February 19, 2006

  • Farewell to Ground Zero
    by Jonathan Schell

    This article will appear in the March 6, 2006 issue of "The Nation" magazine.

    This column will be my last "Letter From Ground Zero." The series will be succeeded by another, "Crisis of the Republic." Until recently it seemed possible to trace the main developments in the Bush administration's policies back to that horrible, fantastical day in September 2001, as if following an unbroken chain of causes and effects. Now it no longer does. The chain is too entangled with other chains, of newer and older origin.

    The war against Afghanistan, where Osama bin Laden had his headquarters and support from the ruling Taliban, was, for better or worse, a clear response to the attack on the United States. The Patriot Act and the reorganization of the national security apparatus likewise were responses to September 11. But with the launch of the Iraq War, the subject was already beginning to change. The political support for the war still flowed from 9/11, but the administration was already veering toward other objectives. For one thing, we know that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and others had wanted to attack Iraq since their first days in office, and, for that matter, even before. For another, the war proved to be a kind of test case of a far more sweeping revolution in American foreign policy, soon outlined in the White House document of 2002, the National Security Strategy of the United States of America, which set forth American ambitions for nothing less than global hegemony based on military superiority, absolute and perpetual, over all other nations. Many friends of this policy frankly and rightly called it imperial.

    The Iraq test case has failed; in doing so it has tied down forces that otherwise might have been given further aggressive missions. The imperial plan stalled -- as the nuclearization of North Korea without an effective American response, among other things, attests. Nevertheless, the administration's international ambitions had a scarcely less sweeping domestic corollary, for which no master strategic document was supplied: a profound transformation of the American state, in which, in the name of the "war on terror," the President rises above the law and the Republican Party permanently dominates all three branches of government. That project had even less to do with 9/11 than did the Iraq War. Its roots can be traced at least as far back as the election of 2000, when the Supreme Court improperly interjected itself into the electoral dispute in Florida and a majority consisting of Republican-appointed Justices awarded the presidency to the man of their own party. Or perhaps we need to look back even further, to the attempt by the Republican-dominated Congress to knock a Democratic President out of office by impeaching him for personal misbehavior accompanied by a minor legal infraction. (If those standards were still in force, President Bush would have been impeached eleven times over by now.) Obviously, these events had nothing to do with 9/11 or the Iraq War. Their roots are older and deeper. To arrange all the new developments, domestic and international, under the heading "Letter From Ground Zero," as if it all began with Osama bin Laden, would therefore be misleading. It would be a kind of lie.

    For the series' new title, I want to acknowledge a debt to Hannah Arendt, who in 1972 published a book of essays titled Crises of the Republic. My single-letter change in her title reflects a belief that today the many disparate crises of the past have combined into one general systemic crisis, placing the basic structure of the Republic at mortal risk. At the forefront of concern must be the question: Will the Constitution of the United States survive? Is the American state now in the midst of a transmutation in which the 217-year-old provisions for a balance of powers and popular freedoms are being overridden and canceled? Or will defenders of the Constitution step forward, as has happened in constitutional crises of the past, to save the system and restore its integrity?

    The obvious precedent is Watergate. Then as now, the presidency became "imperial." Then as now, a misconceived and misbegotten war led to presidential law-breaking at home. Then as now, a quixotic crusade for freedom abroad really menaced freedom at home. Then as now, the law-breaking President was re-elected to a second term. Then as now, the systemic rot went so deep that only a drastic cure could be effectual. Then as now, opposition at the outset consisted not of any great public outrage but the lonely courage of a few bureaucrats, legislators, and reporters. Then it was the war in Vietnam; now it is the war in Iraq and the wider and more lasting "war on terror." Then it was secret break-ins and illegal wiretapping; now it is arbitrary imprisonment, torture and, again, illegal wiretapping. Then it was presidential assertion of "executive privilege"; now it is a full-scale reinterpretation of the Constitution to give the "unitary executive" power to do anything it likes in "wartime."

    Of course, there are obvious differences. In the early 1970s, the opposition party controlled both houses of the legislature, which launched vigorous investigations and, eventually, impeachment proceedings. Now of course the President's party controls the legislative branch and possibly (it's still too early to say, given the traditional independence of the judiciary and its consequent unpredictability) the judicial branch as well. Then, the movement against the war had forced a decision to withdraw; now the anti-war movement is much weaker. On the other hand, when the crisis began back then, the President's popularity was high; now it is low.

    Yet what remains most striking and most surprising is the degree of continuity of the systemic disorder in the face of radical, galloping change in almost every other area of political life. After all, the cold war, which seemed at the time to be the seedbed of the Watergate crisis, ended sixteen years ago, in the greatest upheaval of the international system since the end of World War II. How is it, then, that the United States has returned to a systemic crisis so profoundly similar to the one in the early 1970s? By looking at external foes, are we looking in the wrong place for the origins of the illness? Is this transformation what a more "conservative" public now wants? Or is there instead something in the dominant institutions of American life that push the country in this direction? Those are some of the questions that will be taken up in "Crisis of the Republic."

    Jonathan Schell is The Nation Institute's Harold Willens Peace Fellow. He is the author of "The Unconquerable World" among many other books.

