Terrorists are defined entirely by their hatreds
In the early eighties, on a flight to Washington, DC, out of Salt Lake City, probably, the man sitting next to me was signing letters with a blue ball point pen. He looked tired, and some of the letters were a little worse for having been carried around in a briefcase. "Wyoming's Only Congressman," the letterhead said. The man sitting next to me would have been Dick Cheney, later Secretary of Defense and now Vice President of the United States. My sense of who was important and who was not placed no emphasis on United States Congressmen, particularly not from states so poorly populated that they merited fewer Representatives than Senators. He was busy, and I was tired.
Needless to say, whether I had spoken to the man or not, I wish in retrospect that I had studied him more closely. The man on my right seemed ordinary--middle-aged, overweight, and in every way unremarkable--not the sort of man to be the linchpin of a foreign policy juggernaut seemingly hell-bent on military action as the first option.
Last Saturday, Vice President Cheney addressed the graduating cadets at West Point. Rummy, the man with the swagger, no longer swaggers around as the Secretary of Defense, Paul Wolfowitz is long gone from the Pentagon and probably soon gone from the public stage, and there are rumors in Washington that the Vice President might be preparing to maneuver around his nominal boss, the President of the United States, on matters of war policy, should it come to it. Still, there is no hint in Dick Cheney's manner or rhetoric to indicate that he is aware that his position these days is First Officer on the Titanic.
What have we learned since September 11, 2001? We've learned that Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction and gave no quarter to Al Qaeda in Iraq. We've learned that Hussein, whom we hunted down and turned over to a kangaroo court, might conceivably have been the least of plausible evils for governing Iraq. Nothing better is on offer at the moment, anyway. We've learned the the US military, and the Army in particular, was ill-prepared for the occupation of Iraq. We should have learned that we have probably created a worse haven for terrorists in Iraq than Afghanistan ever was.
If Vice President Cheney is troubled or humbled in any way by any of those lessons, he gave no sign of it in his speech to the graduating class at West Point. Instead, he gave an angry reprise of what he's been saying all along, in stunningly blunt language
To take Cheney's rhetoric seriously enough to express dismay at its blatant manipulation is to be taken in by it. In any case, an audience that is being told what it wants to hear is not being manipulated. It is being stroked. The only serious question would be: Where is the audience that Cheney is stroking? Right in front of him is one plausible answer. All those years in the classroom, thinking critically, surely at some point being taught about propaganda, only to set it aside without notice to be fed rabid nonsense by the Vice President of the United States. Heady stuff. More likely, though, the rhetoric is aimed at the "conservative base," even though any sense of there being anything conservative about it is long gone.
During the cold war, we talked about "The Big Lie." Actually, Communism was a big lie, but we had some pretty big whoppers of our own to tell, including the claim that only our Communist adversary would engage in mass deception by techniques as obvious as repeating the same thing over and over again with great conviction.
And who said that? Why Hermann Göring, of course. Who else? It's taken from Gustave Gilbert's Nuremberg Diary. I'm comparing Dick Cheney to Hermann Göring? I'm gonna play dumb. I dunno. The people don't want war. Cheney is insisting on the necessity of war by telling us that we are in great danger.
Sixty percent of Americans either want the troops pulled out now or a timetable set for pulling the troops out. Another 10 percent aren't sure what they want to do. That just leaves 3 in 10 Americans sure that we should stay in Iraq indefinitely, and yet, that's what Dick Cheney claims is necessary to our national security.
The techniques employed by Dick Cheney at West Point are probably as old as war. Our enemy is amoral, uncivilized, inhuman, and implacable. What enemy isn't? This enemy is so bad that we are justified in abridging the Constitution and the Geneva Convention in dealing with them. That's new.
The Republicans got it handed to them in the last Congressional election, in no small part because of dissatisfaction with the handling of the war in Iraq. If the Republican party is looking for a graceful way to wiggle out of the trap that the Bush administration set for it in Iraq, Dick Cheney is giving no signals.
Fundraising is down at the national level for the Republicans and up for the Democrats. Money isn't everything in politics, but it sure is important. At this point, Dick Cheney may not even care what the cadets thought of his speech, which was almost insulting. It was the big money donors he was talking to, and he was telling them what they wanted to hear.
There have been few Vice Presidents (and, actually, none that I can think of) that can deliver product the way that Dick Cheney did at West Point. Vice Presidents need not be as cautious as Presidents, and Dick Cheney was loaded for bear. For those who thought a comparison to Hermann Göring unfair, I would have to agree with you. Despite having serious health problems, Dick Cheney is the more functional leader.
The speaker at West Point isn't all that different from the man sitting next to me signing letters. He was just doing his job, and a good job of it he did, too. Fire-breathing speeches, after all, are just a continuation of fundraising letters by another means.
Should we be worried, though? It is, I really believe, about motivating the party faithful and nothing else. At least I hope so. Dick Cheney can't have nearly the reputation outside the US that he has here. Dick Cheney can safely throw red meat to check writers while the Department of State tries out the diplomacy option with Iran. I wonder how many of those cadets will die in Iraq?
Needless to say, whether I had spoken to the man or not, I wish in retrospect that I had studied him more closely. The man on my right seemed ordinary--middle-aged, overweight, and in every way unremarkable--not the sort of man to be the linchpin of a foreign policy juggernaut seemingly hell-bent on military action as the first option.
Last Saturday, Vice President Cheney addressed the graduating cadets at West Point. Rummy, the man with the swagger, no longer swaggers around as the Secretary of Defense, Paul Wolfowitz is long gone from the Pentagon and probably soon gone from the public stage, and there are rumors in Washington that the Vice President might be preparing to maneuver around his nominal boss, the President of the United States, on matters of war policy, should it come to it. Still, there is no hint in Dick Cheney's manner or rhetoric to indicate that he is aware that his position these days is First Officer on the Titanic.
