low-intensity conflict" has emanated from
military planners and conservative theorists. "Low-intensity
conflict"-or "peaceful engagement"-the new phrase
favored by the Bush administration-are euphemisms for wars conducted
in Third World countries out of sight of the American public which
rely on hired mercenaries clandestinely working at the direction
of the CIA (this way American soldiers do not die, which upsets
the public). Much of the literature advocating this new method
of making war takes the view that our constitutional traditions
must be bent or redefined in the struggle for American supremacy.
Sam Sarkesian, an academic specialist who chairs the Interuniversity
Seminar on Armed Forces and Society, asserts that revolution is
inherently undemocratic and that counterrevolution must therefore
"develop [its] own morality and ethics that justify any means
to achieve success. Survival is the ultimate morality." This
means that the United States must sometimes support sides in conflicts
in which "all of the ingredients for a 'dirty', ungentlemanly,
terror-oriented conflict are there; and it is likely to be protracted
and increasingly costly." As a consequence, "American
policy may support nondemocratic regimes in the name of democracy."
To do this, Sarkesian argues that the United States needs a stronger,
independent intelligence and covert operations capability. Americans
must be "educated" to understand that we must employ
or support measures overseas "inconsistent" with our
constitutional traditions at home. People like Sarkesian believe
that, in the absence of a successful effort to "reeducate"
Americans about the nation's best self-interests, the government
must act in secrecy.
Based on this logic, the Reagan administration
organized a secret government within the executive branch to conduct
foreign policy. The people within this group gained complete autonomy
from Congress, operated without the knowledge of the public, and
even worked outside the established foreign policy and intelligence
agencies. In 1986, the administration proposed legislation to
repeal the War Powers Act. Congress already had been induced to
increase funds to build up the Special Operations Forces (SOF),
which are authorized to carry out covert operations not subject
to congressional oversight. For both SOF units and the CIA, more
emphasis was placed on training in sabotage and "psychological
operations."
In 1982, CIA operatives were caught mining
Nicaraguan harbors and newspapers published the contents of a
CIA manual used to train the contras to carry out sabotage and
assassination against civilian targets. Congress reacted by enacting
restrictions on CIA involvement in Nicaragua. The administration
found a way around the law in the Special Forces, which were coordinated
from the National Security Council. The Special Forces employ
and train terrorists to carry out acts of violence for political
purposes. The victims are not armed opponents but civilians. To
prevent these victims from appearing as statistics in State Department
human rights reports, civilian victims of the Salvadoran military
and Nicaraguan contras were categorized as legitimate military
targets in flagrant violation of international human rights treaties
to which the United States is a signatory.
The new theorists understood that terrorist
attacks against civilians in Nicaragua constituted an explicit
strategy that they had helped devise. Neil Livingstone, a self-styled
"terrorism expert" with close ties to the Reagan administration,
recommended that in order to fight covert wars military units
must be trained "to hunt down and kill terrorists" accused
of acting against Americans and that "debate be reopened
on murder as an instrument of national policy." For Vernon
Walters, a top Reagan policy maker and former deputy director
of the CIA, the reluctance of the American public to endorse such
tactics "could have been" due to "effective covert
action...carried out by the Soviet Union against the United States."
Walters wrote a scenario in which he imagined a Soviet long-term
planning group in 1948 discussing, "with great sophistication
and profound understanding of the American national character
and of the 'American dream,"' a plan to weaken American resolve
to resist their plans for "world domination." He advocated
that we use the same tactics as he imagined the USSR has used,
especially including psychological warfare and propaganda, and
develop in addition the "ability to recognize when covert
action is being used against us and the means to thwart it."
What did Walters have in mind as the means to "thwart"
such ingenious Soviet "propaganda"? One of the documents
he authored for the administration urged that psychological operations
of the same type used by the United States in other nations "may
be necessary" to win the hearts and minds of Americans.
But Walters's recommendations had already
been implemented by the Reagan administration. The Pentagon had
at its disposal a 1,000-member, $100 million-a-year worldwide
public relations operation with which it generated its own propaganda,
as it did in the case of the invasion of Grenada when it alleged
a much larger Cuban presence and much greater threat to American
lives than actually existed. Besides the Pentagon, taxpayer-funded
institutions like the National Endowment for Democracy and its
Central American branch helped finance "demonstration elections"
and friendly human rights agencies in other nations so that favorable
"information" could be generated for the human rights
reports produced by the State Department.
Public relations has been a principal
tool used to rehabilitate the image of the military services.
Livingstone, who regularly rang the terrorism alarm bells in the
mainstream media, was an executive with Gray and Co., a Washington
public relations firm, when he played a key part in the Reagan
election campaigns. During the first term, Reagan administration
propaganda was coordinated by Michael Deaver. After Deaver's departure,
White House chief of staff Donald Regan established a new team,
headed by W. Dennis Thomas, which met every day to chart ways
to influence public opinion. Thomas summarized the group's philosophy:
The notion absolutely is that you establish
themes through repetition. You've got to establish unanimous agreement
on the part of those who have to put it forth; then you have to
say it, resay it and figure out different ways to say it.
