Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Thursday, 25 October 2012

TomDispatch.com: A Regular Antidote to the Mainstream Media
October 25, 2012
Tomgram: Nick Turse, Big Maps, Big Dreams, and the Failure of the Obama Doctrine
[Note for TomDispatch Readers: It’s a big day for us at this site.  We’re releasing our second volume from Dispatch Books: Nick Turse’s The Changing Face of Empire: Special Ops, Drones, Proxy Fighters, Secret Bases, and Cyberwarfare.  It represents a year of superlative TD reporting of a sort you can find nowhere else online or off.  His book also offers an original take on the next military moves in Washington’s arsenal after the failed invasions and occupations of the Eurasian mainland, the collapse of the “netcentric military,” and the dismal record of “counterinsurgency.”  It lays out the latest attempt of the last standing superpower to garrison Africa, “pivot” to Asia, and nail down the Greater Middle East (yet again), all on the cheap via special operations forces, drones, and proxy armies.  It’s a startling tale and TomDispatch is proud that our new book line is bringing it to you.

We published our first book, Terminator Planet, with Amazon.  No more.  We’re now proudly working on future volumes with a press at the forefront of independent political publishing, Haymarket Books.  If you want to order The Changing Face of Empire directly from Haymarket as either an e-book or a paperback, just click here.  (By the way, those of you who wrote in last time to say that you couldn’t put your money down on an Amazon-produced book, here’s your chance to support both TD and Haymarket, so give copies to your friends, family, and neighbors!)  The book will sooner or later be available at Amazon as well and we’ll let you know when that’s so.

Meanwhile, Nick is happy to personalize and sign The Changing Face of Empire for any reader willing to donate $75 (or more) to this site.  Please check out the offer at our donation page.  It’s a good way to keep TomDispatch rolling in tough times, to get a great signed book as a keepsake, and to support us in producing even more Dispatch Books for you next year with Haymarket.  Many thanks! Tom]

It wasn’t an everyday event, the arrival in TomDispatch’s email inbox of a letter of complaint from Colonel Tom Davis, director of public affairs at USAFRICOM.  It began, “Greetings from U.S. Africa Command, we read the recent [Nick Turse] article ‘Secret Wars, Secret Bases, and the Pentagon’s ‘New Spice Route’ in Africa’ with great interest.” Colonel Davis suggested that his team had, in fact, found “inaccuracies and misrepresentations that we would like to address” in the piece (now part of Turse’s latest book, The Changing Face of Empire: Special Ops, Drones, Proxy Fighters, Secret Bases, and Cyberwarfare).  Col. Davis indicated as well that he expected us to make the necessary changes and so “correct the record,” and that Andy Breslau, the head of the Nation Institute, which supports TomDispatch, would certainly want to know about this as well!  (And indeed, Col. Davis wrote him directly.)

What followed was a copious 3,000-word document, clearly researched by committee at AFRICOM.  For some, such a letter and enclosure might have seemed like a polite attempt at intimidation.  (“I would venture that the Nation Institute, with Andy Breslau as its president, would have those same ideals on professional reporting and would want the inaccuracies and misrepresentations addressed as well.”)

Me, I was thrilled.  Hey, the folks at AFRICOM read TomDispatch!  Better yet, our reporting had gotten under their skin -- enough for them to feel compelled to reply, and even better yet, those “inaccuracies and misrepresentations” were nothing of the sort, as Nick Turse indicated in his several-thousand-word, point-by-point response, published alongside Col. Davis’s critique at this site.  It was a remarkably civil exchange about the changing world of American war-making, now laid out in full in Dispatch Books's The Changing Face of Empire, just published today.  And it was a great hit for TomDispatch.

Think of it as just one more small, unintended consequence of the acts of the U.S. national security community.  Take, on a far larger scale, the Obama administration’s decision that the CIA should facilitate the arming of Syria’s rebels through our Arab “allies.”  Ever since, arms have been flowing from Saudi Arabia and Qatar to Syrian rebel fighters.  Only recently, however, the New York Times reported that Washington is increasingly disturbed -- again those unintended consequences -- that the weapons “are going to hard-line Islamic jihadists, and not the more secular opposition groups that the West wants to bolster.”

Of course, anyone faintly familiar with the way, three decades ago, the Saudi fundamentalist monarchy funneled weaponry to the most extreme of the Afghan mujahedeen commanders fighting the Soviets (as did the U.S. at Saudi and Pakistani request) and so armed our future enemies, will hardly be shocked by this supposedly surprising turn of events.  You would think that, every now and then, a few of history's lessons would penetrate the minds of our top national security officials and that they would actually think before acting.  But generally speaking, no such luck.

Instead of correcting Nick Turse’s “inaccuracies and misrepresentations,” they would do well to buy piles of his new book and hand them out to every ranking officer.  They might learn something not just about follies past, but follies to come.  Today’s Turse post, an adaptation of the book’s conclusion, will give you a feel for what it has to say.  Tom
A Failed Formula for Worldwide War
How the Empire Changed Its Face, But Not Its Nature
By Nick Turse
They looked like a gang of geriatric giants. Clad in smart casual attire -- dress shirts, sweaters, and jeans -- and incongruous blue hospital booties, they strode around “the world,” stopping to stroke their chins and ponder this or that potential crisis. Among them was General Martin Dempsey, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in a button-down shirt and jeans, without a medal or a ribbon in sight, his arms crossed, his gaze fixed. He had one foot planted firmly in Russia, the other partly in Kazakhstan, and yet the general hadn’t left the friendly confines of Virginia.
Several times this year, Dempsey, the other joint chiefs, and regional war-fighting commanders have assembled at the Marine Corps Base in Quantico to conduct a futuristic war-game-meets-academic-seminar about the needs of the military in 2017. There, a giant map of the world, larger than a basketball court, was laid out so the Pentagon’s top brass could shuffle around the planet -- provided they wore those scuff-preventing shoe covers -- as they thought about “potential U.S. national military vulnerabilities in future conflicts” (so one participant told the New York Times). The sight of those generals with the world underfoot was a fitting image for Washington’s military ambitions, its penchant for foreign interventions, and its contempt for (non-U.S.) borders and national sovereignty.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.