Integrity Optional: Lies and Dishonor Plague America's War Machine
By William J. Astore
https://original.antiwar.com/William_Astore/2022/09/29/something-is-rotten-in-the-us-military/
As a military professor for six years at the U.S. Air
Force Academy in the 1990s, I often walked past the honor code prominently
displayed for all cadets to see. Its message was simple and clear: they were
not to tolerate lying, cheating, stealing, or similar dishonorable acts. Yet
that’s exactly what the U.S. military and many of America’s senior
civilian leaders have been doing from the
Vietnam War era to this very day: lying and cooking the books, while cheating
and stealing from the American people. And yet the most remarkable thing may be
that no honor code turns out to apply to them, so they’ve suffered no consequences
for their mendacity and malfeasance.
Where’s the “honor” in that?
It may surprise you to learn that “integrity first” is
the primary core value of
my former service, the U.S. Air Force. Considering the revelations of the Pentagon
Papers, leaked by Daniel Ellsberg in 1971; the Afghan War
papers, first revealed by the Washington Post in
2019; and the lack of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, among other evidence of
the lying and deception that led to the invasion and occupation of that
country, you’ll excuse me for assuming that, for decades now when it comes to
war, “integrity optional” has been the true core value of our senior military
leaders and top government officials.
As a retired Air Force officer, let me tell you this:
honor code or not, you can’t win a war with lies – America proved that in
Vietnam, Afghanistan,
and Iraq – nor can you build an honorable military with them. How could our
high command not have reached such a conclusion themselves after all this time?
So Many Defeats, So Little Honesty
Like many other institutions, the U.S. military
carries with it the seeds of its own destruction. After all, despite being funded in a
fashion beyond compare and spreading its peculiar brand of destruction around
the globe, its system of war hasn’t triumphed in a significant conflict since
World War II (with the war in Korea remaining, almost three-quarters of a
century later, in a painful and festering stalemate). Even the ending of the
Cold War, allegedly won when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, only led to
further wanton military adventurism and, finally, defeat at an unsustainable
cost – more than $8
trillion – in Washington’s ill-fated Global War on
Terror. And yet, years later, that military still has a stranglehold on
the national budget.
So many defeats, so little honesty:
that’s the catchphrase I’d use to characterize this country’s military record
since 1945. Keeping the money flowing and
the wars going proved far more important than integrity or, certainly, the
truth. Yet when you sacrifice integrity and the truth in the cause of
concealing defeat, you lose much more than a war or two. You lose honor – in
the long run, an unsustainable price for any military to pay.
Or rather it should be unsustainable, yet the American
people have continued to “support” their military, both by funding it
astronomically and expressing seemingly eternal confidence in it – though,
after all these years, trust in the military has dipped
somewhat recently. Still, in all this time, no one in
the senior ranks, civilian or military, has ever truly been called to account for
losing wars prolonged by self-serving lies. In fact, too many of our losing
generals have gone right through that infamous “revolving door”
into the industrial part of the military-industrial complex – only to
sometimes return to
take top government positions.
Our military has, in fact, developed a narrative
that’s proven remarkably effective in insulating it from accountability. It
goes something like this: U.S. troops fought hard in [put the name of the
country here], so don’t blame us. Indeed, you must support us, especially
given all the casualties of our wars. They and the generals did their best,
under the usual political constraints. On occasion, mistakes were made, but the
military and the government had good and honorable intentions in Vietnam,
Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere.
Besides, were you there, Charlie? If you weren’t, then
STFU, as the acronym goes, and be grateful for the security you take for
granted, earned by America’s heroes while
you were sitting on your fat ass safe at home.
It’s a narrative I’ve heard time and time again and
it’s proven persuasive, partially because it requires the rest of us, in a
conscription-free country, to do nothing and think nothing about that. Ignorance is strength,
after all.
War Is Brutal
The reality of it all, however, is so much harsher
than that. Senior military leaders have performed poorly. War crimes have been
covered up. Wars fought in the name of helping others have produced
horrendous civilian
casualties and stunning
numbers of refugees. Even as those wars were being
lost, what President Dwight D.
