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  3. Most people only have a very vague idea how US national security and foreign policy decisions are made.

Most people only have a very vague idea how US national security and foreign policy decisions are made.

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  • robparsons@mastodon.socialR robparsons@mastodon.social

    @richpuchalsky @HeavenlyPossum I disagree. Under a liberal process, if the president had said "I want to drop bombs on Iran", the executive would have said, "We're not going to do that, sir".

    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #12

    @robparsons @richpuchalsky

    This is factually untrue. The president has command authority; the interagency process is about rationalizing options presented to the president, not restraining his power to order action.

    robparsons@mastodon.socialR 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

      @richpuchalsky

      They absolutely can, as with Bush II’s invasion of Iraq, during which the interagency process existed to support the president’s goal of fascist imperialism. And the president can always override the interagency process, as when Biden decided to materially support genocide in Gaza against the law and over the objections of the interagency.

      The difference is, I think, the extent to which decisions like this are being made on the immediate and semi-random whims of a fascist who is also suffering from both (i strongly suspect) psychopathy and advanced dementia. It’s a level of Caligula-esque decadence that I don’t think the US has experienced in a while, at a time when it is materially stronger, in coercive terms, than it ever has been.

      richpuchalsky@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
      richpuchalsky@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
      richpuchalsky@mastodon.social
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #13

      @HeavenlyPossum

      I don't really like the mental illness explanations. During the Cold War Presidents routinely made decisions to kill lots of people because some country or other didn't follow US interests, but they were either deniable, or justified by anti-Communism so they didn't seem like whims. But they were not essentially different.

      heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

        This is how we end up in a situation in which the US has gone to war with Iran, yet again, without even a clearly articulated strategic goal or desired outcome.

        Trump has variously indicated that he wanted to intimidate Iran into negotiating with (ie, bribing) him, or to protect Iranian protesters, or to destroy a nuclear program he previously claimed he had destroyed, or regime change.

        And the means of achieving whatever goal he wants to achieve is no more sophisticated than “drop many bombs on Iranian military and government targets.” This is simple punitive violence, the absolutely least sophisticated or precise approach to warfare. “Hurt them until they give you what you want” except that he hasn’t even articulated (and probably has not really conceived of) what he wants from the Iranians.

        Q This user is from outside of this forum
        Q This user is from outside of this forum
        qybat@batchats.net
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #14

        @HeavenlyPossum It's not a war. Only Congress can declare war. This is just a special policing operation. With bombs. Lots of bombs.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

          So many people will die, in Iran and elsewhere in the region, to achieve something unclear, with no ability to identify operational objectives that would allow the US to evaluate whether it has made progress towards its strategic goals (because it doesn’t have any).

          The Saudis tried this in Yemen starting in 2015; they’re still fighting there, while the Huthis still rule much of the country. Let’s see how this latest war works out for the US.

          heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
          heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
          heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #15

          Remember when Pete Hegseth demanded all the general and flag officers of the US armed forces gather to hear him deliver a TED talk, and they all sat stony-faced, oozing with contempt?

          There was a lot of liberal glee at the thought of how much they hated him, how aware they were that he was a charlatan and a fraud. *The non-political, professional military will surely save us!* How’s that working out for you now? All of these officers took an oath to uphold the constitution, and every single one of them participating in this attack on Iran is blatantly participating in a violation of the US constitution. The president has no constitutional authority to launch this war, a power reserved by the constitution for congress. There is no AUMF this time, no plausible excuse or deniability. And they all followed orders and launched the war anyway.

          I hope this at least gives the “Trump can’t just seize power, the military won’t follow orders like that” crowd *some* doubt.

          T heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH jianmin@defcon.socialJ mok0@mastodon.onlineM oldguycrusty@mastodon.worldO 7 Replies Last reply
          1
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          • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

            So many people will die, in Iran and elsewhere in the region, to achieve something unclear, with no ability to identify operational objectives that would allow the US to evaluate whether it has made progress towards its strategic goals (because it doesn’t have any).

