This week’s deployment of Blackhawk helicopters in Chicago is
only the latest in a series of “urban warfare training” exercises that
have become a familiar feature of American life.
As elsewhere, this exercise was sprung unannounced on a startled
civilian population. Conducted in secrecy, apparently with the collusion
of local police agencies and elected officials, Democrats and
Republicans alike, the ostensible purpose of these exercises is to give
US troops experience in what Pentagon doctrine refers to as “Military
Operations on Urban Terrain.”
Such operations are unquestionably of central importance to the US
military. Over the past decade, its primary mission, as evidenced in
Afghanistan and Iraq, has been the invasion and occupation of relatively
powerless countries and the subjugation of their resisting populations,
often in house-to-house fighting in urban centers.
The Army operates a 1,000 acre Urban Training Center in south-central
Indiana that boasts over 1,500 “training structures” designed to
simulate houses, schools, hospitals and factories. The center’s web site
states that it “can be tailored to replicate both foreign and domestic
scenarios.”
What does flying Blackhawks low over Chicago apartment buildings or
rolling armored military convoys through the streets of St. Louis
accomplish that cannot be achieved through the sprawling training
center’s simulations? Last year alone, there were at least seven such
exercises, including in Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, Tampa, St. Louis,
Minneapolis and Creeds, Virginia.
The most obvious answer is that these exercises accustom troops to
operating in US cities, while desensitizing the American people to the
domestic deployment of US military might.
Preparations for such deployments are already far advanced. Over the
past decade, under the pretext of prosecuting a “global war on terror,”
Washington has enacted a raft of repressive legislation and created a
vast new bureaucracy of state control under the Department of Homeland
Security. Under the Obama administration, the White House has claimed
the power to throw enemies of the state into indefinite military
detention or even assassinate them on US soil by means of drone strikes,
while radically expanding electronic spying on the American population.
Part of this process has been the ceaseless growth of the power of
the US military and its increasing intervention into domestic affairs.
In 2002, the creation of the US Northern Command for the first time
dedicated a military command to operations within the US itself.
Just last May, the Pentagon announced the implementation of new rules
of engagement for US military forces operating on American soil to
provide “support” to “civilian law enforcement authorities, including
responses to civil disturbances.”
The document declares sweeping and unprecedented military powers
under a section entitled “Emergency Authority.” It asserts the authority
of a “federal military commander” in “extraordinary emergency
circumstances where prior authorization by the president is impossible
and duly constituted local authorities are unable to control the
situation, to engage temporarily in activities that are necessary to
quell large-scale, unexpected civil disturbances.” In other words, the
Pentagon brass claims the unilateral authority to impose martial law.
These powers are not being asserted for the purpose of defending the
US population against terrorism or to counter some hypothetical
emergency. The US military command is quite conscious of where the
danger lies.
In a recent article, a senior instructor at the Fort Leavenworth
Command and General Staff College and former director of the Army’s
School of Advanced Military Studies laid out a telling scenario for a
situation in which the military could intervene.
“The Great Recession of the early twenty-first century lasts far
longer than anyone anticipated. After a change in control of the White
House and Congress in 2012, the governing party cuts off all funding
that had been dedicated to boosting the economy or toward relief. The
United States economy has flatlined, much like Japan’s in the 1990s, for
the better part of a decade. By 2016, the economy shows signs of
reawakening, but the middle and lower-middle classes have yet to
experience much in the way of job growth or pay raises. Unemployment
continues to hover perilously close to double digits …”
In other words, the Pentagon sees these conditions—which differ
little from what exists in the US today—producing social upheavals that
can be quelled only by means of military force.
What is being upended, behind the scenes and with virtually no media
coverage, much less public debate, are constitutional principles dating
back centuries that bar the use of the military in civilian law
enforcement. In the Declaration of Independence itself, the indictment
justifying revolution against King George included the charge that he
had “affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the
Civil power.”
Side by side with the rising domestic power of the military, the
supposedly civilian police have been militarized. An article published
by the Wall Street Journal last weekend entitled “The Rise of the Warrior Cop” graphically described this process:
“Driven by martial rhetoric and the availability of military-style
equipment—from bayonets and M-16 rifles to armored personnel
carriers—American police forces have often adopted a mind-set previously
reserved for the battlefield. The war on drugs and, more recently,
post-9/11 antiterrorism efforts have created a new figure on the US
scene: the warrior cop—armed to the teeth, ready to deal harshly with
targeted wrongdoers, and a growing threat to familiar American
liberties.”
The article describes the vast proliferation of SWAT (Special Weapons
and Tactics) units to virtually every town in America, fueled by some
$35 billion in grants from the Department of Homeland Security, “with
much of the money going to purchase military gear such as armored
personnel carriers.”
This armed force was on full display in April when what amounted to a
state of siege was imposed on the city of Boston, ostensibly to capture
one teenage suspect. The entire population of a major American city was
locked in their homes as combat-equipped police, virtually
indistinguishable from troops, occupied the streets and conducted
warrantless house-to-house searches.
Underlying this unprecedented militarization of US society are two
parallel processes. The immense widening of the social chasm separating
the billionaires and multi-millionaires who control economic and
political life from American working people, the great majority of the
population, is fundamentally incompatible with democracy and requires
other forms of rule. At the same time, the turn to militarism as the
principal instrument of US foreign policy has vastly increased the power
of the military within the US state apparatus.
Both America’s ruling oligarchy and the Pentagon command recognize
that profound social polarization and deepening economic crisis must
give rise to social upheavals. They are preparing accordingly.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-militarization-of-america-2/5343952
No comments:
Post a Comment