Giving Trump Credit (But
Not Too Much) on Iran
by Maj.
Danny Sjursen, USA (Ret.) Posted on June 24, 2019
The Donald made the right call. Now that’s a
rare statement. Calling off – or at least delaying – a military strike on Iran
was prudent. Nevertheless, there was something deeply unsettling about the
whole thing. The system is broken, perhaps irreparably.
The president never even considered seeking
congressional approval before playing emperor and unleashing death and
destruction on a sovereign nation. Why would he? Essentially every president,
since Truman, has done the same thing one time or another. Unilateral executive
action has been the American norm pretty much since World War II wrapped up.
Seen in this context, Trump isn’t so anomalous as many would like to
believe. Korea kicked off the trend. But the
Vietnam advisory mission, Lebanon, Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Bosnia, Libya, and
Syria – to name the highlights – were all undertaken without the
constitutionally mandated consent of the legislature.
In that sense, a dozen or so more palatable
and polite emperors, I mean presidents, paved
the way for the coarser and more buffoonish reality TV star currently calling
the shots in the White House. Americans’ collective sin of ignoring foreign
policy and ceding unilateral power to the executive branch has truly, and
definitively, come home to roost. That’s partly why I find the protestations from Democratic lawmakers
to be more about partisanship than principles. Genuine legislators – that spent
more time following international policy instead of obsessively raising money –
would all revolt and restrain the president regardless of
their political party. We’re unlikely to see that.
None of this should be seen as a defense or
normalization of Trump. The manis are scary. His threats, vagueness,
and propensity to turn on a policy dime are genuinely disturbing. So is his
blatant affinity for autocrats the world over.
The point is that I shouldn’t have to give "credit"
to Trump when he acts prudently and demonstrates restraint. I, we, should not
have to hang on the words and pronouncements of any one man. The populace, the
media, the Congress should not be relegated to spectators held hostage by the
whims of any one man.
It doesn’t necessarily matter whether that person
is Donald Trump or Barack Obama, per se. The system, as designed in the
Constitution judiciously places the supreme power of warfare squarely on
Capitol Hill, on the collective judgment of the peoples’ elected
representatives. Discussion, debate, deliberation – these ought to be the
hallmarks of any rather profound decision to kill and maim other humans.
Instead, in 21st century America, we "elect" – not necessarily by the
popular vote count – an emperor and then watch and see what he does with our
military and, heck, our nuclear arsenal for that matter.
Which places this author, and all Americans really,
in the awkward, and pathetic, position of having to praise the lunatic-in-chief
for not doing the unthinkable. All of us feast on the decisional scraps of one
Donald Trump. It’s been normalized to such an extent that hardly anyone notices
any longer. All Americans are essentially too trapped in the Matrix of imperial
war to recognize the crumbling of national institutions. It easy (and somewhat
accurate) to blame congress, or the media, or various presidents themselves,
but the rot runs much deeper. Average Americans have forgotten how to be true
citizens, forgotten how to mobilize in the streets and demand change. Too busy
eking out a living after forty years of working wage stagnation, and no longer required to serve in
America’s imperial wars, the people have opted out. We’re all guilty, all
complicit, in the hijacking of the Constitution. So it was that I personally
endured combat in two ill-advised, immoral wars in the Greater Middle East.
See, there are consequences for executive overreach
and popular apathy. We can count the costs to the tune of $5.9
trillion spent, some 7,000 American soldiers killed, and about 480,000 dead
foreigners. All of this occurred with either a congressional rubber stamp or,
often, no stamp at all. While congressmen and senators were busy
dialing-for-dollars, my soldiers were in the field killing and dying in rather
real wars. I’m sure thankful that I’m out of the business of death-dealing, but
also remain deeply unsettled by the knowledge that any war in Iran will affect,
and forever damage, a new generation of officers and soldiers. Americans will
then vacuously thank, and hollowly adulate, the troops involved. Almost no one
will ask why those servicemen were sent to war in the first
place, or question the process by which they were sent. All
the while, the last remnants of the American republic will continue to crumble.
So here we are, hostages to one – rather
disconcerting – man, Mr. Donald Trump. We’ll collectively wait for his decision
on whether to call off, delay, or launch a new Mideast war, this time with
Iran. It’s absurd and need not be this way. Citizens, real citizens I mean,
could hit the streets, flood their congressmen’s’ offices, and shut down the
whole damn country until the president adheres to the Constitution. It’s
genuinely possible, but, of course, will not happen.
Instead, we’ll all remain glued to our TVs and
phones, wondering what the emperor will do next. And when that supreme leader
decides, occasionally, to show restraint, I’ll be in the awkward and insane
position of giving Donald Trump "credit" when he doesn’t embark
on another illegal war in our name. And more’s the pity.
Danny Sjursen is a retired U.S. Army officer and a regular contributor to Antiwar.com.
His work has appeared in the LA Times, The Nation, Huff Post, The
Hill, Salon, Truthdig, Tom Dispatch, among other publications. He served
combat tours with reconnaissance units in Iraq and Afghanistan and later taught
history at his alma mater, West Point. He is the author of a memoir and
critical analysis of the Iraq War, Ghostriders of Baghdad: Soldiers, Civilians, and the Myth
of the Surge. Follow him on Twitter at @SkepticalVet.
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