            The Saudis tried this in Yemen starting in 2015; they’re still fighting there, while the Huthis still rule much of the country. Let’s see how this latest war works out for the US.

            T This user is from outside of this forum
            T This user is from outside of this forum
            tadbithuman@mastodon.social
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #16

            @HeavenlyPossum The process has always been a farce, KlanFuhrer just cut the red tape (red tape for confidentiality).

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • richpuchalsky@mastodon.socialR richpuchalsky@mastodon.social

              @HeavenlyPossum

              I don't really like the mental illness explanations. During the Cold War Presidents routinely made decisions to kill lots of people because some country or other didn't follow US interests, but they were either deniable, or justified by anti-Communism so they didn't seem like whims. But they were not essentially different.

              heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
              heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
              heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #17

              @richpuchalsky

              I’m not sure how to explain this distinction without sounding like an apologist for Cold War presidents—which I absolutely am not—but there seems to me to be an important distinction between a rational process and an irrational one, even if only from the perspective of “how effective is this evil empire at achieving its evil goals.”

              Trump has, for example, started a war that has, for the first time ever, resulted in direct and *damaging* retaliation against US military facilities in Bahrain. This is something that previous acts of aggression did not provoke, because those were all carefully calibrated in terms of means, goals, and risks. In this case, Trump has *wrecklessly* ignored risks to his own assets because he is not just pursuing irrational or evil goals, but also because he is doing so in a haphazard and irrational fashion.

              If anything, this is good news for accelerationists.

              richpuchalsky@mastodon.socialR 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

                Most people only have a very vague idea how US national security and foreign policy decisions are made.

                Most of the time, these decisions are made through the National Security Council (NSC) and its interagency process.

                You might have heard of the NSC, which statutorily consists of the president; vice president; secretaries of state, defense, energy, and the treasury; and the national security advisor.

                But the national security advisor also has a whole staff—usually people on rotation from places like the state department, pentagon, and intelligence community—that manages a vast interagency process.

                aknorals@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                aknorals@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                aknorals@mastodon.social
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #18

                @HeavenlyPossum This is how I found out the US started another war.

                Ugh, weren't Congress critters supposed to meet earlier in the week to limit the post 9/11 powers to do endless war without authorization? I'm very not surprised nothing came of that.

                heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

                  Remember when Pete Hegseth demanded all the general and flag officers of the US armed forces gather to hear him deliver a TED talk, and they all sat stony-faced, oozing with contempt?

                  There was a lot of liberal glee at the thought of how much they hated him, how aware they were that he was a charlatan and a fraud. *The non-political, professional military will surely save us!* How’s that working out for you now? All of these officers took an oath to uphold the constitution, and every single one of them participating in this attack on Iran is blatantly participating in a violation of the US constitution. The president has no constitutional authority to launch this war, a power reserved by the constitution for congress. There is no AUMF this time, no plausible excuse or deniability. And they all followed orders and launched the war anyway.

                  I hope this at least gives the “Trump can’t just seize power, the military won’t follow orders like that” crowd *some* doubt.

                  T This user is from outside of this forum
                  T This user is from outside of this forum
                  tadbithuman@mastodon.social
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #19

                  @HeavenlyPossum
                  Spend money on weapons and warriors who train to use them, get war.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

                    Remember when Pete Hegseth demanded all the general and flag officers of the US armed forces gather to hear him deliver a TED talk, and they all sat stony-faced, oozing with contempt?

                    There was a lot of liberal glee at the thought of how much they hated him, how aware they were that he was a charlatan and a fraud. *The non-political, professional military will surely save us!* How’s that working out for you now? All of these officers took an oath to uphold the constitution, and every single one of them participating in this attack on Iran is blatantly participating in a violation of the US constitution. The president has no constitutional authority to launch this war, a power reserved by the constitution for congress. There is no AUMF this time, no plausible excuse or deniability. And they all followed orders and launched the war anyway.