Such a public relations operation actually
amounted to a kind of domestic covert operation similar to the
operation implemented by the United States elsewhere to influence
the internal politics of other nations.
Rebuilding the Military
It is not much of an exaggeration to say
that the U.S. military had nearly collapsed as an effective institution
during the Vietnam War. Over 1,000 commissioned and noncommissioned
officers were "fragged"-that is, assassinated-by their
troops. There were more mutinies and refusals to engage in combat
than in any previous American war. According to official Army
figures, 28 percent of troops in Vietnam used hard drugs such
as heroin and cocaine. The quality of the officer corps declined.
At all levels, fraudulent medals were awarded. The number of awards
for bravery actually increased as the level of combat declined.
Without a knowledge of history other than
what they were told in high school and through the media, few
soldiers understood the war. The enemy used guerrilla hit-and-run
tactics and was virtually indistinguishable from the non-combatant
population. This fact led to vicious racism and contempt for the
Vietnamese people. Black soldiers were less susceptible because
of their experience with racism in the United States. Some taped
to their helmets the slogan, "No gook ever called me nigger";
a few retreated into their own Saigon enclaves where military
police were afraid to follow. For whites and blacks alike, drugs
constituted a logical refuge from the horror, and the enemy did
not have to supply them. To protect political allies in Thailand
and elsewhere, the CIA guarded poppy fields and transported heroin
on one of its "company" airlines, Air America.
Some military planners and politicians
believed that the problem of discipline lay in the social base
of the army, which was disproportionately made up of the poor
and minorities. After the war, with the abolition of the draft
and implementation of the all-volunteer army, the problem threatened
to grow worse, since there was little incentive for middle-class
citizens to enroll. Blacks were recruited at a rate three times
higher than their proportion in the population. Rates of hard
drug use were estimated to have been 35 percent higher than Vietnam
levels, and 38 percent of the Army's troops were being released
from service after less than three years for "mental, moral
or physical reasons."
By the late 1970s, however, substantial
progress was made to rebuild the military. An all-voluntary army
replaced the draft, and the services' recruitment budgets shot
up. The Reagan administration fine-tuned these efforts. In fiscal
year 1986, the four branches of the military spent over $1.8 billion
on recruitment, an average of nearly $5,400 for each of 333,600
recruits, $1,400 more than the average for the previous year.
Advertising alone totaled $216 million, including $60,000 for
a rock video featuring break dancing. There were about 15,000
military recruiters, one for every 185 high school seniors in
the country. In 1986, there were 227,448 high school students
enrolled in Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps, compared to
a total of 287 twenty years earlier. The Pentagon spent $52.1
million on texts, arms, ~ and uniforms for these students.
Job training and tuition credits accumulated
in the military make military service before entering college
or the job market the only viable option for many high school
seniors, a point hammered home in Pentagon advertising featuring
teenage actors discussing career options in the soda shop. Such
benefits probably account for a significant proportion of reenlistments,
which went up 65 percent from 1985 to 1986. In reality, there
is little more to this approach than the traditional method of
promising impressionable young people advantages that the services
cannot deliver. For all of the emphasis on opportunities for training
for high-tech careers, only 17 percent of Army jobs require such
skills.
On college campuses, students must now
prove that they have registered with the Selective Service to
receive financial aid. With tuition rising and nonmilitary aid
falling, the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) becomes an
increasingly attractive option. In 1986, there were 530 active
ROTC detachments with 110,872 students, up 50 percent since 1975.
At the graduate level, 4,000 students were funded by the Pentagon.
By the mid-1980s, the military was no
longer recruiting from the "lower depths" of American
society. Of first-time recruits, percent of the 1985 group and
92 percent of the 1986 group had graduated from high school. Although
recruitment promises may be inflated, the military is effectively
competing with higher education as a major institution providing
opportunities for job training. Although the children of elites
continue to eschew military service, the lower- to middle-class
ranks of society are becoming heavily populated by people who
have made the rite of passage through military service.
The propaganda benefits from this rite
of passage are not lost upon military planners. In 1977, when
the prestige of the military was at a postwar low and disenchantment
with the defeat in Vietnam still restrained military adventures
abroad Thomas Carr, Director of Defense Education under President
Carter, asserted that military service was becoming an increasingly
important means for socializing young people:
By 1984, given the involvement of such
a large proportion of our young people with military service,
the military will have become a major instrument for youth socialization-assuming
a large portion of the role once dominated by the family, church,
the school, and the civilian work setting.
Young people not exposed to such socialization
through military service are subjected to a propaganda barrage
that has much the same objective. Television advertising especially
concentrated in spot ads shown during sports events, portrays
a positive image of military life and of the military image.
The Internal Politics of the Garrison
State
On July 4, 1987, as Independence Day celebrations
focused on the two hundredth anniversary of the Constitution,
chances are that most Americans overlooked news reports that Lt.