Eisenhower first labeled the military-industrial complex enjoyed windfall profits and expanding power. Again, there’s been no
accountability for failure. In fact, only whistleblowing
truth-tellers like Chelsea
Manning and Daniel Hale have
been punished and jailed.
Ready for an even harsher reality? America is a
nation being unmade
by war, the very opposite of what most Americans are
taught. Allow me to explain. As a country, we typically celebrate the lofty
ideals and brave citizen-soldiers of the American Revolution. We similarly
celebrate the Second American Revolution, otherwise known as the Civil War, for
the elimination of slavery and reunification of the country; after which, we
celebrate World War II, including the rise of the Greatest Generation, America
as the arsenal of democracy, and our emergence as the global
superpower.
By celebrating those three wars and essentially
ignoring much of the rest of our history, we tend to view war itself as a
positive and creative act. We see it as making America, part of our unique
exceptionalism. Not surprisingly, then, militarism in this country is
impossible to imagine. We tend to see ourselves, in fact, as uniquely immune to
it, even as war and military expenditures have come to dominate our foreign
policy, bleeding into domestic policy as
well.
If we as Americans continue to imagine war as a
creative, positive, essential part of who we are, we’ll also continue to pursue
it. Or rather, if we continue to lie to ourselves about war, it will persist.
It’s time for us to begin seeing it not as our making
but our unmaking, potentially even our breaking – as democracy’s undoing as
well as the brutal thing it truly is.
A retired U.S. military officer, educated by the
system, I freely admit to having shared some of its flaws. When I was an Air
Force engineer, for instance, I focused more on analysis and quantification
than on synthesis and qualification. Reducing everything to numbers, I realize
now, helps provide an illusion of clarity, even mastery. It becomes another
form of lying, encouraging us to meddle in things we don’t understand.
This was certainly true of Secretary of Defense Robert
McNamara, his “whiz kids,”
and General William
Westmoreland during the Vietnam War; nor had
much changed when it came to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and General
David Petraeus, among others, in the Afghan and Iraq War years. In both eras,
our military leaders wielded metrics and
swore they were winning even as those wars circled the drain.
And worse yet, they were never held accountable for
those disasters or the blunders and lies that went with them (though the
antiwar movement of the Vietnam era certainly tried). All these years later,
with the Pentagon still ascendant in Washington, it should be obvious that
something has truly gone rotten in our system.
Here’s the rub: as the military and one administration
after another lied to the American people about those wars, they also lied to
themselves, even though such conflicts produced plenty of internal “papers”
that raised serious concerns about lack of progress. Robert McNamara typically
knew that the situation in Vietnam was dire and the war essentially unwinnable.
Yet he continued to issue rosy public reports of progress while calling for
more troops to pursue that illusive “light at the end of the tunnel.”
Similarly, the Afghan War papers released by the Washington Post show
that senior military and civilian leaders realized that the war, too, was going
poorly almost from the beginning, yet they reported the very opposite to the
American people. So many corners were being
“turned,” and so much “progress” was being made in official
reports even as the military was building its own rhetorical coffin in that
Afghan graveyard of empires.
Too bad wars aren’t won by “spin.” If they were, the
U.S. military would be undefeated.
Two Books to Help Us See the Lies
Two recent books help us see that spin for what it
was. In Because Our
Fathers Lied, Craig McNamara, Robert’s son,
reflects on his father’s dishonesty about the Vietnam War and the reasons for
it. Loyalty was perhaps the lead one, he writes. McNamara suppressed his own
serious misgivings out of misplaced loyalty to two presidents, John F. Kennedy
and Lyndon B. Johnson, while simultaneously preserving his own position of
power in the government.
Robert McNamara would, in fact, later pen his
own mea culpa, admitting how “terribly wrong”
he’d been in urging the prosecution of that war. Yet Craig finds his father’s
late confession of regret significantly less than forthright and fully honest.