                    I hope this at least gives the “Trump can’t just seize power, the military won’t follow orders like that” crowd *some* doubt.

                    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #20

                    Something important to understand about fascism is that it is first and foremost an *aesthetic*, one that plays out through power, violence, and cruelty but that never rises above the level of play-acting.

                    Fascists don’t care about things like knowledge and process and actively refuse to engage with them as part of their aesthetic of LARPing as the bravest, strongest, cruelest, coolest kids on the block. A US President has, at his disposal, an apparatus of turning his objectives into material reality of almost unthinkable capacity.

                    A vast intelligence apparatus for know in about the world. A vast bureaucratic apparatus for figuring out useful policies for achieving outcomes in the world. A vast apparatus of violence for hurting people with either precision or indiscriminately on a global scale. If Trump and his coterie were *not* fascists, they might be even more terrifying.

                    But they are fascists, which means they don’t advance beyond the level of “we want to hurt someone, so we’re going to give the order for someone to be hurt immediately and without deliberation or consideration.”

                    They are undoubtedly less dangerous than they could be because they don’t care about and can’t think past the most superficial level of an aesthetic of power and violence. They just want the bombs to fall, right now, doesn’t matter where or on whom, no questions asked.

                    This is why fascists can’t really build institutions or institutional capacity, but can only really cannibalize the capacity of institutions they seize until they have exhausted or destroyed them.

                    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH cy@fedicy.us.toC 2 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

                      @robparsons @richpuchalsky

                      This is factually untrue. The president has command authority; the interagency process is about rationalizing options presented to the president, not restraining his power to order action.

                      robparsons@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                      robparsons@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                      robparsons@mastodon.social
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #21

                      @HeavenlyPossum @richpuchalsky as a statement of rule that is correct. But the formal structure includes a process whereby people who know what they're doing will put arguments to the President that what he wants is a bad idea. And also it includes people who will in the end say to the President, no, that order is illegal, I will not do it. Very few such people are left under Trump's administration. 1/2

                      robparsons@mastodon.socialR heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH 2 Replies Last reply
                      0
                      • aknorals@mastodon.socialA aknorals@mastodon.social

                        @HeavenlyPossum This is how I found out the US started another war.

                        Ugh, weren't Congress critters supposed to meet earlier in the week to limit the post 9/11 powers to do endless war without authorization? I'm very not surprised nothing came of that.

                        heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                        heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                        heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #22

                        @Aknorals

                        Some of them were trying to hold a vote this week, which honestly might have prompted Trump to act now before they could.

                        Congress could always impeach him for violating the constitution (lmao).

                        aknorals@mastodon.socialA 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • robparsons@mastodon.socialR robparsons@mastodon.social

                          @HeavenlyPossum @richpuchalsky as a statement of rule that is correct. But the formal structure includes a process whereby people who know what they're doing will put arguments to the President that what he wants is a bad idea. And also it includes people who will in the end say to the President, no, that order is illegal, I will not do it. Very few such people are left under Trump's administration. 1/2

                          robparsons@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                          robparsons@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                          robparsons@mastodon.social
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #23

                          @HeavenlyPossum @richpuchalsky and finally the President's authority is not absolute; it is bounded by law. Arguably, he has already exceeded his authority by sending troops into action without the authority of Congress.

                          heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • robparsons@mastodon.socialR robparsons@mastodon.social

                            @HeavenlyPossum @richpuchalsky as a statement of rule that is correct. But the formal structure includes a process whereby people who know what they're doing will put arguments to the President that what he wants is a bad idea. And also it includes people who will in the end say to the President, no, that order is illegal, I will not do it. Very few such people are left under Trump's administration. 1/2

                            heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                            heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                            heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #24

                            @robparsons @richpuchalsky

                            All of the same officers who served under Biden are now obediently following Trump’s obviously and blatantly illegal orders.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • robparsons@mastodon.socialR robparsons@mastodon.social

                              @HeavenlyPossum @richpuchalsky and finally the President's authority is not absolute; it is bounded by law. Arguably, he has already exceeded his authority by sending troops into action without the authority of Congress.

