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Selling the President's General: The Petraeus Story
by Tom Engelhardt You simply can't pile up enough adjectives when it comes to the general who, at a relatively young age, was already a runner-up for Time Magazine's Person of the Year in 2007.
His record is stellar. His tactical sense extraordinary. His strategic ability, when it comes to mounting a campaign, beyond compare.
I'm speaking, of course, of General David Petraeus, the President's surge commander in Iraq and, as of last week, the newly nominated head of U.S. Central Command (Centcom) for all of the Middle East and beyond -- "King David" to those of his peers who haven't exactly taken a shine to his reportedly "high self-regard." And the campaign I have in mind has been his years' long wooing and winning of the American media, in the process of which he sold himself as a true American hero, a Caesar of celebrity.
As far as can be told, there's never been a seat in his
helicopter that couldn't be filled by a friendly (or adoring) reporter.
This, after all, is the man who, in the summer of 2004, as a mere
three-star general being sent back to Baghdad to train the Iraqi army,
made Newsweek's cover under the caption, "Can This Man Save Iraq?" (The
article's subtitle -- with the "yes" practically etched into it --
read: "Mission Impossible? David Petraeus Is Tasked with Rebuilding
Iraq's Security Forces. An Up-close Look at the Only Real Exit Plan the
United States Has -- the Man Himself").
And, oh yes, as for
his actual generalship on the battlefield of Iraq Well, the verdict
may still officially be out, but the record, the tactics, and the
strategic ability look like they will not stand the test of time. But
by then, if all goes well, he'll once again be out of town and someone
else will take the blame, while he continues to fall upwards. David
Petraeus is the President's anointed general, Bush's commander of
commanders, and (not surprisingly) he exhibits certain traits much
admired by the Bush administration in its better days.
Launching Brand Petraeus
Recently,
in an almost 8,000 word report in the New York Times, David Barstow
offered an unparalleled look inside a sophisticated Pentagon campaign,
spearheaded by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, in which at least
75 retired generals and other high military officers, almost all
closely tied to Pentagon contractors, were recruited as "surrogates."
They were to take Pentagon "talking points" (aka "themes and messages")
about the President's War on Terror and war in Iraq into every part of
the media -- cable news, the television and radio networks, the major
newspapers -- as their own expert "opinions." These "analysts" made
"tens of thousands of media appearances" and also wrote copiously for
op-ed pages (often with the aid of the Pentagon) as part of an
unparalleled, five-plus year covert propaganda onslaught on the
American people that lasted from 2002 until, essentially, late last
night. Think of it, like a pod of whales or a gaggle of geese, as the
Pentagon's equivalent of a surge of generals.
In that
impressive Times report, however, one sentence has so far passed
unnoticed; yet, it speaks the world of General Petraeus, and of how
this administration and its chosen sons have played their cards from
the moment George W. Bush mounted a pile of rubble on September 14,
2001 at Ground Zero in New York City and began to sell his incipient
War on Terror (and himself as commander-in-chief). From that day on,
the propaganda campaign, the selling war, on the American "home front"
has never stopped.
Here, in that context, is Barstow's key
sentence: "When David H. Petraeus was appointed the commanding general
in Iraq in January 2007, one of his early acts was to meet with the
[Pentagon's retired military] analysts." In other words, on becoming
U.S. commander in Iraq, he automatically turned to the military
propaganda machine the Pentagon had set up to launch his initial surge
-- on the home front.
Think of the train of events this way:
In January 2007, pummeled in the opinion polls, his Iraq policy in
shambles, and the Republican Party in electoral disarray, George W.
Bush and his advisors decided to launch a last-minute home-front
campaign to buy time on Iraq. It was, the President declared in an
address to the American people, his "new way forward in Iraq." In
Vietnam-era terms, the plan itself involved a relatively modest
"escalation" of 30,000 troops, largely into the Baghdad area -- that
being all the troops the overstretched U.S. military then had
available. It gained, however, the resounding nickname, "the surge."
(That word, strangely enough, had essentially been pilfered from the
heart of "insurgent," a term previously used to designate the enemy.)
By
then, of course, the President himself was a thoroughly tarnished
brand, not exactly the sort of face with which to launch 1,000 ships or
even 30,000 troops into a self-made hell against the urgent wishes of
the American people. Instead, he pushed forward his all-American
general -- the smart, bemedaled, well-spoken, Princeton PhD and
counterinsurgency guru, beloved by reporters whom he had romanced for
years, and already treated like a demi-god by members of both parties
in both houses of Congress. He became the "face" of the administration
(just as American military and civilian officials had long spoken of
putting an "Iraqi face" on the American occupation of that country). In
the ensuing months, as New York Times columnist Frank Rich pointed out,
the surging Brand Petraeus campaign only gained traction as the
President publicly cited the general more than 150 times, 53 times in
May 2007 alone. Never has a President put on the "face" of a general
more regularly.
