I apologise for the wonky formatting, but this is an important article
Donald
Trump’s Policies Are Not Anathema to U.S. Mainstream, but an
Uncomfortable Reflection of It
Glenn Greenwald
5
March, 2016
The
political and media establishments in the U.S. — which have
jointly wrought so much destruction, decay, and decadence —
recently decided to unite against Donald Trump. Their central
claim is that the real estate mogul and longtime NBC reality TV
star advocates morally reprehensible positions that are far
outside the bounds of decency; relatedly, they argue, he is so
personally repellent that his empowerment would degrade both the
country and the presidency.
In
some instances, their claim is plausible: There is at least genuine
embarrassment if not revulsion even among America’s political
class over Trump’s proposed mass deportation of 11 million
human beings, banning of all Muslims from entering the country, and
new laws to enable him to more easily sue (and thus destroy)
media outlets that “falsely” criticize him. And his
signature personality brew of deep-seated insecurities,
vindictive narcissism, channeling of the darkest impulses, and
gaudy, petty boasting is indeed uniquely grotesque.
But
in many cases, probably most, the flamboyant denunciations of Trump
by establishment figures make no sense except as self-aggrandizing
pretense, because those condemning him have long tolerated if not
outright advocated very similar ideas, albeit with less
rhetorical candor. Trump is self-evidently a toxic authoritarian
demagogue advocating morally monstrous positions, but in most cases
where elite outrage is being vented, he is merely a
natural extension of
the mainstream rhetorical and policy framework that has been laid,
not some radical departure from it. He’s their id. What
establishment mavens most resent is not what Trump is, does, or
says, but what he reflects:
the unmistakable, undeniable signs of late-stage imperial collapse,
along with the resentments and hatreds they have long deliberately
and self-servingly stoked but which are now raging out of their
control.
Two
of the most recent, widely discussed anti-Trump outrage rituals —
one from Wednesday and the other from last night’s Fox News
debate — demonstrate the sham at the heart of the establishment
display of horror. This week, American political and media
figures from across the spectrum stood
and applauded a tawdry
cast of neocons and other assorted warmongers who
are responsible for grave war crimes, torture, kidnappings, due
process-free indefinite imprisonment, and the worst political crime
of this generation: the attack on and destruction of Iraq.
These
five dozen or so extremists (calling themselves “members of the
Republican national security community”) were the toast of the town
because they published an
“open letter” denouncing
Trump on the ground that his “own statements lead us to conclude
that as president, he would use the authority of his office to act in
ways that make America less safe, and which would diminish our
standing in the world.” This was one of their examples:
His embrace of the expansive use of torture is inexcusable.
Most
decent human beings, by definition, would express this sentiment
without including the qualifying word “expansive.” Even
Ronald Reagan, whom virtually all the signatories claim to
idolize, advocated
for and signed a
treaty in 1988 that stated that “no
exceptional circumstances whatsoever …
may be invoked as a justification of torture” and that “each
State Party shall ensure that all
acts of torture are
offenses under its criminal law.” The taboo is on “all acts of
torture,” not its “expansive use” — whatever that means.
But
the group signing this anti-Trump letter can’t pretend to find an
embrace of torture itself to be “inexcusable” because most of
them implemented torture policies while in government or
vocally advocated for them. So instead, they invoke
the Goldilocks Theory of Torture: We believe in torture up to exactly
the right point, while Trump is disgraceful because he wants to
go beyond that; he believes in “the expansive use of torture.”
The same dynamic drove yesterday’s widely cheered speech by Mitt
Romney, where the two-time failed GOP candidate denounced Trump for
advocating torture while literally ignoring his
own clear pro-torture viewpoints.
Here
we see the elite class agreeing to pretend that Trump is
advocating views that are inherently disqualifying when — thanks to
those doing the denouncing — those views are actually quite
mainstream, even
popular,
among both the American political class and its
population.
Torture was the official American policy for years. It
went way beyond
waterboarding. One
Republican president ordered it and his Democratic
successor immunized
it from all forms of accountability,
ensuring that not a single official would be prosecuted for
authorizing even the most extreme techniques, ones
that killed people —
or even allowed to be sued by their victims.
Many
of the high officials most responsible for that torture regime
and who defended it — from Condoleezza
Rice and John
Brennan —
remain not just acceptable in mainstream circles but hold high office
and are virtually revered. And, just by the way, both of Trump’s
main rivals — Marco
Rubioand Ted
Cruz —
refuse to rule out classic torture techniques as part of their
campaign. In light of all that, who takes seriously the notion that
Trump’s advocacy of torture — including techniques beyond
waterboarding — places him beyond the American pale? To the
contrary, it places him within its establishment mainstream.
Then
there’s the outrage du jour from last night. A couple of weeks
ago, George W. Bush’s NSA and CIA chief, Gen. Michael
Hayden, claimed that
members of the military would never follow
Trump’s orders if it meant committing war crimes such as torturing
detainees or killing a terrorist’s family members (perish the
thought). When asked about this last night, Trump insisted that the
U.S. military would do so: “They’re not going to refuse.
Believe me,” he said. “If I say do it, they’re going to do it.
