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The Troops Dont Defend Our Freedoms
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
October 21, 2005
How often do we hear the claim that American troops defend our freedoms? The claim is made often by U.S. officials and is echoed far and wide across the land by television commentators, newspaper columnists, public-school teachers, and many others. Its even a common assertion that emanates on Sundays from many church pulpits.
Unfortunately, it just isnt so. In fact, the situation is the exact opposite the troops serve as the primary instrument by which both our freedoms and well-being are threatened.
Lets examine the three potential threats to our
freedoms and the role that the troops play in them:
1. Foreign regimes
Every competent military analyst would tell us that the
threat of a foreign invasion and conquest of America is
nonexistent. No nation has the military capability of
invading and conquering the United States. Not China, not
Russia, not Iran, not North Korea, not Syria. Not anyone.
To invade the United States with sufficient forces to
conquer and pacify the entire nation would
take millions of foreign troops and tens of thousands of
ships and planes to transport them across the Atlantic or
Pacific ocean. No foreign nation has such resources or
military capabilities and no nation will have them for
the foreseeable future.
After all, think about it: the U.S. army, the most
powerful military force in all of history, has not been
able to fully conquer such a small country as Iraq
because of the level of domestic resistance to a foreign
invasion. Imagine the level of military forces that would
be needed to conquer and pacify a country as
large and well-armed as the United States.
I repeat: No foreign nation has the military capability
to invade the United States, conquer our country,
subjugate our people, and take away our freedoms.
Therefore, the troops are not needed to protect our
freedoms from this nonexistent threat.
2. Terrorists
Despite widespread fears to the contrary, there is no
possibility that terrorists will conquer the United
States, take over the government, and take away our
freedoms. At most, they are able to kill thousands of people, with, say, suicide bombs
but
they lack the military forces to subjugate the entire
nation or any part of it.
Equally important, while the troops claim that they are
protecting us from the terrorists, it is the
troops themselves or, more precisely, the
presidential orders they have loyally carried out
that have engendered the very terrorist threats against
which the troops say they are now needed to protect us.
Think back to 1989 and the years following when the Berlin Wall fell, East and West
Germany were united, Soviet troops withdrew from Eastern
Europe, and the Soviet Union was dismantled. The Pentagon
didnt know what to do. Unexpectedly, its
50-year-old official enemy was gone. (The Soviet
Union had previously been Americas ally
that had liberated Eastern Europe from Nazi
Germany.) With the fall of the Soviet empire (and, actually, before the fall), the obvious
question arose: Why should the United States continue to
have an enormous standing army and spend billions of dollars in
taxpayer money to keep it in existence?
The Pentagon was in desperate search for a new mission.
We can be a big help in the war on drugs, the Pentagon said. To prove it, U.S. military forces even shot to death 18-year-old American citizen Esequiel Hernandez in 1997, as he tended his goats along the U.S.-Mexican border. Well help American
businesses compete in the world. Well readjust NATOs mission to protect Europe from non-Soviet threats. Well
protect us from an unsafe world.
Then along came the Pentagons old ally, Saddam
Hussein, to whom the United States had even entrusted
weapons of mass destruction to use against the Iranian
people, and gave Americas standing army a new
raison dêtre. Invading Kuwait over an
oil-drilling dispute, Saddam provided the Pentagon with a new
official enemy, one that would last for more than 10
continuous years.
Obeying presidential orders to attack Iraq in 1991,
without the constitutionally required congressional
declaration of war, the troops ended up killing tens of
thousands of Iraqis. Obeying Pentagon orders to attack
Iraqs water and sewage facilities, the troops
accomplished exactly what Pentagon planners had anticipated spreading deadly infections and
disease among the Iraqi people. Continuing to obey presidential orders in the
years that followed, the troops enforced what was
possibly the most brutal embargo in history, which ended up contributing to the deaths
of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children, deaths that
U.S. officials said were worth it. Obeying
presidential orders, the troops enforced the illegal
no-fly zones over Iraq, which killed even
more Iraqis, including children. Obeying presidential
orders, the troops established themselves on Islamic holy
lands with full knowledge of the anger and resentment
that that would produce among devout Muslims. Obeying
presidential orders, the troops invaded and occupied Iraq
without the constitutionally required congressional
declaration of war, killing and maiming tens of thousands
of innocent Iraqis that is, people whose worst
crime was to resist the unlawful invasion of
their homeland by a foreign power.
