Custodians of Empire

by: Tom Engelhardt  |  The Nation

Custodians of Empire
Many believe that Obama's foreign policy team is right of center. (Photo: Getty Images)

    The Obama national security "team" - part of that much-hailed "team of rivals" - does not yet exist, but it does seem to be heaving into view. And so far, its views seem anything but rivalrous. Mainstream reporters and pundits lovingly refer to them as "centrist," but, in a Democratic context, they are distinctly right of center. The next secretary of state looks to be Hillary Clinton, a hawk on the Middle East. During the campaign, she spoke of our ability to "totally obliterate" Iran, should that country carry out a nuclear strike against Israel. She will evidently be allowed to bring her own (hawkish) subordinates into the State Department with her. Her prospective appointment is now being praised by the likes of Newt Gingrich and Henry Kissinger.

    The leading candidate for National Security Advisor is General James L. Jones, former Marine Corps commandant and NATO commander, who remained "publicly neutral" during the presidential campaign and is known to be personally close to John McCain and, evidently, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates as well. Not surprisingly, he favors yet more spending for the Pentagon. The reputed leading candidate for Director of the CIA, John Brennan, now head of the National Counterterrorism Center, was George Tenet's chief of staff and deputy executive director during the worst years of the CIA's intelligence, imprisonment, and torturing excesses.

    The new Secretary of Defense is odds on to be... the old secretary of defense, Robert Gates, a confidant of the first President Bush. Still surrounded at the Pentagon by former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's holdovers, he has had a long career in Washington as a clever apparatchik. He was the adult brought in - the story of how and by whom has yet to be told - to clean up the Bush foreign policy mess (and probably prevent an attack on Iran). He did this. He now favors no fixed timelines for an Iraq withdrawal, but a significant American troop "surge" in Afghanistan, "well north of 20,000," in the next 12-18 months. He has overseen the further growth of the bloated Pentagon budget and has recently come out for the building of a new generation of nuclear weapons. (Other candidates for Defense include former Clinton Navy Secretary and key Obama advisor Richard Danzig, who may end up - for the time being - as an undersecretary of defense, Clinton former Deputy Secretary of Defense John Hamre, and Republican Senator Chuck Hagel, who might instead land the job as the Director of National Intelligence.)

    Drop down a tier, as Yochi Dreazen of the Wall Street Journal wrote last week, and you find the Obama transition people using a little known think-tank, the Center for a New American Security (CNSA), as a "top farm team" to stock its national security shelves. The founders of the center are - don't be shocked now - former Clinton administration officials providing yet more "centrists" to an administration that seems to believe the essence of "experience" is having been in Washington between 1992 and 2000. CNAS, by the way, is officially against a fixed timeline for withdrawal from Iraq. In that, it seems typical of the coalescing national security team, almost none of whom, so far, opposed the invasion of Iraq (other than the president-elect). Having been anti-war is evidently a sign of inexperience and so a negative.

    Add in the military line-up - Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Mike Mullen, Centcom Commander David Petraeus, Generals Raymond Odierno and David McKiernan, the U.S. commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan - all second term Bush picks, all reportedly ready to push for a major "surge" in Afghanistan, all evidently against Obama's timeline for withdrawing U.S. combat forces from Iraq.

    Now, mind you, so far we've only been considering the foreign policy issues of empire that face the next team. Domestically, if Gates remains, the Air Force might get kneecapped (perhaps losing the F-22 Raptor, the weapons system it wants for a war that will never be fought), but the Army and Marines will expand, as (so he promises) will the Navy. The essence of the matter is simple enough, as Frida Berrigan, arms expert for the New America Foundation and TomDispatch regular, indicates in her latest piece, "Weapons Come Second": Even in the toughest of economic times, the Pentagon, bloated budget and all, is likely to prove relatively untouchable.

    The Obama transition team's explanation for the remarkably familiar look to its emerging national security line-up, suggested David E. Sanger in a recent front-page think piece in the New York Times, is "that the new administration will have no time for a learning curve. With the country facing a deep recession or worse, global market turmoil, chaos in Pakistan and a worsening war in Afghanistan, 'there's going to be no time for experimentation,' a member of the Obama foreign policy team said." In other words, we need the sort of minds, already imprisoned in Washington's version of "experience," who helped lead us into this mess (long term), to get us out of it. "Experimentation" is obviously for times when it isn't needed. For these custodians of empire, Better a steady hand and the same-old thoughts. No?

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"We (REALLY) don't need no

"We (REALLY) don't need no (more) stinking badges"... If indeed true that our dear Obama is right center leaning, hawkish, surrounded and manipulated by same, let's pray that the basic spiritual and genetically coded intelligences of the greater population in the United States and worldwide encourage and gracefully guide demilitarization and swords into plowshares generally - and literally. Where's the wealth in aggression, violence, oppression, occupation weaponry and armaments?


