Truthout Original

The Threat of Realism

by: Marc Ash, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Gates shakes hands with reporter.
Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates (center) shakes hands with a reporter outside Saddam Hussein's Al Faw palace during an Iraqi visit in September of 2008. (Photo: Jerry Morrison / AP)


    Still some 50 days out from inauguration, it's far too early to jump to conclusions about how the new administration will handle war on two fronts, but if you think war on two fronts is a bad idea, there's some writing on the wall that doesn't bode well.

    Change has indeed come. America has elected its first president of partly African heritage. That alone stands as a quantum leap forward that no force on earth will ever change. It is nothing short of a collective national triumph. And the man is a bona fide intellectual no less. Intellectuals, of course, being as rare as good decisions at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

    While there is ample grist for optimism, only a fatal optimist or a militarist could fail to be concerned about the rough sketch emerging for Iraq and Afghanistan.

    At central issue in both campaigns is what President-elect Obama referred to in his remarks in Chicago on December 1 introducing the new national security team as "our global leadership." The concept of American global leadership is not new. It really dates back to a pre-American Civil War notion that US technology, specifically military technology, had become so advanced that we could spread our influence far and wide, and come home with the booty. The world had its notice on July 8, 1853, when Commodore Perry navigated an American war armada into Edo Bay harbor in Tokyo, Japan, on a "diplomatic" mission. There were no diplomats on board. At the point of 66 naval guns, Perry opened Japanese ports to US trade.

    For US public relations purposes, American global domination is most often wrapped in positive tones. Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin reminded us continually on the campaign trail that "America should be a force for good in the world." John F. Kennedy established the Peace Corps. But Kennedy, among other things, also quietly fomented counterrevolution in Cuba.

    If average Americans were blissfully unaware that US global leadership included domination of global resources, that bliss was shattered in 1962 when Fidel Castro and Che Guevara pointed Russian-supplied atomic missiles at the US mainland from Cuba. Castro and Guevara bluntly accused the US of imperialism and ruthless exploitation of Cuba, and many other nations as well. Castro said, "End the philosophy of plunder and the philosophy of war will be ended as well." What Guevara did in his address to the United Nation's General Assembly on December 11, 1964, was issue a worldwide appeal for resistance to US imperialism. Clearly, Castro and Guevara saw their struggle in defensive terms.

    In his remarks in Chicago, President-elect Obama seemed torn between a new realization that "our destiny is shared with the world's," and the old view he articulated speaking on behalf of the new security team he was introducing: "I think all of us here share the belief that we have to maintain the strongest military on the planet." He literally seems to be working through the equation in front of the cameras. Early in his prepared remarks, Obama presented a seemingly newly matured view of America's role in the world saying:

"The common thread linking these challenges is the fundamental reality that in the 21st century our destiny is shared with the world's. From our markets to our security, from our public health to our climate, we must act with that understanding that, now more than ever, we have a stake in what happens across the globe. And as we learned so painfully on 9/11, terror cannot be contained by borders, nor safety provided by oceans alone."

    But he went on to say:

"And so, in this uncertain world, the time has come for a new beginning, a new dawn of American leadership to overcome the challenges of the 21st century and to seize the opportunities embedded in those challenges. We will strengthen our capacity to defeat our enemies and support our friends. We will renew old alliances and forge new and enduring partnerships. We will show the world once more that America is relentless in the defense of our people, steady in advancing our interests and committed to the ideals that shine as a beacon to the world - democracy and - (audio break) - because American values are America's greatest export to the world."

    So, there may be some things he's working through.

    Iraq

    Of all the gifts left to Americans by departing commander in chief Bush, the two wars he started in Iraq and Afghanistan are most troubling. The American presidency is an extraordinarily difficult job under any circumstances, but to inherit the job with two botched wars-turned-quagmires underway sets a whole new standard. Regrettably, the working model for an Iraq plan that Obama and team appear to be navigating off of at this early stage seems to have serious flaws. Again from Chicago:

"The SOFA that has been now passed by the Iraqi legislature points us in the right direction. It indicates we are now on a glide path to reduce our forces in Iraq. I will be meeting with not only Secretary Gates but the Joint Chiefs of Staff and commanders on the ground to make a determination as to how we move that pace - how we proceed in that withdrawal process.