                              heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                              heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                              heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #25

                              @robparsons @richpuchalsky

                              Biden violated the law when he directed material support to Israel’s genocide in Gaza and the interagency process did not stop him.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

                                @Aknorals

                                Some of them were trying to hold a vote this week, which honestly might have prompted Trump to act now before they could.

                                Congress could always impeach him for violating the constitution (lmao).

                                aknorals@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                                aknorals@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                                aknorals@mastodon.social
                                wrote sidst redigeret af
                                #26

                                @HeavenlyPossum I remember when I was a kid, thinking impeachment was a real thing that could effect Bush Jr.

                                yianiris@kafeneio.socialY 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

                                  Remember when Pete Hegseth demanded all the general and flag officers of the US armed forces gather to hear him deliver a TED talk, and they all sat stony-faced, oozing with contempt?

                                  There was a lot of liberal glee at the thought of how much they hated him, how aware they were that he was a charlatan and a fraud. *The non-political, professional military will surely save us!* How’s that working out for you now? All of these officers took an oath to uphold the constitution, and every single one of them participating in this attack on Iran is blatantly participating in a violation of the US constitution. The president has no constitutional authority to launch this war, a power reserved by the constitution for congress. There is no AUMF this time, no plausible excuse or deniability. And they all followed orders and launched the war anyway.

                                  I hope this at least gives the “Trump can’t just seize power, the military won’t follow orders like that” crowd *some* doubt.

                                  jianmin@defcon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  jianmin@defcon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  jianmin@defcon.social
                                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                                  #27

                                  @HeavenlyPossum

                                  it's worth considering there is significant legal gray area that ties the hands of service members. I don't think this is obviously illegal.

                                  Using a non-statutory title for the DoD? an obvious, small, but meaningful violation of the oath of office.

                                  But I'd argue the 9/11 AUMF is still vague and broad. There have been many actions in the last year I do think are illegal, but it's not obvious to me that this one is.

                                  I don't think, from an oath of office perspective, attacking Iran is significantly different from the countless other military actions in the middle east that the US has taken since 9/11.

                                  ETA: I do agree with your central point though: I wouldn't expect the US Military to save America from fascism.

                                  second edit to note a trusted legal expert says I'm wrong here.

                                  heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH Q 2 Replies Last reply
                                  0
                                  • jianmin@defcon.socialJ jianmin@defcon.social

                                    @HeavenlyPossum

                                    it's worth considering there is significant legal gray area that ties the hands of service members. I don't think this is obviously illegal.

                                    Using a non-statutory title for the DoD? an obvious, small, but meaningful violation of the oath of office.

                                    But I'd argue the 9/11 AUMF is still vague and broad. There have been many actions in the last year I do think are illegal, but it's not obvious to me that this one is.

                                    I don't think, from an oath of office perspective, attacking Iran is significantly different from the countless other military actions in the middle east that the US has taken since 9/11.

                                    ETA: I do agree with your central point though: I wouldn't expect the US Military to save America from fascism.

                                    second edit to note a trusted legal expert says I'm wrong here.

                                    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                                    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                                    heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social
                                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                                    #28

                                    @jianmin

                                    If a massive attack against another country, in disproportion to any immediate threat, without a declaration of war, with the goal of overthrowing that country’s government isn’t illegal, then the concept of legality is meaningless.

                                    (Which of course it always has been.)

                                    rubixhelix@kolektiva.socialR jianmin@defcon.socialJ 2 Replies Last reply
                                    0
                                    • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

                                      So many people will die, in Iran and elsewhere in the region, to achieve something unclear, with no ability to identify operational objectives that would allow the US to evaluate whether it has made progress towards its strategic goals (because it doesn’t have any).

