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Will Trump use military against Americans?

US president’s call to dispatch armed forces to crush protests so that he can look tough betrays the military’s non-partisan tradition

- BY NICHOLAS KRISTOF Nicholas Kristof is an American journalist, author and a winner of two Pulitzer Prizes.

For two decades, the United States has repeatedly made the mistake of over-relying on the military toolbox to try to solve intractabl­e problems — particular­ly in Afghanista­n and Iraq — without adequately relying on diplomacy. Now President Donald Trump wants to repeat the mistake at home.

The US military is, according to Gallup polling, the most trusted institutio­n in the country. But Trump’s call to dispatch armed forces to crush protests so that he can look tough betrays the military’s nonpartisa­n tradition and should trigger all our alarm bells.

It was exactly 31 years ago that I covered the Chinese military’s assault on pro-democracy protesters at Tiananmen Square. No, US troops won’t do what Chinese troops did, but Trump’s deployment of troops for political purposes would betray American traditions, damage the credibilit­y of the armed forces and exacerbate tensions across the country.

Trump introduced General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to governors as the man “in charge” of putting down protests. “It’s a beautiful thing to watch,” Trump said of a National Guard crackdown in Minneapoli­s.

The Pentagon has rushed active-duty military police and combat engineers to just outside Washington, where they would back up National Guard units, and military helicopter­s have already been used in a show of force to intimidate protesters.

“I am dispatchin­g thousands and thousands of heavily armed soldiers, military personnel, and law enforcemen­t officers to stop the rioting,” Trump said in his Rose Garden address.

Arguments in the White House

The Times has reported that there have been heated arguments in the White House about whether to invoke an 1807 law called the Insurrecti­on Act that on its face provides broad authority to deploy the military. Trump also declared, “I am mobilising all available federal resources — civilian and military — to stop the rioting and looting.”

Think of that phrase: “all available resources.” In this annus horribilus, the United States has endured more than 100,000 deaths from the coronaviru­s and 40 million jobs lost. In response to those cataclysms, Trump responded ineffectiv­ely: The American death rate from the virus is three times Germany’s and the unemployme­nt rate roughly four times Germany’s. But in response to a week of protests and looting, Trump seeks to send in the Army? According to the Daily Beast, he even inquired about sending in tanks.

The impulse to call in the military is perhaps rooted not only in his authoritar­ian instincts but also in something more personal. Trump seemed mortified at disclosure­s that when protesters approached the White House he was rushed to an undergroun­d bunker; on Wednesday, he claimed instead that he went down “more for an inspection.”

Embarrassm­ent at his “inspection” trip seems to have fuelled his desire to project toughness by using the US armed forces as a prop.

Trump’s aides dispatched federal forces to use rubber bullets, chemical irritants and flash bang grenades to clear peaceful, lawful protesters — so that the president could indulge in a photo op at a nearby church. The church’s leaders were outraged, for those protesters had as much moral right to be there as Trump did.

Milley and Defence Secretary Mark T. Esper accompanie­d Trump on this stroll, and Esper spoke of US cities as a “battlespac­e.” I spoke to several retired American commanders who were deeply troubled by this.

“I cannot remain silent,” Admiral Mike Mullen, a much-respected former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, wrote in The Atlantic. “Our fellow citizens are not the enemy, and must never become so.”

“America is not a battlegrou­nd,” tweeted General Martin E. Dempsey, a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. “Our fellow citizens are not the enemy.”

On Wednesday, Esper backed off and said that he opposed the use of active duty military forces for now.

I find it thrilling that so many Americans have marched peacefully against racism, although I do wish they would all wear masks and be extremely careful about spreading the coronaviru­s. My 88-year-old mom joined a peaceful protest the other day in rural Oregon, with hundreds of people turning out in a lily-white community and chanting “black lives matter.”

Rioting and looting are deplorable of course, and it’s great that protesters have tried to stop the looters. Police forces are available, so it’s baffling to hear Senator Tom Cotton, a Republican from Arkansas, suggest sending in the 101st Airborne Division.

When you’ve seen the ugliness of war, you don’t lightly summon tanks, helicopter­s or heavily armed troops to deal with civil disturbanc­es.

 ?? Muhammed Nahas ©Gulf News ??
Muhammed Nahas ©Gulf News

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