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A TALE OF TWO COLD WARRIORS WHO CHANGED COURSE
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CHALMERS JOHNSON AND DANIEL ELLSBERG are roughly the same age of slightly more than 70 years. They both worked for America's military-industrial complex, Johnson as a CIA consultant and Ellsberg as a Marine and then an an intelligence analyst and strategist.
Ellsberg broke loose earlier than Johnson from his hawkishness and his belief in the mission and practice of American empire, and put his life and career in jeapordy by leaking secret files, known as the Pentagon Papers, from the RAND Corporation on the conduct of America's war with Vietnam.
Chalmers Johnson defected from his role as 'spear-carrier for American empire' in 1995 after the 1995 publication of the East Asia Strategy Report by the Pentagon's Office of International Security Affairs (known as the Nye Report, named after then DOD/ISA Director Joseph Nye). In this report, Johnson saw that America was committing itself to permanent global military engagement despite the fact that it's chief rival in global affairs, the Soviet Union, had collapsed.
Johnson's provocative Foreign Affairs article, "East Asian Security: The Pentagon's Ossified Strategy," argued that such places like Okinawa which then hosted more than 40 separate U.S. military installations on a small island were a crisis waiting to happen. He was prescient. In September of that year, a 12-year old girl was raped by three U.S. military servicemen which helped ignite the largest anti-American, anti-base protests in Japan in more than 40 years.
Chalmers Johnson, who was Chairman of UC Berkeley's Political Science Department during the Vietnam protests and who was not sympathetic with the students, followed this important essay with two best-selling treatments about the blindspots and hubris of American power in the world. The first was Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Power, whose publication preceded 9/11 by about 18 months but like the prescient Hart/Rudman Commission on National Security in the 21st Century, predicted some major shock or blowback to be hurled at America. The second was Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the Loss of the Republic which is still selling strong in bookstores around the world.
Chalmers Johnson and I have collaborated for a long time and have directed together, with his wife Sheila Johnson, the Japan Policy Research Institute -- and for more than a decade have wrestled with the issue of how to get American foreign policy back on track. Chalmers and Sheila are the conveners and cultivators of an alternative assortment of smart thinkers, writers and artists who make a modern foreign policy Bloomsbury Group -- but instead of Bloomsbury Square, the exchanges and debates occur at their home in Cardiff, California -- near San Diego.
As self indulgent as this may sound, visiting them each time I have has the feel of historical importance. I've engaged in discussions with the late Francis Crick in La Jolla -- because of my connections to the Johnsons; had dinner with the late Haru Matsukata Reischauer at their home; and not too long ago enjoyed a provocative evening and dinner with Daniel Ellsberg.
Ellsberg brought with him the very last RAND report he produced in early 1971 -- which was never published by RAND -- which analyzed Johnson's Peasant Nationalism and Communist Power: The Emergence of Revolutionary China.
These two now aged cold warriors had never met before that night and had provoked each other over the years -- and both felt that America was on a course that would harm liberal democracy and replace the republic with an empire committed to permanent global military engagement that would always seek new rationales to justify the high costs of military expenditures and deployments.
What struck me -- and I mean this as no slight to Ellsberg -- is that he seemed to be tired of the battle. He had just published an important and interesting new book, Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers but was not seemingly ready to become a high octane policy activist engaged in similar battles raging today about the proper conduct of American foreign and defense policy abroad, but particulary in Iraq.
Johnson, on the other hand, seemed practically teenager like in his youthful zeal to take on the Bush administration and any one else, Democrat or Republican (or Independent), who shared Bush's illusion of American post-Cold War righteousness in global affairs.
My single contribution at that dinner was to suggest to Ellsberg, who had clearly suffered personally on many fronts because of the stigma associated with leaking national security documents, that he write an article that argued that America should treat as a hero any of the 300 or so personnel in government with a foot-thick set of super secret files that would expose some of the contradictions, fabrications, and lies about the so-called many fronted war on terror. I believed that Ellsberg could help inspire patriotic selflessness in some bureaucrat or analyst who would put career and reputation on the line to fill in the many blanks we have about our engagement in Iraq and about the entire buildup to the war, before and after 9/11.
