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From the Progressive Internet -- www.crisispapers.org
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Ellsberg's "Secrets" and Bush's War:
An Intersecting History
By Bernard Weiner, Co-Editor, The Crisis Papers
May 25, 2004
Dear Reader: On those occasions when there is no
new essay to publish, we will re-print articles from the past that are
especially relevant to our current situation. Here is a piece about how
individuals can approach an illegal, immoral war, a topic that couldn't
speak more to our time: Bush, as became clear from his recent speech
outlining his "plan" for Iraq -- which amounts to continuing the disastrous
policies that got us in this mess originally -- needs to be stopped by
action from all spheres, by more leaks from courageous insiders, by massive
civil disobedience, by impeachment, by an electoral landslide defeat. The
Ellsberg piece, which was reposted widely on the net, first ran on The
Crisis Papers on January 9, 2003.
American politicians have a vested interest in carrying out their true
agendas away from public scrutiny. Only on rare occasions do we ordinary
citizens get a glimpse of how things really operate -- the
Army-McCarthy hearings in the '50s, the Watergate investigation in the '70s,
Iran-Contra in the '80s,and so on -- and then the curtain snaps shut.
Two best-selling books -- one published in mid-2002, the other just recently
released -- take us believably into that mysterious world, because both are
written by former highly-placed insiders, who know how the game was played,
where the bodies were buried, and who did what to whom. The first was David
Brock's "Blinded by the Right," an account of how this character-assassin-
for-hire became the Right-Wing's journalistic hatchet-man, smearing Anita
Hill and Bill Clinton, among others, before coming to his senses and telling
the world what he knew of the actual rightwing forces that employed him for
so long.
The current best-seller is Daniel Ellsberg's "Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam
and the Pentagon Papers." It should be required reading for anyone
interested in what really goes on behind the scenes of the American
political stage.
Ellsberg, formerly a high-ranking analyst for the State and Defense
Departments and an independent consultant with the Rand Corporation, focuses
almost exclusively on the Vietnam War/Watergate era decades ago, but what he
reveals, alas, is just as relevant to our current constitutional/war crises.
Ellsberg became a hero to many when he leaked the so-called "Pentagon
Papers" to the New York Times in 1971 -- the secret history of the Vietnam
War that was prepared for the Secretary of Defense but withheld from
Congress and the American people.
What Ellsberg learned from first-hand experience (he was a Marine company
commander in Vietnam, and visited that country often as a civilian
consultant later), and as a result of researching and diving into the
Pentagon Papers history, was mind-blowing for him. As it should be for us as
well.
KEEPING SECRETS FROM THE PUBLIC
Since the late-1940, the conventional wisdom had been that the U.S. drifted
into the war in Vietnam following the French colonial period, and that
American Presidents were given bad information by their advisors and thus
made mistakes in policy that led to deeper and deeper involvement. Ellsberg
discovered that this view was incorrect.
Contrary to this version of events pushed by the government, the U.S. didn't
"drift" into anything. The closest advisers to five presidents (Truman,
Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon) told their bosses the truth from the
outset, that there was no way the U.S. could win a victory against
post-colonialist Vietnamese nationalism; the best that could be hoped for
was endless stalemate. Despite the warnings, those Presidents not only
embraced the war but kept expanding it. Millions died as a result.
The key to carrying on that insane, immoral war was that the decisions
always were made in secret by the President, away from scrutiny by the
Congress, the press, and certainly by the American people.
In other words, both Republican and Democratic Presidents and their closest
advisers lied for decades to the citizenry, to the press, to the Congress --
the result of which was untold misery for both U.S. military troops and
Vietnamese civilians.
The common wisdom is that "you can't keep secrets in Washington," and that
someone always deliberately leaks or inadvertently blabs. But, says
Ellsberg, who was privy to some of the most top-secret material for years,
"the fact is that the overwhelming majority of secrets do not leak to the
American public.
This is true even when the information withheld is well known to an enemy
and when it is clearly essential to the functioning of the congressional war
power and to any democratic control of foreign policy...Secrets that would
be of the greatest importance to many of them can be kept from them reliably
for decades by the Executive Branch, even though they are known to thousands
of insiders."
WARS & HIDDEN AGENDAS
And who is in charge of the current government's secrets today? The
Hard-Rightists who control American policy and who have made the Bush
Administration the most secretive, closed shop -- isolated from the real
world in which most of us live -- of any administration in modern times.
(Senator Patrick J. Leahy, the Vermont Democrat first elected in 1974, said,
"Since I've been here, I have never known an administration that is more
difficult to get information from." Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican
of Iowa, said things are getting worse, and "it seems like in the last month
or two I've been running into more and more stonewalls.")
To carry on and enlarge the Vietnam war, administrations provoked violent
responses from the Vietnamese enemy, or even worse concocted false claims of
violence against U.S. troops -- and then simply lied about their actions. In
those days, citizens tended to believe what their officials told them and so
the untruths rarely were caught.
Again, the similarities to contemporary times are instructive: An
administration needs an enemy, needs a war, in order to carry out its hidden
agenda with the support of the American people, and so the true motives are
concealed and lies are dispensed. Not quite as many citizens are inclined
these days to believe everything they're told by their government leaders,
but the pattern is still there. And still works. As Ellsberg says of Vietnam
but which can apply to our current situation as well: "The President was
determined to mislead the public...to conceal that he was taking the country
into a major, prolonged war."