What have we learned since September 11, 2001? We've learned that Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction and gave no quarter to Al Qaeda in Iraq. We've learned that Hussein, whom we hunted down and turned over to a kangaroo court, might conceivably have been the least of plausible evils for governing Iraq. Nothing better is on offer at the moment, anyway. We've learned the the US military, and the Army in particular, was ill-prepared for the occupation of Iraq. We should have learned that we have probably created a worse haven for terrorists in Iraq than Afghanistan ever was.
If Vice President Cheney is troubled or humbled in any way by any of those lessons, he gave no sign of it in his speech to the graduating class at West Point. Instead, he gave an angry reprise of what he's been saying all along, in stunningly blunt language
As Army officers on duty in the war on terror, you will now face enemies who oppose and despise everything you know to be right, every notion of upright conduct and character, and every belief you consider worth fighting for and living for. Capture one of these killers, and he'll be quick to demand the protections of the Geneva Convention and the Constitution of the United States. Yet when they wage attacks or take captives, their delicate sensibilities seem to fall away. These are men who glorify murder and suicide. Their cruelty is not rebuked by human suffering, only fed by it. They have given themselves to an ideology that rejects tolerance, denies freedom of conscience, and demands that women be pushed to the margins of society. The terrorists are defined entirely by their hatreds, and they hate nothing more than the country you have volunteered to defend.No country understands, talks about, exploits, or expresses cynicism about public relations, advertising or propaganda as intensely as does the United States. The United States pioneered the modern use of these techniques, which are important to the commercial and political life of the nation. It is difficult to imagine anyone graduating from a decent college without having been sensitized at some point to propaganda well enough to recognize it when it is used so blatantly.
To take Cheney's rhetoric seriously enough to express dismay at its blatant manipulation is to be taken in by it. In any case, an audience that is being told what it wants to hear is not being manipulated. It is being stroked. The only serious question would be: Where is the audience that Cheney is stroking? Right in front of him is one plausible answer. All those years in the classroom, thinking critically, surely at some point being taught about propaganda, only to set it aside without notice to be fed rabid nonsense by the Vice President of the United States. Heady stuff. More likely, though, the rhetoric is aimed at the "conservative base," even though any sense of there being anything conservative about it is long gone.
The terrorists know what they want and they will stop at nothing to get it. By force and intimidation, they seek to impose a dictatorship of fear, under which every man, woman, and child lives in total obedience to their ideology. Their ultimate goal is to establish a totalitarian empire, a caliphate, with Baghdad as its capital. They view the world as a battlefield and they yearn to hit us again. And now they have chosen to make Iraq the central front in their war against civilization.There is only one credible empire in the world, and Dick Cheney is currently the Vice President of it. And who made Iraq the central front anyway? If there is any chance of the agenda attributed to the terrorists succeeding, then we should under no circumstances be talking about pulling out of Iraq until it is completely pacified, which means we should be in Iraq indefinitely. Cheney knows there is no support on the home front for such a commitment
During the cold war, we talked about "The Big Lie." Actually, Communism was a big lie, but we had some pretty big whoppers of our own to tell, including the claim that only our Communist adversary would engage in mass deception by techniques as obvious as repeating the same thing over and over again with great conviction.
Of course the people don't want war. But after all, it's the leaders of the country who determine the policy, and it's always a simple matter to drag the people along whether it's a democracy, a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism, and exposing the country to greater danger.
And who said that? Why Hermann Göring, of course. Who else? It's taken from Gustave Gilbert's Nuremberg Diary. I'm comparing Dick Cheney to Hermann Göring? I'm gonna play dumb. I dunno. The people don't want war. Cheney is insisting on the necessity of war by telling us that we are in great danger.
Sixty percent of Americans either want the troops pulled out now or a timetable set for pulling the troops out. Another 10 percent aren't sure what they want to do. That just leaves 3 in 10 Americans sure that we should stay in Iraq indefinitely, and yet, that's what Dick Cheney claims is necessary to our national security.
The techniques employed by Dick Cheney at West Point are probably as old as war. Our enemy is amoral, uncivilized, inhuman, and implacable. What enemy isn't? This enemy is so bad that we are justified in abridging the Constitution and the Geneva Convention in dealing with them. That's new.
The Republicans got it handed to them in the last Congressional election, in no small part because of dissatisfaction with the handling of the war in Iraq. If the Republican party is looking for a graceful way to wiggle out of the trap that the Bush administration set for it in Iraq, Dick Cheney is giving no signals.
Fundraising is down at the national level for the Republicans and up for the Democrats. Money isn't everything in politics, but it sure is important. At this point, Dick Cheney may not even care what the cadets thought of his speech, which was almost insulting. It was the big money donors he was talking to, and he was telling them what they wanted to hear.
There have been few Vice Presidents (and, actually, none that I can think of) that can deliver product the way that Dick Cheney did at West Point. Vice Presidents need not be as cautious as Presidents, and Dick Cheney was loaded for bear. For those who thought a comparison to Hermann Göring unfair, I would have to agree with you. Despite having serious health problems, Dick Cheney is the more functional leader.
The speaker at West Point isn't all that different from the man sitting next to me signing letters. He was just doing his job, and a good job of it he did, too. Fire-breathing speeches, after all, are just a continuation of fundraising letters by another means.
Should we be worried, though? It is, I really believe, about motivating the party faithful and nothing else. At least I hope so. Dick Cheney can't have nearly the reputation outside the US that he has here. Dick Cheney can safely throw red meat to check writers while the Department of State tries out the diplomacy option with Iran. I wonder how many of those cadets will die in Iraq?