    This article will appear in the March 6, 2006 issue of "The Nation" magazine.

    copyright 2006 Jonathan Schell

Comments (16)

  • Hey John; ryc; I appreciate your kind words, and I’m really not sure that “when” they are extended has much importance, as it is the sincerity of the words that would be all I cared about. And I have never doubted your sincerity on any issue, including this one. So thank you! Now, regarding you not even being missed due to the so-called “worshipping”, that is false on two counts.One,your comments on any subject are missed, as your opinion is held in the highest respect. Number two is the fact that it is I who am grateful to be sharing part of those “worshipping” ladies days. They just have big hearts and feel sorry for me. J
     
    Peace   John            Scott
     
    I'll be back to read the post.Looks...

  • ryc: Well, first I would have to install some more shelving. I remember a description of your pad you made once. You would need several sizes of shelves and whatever old ones would have to be cleaned, repaired or tossed. Then we would get to organizing all the stuff that belong on them. (Of course the shelves would have to compliment your antiques.) I would bring along with me several possibilities for discrete storage (i.e. under coffee table, under desk, in closets.) Wait... you did not ask me to clean and organize did you. Sorry, I'm in that zone. Are you a pack rat or just indifferent to organization? Those would probably be my two analyses without further information. Antiques might suggest that the things you have are not simply there because you can't toss them. I would have to see the joint to know anything for certain. You are a wild card, I hesistate to make any real guesses.

  • Eccentrique, how very kind of you to say so! The portrait was done based on a photo taken over twenty years ago sometime in the eighties I think... take care - yasmine

  • RYC: It's fairly easy to know whether it's the real thing or not. I just need to aks you whether you yourself are doing really well regardless of whatever happens around you. And we both know the answer.
    And no,loving oneself doesn't happen because. There is no prerequisite, like "God loves me and therefore I can love myself". That means tacking up the horse backward. Self-love happens first, regardless not because. Anything else is dishonest.

  • ryc;
    Where are they,exactly,John? The ones holding the tapes,anyways?I want to see if they've made any money.

  • RYC: Possibly. And in that issue lies also the reason why I can't be of help to you.

  • one, i don't think the constitution will survive without some radical intervention.  two, why in the world are we as a country getting more conservative (i'm certainly not!) when all it seems to do is create more havoc?  and, even though i was a wee child, this crisis seems far more serious than what we had in the 70s.  i think we weathered that, finallly, with a huge change of direction.  this is really why i think hillary clinton is a sure thing in 2008, because we need such a radical change she will seem tame to middle-of-the-road naysayers when they look at what king george ultimately accomplishes.  i'm definitely in hill country.  i keep saying that and i need to make a bumper sticker.  anyhow, this article frightens the hell out of me.  where are the answers?  do we have any answer people?

  • Great post. I think there is something dominant in the institutions of American life that pushes the country in this direction. I think it is our tendency to proseltyze. Really, I believe that at our core American's want to be the good guys, and whatever they find that gives them happiness, they/we tend to wish upon another without regard sometimes because it is coupled with our passion. Religion, athletics, technology, even freaking dietary issues become areas in which American's seem to feel they have to outshine everyone. And in the instances that we do, we want to share it so badly that we step all over ourselves and others in the process. And of course there is money. We have to have the most! It's that pull yourself up by your bootstraps mentality gone steroid. But even wen we do have the most of something we still try to convince others we have the secrets to success when they aren't necessarily inerested. We've become the drama queen friend. We want the spotlight all the time and don't look outside of ourselves too much. xenophobia among the young is a norm until they meet someone from another country. And even our young push their beliefs upon the young of foreign countries at times. We have to learn the importance of valuing the world. We have to let ourselves experience it. We are all about the pursuit of happiness no matter what, and happiness only as we define it.

    Of course I am not speaking about everyone, but this seems to be a commonality among people I know and even myself. We can't wait to help make someone's life better which in a vacuum is a wonderful intention, but it takes a special effort for us to get out of that vacuum. It may be this way elsewhere as well (it is) and that may add to the problem (it does). But we do have sway and if we can humbly join in the world dialogue without our incessant need to be first, we might just have a shot at changing what is certainly a crisis.

  • I loved his articls and will continue reading them now...its just scary, as he points out, "The chain is too entangled with other chains, of newer and older origin." the scandals and outrages of the bush administration are so convoluted it takes a lot of patience to find truth - patience that most americans and the msm do not use.

  • We do need radical change.  We are about to lose our democracy if we don't.  It's like '1984'.

  • Wow that fire you were talking about sounds like quite an action packed experience. I bet it was a really stressfull to deal with, especially in weather like that! Fire fighters are very strong and brave, I cant help admiring  them....

  • hello i haven't visited you in a while. your writing is still really good =) and the article u posted is so interesting. take care =)

  • Thank you Sweet Man for your visit
    and comments..always

  • lol, what kinda comment is that? Of course it's a flower, a closeup of a rose. The pic had been posted before and it'll remain there for a long time, just to give people a chance to leave a comment in case I ever comment on any of their posts. That's what I'm keeping the xanga for... to sneak around other people's xangas when I'm bored and leave comments when I feel like adding my two cents to someone's personal drama.

  • RYC:  He's a private investigator.  The stuff he's always doing is talking on his webcam with his brothers.  Or he's buying more "stuff" for the computer or he's revising his dvd he made.  It's an hour and a half long and it's all about him.  :)   There's like 3 minutes of our daughter in it.  I get so irritated with him sometimes because it's all about him, all the time.  He is a very narcissistic person.  But hey, obviously he had/has some good qualities about him...........I married him. 

  • Dear 007,

    I am hoping that in this year's Election, the GOP will lose a significant number of seats in both houses.  We will also see the mettle of the newly minted Supreme Court, I suspect.

    DI Edifice

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