Inglorious military moment akin to Hoover’s move in ’32
A small fraction of a large number can be a significant number. So, although the fact that there are a significant number of ninnies among the 329 million people in this country is embarrassing, it is not surprising. What is puzzling is that specimens such as Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have reached positions of considerable responsibility in today’s government.
It might be a fact of today’s political physics that these two have floated upward because they are lighter than air. That, however, is an insufficient explanation of their eminence. Neither is it satisfactory to merely note that such people can be expected to be found in high offices when the dispenser of offices, civilian and military, probably would explicitly reject basic civic norms if he knew they existed.
They will not exist for long if the nation does not recoil against an administration that includes a defense secretary who refers to this Republic as a “battlespace.” And also includes a four-star Army general who reports to the Oval Office in combat fatigues, dressed appropriately for an evening of police and military engagements that involved clearing a public park of peaceful demonstrators, and intimidating protesters elsewhere.
The purpose of the clearing, achieved with flash-bang grenades and chemicals, was to enable the Bible-brandishing commander in chief to stand in front of a church for the purpose of stroking the portion of his political base that is composed of Evangelical Christians who relish rendering their souls unto this particular Caesar.
Tuesday, Esper’s evolving explanation was he did not know details about the event his commander was conscripting him into. Monday night’s Battle of Lafayette Square and operations elsewhere in Washington were inglorious engagements for the U.S. military, comparable to events of July 28, 1932. President Herbert Hoover ordered the Army to disperse the members of the self-named Bonus Expeditionary Force, which at one point that sweltering summer numbered about 20,000.
It was made up of World War I veterans drawn to
Washington to exhort Congress to pass bonuses for veterans. After the House narrowly passed but the Senate overwhelmingly rejected the bonus legislation, many marchers began to leave Washington.
But Hoover was reeling toward paranoia under the pressure of the Depression, the worst economic calamity in U.S. history until the one that has today’s president floundering. Hoover ordered the dispersal of the remaining marchers.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who suspected there were more communists than veterans, had ordered tanks brought from Maryland’s Aberdeen Proving Ground, and had alerted mounted cavalry.
When MacArthur decided to witness the operation, one member of his staff warned him, unsuccessfully, that this would be “highly inappropriate.” So spoke Major Dwight Eisenhower.
So the cavalry came down Pennsylvania Avenue with drawn sabers, the infantry threw tear-gas grenades and the mission was accomplished.
Monday’s engagements were in the service of the president’s promise to “dominate” protesters.
It is perhaps a mistake to be angry at Esper or Milley. The military officers involved, like their civilian leaders, have all been promoted to the level of their incompetence.