All that death and destruction both pre-9/11 and post-9/11 have given rise to terrible
anger and hatred against the United States, which
inspired the pre-9/11 attacks, such as the 1993 attack on the World
Trade Center, the attack on the USS Cole, and the
attacks on overseas U.S. embassies, the 9/11 attacks, and the terrorist threats our nation faces today.
Through it all, the Pentagon simply echoed the claims of
the president that all the death and destruction
and humiliation that the U.S. government had wreaked on
people in the Middle East, as well as its unconditional
military and financial foreign aid to the Israeli
government, had not engendered any adverse feelings in
the Middle East against the United States. Instead, the
president and the Pentagon claimed, the problem was that
the terrorists simply hated America for its
freedom and values.
If the American people had dismantled the nations
standing army when the Soviet empire was dismantled, the
federal government would have lacked the military means
to meddle and intervene in the Middle East with
unconstitutional military operations, sanctions, no-fly
zones, bases, invasions, and occupations. Therefore,
there never would have been the terrorists attacks against the United States and a war on
terrorism for the troops to fight, not to mention
the USA PATRIOT Act, secret search warrants and secret
courts, the Padilla doctrine, and other federal
infringements on our rights and freedoms.
Finally, but certainly important, despite being the most
powerful standing army in the world, the U.S. troops were not
even able to protect Americans from terrorist acts, as
best evidenced by two terrorist attacks on the same target
the World Trade Center, first in 1993 and then
again in 2001.
3. The federal government
As our Founding Fathers understood so well, the primary
threat to our freedom lies with our own government.
Thats in fact why we have the Constitution and the
Bill of Rights to protect us and our freedoms from
federal officials. If the federal government did not
constitute such an enormous threat to our freedoms, there
would be no reason to have the Constitution and the Bill
of Rights.
Yet, what is the primary means by which a government
takes away the freedoms of its citizenry? Our American
ancestors gave us the answer: its military forces. That
is in fact why many of our Founding Fathers opposed a standing,
professional military force in America they knew
not only that such a force would be used to involve the
nation in costly, senseless, and destructive wars abroad
but also that government officials would inevitably use
the troops to ensure a compliant and obedient citizenry
at home.
Consider the words of James Madison:
A standing military force, with an overgrown
Executive will not long be safe companions to liberty.
The means of defense against foreign danger have been
always the instruments of tyranny at home. Among the
Romans it was a standing maxim to excite a war, whenever
a revolt was apprehended. Throughout all Europe, the
armies kept up under the pretext of defending, have
enslaved the people.
Heres how Patrick Henry put it:
A standing army we shall have, also, to
execute the execrable commands of tyranny; and how are
you to punish them? Will you order them to be punished?
Who shall obey these orders? Will your mace-bearer be a
match for a disciplined regiment?
Would U.S. troops obey presidential orders to deploy
against the American people and take away our freedoms?
There is no doubt about it. Of course they would,
especially if the president told them that our
freedom and national security depended on it,
which he would.
As I suggested in my article, The Troops Dont Support the Constitution,in the United
States the loyalty of the troops is to the president as
their supreme commander of chief, not to the
Constitution. Recent evidence of this point, as I
observed in my article, was the willingness of the troops
to obey presidential orders to deploy to Iraq despite the
fact that the president had failed to secure the
constitutionally required congressional declaration of
war.
What if the president ordered the troops to deploy across
the United States and to round up terrorists
and incarcerate them in military camps, both here and in
Cuba? Again, there can be no doubt that most of the
troops would willingly obey the presidents orders,
especially in the middle of a crisis or
emergency because they view themselves as
professional soldiers whose job is to serve the president
and not to question why but simply to do or
die.
