Backers of Endless War Deplore That Many Trump Supporters Favor Using Violence
Ever since Donald Trump became a former president, news outlets and
commentators have cited
polls
showing that many Republicans believe violence might be needed to save the
country. As Trump’s legal woes increase, so do mainstream media alarms about
the specter of violent responses. But we’ve heard virtually nothing about
connections between two decades of nonstop U.S. warfare overseas and
attitudes favoring political violence at home.
For more than 20 years, a bipartisan approach in Congress and the Oval
Office has made sure that the United States uses enormous and lethal
violence abroad. Stripped of the usual noble rhetoric, that approach
amounts to might-makes-right, an easy conceit when the U.S. military is by
far the most powerful in the world. Reinforced in the name of a “war on
terror,” the righteous posturing has made perpetual war seem normal.
When Trump loyalists attacked the Capitol building on Jan. 6, 2021, a
disproportionately high number
of those who
led
and
participated
in the assault were
military veterans
. By then, two decades of ongoing U.S. warfare had fueled the presumption
that using deadly force is justified when all else fails.
War is all about inflicting sufficient violence to achieve goals. That was
the basic method of the pro-Trump mob that attacked the Capitol in a
desperate attempt to prevent Joe Biden from becoming president.
Those who laid siege to the Capitol two and half years ago were responding
to what they understood as an order from commander in chief Trump. And many
of the assault’s leaders drew on their military training and know-how to
pull off the successful breach of security on Capitol Hill.
“It was like a war zone,” some
House
and
Senate
members have recalled, using identical words to describe and deplore what
they saw that day. But Congress actually likes -- and lavishly subsidizes
-- real war zones. Hefty majorities of Democrats and Republicans keep
approving huge appropriations to create faraway war zones or make them more
deadly.
As a result -- along with
several million deaths
inside attacked countries as well as terrible injuries to bodies and minds
-- the
still-continuing
“war on terror” has meant large numbers of violence-traumatized veterans.
“Between 1.9 and 3 million service members have served in post-9/11 war
operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, and over half of them have deployed
more than once,” the Costs of War project at Brown University
reports
. “Many times that number of Americans have borne the costs of war as
spouses, parents, children, and friends cope with their loved ones’
absence, mourn their deaths, or greet the changed person who often
returns.”
All along the way, the U.S. media and political establishment has glorified
the ostensibly heroic exploits of the Pentagon’s forces as they’ve
implemented vast violence. War-making is routinely
equated with ultimate patriotism
.
The war machine does not have an automatic “off” switch when soldiers
return home. Military drills can morph into political maneuvers. And some
key takeaways from the rigidly authoritarian structure of the military are
well-suited for MAGA forces.
“With thresholds of acceptability declining in domestic political life, the
Trump frenzy came more and more to resemble the mentalities of warfare,” I
wrote in the new book
“War
Made Invisible.” And “the insurrectionists, exhibiting loyalty to the
man at the top of the command structure, escalated to violence when all
else had failed. . . . Trump was drawing on a deeply militaristic cultural
mentality, fueled by nearly 20 years of nonstop war at that point; the
‘training’ of his militant and dangerous supporters was most importantly
about mindsets.”
The classic military strategist Carl von Clausewitz
wrote
two centuries ago that “war is nothing but a continuation of politics with
the admixture of other means.” Now, some of Trump’s true believers are
eager to adapt the violent precepts of perpetual war to American politics.
____________________________________
Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and executive
director of the Institute for Public Accuracy. He is the author of a dozen
books including War Made Easy. His latest book,
War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its
Military Machine
, was published in summer 2023 by The New Press.
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