| I don't know how many times I've seen articles about Wesley
Clark making a formidable opponent for George Bush. And I agree, he likely
would, but so what?
I too am sick of the sound of Bush's voice. My radio dial is turned
five words into any sound clip from this dangerous half-wit with a speech
impediment, but what can be gained by replacing him with Clark?
For people in high positions, criticizing Bush now on Iraq is cheap
talk. The idiotic, destructive war is done. Americans must live with its
consequences and responsibilities no matter who is President. A decent
alternative to Bush demands more than a few cheap words of criticism.
You might think the people writing these pieces see Clark as the
embodiment of America's silly myths about citizen-soldiers, a kind of
television-age Cincinnatus, who could defeat one of the most lamentable,
wrong-headed President in American history.
Clark is not a citizen soldier. He is a professional, a lifetime paid
killer. And he has done a good deal of killing. His record just in the
very brief and relatively small conflict in Serbia is filled with dead
non-combatants, from busloads of cremated civilians to people blown apart
at a downtown television station. I understand his thinking in doing these
things. I just totally disagree with it.
His record there is marked also with unbelievably poor judgment. The
attack he ordered against a large Russian force was deranged. Thank God, a
tough old British general dared to disobey the order. Even the bombing of
the Chinese embassy was never satisfactorily explained. His documented
fraternization with a vicious war criminal appalled many Europeans.
Generals of any kind rarely make good democratic leaders. They have
lived their entire adult lives barking orders at folks trained to respond
to barking, basic military training having great similarities to obedience
school for dogs. The entire purpose of much of this training is to efface
individual will and initiative.
That's why generals come from places like West Point. They are imbued
with an ideology not intended for enlisted men, an ideology of officers'
class, privilege, and authority.
Any military organization functions a great deal like a Soviet-style
government. Direction comes from above, the Pentagon representing the
quintessence of a centrally-planned economy. Waste and inefficiency come
on a colossal scale. The waste goes largely unquestioned, because
patriotism covers a many evils or, at any rate, intimidates a multitude of
critics.
Civilian government simply does not work that way. There is more than a
tinge of wishful thinking that people who bark orders can "make the
trains run on time." It rarely turns out that way.
General-President Eisenhower, one of the better of a bad lot in
American history, despite his personal charm and common-sense words,
displayed many dangerous qualities. He worked with the appalling Dulles
brothers, gentlemen whose thinking perhaps more closely resembled their
Soviet counterparts than any democratic officials. The Bay of Pigs
invasion was planned and organized under Eisenhower's stewardship. He took
many risks with the Soviet Union, including the disastrous flight of a
U-2, shot down just before an important summit. A number of
democratically-elected governments were toppled by Eisenhower's
government. Men like the Shah of Iran, torturer of countless thousands,
were put into power over democratically elected officials. He kept the
eerie, pathological Richard Nixon on the ticket when there was a sound
excuse to drop him.
What most Americans recall about Eisenhower was that the nation grew in
the postwar period, that he was affable, and that he had a cute nickname.
Some recall his powerful words on the military-industrial complex, a fair
warning that has been utterly ignored.
What do we know about Clark? He discovered what party he belonged to in
a kind of epiphany at about sixty years of age. This suggests either
retardation or lying, and I'm pretty sure he is a bright fellow. What a
silly nonsense to believe this. Has he never voted in elections or
contributed to a party? Of course, what has really happened is that only
the Democrats offer Clark the opportunity to rise to Commander-in-Chief.
Clark senses Bush is increasingly vulnerable, and I believe he is
right. Bush's vulnerability will increase as the staggering costs of
invading and occupying Iraq become apparent and as months of melodramatic
reports of ambushed Americans continue.
What will America get for its treasure and blood? A more stable Middle
East? Look at the disastrous situation of the Palestinians today and say
that with a straight face. Sharon has been supported through a relentless
campaign of state-terror in the name of fighting terror. The very economy
of Israel is at risk owing to its trying to behave like a world power on
the pocket book of a moderate-size American state. And peace remains
further away than at any time in recent memory, a new poll showing
Israelis voicing despair, something the Palestinians have lived with for
decades.
Consider the festering resentments of tens of thousands of Iraqis
bitterly suffering for years under the impact of Bush's delusions. Crime
and murder have risen to unprecedented levels in Iraq, increased by
thousands of percent over what they were before Bush smashed public order.
Many discontents, uncertainties, and internal rivalries have been
released, and new enemies are in the making.
In Afghanistan, a costly mess remains. The figurehead president of the
country, who has little reason to cause Bush grief, himself admits it will
take years to gain stability. The production of opium poppies has exploded
since the Taliban were pushed aside. Perhaps, American soldiers will come
home as they did from Vietnam, addicted to drugs. That was, after all, one
of the hidden costs of America's insane Vietnam crusade: farm boys from
every corner of America returned home using drugs they never had heard of
before.
On top of all this, the American economy is sour, and I don't mean just
current GDP growth. Longer-term matters are at stake. Clinton's surpluses
have been squandered, deficits in trade and expenditure have reached
intimidating levels, and the economy is under the shadow of
unknowably-vast obligations abroad, including everything from billions in
bribes for foreign support in Iraq to open-ended contracts for associates
of Bush and Cheney.
Bush officials are shown daily to be remarkably petty and corrupt.
Imagine a neocon outing a CIA agent? It's the kind of act for which they
would have nailed Clinton to a cross. But these nasty people's lust for
vengeance and getting even drives them to do about anything.
The national-security apparatus they have put into place is horrible
and dangerous and can only increasingly be seen to be so as it operates.
Yes, Bush will be vulnerable. So why waste the opportunity on Clark?
There have to be better people.
Unfortunately, American national politics are about as agile as the
Pentagon's bloated bulk. An American presidential campaign takes forever,
often coming to resemble in cost and duration preparations for the landing
at Normandy. The actual conditions at the time of the election can only be
guessed at in such a lengthy process. It is one of the more foolish and
costly parts of American politics, but it is the reality people must work
under. So, a handsome general with no political baggage who criticizes the
President about Iraq a little bit looks like a good bet.
And that is how America is run, and those who dream of something else
only hope against hope.
John Chuckman chuckman@yellowtimes.org
is former chief economist for a large Canadian oil company. He has
many interests and is a lifelong student of history. He writes with a
passionate desire for honesty, the rule of reason, and concern for human
decency. He is a member of no political party and takes exception to what
has been called America's "culture of complaint" with its habit
of reducing every important issue to an unproductive argument between two
simplistically-defined groups. John regards it as a badge of honor to have
left the United States as a poor young man from the South Side of Chicago
when the country embarked on the pointless murder of something like 3
million Vietnamese in their own land because they happened to embrace the
wrong economic loyalties. He lives in Canada, which he is fond of calling
"the peaceable kingdom." John's columns appear regularly on
Counterpunch, Media Monitors, Online Journal, Scoop (New Zealand), Liberal
Slant, Yellow Times, Dissident Voice, Jeff Rense, and many other Internet
sites. He is regularly translated into Italian (Utopia) and Spanish (Rebelion) |