Give the President-Elect a

Give the President-Elect a chance. Please. With new leadership comes a new synergy and different use of people's experience and talents. No choice will please everyone. It would seem, from my admittedly limited and supportive point of view, that he is creating balance in his overall administration between left and right. He promised to find common ground, not to make any one side ecstatic with power. And Hillary Clinton made a few bold campaign statements - so what - she had to in order to compete and not seem 'too soft.' To label her a total 'hawk' is premature. Let the man work, he is a leader and will run his administration - not be run by it - or I have grossly mistaken his character (always possible...) So, before greeting the "new morning in America" with a steaming hot cup of venom, let's at least let him sit behind the desk in the oval office for a couple of days, weeks maybe? Just a thought...


I keep reading that there is

I keep reading that there is a great need for experienced people to be in charge now. When the experienced people have shown themselves to be timid, (afraid to tell the truth to their boss) (suck-ups??) incompetent boobs, why would they be better than someone with intelligence and common sense?


This wider reflection on

This wider reflection on what lies ahead is so helpful. More, more!


The only problem with

The only problem with Defense is that maybe -- just maybe-- the dollar will collapse and they will not have the capital to pursue their grand designs. You just can't keep printing funny money forever. Sooner or later the music will stop and everyone will rush for the chairs. Will Obama be the one left standing?


When Mr. Clinton took over

When Mr. Clinton took over from Reagan and George the first in 1993, I foolishly hoped that this would represent a change from the harsh policies of Reagan and George the first. Didn't happen. Now, some hope that Mr. Obama will change the policies of the illegitimate 'administration.' About the best we can hope for is that we won't torture people any more. We sure as hell aren't getting out of Iraq or Afghanistan any time soon, despite the fact that spending well over a trillion a year on killing is killing the economy. When was the last time anyone in the punditocracy mentioned that fact?


Larry Korb should have been

Larry Korb should have been named as SecDef, along with picks from the Center for Defense Information for sub-posts and intel slots. Americans want to get out of the empire business and that's part of what they voted for. I'm not surprised in the least that we are getting these establishment hawks for a foreign policy team. Progressives should get ready for a massive disappointment.


Meet the new boss. Same as

Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss. Boy am I disappointed! I had hoped Obama would abandon empire and world domination. But it doesn't seem he will. It'll finish ruining us!


We got Wall Street backers

We got Wall Street backers at Treasury and Economic advisors. Why wouldn't we get War Hawks for Defense? You get the picture. We have been "hope-a-doped". We have been had. Peaple will roam the streets looking for handouts, souplines will stretch blocks. Obama is no FDR. This deal was cut long time ago, but still we been had, we fought this revolution and now we get Billery in disguise. I'm more than disappointed. I've spent my life fighting injustice, but I'm disappointed for the children of the world. They deserve more than the same lies we got. Change that you can believe in? It was just another slogan.


Eric Rogers had hoped Obama

Eric Rogers had hoped Obama would abandon empire and world domination? Did he listen to the debates? In all three debates Obama said some variation of the line, "There has never been a country on Earth that saw its economy decline and yet maintained its military superiority. " Does this sound like someone ready to abandon world domination? I titled my response to the debates, The Peace Candidate is Anything But (http://freesoil.org/wordpress/?p=608). These picks for his Administration were no surprise to me.


"Change doesn't come from

"Change doesn't come from Washington," [Obama] said. "Change comes to Washington." So, "what we are going to do is combine experience with fresh thinking", says the President-elect. Don't look to me like there's any fresh thinking coming to DC, just the same ol' “experienced” DLC. Ah, I get it, we'll have a Department of Experience sitting in all the Cabinet and advisory chairs, and a Department of Fresh Thinking in the White House basement utility closet. On the other hand, if we mind good lawyerly thinking, moving from the nasty hard right of the past 8 yr to the alligator tears center right does indeed qualify as a change. But the lesser of two evils is still an evil. Yes, ANONYMOUS 1528, we maybe should wait to see how things shake out before we get our bowels in an uproar. By the time we're absolutely positively beyond the possibility of doubt sure we're getting Clinton II instead of Bush III, maybe we'll forget what we really wanted. And then we'll go quiet again, getting by on PETER'S familiar if tenuous hope that somehow something will happen. And we'll know that the lovely moment of shared joy mingled with disbelief after the election might have been obliterated by a jet on its way collect another welfare check for its too big to fail, free enterprise loving, head in the sand corporate owner. Or it might have been just another failed experiment on the way to Ronnie’s beloved boondoggle, Star Wars. Or it might have been a patriotic gesture by the Alaska Liberation Movement. Or it might be another twist in the ongoing saga of Disaster Capitalism. Not to worry, another Blue Ribbon panel of folks with impeccable resumes will investigate the matter right down to the lowest ranking person who can be blamed for the whole debacle. Meanwhile, the rest of us can go back to figuring out how to get enough food and shelter on less and less money as well as how to have a planet to give to our grandkids. Ah, now I get it. That’s where the fresh thinking part comes in.


Maybe Obama is just keeping

Maybe Obama is just keeping his enemies close so he can size them up better, gather their strengths and then cleverly turn them toward better ways. It's a nice thought, anyway.