Another good example of the allegiance that the troops
have toward the president involves the case of U.S.
citizen Jose Padilla. Labeling Padilla a
terrorist, the president ordered the troops
to take him into military custody, deny him access to an attorney, and punish
him without a trial and due process of law. The troops
obeyed without question. Do you know any troops who have
publicly protested the Padilla incarceration or who have
resigned from the army in protest? How many have publicly
announced, I refuse to participate in the Padilla
incarceration because I took an oath to support and
defend the Constitution?
Indeed, how many of the troops resigned in protest at the
presidents orders to set up a prisoner camp at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, knowing that the reason he and the
Pentagon chose Cuba, rather than the United States, was precisely to avoid the constraints of the Constitution?
If the troops didnt protest with respect to Iraq or
Padilla or Gitmo, what is the likelihood they would
protest when their commander in chief ordered them to
arrest 100 other Americans terrorists, or
1,000?
I repeat: The troops, from the Pentagon on down, would
not disobey orders of the president to disarm and arrest
American terrorists, especially in the midst
of a crisis or emergency.
And even if some were to protest, they would be quickly
shunted aside (probably punished as well) and replaced
with those troops whose allegiance and loyalty to the
president would be unquestioned.
Now its true that soldiers are supposed to disobey
unlawful orders, but as a practical matter most of the
troops are not going to overrule the judgment of their
commander in chief as to what is legal or not. After all,
how many troops involved in the torture and sex-abuse
scandal refused to participate in the wrongdoing,
especially since they thought that it was approved by the
higher-ups? Again, how many refused orders to deploy to
Iraq despite the fact that there was no constitutionally
required congressional declaration of war?
Imagine that the president issues the following grave
announcement on national television during prime time:
Our nation has come under another terrorist attack.
Our freedoms and our national security are at stake. I
have issued orders to the Joint Chiefs of Staff to
immediately take into custody some 1,000 American
terrorists who have been identified by the FBI as having
conspired to commit this dastardly attack or who have
given aid and comfort to the enemy. I have also ordered
the JCS to take all necessary steps to temporarily
confiscate weapons in the areas where these terrorists
are believed to be hiding. These weapons will be returned
to the owners once the terrorist threat has subsided. I
am calling on all Americans to support the troops in
these endeavors, just as you are supporting them in their
fight against terrorism in Iraq. We will survive. We will
prevail. God bless America.
Now ask yourself: How many of the troops would disobey
the orders of the president given those circumstances,
especially if panicked and terrified Americans and the
mainstream press were endorsing his martial-law orders?
The answer: Almost none would disobey. They would not
consider it their job to determine the constitutionality
of the presidents orders. They would leave that for
the courts to decide. Their professional allegiance and
loyalty to their supreme commander in chief would trump
all other considerations, including their oath to
support and defend the Constitution.
Therefore, if the federal government is the primary
threat to our freedom, then so are the troops: their
unswerving loyalty to their commander in chief makes them
the primary instrument by which the federal government is
able to destroy or infringe the rights and freedoms of
the citizenry.
The solution
No one can deny that we now live in a nation in which the president wields, albeit unconstitutionally, the omnipotent power to send the entire nation into war against another nation and that he has the means a loyal and obedient army to exercise that power. President Bush made his position clear prior to his invasion of Iraq, when he emphasized that while he welcomed the support of Congress in the event he decided to wage war on Iraq, he didnt need its approval. His position was reconfirmed by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who informed Congress on October 19, 2005, that the commander in chiefs position was that he did not need the consent of Congress to send the nation into another war, this time against Syria.
No one can deny that we now live in a nation in which the president claims the omnipotent power to jail and punish any American citizen whom the president labels a terrorist, denying him due process of law, trial by jury, and other constitutional guarantees and that he has the means a loyal and obedient army to exercise that power.