He liked the idea, and about 18 months ago, I contacted the Washington Post and New York Times who both seemed cautiously interested. But the article never appeared -- mostly because Dan Ellsberg didn't get to writing the piece for some time. I know that the Washington Post Outlook Section did try and commission a piece.
But today, that article -- similar to the one that we discussed at the home of Chalmers and Sheila Johnson -- appears in the New York Times.
I thought that Richard Clarke's Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror was the best America could hope for in terms of a guy who let average Americans have a peek inside the realities of Oval Office politics. Ron Suskind's The Price of Loyalty also helped spill some of the insider thinking and behavior of the administration.
But we still haven't had the equivalent of the Pentagon Papers.
I think it is time that we join Ellsberg's call for a national hero -- as yet unknown in the bowels of this administration -- to come forward with the truth of what has been going on.
Someone leaked Valerie Plame's identity over phone lines of the most intelligence-watched place on the face of the Earth, the White House, and has not yet had to pay a price.
Think about leaking something that would actually help get America back on track -- rather than to harm her interests as the divulgence of a covert agent's identity did.
Here is part of the note in today's article written almost as a letter of support to next Bush Administration "Ellsberg of this era":
Technology may make it easier to tell your story, but the decision to do so will be no less difficult. The personal risks of making disclosures embarrassing to your superiors are real. If you are identified as the source, your career will be over; friendships will be lost; you may even be prosecuted. But some 140,000 Americans are risking their lives every day in Iraq. Our nation is in urgent need of comparable moral courage from its public officials.
I happen to be in New York again courtesy of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund at a conference organized by Leon Fuerth on the challenge of what he calls "Forward Engagement," or forecasting public policy challenges and choices. And one of the great problems of our world is the inability of complex systems, driven mostly by inertia and some sense that what they do tomorrow needs to look mostly like what they did yesterday, to adapt to new information or bugle calls to change course before a collision.
The fact is that American policy makers treat the Daniel Ellsberg's and Chalmers Johnson's of the country as oddities to be avoided -- stepped around -- when in fact they see much more than most of those I know in Washington and have been willing to bet their lives and reputations on their views.
Regrettably, such inspired risk-taking exists only in the smallest nooks and crannies of our government and usually earns expulsion rather than reward.
-- Steve Clemons
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Steve,
I agree, somebody must step forward and publicly document the Bush administrations feckless policies, be they foreign or domestic, but as to whether they would be effective as Ellsburg was thirty years ago I have my doubts.
Much has changed in the intervening years, the press is no longer the press, but rather a collection of media conglomerates who's sole purpose is to generate revenue streams in the short term. In the interim of time, the Republican party has morphed into a party who's sole purpose is to achieve unrestrained power. Add to this mix a president who's family has been able to implement but one policy successfully...that of revenge. I am not sure that in this toxic environment the selfless creature you suggest could survive the few short breathes it would take to elucidate this administrations criminal shortcomings.
No, Washington has changed, the critical mass of good men is no longer there, it is if George Baily had never been born, Bedford Falls is now Pottersville. Is it worth destroying your life, when those you are defending are indifferent or hostile to your sacrifice? What a cruel fate, to sacrifice all, knowing that the message could very well go unheard.
I was far more impressed with Secrets than I was with The Sorrows of Empire.
In fact, I thought the latter was rather thinly sourced and loosely argued. This was disappointing, because I think there are real questions we need to answer about the degree to which our military empire creates more problems than it solves.
Johnson's chief flaw is that he never seriously grapples with opposing viewpoints.
The example I think of is his discussion of the IMET program, which, it can be argued, does a lot of good. A lot of the human rights violations committed by militaries in developing countries happen due to incompetence more than to malice -- take the disastrous efforts of the Russians in Beslan, for instance. Where democracies and thriving economies have developed, in many cases it's been due to the competence instilled first within military establishments in authoritarian regimes. One budding example is our assistance to Georgia, which despite a lot of obstacles has been making strides toward democracy and the rule of law.