Robert McNamara fell back on historical ignorance about Vietnam as the key
contributing factor in his unwise decision-making, but his son is blunt in
accusing his dad of unalloyed dishonesty. Hence the title of his book, citing
Rudyard Kipling’s pained confession of his own complicity in sending his son to
die in the trenches of World War I: “If any question why we died/Tell them because our fathers lied.”
The second book is Paths of
Dissent: Soldiers Speak Out Against America’s Misguided Wars,
edited by Andrew Bacevich and Danny Sjursen.
In my view, the word “misguided” doesn’t quite capture the book’s powerful
essence, since it gathers 15 remarkable essays by Americans who served in
Afghanistan and Iraq and witnessed the patent dishonesty and folly of those
wars. None dare speaks of failure might be a subtheme of these
essays, as initially highly motivated and well-trained troops became
disillusioned by wars that went nowhere, even as their comrades often paid the
ultimate price, being horribly wounded or dying in those conflicts driven by
lies.
This is more than a work of
dissent by disillusioned troops, however. It’s a
call for the rest of us to act. Dissent, as West Point graduate and Army
Captain Erik Edstrom remind us, “is nothing short of a moral obligation” when
immoral wars are driven by systemic dishonesty. Army Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis,
who blew an early whistle on
how poorly the Afghan War was going, writes of his “seething” anger “at the
absurdity and unconcern for the lives of my fellow soldiers displayed by so
many” of the Army’s senior leaders.
Former Marine Matthew Hoh, who resigned from
the State Department in opposition to the Afghan “surge” ordered by President
Barack Obama, speaks movingly of his own “guilt, regret, and shame” at having
served in Afghanistan as a troop commander and wonders whether he can ever
atone for it. Like Craig McNamara, Hoh warns of the dangers of misplaced
loyalty. He remembers telling himself that he was best suited to lead his
fellow Marines in war, no matter how misbegotten and dishonorable that conflict
was. Yet he confesses that falling back on duty and being loyal to “his”
Marines, while suppressing the infamies of the war itself, became “a washing of
the hands, a self-absolution that ignores one’s complicity” in furthering a
brutal conflict fed by lies.
As I read those essays, I came to see anew how this
country’s senior leaders, military and civilian, consistently underestimated
the brutalizing impact of war, which, in turn, leads me to the ultimate lie of
war: that it is somehow good, or at least necessary – making all the lying (and
killing) worth it, whether in the name of a victory to come or of duty, honor,
and country. Yet there is no honor in lying, in keeping the truth hidden from
the American people. Indeed, there is something distinctly dishonorable about
waging wars kept viable only by lies, obfuscation, and propaganda.
An Epigram from Goethe
John Keegan, the esteemed military historian, cites an
epigram from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe as being essential to thinking about
militaries and their wars. “Goods gone, something gone; honor gone, much gone;
courage gone, all gone.”
The U.S. military has no shortage of goods, given its
whopping expenditures on weaponry and equipment of all sorts; among the troops,
it doesn’t lack courage or fighting spirit, not yet, anyway. But it does
lack honor, especially at the top. Much is gone when a military ceases to tell
the truth to itself and especially to the people from whom its forces are
drawn. And courage is wasted when in the service of lies.
Courage wasted: Is there a worst fate for a military
establishment that prides itself on its members being all volunteers and is
now having trouble filling
its ranks?
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join us on Facebook.
Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new dystopian novel, Songlands (the
final one in his Splinterlands series), Beverly Gologorsky’s novel Every Body Has
a Story, and Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation
Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows
of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power, John
Dower’s The Violent
American Century: War and Terror Since World War II, and
Ann Jones’s They Were
Soldiers: How the Wounded Return from America’s Wars: The Untold Story.
William J. Astore, a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF)
and professor of history, is a TomDispatch regular and
a senior fellow at the Eisenhower Media Network (EMN), an organization of
critical veteran military and national security professionals. His personal blog is Bracing Views.
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