Thus, as a practical matter the troops serve not as a defender of our freedoms but instead simply as a loyal and obedient personal army of the president, ready and prepared to serve him and obey his commands. It is an army that stands ready to obey the presidents orders to deploy to any country in the world for any reason he deems fit and attack, kill, and maim any terrorist who dares to resist the U.S. invasion of his own country. It is also an army that stands ready to obey the presidents orders to take into custody any American whom the commander in chief deems a terrorist and to punish him accordingly.
There is one and only one solution to this threat to our freedoms and well-being: for the American
people to heed the warning of our Founding Fathers
against standing armies before it is too late, and to do
what should have been done at least 15 years ago:
dismantle the U.S. military empire, close all overseas
bases, and bring all the troops home, discharging them
into the private sector, where they would effectively become “citizen-soldiers” well-trained citizens prepared to rally to the defense of our nation in the unlikely event of a foreign invasion of our country. And for the American people to
heed the warning of President Eisenhower against the
military-industrial complex, by shutting down the
Pentagons enormous domestic military empire,
closing domestic bases, and discharging those troops into
the private sector.
Oh, my gosh, if we did all that, how would our
freedoms be protected?
Protected from what? Again, there is no threat of a
foreign invasion. And again, terrorism is not a threat to
our freedom. Moreover, dismantling the standing army
would remove the primary means by which presidents have
succeeded in engendering so much anger and hatred against
our nation anger and hatred that in turn have
given rise to the threat of terrorism against our nation.
And finally, the worst threat to our freedom is our own
government, and by dismantling the standing army we would
reduce that threat significantly.
What would happen if a foreign nation ever began
constructing thousands of ships and planes and mobilizing
millions of people to invade the United States? The
answer to that threat was also provided by our Founding Fathers:
the foreign nation in question would be met by a nation of free well-armed citizens who would be prepared and
willing to
rally quickly to oppose any invasion and conquest of our
nation. Invading a United States filled with
well-trained, free men and women would be much like invading
Switzerland like swallowing a porcupine.
Dont forget that the men and women who currently
serve in the U.S. armed services wouldnt disappear;
instead they would join the rest of us as
citizen-soldiers, people whose fighting skills could be depended
on in the unlikely event our nation were ever threatened
by invasion by a foreign power.
We should also keep in mind the tremendous economic
prosperity that would result from the dismantling of
Americas enormous standing army. Not only would all
the taxpayer money that is being used to fund the
standing army be left in the hands of the citizenry for
savings and capital, but all those new people in the
private sector would be producing as well, instead of
living off the IRS-provided fruits of other peoples
earnings. Thus, the economic effect would be doubly
positive, and, while weakening the federal government, it
would make our nation stronger.
What about foreign monsters, tyrants, oppressors, and
conquerors? The answer to that was also provided by our
Founding Fathers: Our government would no longer go
abroad in search of monsters to destroy, but foreigners
suffering oppression and tyranny would know that there
would always be at least one nation that would accept
them the United States of America. Rather than
police the world, Americans would focus on producing the
freest and most prosperous society in history as a model
for the world and to which those who escaped tyranny and
oppression could freely come.
Of course, those Americans who would nonetheless wish to
leave their families and jobs to help oppressed people
overseas would still be free to do so.
We should also bear in mind the perverse results of the
federal governments military empire and overseas
interventions. World War I brought World War II, which
brought the Soviet communist occupation of Eastern
Europe, which brought the Cold War, the Korean War, and
the Vietnam War, along with an enormous standing army in
our country. The Middle East interventions and meddling
have brought us terrorism, the war on terrorism, the USA
PATRIOT Act, the Padilla doctrine, military torture and
sex abuse, and CIA kidnappings and renditions
to foreign countries for the purpose of proxy torture.
By their fruits, you shall know them.
One vision the vision of militarism and empire will bring America more violence, death,
destruction, impoverishment, and loss of freedom. The
other vision the vision of a limited-government,
constitutional republic with citizen-soldiers
would put our nation back on the right road of peace,
prosperity, harmony, and freedom.
Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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