In Vietnam, Ellsberg writes, there was a "general failure to study history
or to analyze or even to record operational experience, especially
mistakes...There were situations -- Vietnam was an example -- in which the
U.S. government, starting ignorant, did not, would not learn."
Five Presidents in the Vietnam case didn't want to believe what their "best
and brightest" advisors had told them -- that the war was doomed to
stalemate and there was little the U.S. could do about it -- because the
Presidents believed they knew what was best for U.S. interests and they
might, unlike their predecessor, just luck out and somehow snatch a victory
from the jaws of defeat. (As Ellsberg writes, each President "thought that
history started with his administration and that they had nothing to learn
from earlier ones.") Most of these advisors, their advice having been
ignored, continued to serve and mouth the "we-will-prevail' attitude of
their bosses -- including Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara -- but they
knew better.
And the key to these Presidents' peculiar form of denial was a belief in the
various "truisms" that had been battered into their heads for decades:
"better dead than red," "the domino theory" (that if Vietnam communism was
victorious, the entirety of Asia would fall to communism), "worldwide
communist domination" (failing to understand that the communist movement was
not monolithic but was rife with nationalistic divisions), and the fear that
politically they'd be regarded as unpatriotic if they didn't bring off a
victory and thus would damage their chances for re-election.''
THE ARROGANCE OF POWER
Underlying U.S. policy at that time was a belief that America knew what was
best for other countries. "To presume to judge what was best for them, with
life and death at stake, was the height of imperial arrogance, the
'arrogance of power,' as Senator Fulbright later called it." This
observation has a certain ring of familiarity about it, as the Bush
Administration arrogantly moves around the globe today like a big bully,
informing other countries and their leaders what should be done and if they
won't do it voluntarily, the U.S. will make sure it happens, one way or
another.
Ellsberg warmed to his theme of the dangers of Executive Branch arrogance in
a 1971 interview with CBS's Walter Cronkite: "Executive officials, the
Executive Branch of government, has fostered an impression that I think the
rest of us have been too willing to accept over the last generation, and
that is that the Executive Branch is the government, and that indeed they
are leaders in a sense that may not be entirely healthy, if we're to still
think of ourselves as a democracy.
"I was struck, in fact," said Ellsberg, "by President Johnson's reaction to
these [Pentagon Papers] revelations as 'close to treason,' because it
[suggested] that what was damaging to the reputation of a particular
administration, a particular individual, was in effect treason, which is
very close to saying 'I am the state.' And I think that quite sincerely many
Presidents, not only Lyndon Johnson, have come to feel that." Sound like any
White House resident you know today?
Since the closest advisors to Presidents were having no effect on ending the
war in Vietnam, Ellsberg came to believe "that only if power were brought to
bear upon the executive branch from outside it," might the inexorable grind
toward more slaughter be halted. That meant, in his case, leaking the
Pentagon Papers to the public, and so he turned them over to the New York
Times, whereupon the Nixon Administration went to court and, for the first
time in American history, tried to prohibit a free press from publishing. It
lost. The hidden history was revealed for how America got into Vietnam, and,
as a result, this information helped eventually get the war stopped through
negotiations -- but at a high price: the thousands of U.S. dead, the
hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese dead, who would have survived if the
negotiations urged years before by presidential advisors had been carried
through.
WATERGATE & IRAQ
It was the Administration's obsession with wrecking Ellsberg's reputation
and career -- and its hubris that it could get away with anything under the
claim of "national security" -- that led inexorably to the crimes of the
Watergate scandal (breaking and entering, covering up a raft of these and
other felonies, interminable lying), which brought down the house of Nixon.
Ellsberg discovered a truth that is exactly to the point today: "The
concentration of power within the Executive Branch since World War II had
focused nearly all responsibility for policy 'failure' upon one man, the
President. At the same time, it gave him enormous capability to avert or
postpone or conceal such personal failure by means of force and fraud.
confronted by resolute external resistance, as in Vietnam, that power could
not fail to corrupt the human who held it."
Oddly enough, it was H.R. Haldeman, President Nixon's chief of staff, who
noted the full impact of what happens when the truth leaks out, as it did in
the case of the Pentagon Papers: "To the ordinary guy, all this [the
revelations about what leaders do behind the scenes] is a bunch of
gobbleedygook. But out of the gobbleedygook comes a very clear thing: you
can't trust the government; you can't believe what they say; and you can't
rely on their judgment. And the implicit infallibility of Presidents, which
has been an accepted thing in America, is badly hurt by this, because it
shows that people do things the President wants to do even though it's
wrong, and the President can be wrong."
Five Presidents were tragically wrong with regard to Vietnam; and our
current resident in the White House is wrong with regard to his secretive
war policies. The lock on secrets must be broken once again, before we
become permanently engaged in an imperial foreign policy that will bring
death and destruction down upon the world and that will leave our own
society morally adrift and, as in the Vietnam era, close to a political
civil-war. Let us learn from history and stop our leaders before it's too
late.
We must all become Ellsbergs.
Copyright 2003, by Bernard Weiner
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