National Post

An inglorious military moment

- GEORGE F. WILL The Washington Post georgewill@ washpost. com

Asmall 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 the United States is embarrassi­ng, it is not surprising. What is puzzling is that specimens such as Defence 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 defence 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. Unfurl the “Mission Accomplish­ed” banner.

On Tuesday, Esper’s evolving explanatio­n was that he did not know details about the event his commander was conscripti­ng him into. Last Monday night’s Battle of Lafayette Square, which took place in a traditiona­l venue of protests, and operations elsewhere in Washington, D.C., 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, generally remembered as the Bonus Army or Bonus March, which at one point that sweltering summer numbered approximat­ely 20,000.

It was made up of First World War veterans drawn to Washington to exhort Congress to pass bonuses for veterans. They were encamped in a sprawling jumble of tents and shanties on the Anacostia River south of Washington.

After the House narrowly passed but the Senate overwhelmi­ngly rejected the bonus legislatio­n, many marchers began to leave Washington. Hoover’s soonto- be- successor, New York Gov. Franklin Roosevelt, offered to pay for train tickets home for New York marchers.

But Hoover was reeling toward paranoia under the pressure of the Great 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, the army chief of staff, who had been sniffing what he considered the stench of revolution, suspected there were more communists than real veterans. ( Arthur Herman, in his 2016 biography Douglas Macarthur: American Warrior, writes: “No one doubts today that the Bonus March was a spontaneou­s, unplanned movement born of frustratio­n and — in many cases — desperatio­n.”) MacArthur had ordered tanks brought from Maryland’s Aberdeen Proving Ground, and had alerted mounted cavalry under the command of Col. George Patton.

When Macarthur decided to witness the operation, one member of his staff warned him, unsuccessf­ully, that this would be “highly inappropri­ate.” So spoke Maj. Dwight Eisenhower.

Macarthur changed from his summer suit into, Herman writes, a uniform that his Filipino valet fetched, the one that Macarthur’s “mother usually picked out for formal occasions and dinners, and decorated with every ribbon and medal, including his marksmansh­ip badges,” with “breeches and gleaming riding boots and spurs.” Herman says, “Mac put it on without thinking twice.”

The cavalry came down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue with drawn sabres, the infantry threw tear- gas grenades, D. C. police pitched in and the mission was accomplish­ed. Sometimes it does seem that history is not one damn thing after another, it is the same damn thing over and over.

Last Monday’s military and police engagement­s in downtown Washington were in the service of the president’s promise to “dominate” protesters.

It is perhaps a mistake to be angry at Esper or Milley, or, for that matter, at the officers who ordered military helicopter­s to hover menacingly at rooftop level to intimidate protesters exercising a First Amendment right in proximity to monuments commemorat­ing those who founded and preserved this Republic.

The military officers involved, like their civilian leaders, have all been promoted to the level of their incompeten­ce.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? U. S. President Donald Trump with Defence Secretary Mark Esper, centre, and Gen. Mark A. Milley, right.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES U. S. President Donald Trump with Defence Secretary Mark Esper, centre, and Gen. Mark A. Milley, right.

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