Col. Oliver North and other members of a secret Reagan administration
task force had formulated a plan to suspend the Constitution and
declare martial law in the event of either urban riots or widespread
domestic opposition to a military intervention. In such a case,
national government control was to be transferred to the Federal
Emergency Management Agency and military commanders would have
been appointed to run state and local governments.
William French Smith, then attorney general,
hushed up the plan, and government officials subsequently brushed
aside reports about it, claiming that this kind of contingency
planning is an ordinary function of government and a necessary
preparation for emergencies, such as nuclear war. But in fact,
North and his National Security Council aides had been planning
an operation designed to involve the United States in exactly
the kind of foreign intervention that might have provoked internal
opposition. And the NSC was not merely running amok; Elliot Abrams,
Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs (after
1985) and chief public advocate of the Administration's policy
toward Central America, was a staunch advocate of an invasion
of Nicaragua, as he admitted early in 1989.
The contras, then virtually under North's
direction, were to swarm into an area of Nicaragua and declare
it "liberated." North knew that this action would inevitably
provoke a counterattack by Sandinista forces and that the United
State s would be under pressure to commit ground combat troops
to rescue its mercenaries (the plan was very similar to the Bay
of Pigs operation in Cuba in 1961). North, who had begun his career
in Vietnam, understood that successful prosecution of a land war
in Central America would almost surely require suppression of
dissent at home. Part of his plan for accomplishing the necessary
repression would have involved the establishment of internment
camps, similar to those used during the Second World War to incarcerate
American citizens of Japanese ancestry. North could have some
confidence in overcoming the legal obstacles to such a plan. After
all, the present Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, William Rehnquist,
helped Nixon's attorney general John Mitchell draft a similar
strategy to use against people protesting the Vietnam War.
North had already heavily influenced the
shape of the Central America debate. For example, pro-contra legislators,
including Senator John Danforth, were fond of quoting from a 1981
speech by Nicaraguan Interior Minister Tomas Borge in which he
proclaimed the Sandinista revolution as one that "goes beyond
our borders " Danforth's quote came from information provided
by a white paper, "Revolution Beyond Our Borders," prepared
by the Office of Public Diplomacy of the State Department. It
failed to quote the rest of Borge's remarks, including the explanation,
"This does not mean we export our revolution. It is sufficient-and
we cannot avoid this-that they take our example." The oversight
is understandable. The unofficial coordinator of the Office of
Public Diplomacy was Oliver North.
The Office of Public Diplomacy was actually
a small operation compared to the entire public relations campaign
being used to sell the Reagan administration's policy. A tax-exempt
organization called the National Endowment for the Preservation
of Liberty, working with the support of Lt. Col. North and President
Reagan, solicited millions of dollars from citizens to coordinate
"private" support for the contras. A public relations
firm, International Business Communications (IBC), helped in the
effort, which was headed by two former government employees.
The American public was the chief target
of the IBC and the Office of Public Diplomacy. By relying on "private"
donations, the IBC was able to lobby members of Congress, using
methods that would have been considered suspect if utilized by
public agencies. For example, the IBC organized letter writing
and phone campaigns wherein "citizens" would express
their opinions to congressmen.
On March 13, 1985, a staff member of the
Office of Public Diplomacy sent a memorandum to White House director
of communications Pat Buchanan to describe the "White 'Propaganda'
Operation" being organized by IBC. He gave five examples
of the campaign. One included an op-ed editorial in the Wall Street
Journal, written by a history professor who had received funds
and assistance provided by "our staff." Two other op-ed
pieces appearing in the New York Times and Washington Post were
written entirely by the Office of Public Diplomacy, though they
were signed by contra leaders. All this was done despite the fact
that the 1985 Appropriations Act specifically prohibited using
public funds "for publicity or propaganda purposes not authorized
by Congress."
While Congress and the media focused the
public's attention on the question of whether or not Reagan knew
about the diversion of profits from the sale of arms to Iran to
the contras, the larger issue was the existence of a permanent
"secret government" that ran not only the contra war
but a variety of other covert actions. Many of these actions were
actually carried out by secret organizations and networks that
supplied their own funding to supplement what they received from
the CIA through drug trafficking and arms merchandising. When
Congress outlawed military aid to the contras, this network went
into action to save the contras. It was a largely private network
that operated in coordination with, but not under the control
of, American intelligence agencies.
If In the face of an increasingly complex,
well-coordinated, and insulated national security apparatus, the
information available for public debate about foreign affairs
becomes subject to an overwhelming degree of manipulation. Decisions
are carried out in secret and the volume of state secrets has
mushroomed with every presidential administration. After decisions
are made behind closed doors, strategies are devised about how
to manipulate mass opinion in favor of decisions or actions already
undertaken. Domestic electoral decisions do not lead to governmental
policies. Instead, public opinion campaigns are orchestrated to
build support for decisions already reached.
The
Democratic Facade
Index
of Website
Home Page