I believe that 16 months is the right time frame, but, as I've said consistently, I will listen to the recommendations of my commanders. And my number-one priority is making sure that our troops remain safe in this transition phase, and that the Iraqi people are well served by a government that is taking on increased responsibility for its own security.

It is a sovereign nation.

What this signals is a transition period in which our mission will be changing. We will have to remain vigilant in making sure that any terrorist elements that remain in Iraq do not become strengthened as a consequence of our drawdown."

    The first problem here is that, yes, the occupation of Iraq is about dominating on behalf of large American-based corporations the resources of Iraq, and, yes, the American taxpayer is footing the entire bill. That is not going to last. It is highly unlikely that the US economy can sustain the occupation of Iraq for another 12 months. It might not be sustainable for another six months. A day is rapidly approaching when a critical-mass financial decision in relation to the occupation of Iraq will have to be made.

    Next, "reducing our forces" is both vague and potentially fraught with major risk. Ending the war and a full restoration of Iraqi sovereignty is not accomplished by a smaller, kinder, gentler US occupying force it accomplished by ending the US military presence in Iraq. If you read between the lines here, a real withdrawal of US military forces from Iraq doesn't appear to be under consideration.

    In addition, any significant "drawdown" of US forces in Iraq would expose the remaining force to an ever-increasing security risk. That leads to dead US soldiers. Obama seems to address this when he refers to "making sure that our troops remain safe in this transition phase." Unfortunately, the core equation remains the same: smaller force, greater security risk. So, in terms of Iraqi sovereignty and US force security, the current plan appears fundamentally flawed.

    This leaves aside all of the war crimes committed against the Iraqi people in order to maintain control by force of their country. Including extra-judicial assassination, indefinite imprisonment without due process, displacement of vast segments of the population, and the list goes on.

    Afghanistan

    In Afghanistan, for whatever reason, everyone on a US national security level seems to have forgotten the lessons that the vastly superior Soviet military learned in Afghanistan two decades ago, i.e., do not leave your military there. It is what military experts have always referred to it as the graveyard of foreign armies.

    There seems to be a desire on the part of US military planners to do in Afghanistan now what they "should have" or were "not allowed" to do in 2002. But now is now and then was then. Now, a new strategy must be developed. One that doesn't repeat the mistakes of Mikhail Gorbachev or George W. Bush. The plan currently offered won't pass muster.

    Realism

    The debate in Washington right now is defined by what media pundits have taken to labeling as "Realism." As is the case with any "ism" it has man-made borders. The cornerstones of this brand of realism appear to include:

- A notion that it is an American birthright to lead the world, and profit by doing so.

- A notion that the US can maintain over 700 military bases worldwide and not unify the world in opposition.

- A notion that an Iraqi government, or any government orchestrated, protected and funded by US occupiers can someday be sovereign.

- A notion that the occupation of Iraq or Afghanistan can end well.

    Those are clearly false, unsustainable and quite dangerous realisms.

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You can send comments to Truthout Executive Director Marc Ash at: director@truthout.org.

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interesting the events in

interesting the events in the past few weeks occuring in a vacuum seemingly, with obama busy, his plate full, marked contrast to the campaign and election. no one at the helm. one seemingly careful (obama, the elect), the other as careless as ever. bush and the style we've had to endure for the last eight years still isn't gone. shame and grief. when will obama tap some greens? not likely. at least volckers on the team.... the stiglitz articla very good, from vanity fair naturally.

If all the "this is a real

If all the "this is a real change" stuff is real, then let's see a prompt prosecution by the Obama Justice Department of the entire health insurance industry as a criminal conspiracy under the RICCO statutes.

The monkey trap. It was

The monkey trap. It was clear from the onset that a new-coming president (whoever that would be) would receive not just two quagmires, but two resource-laced quagmires, and that getting out of the stingy part requires letting go of the juicy one. It looks to me pretty much like the age-old monkey trap: a hollowed out coconut nailed to a tree, with peanuts inside and a hole big enough to squeeze a monkey hand through but that would not be big enough to pull the hand out if closed. Many monkeys just wait for capture there, unable to make the decision to let go of the peanuts. More subtle is the fox in the fable "le renard et les raisins" (the fox and the grapes) by Jean de la Fontaine (XVII Century French writer) where a starved fox who found juicy, ripe grapes that are decidedly out of reach decides to call them not good enough for him. It can be frustrating but then it does not waste any time to move on. The question for this coming administration is whether they will be able to let go of the oil and move on.