That’s what leadership is about.” Of all the statements
Trump made last night, this was the one most
often cited by pundits as
being the most outrageous, shocking, disgusting, etc. Even bona
fide war
criminals such as the Bush White House’s pro-invasion and torture
propagandist got
in on the moral outrage cat:
Trump is wrong when he says military will do whatever he tells them. They'll resign before carrying out what they think is an illegal order.
But
is there any doubt that Trump is right about this? Throughout the
14-year war on terror, a handful of U.S. military members
have bravely andnobly refused
to take part in, or vocally
denounced,
policies that are clear war crimes. But there was no shortage of
people in the military, the CIA, and working for private American
contractors who dutifully carried out the most heinous abuses and war
criminality. The military official in charge of investigating war on
terror policies, Gen. Antonio Taguba, said
this in
2008:
After
years of disclosures by government investigations, media accounts,
and reports from human rights organizations, there is no longer any
doubt as to whether the current administration has committed war
crimes. The only question that remains to be answered is whether
those who ordered the use of torture will be held to account.
In
2009, Gen. Barry McCaffrey said,
“We tortured people unmercifully. We probably murdered dozens of
them during the course of that, both the armed forces and the C.I.A.”
The notion that the U.S. intelligence and military community will
collectively rise up in defiance of the commander-in-chief if they
are ordered to obey polices that are illegal is just laughable.
It’s
obviously a pleasing fiction to believe — it produces nice,
nationalistic feelings of nobility — but everything in the past
decades proves that Trump is right when he says, “They’re not
going to refuse.” Some likely would, but nowhere near enough to
preclude the policies being carried out. In fact, the primary
argument used to justify immunizing America’s torturers is
that they were just following orders as approved by John Yoo and
company: reflecting a moral code that dictates that, even
when it comes to plainly illegal policies, obedience is
preferable to defiance.
Then
there’s the feigned horror over Trump’s proposal to kill the
family members of terrorists. Though they claim they don’t do it
deliberately, the fact is that this is something both the U.S.
and Israel, among others, have routinely done for years: They
repeatedly bomb
people’s homes or
work places, killing
innocent people including
family members,
and then justify
it on the ground that
a terrorist was among them. While they claim they don’t target
terrorists’ family members, they certainly
target their homesand
other places family members are certain to
be found.
When
a U.S. drone strike in 2011 killed the U.S. citizen Anwar al-Awlaki
in Yemen, and then another drone strike two weeks later killed
his 16-year-old American son, Abdulrahman (who
nobody claimed was involved with terrorism), former White House Press
Secretary Robert Gibbs justified
it this way:
If
you really think you can locate fine distinctions — we merely
keep killing the children, spouses, and other family members over and
over by accident, not by purposely targeting —
at least don’t pretend that what Trump is advocating is something
our civilized minds have never previously encountered. He may be
more gauche for saying it aloud and gleefully justifying it rather
than feigning sorrow over it, but the substance of what he’s saying
— despicable though it is — is hardly categorically
different from what the U.S. government and its closest allies
actually do over and over. And that’s to say nothing of the
unpleasant fact that we’re all now supposed to ignore lest we
be smeared as Trump supporters: that even as he advocates clear war
crimes, he also, in some important cases, is advocating
policies andapproaches less
militaristic and warmongering than not only his
GOP rivals,
but the war-loving
leading Democratic candidate
as well.
As
for his starkly disgusting personal qualities, none of these is new.
Anyone who has lived in New York has known for decades that this
is who and what Donald Trump is.
And yet he was fully integrated within and embraced by America’s
circles of power and celebrity, including by those who now want to
pretend to find him so hideously offensive. As the New
York Times put
it in
December, “For years, President Bill Clinton was the best friend
Donald J. Trump always hoped to have.”
One can argue, with some validity, that there’s value in collectively
denouncing the most extreme expressions of imperial violence and war
criminality in the context of a national election, even if it’s
tinged with some inconsistency and hypocrisy. That’s fine, provided
doing so does not serve to consecrate feel-good fantasies about
American government and society. Finding a villain we can
collectively condemn by consensus is a natural tribalistic desire:
Declaring someone uniquely evil and then denouncing him is an
affirmation of one’s own virtue. It feels good. As an excellent New
York Times op-ed last
week by psychology researchers at Yale explained, “human
beings have an appetite for moral outrage” because it’s
often “a result of a system that has evolved to boost our
individual reputations.”Collective moral condemnation can be
genuinely valuable if it’s grounded in honest moral line-drawing.
But when it’s driven largely by self-delusion and
self-glorification — by the fiction that what is being condemned
resides in a different moral universe rather than just a couple of
degrees farther down the road — it can be quite destructive:
ennobling that which is decisively ignoble.
Over
the past few weeks, there has been a tidal wave of establishment
denunciations of Donald Trump. It’s now not only easy to do but
virtually obligatory. But very few of those denunciations contain any
real examination of what accounts for his popularity and appeal: why
a message grounded in contempt for the establishment resonates so
strongly, why anxiety and anger levels are so high that the ground is
so fertile for the angry strongman persona he represents. That’s
because answering that question requires what U.S. establishment
guardians most fear and hate: self-examination.
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