America’s Slow-Motion Military Coup

Authored by Stephen Kinzer via The Boston Globe,

In a democracy, no one should be comforted to hear that generals have imposed discipline on an elected head of state. That was never supposed to happen in the United States. Now it has.

Among the most enduring political images of the 20th century was the military junta. It was a group of grim-faced officers — usually three — who rose to control a state. The junta would tolerate civilian institutions that agreed to remain subservient, but in the end enforced its own will. As recently as a few decades ago, military juntas ruled important countries including Chile, Argentina, Turkey, and Greece.

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These days the junta system is making a comeback in, of all places, Washington. Ultimate power to shape American foreign and security policy has fallen into the hands of three military men: General James Mattis, the secretary of defense; General John Kelly, President Trump’s chief of staff; and General H.R. McMaster, the national security adviser. They do not put on their ribbons to review military parades or dispatch death squads to kill opponents, as members of old-style juntas did. Yet their emergence reflects a new stage in the erosion of our political norms and the militarization of our foreign policy. Another veil is dropping.

Given the president’s ignorance of world affairs, the emergence of a military junta in Washington may seem like welcome relief. After all, its three members are mature adults with global experience — unlike Trump and some of the wacky political operatives who surrounded him when he moved into the White House. Already they have exerted a stabilizing influence. Mattis refuses to join the rush to bomb North Korea, Kelly has imposed a measure of order on the White House staff, and McMaster pointedly distanced himself from Trump’s praise for white nationalists after the violence in Charlottesville.

Being ruled by generals seems preferable to the alternative. It isn’t.

Military officers, like all of us, are products of their background and environment. The three members of Trump’s junta have 119 years of uniformed service between them. They naturally see the world from a military perspective and conceive military solutions to its problems. That leads toward a distorted set of national priorities, with military “needs” always rated more important than domestic ones.

Trump has made clear that when he must make foreign policy choices, he will defer to “my generals.” Mattis, the new junta’s strongman, is the former head of Central Command, which directs American wars in the Middle East and Central Asia. Kelly is also an Iraq veteran. McMaster has commanded troops in Iraq and Afghanistan almost without interruption since he led a tank company in the 1991 Gulf War.

Military commanders are trained to fight wars, not to decide whether fighting makes strategic sense. They may be able to tell Trump how many troops are necessary to sustain our present mission in Afghanistan, for example, but they are not trained either to ask or answer the larger question of whether the mission serves America’s long-term interest. That is properly the job of diplomats. Unlike soldiers, whose job is to kill people and break things, diplomats are trained to negotiate, defuse conflicts, coolly assess national interest and design policies to advance it. Notwithstanding Mattis’s relative restraint on North Korea, all three members of Trump’s junta promote the confrontational approach that has brought protracted war in Afghanistan, Iraq and beyond, while fueling tension in Europe and East Asia.

Our new junta is different from classic ones like, for example, the “National Council for Peace and Order” that now rules Thailand. First, our junta’s interest is only international relations, not domestic policy. Second, it did not seize power in a coup, but derives its authority from the favor of an elected president. Third and most important, it main goal is not to impose a new order but to enforce an old one.

Last month, President Trump faced a crucial decision about the future of America’s war in Afghanistan. This was a potential turning point. Four years ago Trump tweeted, “Let’s get out of Afghanistan.” If he had followed that impulse and announced that he was bringing American troops home, the political and military elite in Washington would have been stunned. But junta members swung into action. They persuaded Trump to announce that instead of withdrawing, he would do the opposite: reject “rapid exit” from Afghanistan, increase troop strength, and continue “killing terrorists.”

It is no great surprise that Trump has been drawn into the foreign policy mainstream; the same happened to President Obama early in his presidency. More ominous is that Trump has turned much of his power over to generals. Worst of all, many Americans find this reassuring. They are so disgusted by the corruption and shortsightedness of our political class that they turn to soldiers as an alternative.

It is a dangerous temptation.

 

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14 Comments
javelin
javelin
September 19, 2017 7:20 am

What a load of crap–sounds like an editorial from Rachel Maddow or something, and the shadow government and deep state have been in charge for 50+ years. The Intelligence agencies in league with the MIC are doing far more than the tiny mind of this writer’s imaginations even understand.