Now, let's return to that single sentence from
Barstow. Having been put forward by Bush as his favorite general and
the savior of his Iraq policies, Petraeus seems to have promptly turned
to the Pentagon's favored military "analysts" for a hand. The general's
initial surge, that is, was right here at home via those figures the
Pentagon had embedded in the media and liked to refer to as its
"message force multipliers." Let's keep in mind that one of those
figures, retired Army general Jack Keane, a "patron" to Petraeus during
his rise in the ranks, was, along with Frederick Kagan of the American
Enterprise Institute, an "author" of, and key propagandist for, the
surge strategy, as well as the head of his own consulting firm, on the
board of General Dynamics, and a national security analyst for ABC
News. So, in case you were wondering why the hosannas to Petraeus
nearly reached the heavens and why the "success" of the surge was
established so quickly in this country (despite four years of promises
followed by disaster that might have called for media caution) look
first to those surging retired generals and to the general who had
already established himself as a military brand name.
And
let's keep in mind that the Times' Barstow has pulled back the curtain
on but one administration program of deception. It is unlikely to have
been the only one. We don't yet fully know the full range of sources
the Pentagon and this administration mustered in the service of its
surge. We don't know what sort of thought and planning, for instance,
went into the transformation of any Sunni insurgent who didn't join the
new Awakening Movement and become a "Son of Iraq") into a member of
"al-Qaeda-in-Mesopotamia" -- or, more recently, every Shiite rebel into
an Iranian agent.
We don't know what sort of administration
planning has gone into the drumbeat of well-orchestrated, ever more
intense claims that Iran is the source of all our ills in Iraq, and
directly responsible for a striking percentage of U.S. military deaths
there. Recently, according to the New York Times, "senior officers in
the American division that secures the capital said that 73 percent of
fatal and other harmful attacks on American troops in the past year
were caused by roadside bombs planted by so-called 'special groups'" (a
euphemism for Iranian-trained groups of Shiite militiamen).
We
don't have a full accounting of the many carefully guided tours of Iraq
given to inside-the-Beltway think-tank figures like Michael O'Hanlon of
the Brookings Institution, former military figures, journalists,
pundits, and congressional representatives, all involving special
meet-and-greet contacts with Petraeus and his top commanders, all
leading to upbeat assessments of the surge. We don't have the logs of
our surge commander's visitors these last months, but we know,
anecdotally at least, that, during this period, no reporter, no matter
how minor, seemed incapable of securing a little get-together time to
experience the general's special charm.
Put everything we do
know, and enough that we suspect, together and you get our last surge
year-plus in the U.S. as a selling/propaganda campaign par excellence.
The result has been a mix of media good news about "surge success,"
especially in "lowering violence," and no news at all as the Iraq story
grew boringly humdrum and simply fell off the front pages of our papers
and out of the TV news (as well as out of the Democratic Congress).
This was, of course, a public relations bonanza for an administration
that might otherwise have appeared fatally wounded. Think, in the
president's terminology, of victory -- not over Shiite or Sunni
insurgents in Iraq, but, once again, over the media here at home.
None
of this should surprise anyone. The greatest skill of the Bush
administration has always been its ability to market itself on "the
home front." From September 14, 2001 on, through all those early
"mission accomplished" years, it was on the home front, not in
Afghanistan or Iraq, that administration officials worked hardest,
pacifying the media, rolling out its own "products," and establishing
the rep of its leader and "wartime" Commander-in-Chief.
As White House
Chief of Staff Andrew Card explained candidly enough to the New York
Times, when it came to the launching, in September 2002, of a campaign
to convince Congress and the public that an invasion of Iraq should be
approved: "From a marketing point of view, you don't introduce new
products in August."
Falling Upwards
As a general and
a personality, Petraeus fit the particular marketing mentality of this
administration perfectly. Graduating from West Point too late for
Vietnam -- he wrote his doctoral thesis on that war -- he had, before
the President's invasion, taken part only in "peacekeeping" operations
in places like Haiti. In March 2003, a two-star general, he crossed the
Kuwaiti border as commander of the 101st Airborne Division. After
Baghdad fell, his troops occupied Mosul, a relative quiet city to the
north, largely untouched by invasion or war. There, he gained a
reputation (at least in the U.S.) for having a special affinity for
Iraqis and for applying top-notch, outreach-oriented counterinsurgency
tactics.
In those early months, he always seemed to have a
writer in tow. In 2004-2005, for his next tour of duty -- already with
the the ear of the President and of Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul
Wolfowitz -- he returned to Iraq as the Newsweek Can-He-Save-It guy.
His giant task was to "stand up" Iraqi security forces. Again, he had
writers in tow. The Washington Post's columnist David Ignatius, for
instance, twice paid extended visits to the general during that tour,
returning from helicoptering around the Iraqi countryside all aglow and
writing glowingly of the job Petraeus was doing (as he would again over
the years, as so many other journalists and commentators would, too).
The
general himself wasn't exactly shy on the subject of his
accomplishments. He wrote, for instance, a strategically well-placed
op-ed in the Washington Post in September 2004, just as the
administration was rolling out another "product," the President's run
for a second term. In it, with just enough caveats to cover himself
professionally, he waxed positive about the glories of Iraqi soldiers
standing up. It was a piece filled with words like "progress" and
"optimism," just the sort of thing a President trying to outrun a bunch
of Iraqi insurgents to the November 4th finish line might like to see
in print in his hometown paper. The general picked up his third star on
this tour of duty.