Robert B., the point here is

Robert B., the point here is not that the United States' escapade in Afghanistan has been a failure, but that the U.S. has no business being there in the first place. And staying put in Afghanistan (or escalating, as appears to be the case) makes no more sense that it did or does in Iraq. All around the world, people respond negatively to the imposition of imperialism.

Wouldn't it be wonderful if

Wouldn't it be wonderful if Obama required his highly qualified foreign policy experts to specify achievable objectives in Iraq and Afghanistan, detailed benchmarks for achieving them, and an implementation plan. PLUS the feature that any failure to achieve objectives would be accompanied by (a) sacrificing objectives shown to be unrealistic, and (b) reducing military effort. The spinmeisters can always find ways of defining "victory" to fit any set of facts.

They're going after the

They're going after the Caspian Sea Oil- $16 trillion worth

I was in favor of taking out

I was in favor of taking out the deranged, fascist government of Afghanistan BEFORE 9/11. Trying to equate Afghanistan with Iraq is simply wrong. George Bush bungled Afghanistan before he bungled Iraq, but that doesn't mean the mission in Afghanistan was a quagmire of equal stupidity. It wasn't, and it isn't. Afghanistan could have been and should still be the bastion of democracy and women's rights and freedoms the Middle East was supposed to become as a result of our intervention. Obama has enough problems from the looney Republicans without additional opposition from the Democratic left. Stop being morons, please.

Limbaugh might just be

Limbaugh might just be messing with our heads, but if he and Henry Kissinger both find Obama's security picks encouraging, it fills my heart with dread. I knew it meant nothing good when Obama kept emphasizing he would pull out the "combat troops" in 16 months -- it meant he'd describe the troops he wanted to leave there with some other term. Same goes for the Afghanistan position, trying to show he's tough on "defense" by picking a different stupid war to prosecute doesn't reassure me. The problem here is there does appear to be a snake pit in the area of Afghanistan-Pakistan which sends out terrorists from Bali to Mumbai. Something has to be done about them, though our army probably isn't the right tool. Thanks for the article, Marc. Keep speaking truth to power.

Hope against hope, my

Hope against hope, my friends. The Obama campaign was the first widespread evidence of this rotten "realism". To not seriously discuss our role in the world -- especially after 9-11 -- is not to motivate/inspire Americans to the better angels of our nature. Democracy is short-circuited. So now he has our glorious hope and well-founded worry. And the old devils of self-righteous imperialism (the beast visher so acutely identified above) drool as they take new positions.

But we've got this straw,

But we've got this straw, see. And it goes into your oil, and we DRINK IT UP! WE DRINK IT UP!

Power and leadership is not

Power and leadership is not a birthright, power is given by the the people and in the US case the citizens of the world. Leadership against the will of the world is seen as dictatorship in the eyes of the human race. The desire of the world community is peace, a sustainable environment/climate, and energy for everybody. The policies of the Bush administration were a spit in the face of the human race and predictably the US lost its global leadership and power position. The world engaged in mostly passive resistance of all possible forms. One should think that the solution to the US leadership dilemma is quite easy. After all the free world would still like to see the US leading and to again be the shining beacon the still not so free world could see bright and clear, setting an example to follow without force. P-E Obama is right in observing that the US needs he world and that the world needs the US. This understanding is all that's necessary. Once the US starts to set an example in alternative energy, climate control, and peace efforts, then the US leadership position, power, and the shining beacon on the hill will come back all naturally. After all China is securing her energy and commodity needs so far peacefully and in an economic framework. Meaning they solely use negotiations and financial means to gain access and influence outside of their direct power zone. The US should and could do no less. A ground war in Afghanistan is suicide, emphasis should be on air control and stealth, fast, flexible counter terror strikes. The sooner we leave the region all together the better it will be for anybody involved!