                                      The Saudis tried this in Yemen starting in 2015; they’re still fighting there, while the Huthis still rule much of the country. Let’s see how this latest war works out for the US.

                                      steggy@sunny.gardenS This user is from outside of this forum
                                      steggy@sunny.gardenS This user is from outside of this forum
                                      steggy@sunny.garden
                                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                                      #29

                                      @HeavenlyPossum I think it achieves distraction from the Epstein files, which is all Trump is about

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

                                        Something important to understand about fascism is that it is first and foremost an *aesthetic*, one that plays out through power, violence, and cruelty but that never rises above the level of play-acting.

                                        Fascists don’t care about things like knowledge and process and actively refuse to engage with them as part of their aesthetic of LARPing as the bravest, strongest, cruelest, coolest kids on the block. A US President has, at his disposal, an apparatus of turning his objectives into material reality of almost unthinkable capacity.

                                        A vast intelligence apparatus for know in about the world. A vast bureaucratic apparatus for figuring out useful policies for achieving outcomes in the world. A vast apparatus of violence for hurting people with either precision or indiscriminately on a global scale. If Trump and his coterie were *not* fascists, they might be even more terrifying.

                                        But they are fascists, which means they don’t advance beyond the level of “we want to hurt someone, so we’re going to give the order for someone to be hurt immediately and without deliberation or consideration.”

                                        They are undoubtedly less dangerous than they could be because they don’t care about and can’t think past the most superficial level of an aesthetic of power and violence. They just want the bombs to fall, right now, doesn’t matter where or on whom, no questions asked.

                                        This is why fascists can’t really build institutions or institutional capacity, but can only really cannibalize the capacity of institutions they seize until they have exhausted or destroyed them.

                                        heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                                        heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                                        heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social
                                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                                        #30

                                        Like, the US just went to war with Iran and its secretary of defense has been busy tweeting about how woke the Boy Scouts are and trying to shake down an AI company while his department shoots down the drones of another US government agency because none of these people can or want to do the jobs they were appointed to do.

                                        They want to look like they’re doing the jobs they *imagine* they were appointed to do, which are mostly fantasy versions based on some tv and movies, shaped by their own innate fascist impulses and bottomless greed.

                                        But these are not serious people and they cannot perform serious tasks. In addition to all of the people they will murder in places like Iran, they will causes many more people to die through incompetence and malfeasance.

                                        spiritualannie@chattrbx.comS 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • heavenlypossum@kolektiva.socialH heavenlypossum@kolektiva.social

                                          Remember when Pete Hegseth demanded all the general and flag officers of the US armed forces gather to hear him deliver a TED talk, and they all sat stony-faced, oozing with contempt?

                                          There was a lot of liberal glee at the thought of how much they hated him, how aware they were that he was a charlatan and a fraud. *The non-political, professional military will surely save us!* How’s that working out for you now? All of these officers took an oath to uphold the constitution, and every single one of them participating in this attack on Iran is blatantly participating in a violation of the US constitution. The president has no constitutional authority to launch this war, a power reserved by the constitution for congress. There is no AUMF this time, no plausible excuse or deniability. And they all followed orders and launched the war anyway.

                                          I hope this at least gives the “Trump can’t just seize power, the military won’t follow orders like that” crowd *some* doubt.

                                          mok0@mastodon.onlineM This user is from outside of this forum
                                          mok0@mastodon.onlineM This user is from outside of this forum
                                          mok0@mastodon.online
                                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                                          #31

                                          @HeavenlyPossum This feeling that that military officers would take seriously their oath to the Constitution is mainly an American position. Everybody else realizes that in the history of the world, armies have *always* followed orders from the leadership, legal, ethical, obeying laws of conflict or not.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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