Chalmers merely assumes that everything we do is bad, bad, bad, and never stops to wonder why serious people might think we are doing real good.
As for Ellsberg's editorial, I swear he published something like it in Salon not too long ago.
Thanks for the comments Steve and Praktike. I didn't see Ellsberg's Salon article but will look for it when I'm not on the road. I disagree about Sorrows of Empire, of which the chapter on the 750 U.S. military installations is brilliant and extremely well researched. But that book, and Blowback, as well, are both meant as polemical treatises on U.S. foreign policy...whereas Secrets is more memoir I think.
Interesting discussion.
best,
Steve Clemons
Thanks for your response, Steve.
I'm going to have to go back and reread the chapter again, now that you mention it.
As for Secrets, I think it's actually for more than a memoir. I particularly like the window we get into Ellsberg's thought process on NSSM 1, which gets into a bit of organizational theory. He lays out a convincing rationale as to why he did what he did. I do think we could use an NSSM 1 process today, more than we need a Pentagon Papers type of leak. Just giving the NSC a chance to see where different entities evaluate where we are in Iraq would be extremely helpful, and could tamp down the kind of chaos that leads to things like Larry Franklin trying to use AIPAC to influence Elliot Abrams.
Steve, you have the makings of a screen writer in you, I think. I love reading about this dinner encounter, as long as it is, and it leaves me really wanting more. I feel like you are elevating this bitchy medium to something quite different and unique, and surprisingly un-dull.
i really hope that you figure out how to keep this up; your output and the breadth of interest is intimidating and remarkable. thanks guy.
Something there is that does not like a snitch.
I don't actually think that Ellsberg is a snitch. I applaud what he did. But, there is something in our society where animosity for people who reveal wrongdoing is more prevalent than appreciation for the courage it takes to reveal the wrongdoing.
The young military man who blew the lid on the Abu Graib scandal is under 24 hour protection. Sherrin Watkins, the highly qualified accountant woman who blew the lid on Enron has not been receiving job offers. Colleen Dowling, the FBI agent from Minneapolis who wrote directly to Mueller and went public regarding the FBI screwups is certain she will never be promoted. The female translator with the FBI was fired for informing her superiors that some translators were not translating certain info that was related to people they knew.
I don't know what it is. But, I know its real. Many people, in all earnestness, will speak rabidly about tattletales and snitches and turncoats, while never sensing the fact that a company like Enron, or the FBI, or the abusing soldiers at Abu Graib has violated them far worse than anything the 'snitch' has done. They will take the fact that someone has shed light on an issue far more personally, viscerally even, than the fact that Andrew Fastow ripped off the public and stockholders, destroyed some small businesses in California that couldn't pay the huge increase in electricity cost, etc. Or the fact that a translater might deliberately not translate info that conceivably might prevent a terrorist attack. Something there is that ....
I think the risk/reward proposition in leaking embarrassing materials is a little bit less enticing then it may at first appear to us. Consider that (IMO):
1. J. Ashcroft might just declare said leaker an enemy combatant or the like. Whisk! Off to Gitmo, enjoy your eternal solitude.
2. That this administration has bent or busted the truth and the law at almost every turn is not a secret. It isn't proven, but I think honestly most of America actually knows it deep down. The whole world knows it -- why wouldn't Americans? The frightening thing is, there is a significant part of America that doesn't care... it's like Ollie North times a hundred.
Almost certainly there is a considerable slice of conservatives that *enjoys* watching the administration get away with the things it does, and how apoplectic this makes liberals. After all, that is the American ethos -- get away with it. We teach it in businesses, we teach it in schools, we teach it in sports.
I propose that a document from the desk of the VP instructing the CIA to manufacture phony nuclear evidence in Iraq would -- if leaked to the big 4, say -- yield Kerry around a 5 or 6 point bounce, with probably a significant backlash of outrage at the media and the leaker to follow shortly thereafter.
So, why do it? Why leak? Would it change anything?
Speaking of leaks and sports - just read an amusing suggestion as a name for the new Washington baseball team: the Washington Leakers




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