Obama is a member of the

Obama is a member of the establishment. Otherwise he would not have become the presidential candidate of one of our nation's major political parties. His foreign policies will not upset the establishment. Look at his national security team!

obama appears to be serious

obama appears to be serious in his commitment to bipartisan foreign policy: a blend of neoliberal and neoconservative assumptions and principals. he can coat it any way he wants, but if he swallows the basic strategy of the war on terrorism, which is "permanent war" against America's "enemies everywhere," which was first developed by military intellectuals after Vietnam, made its first appearance under Reagan, and was solidified with the inside job terrorist attacks of 9-11, the New Pearl Harbor the neocons had been warning us about for much of the second term of the Clinton Administration. Of course, Clinton was no saint, the neoliberal evangelist of globalization, in his prime he made Thomas Friedman look like a sophisticated observer of the economic scene. Clinton helped militarize US foreign policy in South America with Plan Colombia, following up Bush I's post Cold War "war on drugs" which gave the US another excuse to continue its unilateral intervention in the affairs of other nations. Obama will give us some crumbs from the table of international human rights law, maybe even re-establish Habeus Corpus in the USA (don't hold your breath). While Obama makes a real difference providing cover for Wall Street's call for a new fiscal stimulus state to help bailout the mess they have made of the domestic economy, do not expect much progress in the way of much else. I love his intellectualism, but so far i have seen nothing to make me think he will do much more than manage the global empire in a more efficient and "soft power" way than the previous clown who was put into power by the War Party and its White Men behind the curtains of America's Democratic Republic. Obama is in power now because they need him to prevent this country from falling apart. If they had wanted to crush him, i am sure their media would have made it happen.

To paraphrase your

To paraphrase your conclusion: Realism Is bought in action and money talks louder than words.

Nice job, Mark, in pointing

Nice job, Mark, in pointing out the erroneous foreign policy assumptions rooted in the traditional Anglo White Supremacy which informed all of Mr. Obama's predecessors. These assumptions however, in light of and possibly in spite of his choices to fill varied cabinet posts, do not necessarily inform Mr. Obama's world view or judgment. Mr. Obama, a non-white person raised in white culture, which places him in a unique position unavailable to his forbears, one that offers a much clearer view of the hubris and folly inherent in the exceptionalist and triumphalist attitudes of of old. One would hope that Mr. Obama will provide governance more rooted in Enlightenment principles of Universality than the current administration's ethical free-for-all. I'm anxious to see how well Mr. Obama performs in returning the US to Constitutional law from Bushite arbitrary tyranny in his first week after the inauguration before I dismiss him, as so many already have, as being just more of the same, for without Habeas Corpus and Posse Comitatus, all other points are moot.

The reality that has come

The reality that has come upon us with our increasing awareness of our planet and our enhanced ability to communicate is that we can no longer sustainably continue to extract the world's resources as we have. We cannot, without hurting ourselves, keep dumping the by-products of manufacturing, agriculture and consumer goods into our environment. I am certain Obama knows this as well or better than we do. So the "profit" in the equation of global leadership must adapt to our new awareness of our stewardship and our responsibility for our own destiny, if we are to have any. Again, Obama knows this-- and even the Pentagon knows it. The Pentagon recently released a study stating the prime threat to our security is climate change. Of course the Pentagon did not feel it necessary to point out the threat of stupidity. As long as vested interests representing antique and obsolete technologies control our government,our future is questionable. To some, this can be a blessing. America as a humble friend not aspiring to super dominance of the planet has a much better chance of enduring another two hundred years. Obama can see this as well as we. One good reason to appoint a Marine General is to notify potential threats that we will be tough, even as we retreat from the ruthless exploitation we have pursued in the past. That reality is entering the picture is encouraging, that reality is perceived as having undergone major shifts from the past is inevitable. The mothers and children of the world deserve t0 benefit from our new understanding of our responsibility, even if the oligarchs do not. The "smart government" of which Obama speaks must succeed if life on earth is to prosper. The transition from the old paradigm must be managed with finesse and a minimum of friction and conflict.

I like realism -- in fact,

I like realism -- in fact, prefer it -- especially when applied to Obama's foreign policy. Thanks for the sampling.

