The image of the State in 1984 is that of a boot in the face
Brian to Winston, in Orwell's 1984
In human affairs, nothing arises in a vacuum but rather develops from a pre-existing kernel. Neocon doctrine is no different and is what might be called an “historical inference.”
Within the U.S. foreign policy establishment, the phrase “zones of democratic peace” had a pre-existing usage, the ultimate effect of which was simply that it was considered beneficial to the United States to extend the capitalist free-trade system to as many countries and regions in the world. In Ancient Athens, the same hegemonic doctrine might well have been labelled, “Zones of Hellenic Co Prosperity” What is new is the meaning the Neocons have given to “hegemony.”
Even here, the brutalization of american hegemony is not without antecedents. Through the Korean War, it can be said, in a general way, that the United States pursued its hegemonic interests by fairly conventional means. That changed with Vietnam, where turning South Vietnam into a U.S.-friendly zone of democratic peace, entailed participation in a civil war and, hence inescapably, participation in a war against civilians. The most notorious aspect of this war was the U.S. “pacification” program, which involved turning villages into mini-concentration camps and murder, code named Phoenix. Even here, the actions were not without antecedents in the German administered Generalgouvernment and Nazi occupation policies in “the eastern” territories.
But to say that the neocon Thug Staat is not without antecedents is not to say that it is simply more of the same. It is not. It is a progression by degree beyond a threshold that has resulted in something qualitatively and dangerously new. In the New American Century, the exercise and enjoyment of the means has become an end in itself.
As Brian explained to Winston in the torture chambers of the Ministry of Truth, prior to 1984, governments and tyrants always sought to justify their power in terms of some ulterior good. Whatever that good was asserted to be, power was exercised in the name of bringing that good about. Likewise the exercise of power was limited by what was justifiable in terms of the asserted good. No more. The Party in 1984 had learned that power could and would be exercised entirely for its own sake no more, without need to justify it by anything other than the self justification of the pursuit of dominance.
It was thus useless for Winston to scream “why?” -- the answer was simply “because”. It was useless for Winston to argue that what the State was doing was self-defeating, because what the State was engaged in was was self-asserting for its own sake. Power projection for its own sake was the beginning and end of existence.
To say that the goal of US policy is to project power, and preserve preeminence through “full spectrum dominance” is simply to say that there is no ulterior goal -- that power is a good in and of itself. But power in and of itself is simply the smashing if things; and smashing things...smashing countries, people... is what the neocon agenda is all about.
This is not to say, that no ulterior justification is ever used in the PNAC Manifesto. From time to time there is some tepid allusion to “American interests and princoples” whatever those “principles” might be. These are simply linguistic holdovers on the march toward a simpler, purero NeoSpeak. What is astonishing how little ulterior good is ever mentioned.
The Manifesto never talks about erecting schools, economic development, culture, infrascturcture, Peace Corps in zones of democratic freedom. In fact the Manifesto hardly ever speaks of American interests, other than the interest inhaving more control, more power, more hardware more destructive weapons.
To say that there is an ulterior purpose of “safety” is simply to use labels to play havoc with cause and effect. At some level of generality “purpose” becomes de facto meaningless. Safety through Dominance is no more than I’m safe because I’m bashing you. Peace through Rubbleizing.
Once it is understood that the Neocons are engaged in a purely Orwellian pursuit of power and dominance for its own sake, it can also be understood that their brutality will not be confined to “America’s security perimeter” On the contrary, it will of necessity be extended inward to The Homeland itself.
This follows first from the fact that once power projection is the self-justifying goal it really doesn’t matter where it is exercised. The point is to project and for this Kansas is as good as Khandahar. It follows also from the fact that once the American populace become inured to brutality, they will be indifferent to it when it pummels some “terrorist” in the Homeland; and it will in fact be considered a good thing that a potential terrorist was caught and rooted out.
It also follows fom the entire “security-based” mentality. “Security” begins at home and since the Homeland is the preeminent zone of democratic peace, it requires its security environment to be shaped as much as any other. Already the neoscum administration is seeking to dispense with constitutional limits on data mining all currently available information on U.S. citizens. It is already seeking to “organically” penetrate certain “suspect” and “target” groups, without ever specifying exactly what makes them suspect. It is already seeking to build security perimeters and walls all around the country, always pointing to the alleged inchoate threat outside and always ignoring that walls and controls and checks work both ways. The notion that the the State should “control” the internet and wage net-war on it, basically extends power projection and security shaping into the realm of information and thought.
Last but not least, it follows from the project to turn U.S. soldiers into drugged up killers. If the neocons are willing to turn U.S. soldiers into drugged up killers, they will see no objection to pharmaceutically enhancing domestic security forces. The images we see in Guantánamo, Afghanistan and Iraq today are a foretaste of the Homeland tomorrow. It will be so.
©Barfo, 2003