I suggest everyone take the time to watch this–very good explanation of how ginormous TPTB really are…is resistance futile ?

Bingo
Bingo
September 19, 2017 8:18 am

If you know for certain that USA diplomats are the ones who seek to do maximum harm to the USA then the military looks better.

Thaisleeze
Thaisleeze
September 19, 2017 8:47 am

The unhappiest people here in the land of smiles seem to be the police, who are having their businesses squeezed. Almost all of the Thais I know feel reasonably comfortable under their current leaders.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Thaisleeze
September 19, 2017 8:54 am

From what I understand, those that aren’t get arrested or killed.

https://duckduckgo.com/html/?q=thai%20political%20opposition

Ponyexpress
Ponyexpress
September 19, 2017 9:33 am

What most don’t consider when discussing the mindset of career military people is the fact that they have lived, grown and developed in a very rigid socialistic world, albeit subsidized by a democratic /capitalist system.
They essentially are hierarchically trained and socialistic, group thinking beings. Their ingrained views are in great part, anathema to a Democratically elected civilian government.
Our President and congress need to be aware of this .

Gerold
Gerold
September 19, 2017 9:57 am

It’s unfortunate, but people get the government they deserve.

Diogenes
Diogenes
September 19, 2017 10:17 am

” Q: And the operators? What space are they in?
A: Ultimately? Dead Space. That’s what makes them operators. They just sit there in a kind
of vacuum. They’re the living dead. They get their only pleasure from operating the
androids. And that, too has diminishing returns. That too leads to more invasive means and
more force. The whole thing collapses.”

“This is pretty much why societies are based on war. War is the thing people think will wake them up and get them out of the bubble.”

Jon Rappoport Interview with hypnotherapist Jack True

http://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message386588/pg1?disclaimer=1

Hey Admin any chace you could post this interview it is totally mind-blowing.

Team Goy #432

GilbertS
GilbertS
September 19, 2017 10:48 am

In my opinion, this article is a bunch of liberal hogwash. I was willing to read with an open mind until I got to his odious bit about Trump praising white nationalists at Charlottesville.
It’s hard to call 3 retired generals a junta when they can be fired any time. Wasn’t Mike Flynn also a general? That didn’t protect him from being fired after 1 month in office.

Gayle
Gayle
September 19, 2017 11:12 am

I agree with the substance of the article. I would like to challenge its author to document his claim that DJT praised the white supremacists.

I have noticed the leaks have diminished by 90% since Kelly took control.

rhs jr
rhs jr
September 19, 2017 1:34 pm

“It’s Tommy this, an’ Tommy that, an` Chuck him out, the brute! But it’s “Saviour of ‘is country” when the guns begin to shoot”
I’ve had my problems with Generals but I’d take one Franco Benevolent Dictator over the whole Socialist & NeoCon loving Congress right now.

Done in Dallas
Done in Dallas
September 19, 2017 2:34 pm

Quit reading here: “McMaster pointedly distanced himself from Trump’s praise for white nationalists after the violence in Charlottesville.”

anonymous
anonymous
September 19, 2017 9:11 pm

On a side note, there’s an interesting piece in the NYT about how the alt right manages to recruit and brainwash people — mostly young men — by convincing them that ‘cultural Marxism’ exists and the Holocaust wasn’t real.

Undercover With the Alt-Right
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/19/opinion/alt-right-white-supremacy-undercover.html

rhs jr
rhs jr
  anonymous
September 20, 2017 12:10 am

The Senile Old Gray Lady also reports that the Economy is doing Great, Mankind is overheating the Earth, The 2nd Amend increases crime rates, Obama was the Greatest POTUS and Harpy was robbed, Diversity is Strength and Unity, Blacks have equal IQs and their countless problems all stem from White Bigotry, GMOs and Vaccines are safe, Political Correctness is next to Godliness, God is dead, Christianity is the Religion of Hate and Islam the Religion of Peace, there are no Chemtrails, and Jews are God’s Chosen People.

Bones
Bones
September 19, 2017 10:00 pm

Yeah, those so called diplomats have screwed things up real good over the last 50 years. These generals may be exactly what is needed to clean these shitbags out…..jus sayin