You are making valid points

You are making valid points - but "change" will not be accepted by this country or the world all at once, no matter how much some of us wish it so. Naval ships can take over a mile to turn. This country (and the world), with it's vast array of socio-economic systems and structures, is a very very large ship. Some "change" will come soon as this president elect will need to prove the merits of his ideas, the rest will come in bits and pieces as the public of this nation (and the world) digests and responds. Do not forget that Obama will be taking office at a time when the types of solutions needed are unprecedented and the risks of unforeseen consequences high. He will approach the presidency as a liberal centrist, pretty much as he has always been. This being said - what would you have him say to the country and the world when announcing his national security team? I don't disagree with your sentiments - and you should always examine with a discriminating eye - but don't forget the context. This new president will not succeed by re-writing the rulebook all at once and trying to force everyone to play.

If the United States insists

If the United States insists to "shine as a beacon to the world," as Senator Obama expressed and the author Marc Ash quotes above, the United States must show the world why the U.S. should be considered such a beacon. To do this, the U.S. must exercise leadership by example above all else, especially above force. We the People of the U.S. must show the world through our individual and collective diligence that we shall create opportunities for the least fortunate of our people, a population of Americans that is increasing at a core-meltdown rate. It is disgraceful and disgusting for a country so wealthy as the United States to be a home for almost 1/6 of it's population to live in poverty and perpetual hopelessness. An empty promise has been the staple of U.S. office-holders for too long. The various grass-roots efforts that sprouted over the past years may have sought different specific avenues (to end to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, to guarantee equal rights for homosexuals, to create equitable healthcare and education systems, etc.) for social justice, but all of those avenues converged upon the same disappointing point: The shut and locked gate, with no one behind it anyway, that is the Bush Administration. With Barack Obama about to take office, along with many new legislators and other new officials nationwide, now is not the time to cool off. Rather, these efforts should be voraciously increased to guarantee their objectives are accomplished. Barack Obama is not the catalyst for change, but the new gatekeeper; the people are the catalyst for change and Obama's administration shall, hopefully, be the open gate to the finish. It is the right and responsibility of each citizen to compel their public officials to fulfill their campaign promises made to attain their office. Through peaceful and unrelenting, unrelenting actions from these types of organizations and individuals, these goals shall be accomplished.

Obama has given the world

Obama has given the world hope - the mother of miracles. Miracles will have to be worked to morph beast (the US) into beauty (America). Obama may just be the miracle worker. Let's not second-guess hope, please. Let's stay on this side of hope - it's all we've got this side of realism. Peter Edler Stockholm

The problem is that America

The problem is that America keeps electing presidents who are super ambitious, coming from either humble class or diminished intellectual backgrounds. Obama needs to confront the class of Americans he has been lusting to join. He has to reject membership in the club that he so wants to be a member of. Is he up to the challenge? He will be judged by the content of his character - he engages in an epic struggle - he must destroy the rich powerful beast, the same beast that promises to protect him.

My heart is sick. Other

My heart is sick. Other "realisms": -No windfall profits tax for oil companies -No 3% raise on taxes for the wealthy -No oversight on the bailout And I am pissed. The truth in the advertising is beginning to show itself.

About time that someone told

About time that someone told it like it is ... you just need to tell it a little louder and a little more often. Irak and Afghanistan are pure and outright failures and the longer the US stays there the more they will fail. Up to them. It would be time to also start giving all of the very good reasons that the US should start scaling back and dropping forever the most stupid thing since the Edsel. There missile defense shield in Poland the the Czech Republic. You think you have problems now, just install these idiotic things and keep supporting the idiots in Tbilisi and Kiev and then you will have real problems, not some little two bit operations like in Irak and Afghanistan. Way to go Mr. Ash.... now just louder and more often.

It is nice to see some

It is nice to see some honest criticism of Obama on Truthout. Frankly, I have been disappointed in Truthout's analysis of Obama's foreign policy. Thank you Marc Ash. And to the rest of the Truthout staff, I initially started reading Truthout for credible stories regarding the Iraq War. Please be just as vigilant in examining Obama's war policies as you were in examining Bush's policies. Or I will stop visiting your site.