Obama Dresses Down the Military, but What's Changed?

by: William J. Astore, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Obama Dresses Down the Military, but What's Changed?
Then-Senator Obama speaks with General Petraeus in Iraq on July 21, 2008. (Photo: Staff Sgt. Paul Villanueva II / U.S. Air Force)

According to NBC News and journalist Jonathan Alter in his book "The Promise," President Barack Obama "dressed down" senior generals at the Pentagon for attempting in 2009 to "box him in" on troop levels in Afghanistan. The "exceedingly unhappy" president was in a "cold fury" at his generals for "speaking out of turn" before last year's speech at West Point. Alter even suggests that American generals hadn't been on the receiving end of such a serious tongue-lashing since President Harry S Truman fired General Douglas MacArthur during the Korean War.

Is Obama the reincarnation of Harry "the buck stops here" Truman? Has he brought rebellious generals to heel? Evidence suggests otherwise. First, under Obama the U.S. military has gotten everything they could've possibly wanted, and more: rising defense budgets, more soldiers and Marines added to the ranks, and virtually uncontested control over American foreign policy in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere. All major weapon system acquisition programs are "full speed ahead," the exception in this case -- the F-22 Raptor -- being a manifestation of Secretary of Defense Robert Gates' determined opposition to the program, stemming in part from the Air Force's truculent and tone-deaf demands for ultra-expensive air superiority fighters that are unneeded in America's current war zones.

Second, no general of the power and popularity of MacArthur has been fired. On the contrary, Obama has empowered the generals favored previously by George W. Bush and Dick Cheney, men like David Petraeus and Stanley McChrystal. This is not to suggest Obama should fire either of these men; rather, it's to point out that Obama has not yet taken the kind of strong (and, initially, wildly unpopular) stand Truman took in firing "the American Caesar" during the Korean War.

So, has Obama reined in his generals and humbled our military? Of course not. At a time of huge deficits and prolonged recession, Obama has further empowered our national military state. He has made no tough decisions to corral, control, or cut our military establishment. His decision to surge more troops to Afghanistan may have been resisted within progressive and anti-war circles, but it was hardly an unpopular decision within the military-industrial complex.

Indeed, the claim that Obama's "dressing down" of his generals is the toughest talk these and previous star-wearing men have heard since Truman-MacArthur is ridiculous. Tell that to the generals who had to deal with the skeptical Dwight D. Eisenhower, himself a former five-star general, in the 1950s; tell that to the generals who were constrained by John F. Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis, to the generals who had their arms twisted by Lyndon Johnson over Vietnam, or to the generals on the receiving end of profanity-laden second-guessing by Richard Nixon. Even Jimmy Carter had the temerity to cut the entire B-1 bomber program, despite intense opposition by the U.S. Air Force (the B-1 was later restored under President Ronald Reagan).

To put it bluntly: During his campaign Obama talked about "change," but with respect to our military and our wars, the only "change" since 2008 has been more military escalation, including more drone attacks in the Af-Pak war, as well as more military spending. Indeed, Obama vowed not to ask for "emergency" supplemental funding to pay for these wars, only to break that vow by asking this year for an additional $33 billion for Afghanistan.

Actions speak far louder than words: What we've witnessed from Obama is no "dressing down" of our military, but rather yet another ramping up.

This article has also been published on HuffingtonPost.

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William J. Astore is a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF).  He taught cadets at the Air Force Academy, officers at the Naval Postgraduate School, and applauded thousands of troops as they crossed the stage to graduate from the Defense Language Institute.  A TomDispatch regular, he currently teaches history at the Pennsylvania College of Technology.  He may be reached at wastore@pct.edu.


Comments

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Oh dear, the threat is real,

Oh dear, the threat is real, Bush was right



The author doesn't say why

The author doesn't say why why Obama is doing this?

I voted for Obama cos he spoke the spoke and walked the walk. And now he's no diffrent from Dubya



More Obama BS. The Generals

More Obama BS. The Generals pushed him, so he told him he didn't like it, but then as he was told.

Obama is more right-wing than Bush. When are the Dems going to stop supporting this fascist.



Obama simply is part of the

Obama simply is part of the "establishment," so expect more of the same. He no doubt has to keep Kennedy's fate in mind.



This doesn't feel good.

This doesn't feel good. Given the author's military background, I'm certain he's a fairly moderate individual. Given that perspective, it is disturbing that President Obama is not making more substantive moves in terms of reining in the US military. I did not trust the generals who were put in place during the previous administration and I felt that not removing them foreshadowed a continuation of their failed policies. We need the president to follow through on his commitment to bring the changes we elected him to make.



The only "change" is Buffalo

The only "change" is Buffalo Soldier-in-CHUMP!



Yes, we can.......means yes

Yes, we can.......means yes we can continue with Cheney/Bush war policies and support the MIC (follow the money).
Same with Wall Street, no change, no real reform (just a rubber stamp for the power elites).
Talk is cheap.



Obama: yes we

Obama: yes we can.........means yes we can continue the war policies of Cheney/Bush and support the MIC. Same with Wall Street, no change or real reform (follow the money).
Talk is cheap.



I read the article. I read

I read the article. I read the comments. I don't really know anything more than I did before. I feel like I read the part about Obama's lack of change in a thousand different articles and a million comments, it seems. Like cut and paste. It is always just as definite and simplistic with no real analysis or understanding. Then what little sense exists is ruined by statements like 'just like Bush', which could read: 'I didn't like dubya, but I didn't really understand what I was observing' or 'I am a troll'.

Even if the conclusion is correct the path to that conclusion is critical.

- OA