Next came a stint at home where he oversaw
the rewriting of the Army's counterinsurgency manual, while touting
himself as the expert of experts on that subject, too. And then, of
course, in February 2007, a fourth star in hand, he took charge of the
U.S command in Iraq for its surge moment.
Last week, of
course, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates appointed him head of the
Pentagon's Central Command with responsibility for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and for our proxy war in Somalia. His duties will soon
stretch from North Africa into Central Asia. The appointment, however,
came after the fact. By then, as George W. Bush's personal general, he
had already left the actual Centcom commander, Adm. William "Fox"
Fallon in the dust. The President dealt with him directly, bypassing
the Centcom commander; and, even before Fallon's ignominious
resignation, Petraeus was already traveling the Middle East as,
essentially, the President's personal representative, engaging in acts
normally reserved for the head of Centcom. His appointment was seconded
by Presidential candidate John McCain ("I think he is by far the
best-qualified individual to take that job "), signaling the degree to
which the Bush administration is now preparing optimistically for
McCain's war (or, alternatively, for Obama's hell).
But here's
the strange thing when you look more carefully at Petraeus's record (as
others have indeed done over these last years), the actual results --
in Iraq, not Washington -- for each of his previous assignments proved
dismal. What the record shows is a man who, after each tour of duty,
seemed to manage to make it out of town just ahead of the posse, so
that someone else always took the fall.
On his time in Mosul, former ambassador Peter Galbraith offered this description:
"As
the American commander in Mosul in 2003 and 2004, he earned adulatory
press coverage for taming the Sunni-majority city. Petraeus ignored
warnings from America's Kurdish allies that he was appointing the wrong
people to key positions in Mosul's local government and police. A few
months after he left the city, the Petraeus-appointed local police
commander defected to the insurgency while the Sunni Arab police handed
their weapons and uniforms over en masse to the insurgents."
Mosul
has remains a hotspot of insurgency ever since. On his next tour, when
it came to all the "progress" training the Iraqi army, let Rod
Nordland, the author of that "fawning" -- his retrospective adjective,
not mine -- Newsweek cover piece of 2004, suggest an obituary, as he
did in 2007:
"[Petraeus] rose to fame not by his
achievements but by his success in selling them as achievements. He's
first of all a great communicator Training the Iraqi military and
shifting responsibility to them was the mantra Petraeus sold to
hundreds of credulous reporters and hundreds of even more credulous
visiting CODELs (congressional delegations) By the time he left, the
training program was clearly on its way to spectacular failure. By the
end of last year that had become received wisdom; it became convenient
for the brass to blame the fiasco on the politically less popular and
media-friendless Gen. George Casey. Entire brigades of police had to be
pulled off the street and retrained because they were evidently riddled
with death squads and in some cases even with insurgents. The Iraqi
Army was all but useless, a feeble patient kept on life support by the
American military."
Just recently, in hearings before Congress,
Petraeus himself introduced two new words to describe the post-surge
security situation in Iraq: "fragile and reversible." Take that as a
tip for the future. Fragile indeed. The surge landscape the general
helped create has, from the beginning, been flammable and unstable in
the extreme. It has, in recent weeks, been threatening to break down in
Shiite civil strife, even as, under an American aegis, the Sunnis have
been rearming and reorganizing for the day when they can take back a
Baghdad that was largely cleansed of their ethnic compatriots during
the aurge months. Americans are once again dying in increasing numbers
(though little attention has yet been paid to this in the media), as
are Iraqis. It will be a miracle if post-surge Iraq doesn't come apart
before November 4, 2008, not to say the end of George Bush's term in
January.
The problem is: Putting a face -- that is, a mask --
on something has nothing to do with changing it in any essential way,
no matter how you brand it and no matter who's listening to you
elsewhere. This August or September, when the general takes over at
Centcom, he will leave behind (as he has before) the equivalent of an
IED-mined stretch of Iraqi roadside ready to explode, possibly under
the coming U.S. presidential election. It remains to be seen whether he
will once again have made it out of town in the nick of time and
relatively unscathed.
The miracle, of course, was that, so
late in the game, the American media swallowed the President's (and
general's) propaganda on the surge campaign which, on the face of it,
was ludicrous. Stranger still, they did so for almost a year before the
situation started to fray visibly enough for our TV networks and major
papers to take notice. For that year, most of them thought they saw a
brass band playing fabulously when there was hardly a snare drum in
sight.
That result may be a public-relations man's dream, but
it was thanks to a con man's art. The question is: Can the President
make it back to Texas before the bottom falls out in Iraq? And will the
general continue to fall ominously upward?
Tom Engelhardt, who
runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com, is the co-founder of the
American Empire Project. His book, The End of Victory Culture
(University of Massachusetts Press), has been updated in a newly issued
edition that deals with victory culture's crash-and-burn sequel in
Iraq.