
By
Rafia Zakaria
Nov 30,
2019
CHIEF
Special Warfare Operator Edward ‘Eddie’ Gallagher is a man of many sins.
According to military prosecutors in the United States, Gallagher is
responsible for brutally stabbing and murdering a teenage so-called Islamic
State (IS) fighter, using his sniper rifle on ordinary Iraqi citizens, and
boasting about racking up his ‘kills’ to others.
To top it
all off, Gallagher is also guilty of taking a triumphant photo of himself with
the young IS fighter that he killed. Gallagher was tried and convicted by a
military court earlier this year, and was to be deprived of his rank and booted
out of the US Navy SEALs.
President
Donald Trump could not tolerate this. Despite having been told by top military
and defence officials that he should leave the issue alone and allow the navy
to handle what happened to Gallagher, he decided to intervene and reverse war
criminal Gallagher’s demotion. This angered the naval secretary who was made to
step down.
The whole
story is important because it can easily be considered as a metaphor for how
American power is likely to operate in the next decade.
First, it
is of course not ‘news’ that the United States, either via its armed forces or
via other officials, cares little for the lives of brown and black people in
places such as Pakistan or Afghanistan or Iraq. The massive death toll in the
Iraq and Afghan wars, the crushing depravity of Abu Ghraib, the torture carried
out on suspected terrorists at the CIA black sites, are only the incidents that
we know of. Others in greater numbers may also have taken place, their
perpetrators never caught and their victims never avenged. In simple terms, the
exercise of American power in the past two decades has been brash and brutish.
And yet
those pre-Trump era years represent the ones in which there were still limits
to American power. In the past decades, the United States, as the liberal
democratic giant of the world, tried, at least in name, to toe the line of the
rule of law and the enforcement of human rights principles. Many, or even most,
times it failed, but it did appear to try.
Human
rights reports were regularly issued by the US State Department and officials
routinely considered the records of every country around the world. In sum,
American foreign policy at least tried to pay some level of lip service to
human rights and fair play.
The next
decade is going to be different. The US may be making an exit from expensive
ground wars, but the use of its special forces to carry out missions such as
the killing of IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi are all examples of what American
warfare will look like in the future.
Condoning
the deeds of a man like Gallagher further suggests that US civilian leadership,
particularly if the presidency stays with the Republicans, is going to be
completely unfettered in the mayhem it inflicts on enemies real or imagined.
Donald Trump pardoned Gallagher because he has little patience for the rules
and procedures that are supposed to ensure how American soldiers exercise their
power.
In his
simple and murderous world, might makes right — and America has plenty of
might. With this worldview he is likely to provide carte blanche to any and all
exercises of American power, regardless of whether or not they are humane. The
weakening of liberal limits on the exercise of power that began under former
president George Bush will now lead to complete evisceration under President
Trump.
The future
of the US is likely to be illiberal. The restoration of the rank of a man who
did not fight fairly and the commander-in-chief’s disregard for the lives of
non-white peoples is likely to be a fixture of American foreign policy in the
future.
Already,
the US has set about eliminating foreign aid to non-Christian places. Aid to
Gaza and the West Bank has been indefinitely discontinued; already disbursed
aid to Iraq has been left without proper administrators. The liberal
constraints that would have functioned as a buffer against overt discrimination
against aid-recipient countries based on their religion are no longer regarded
as such.
The
cumulative impact of these developments requires Pakistan to be very vigilant
of the kind of help it accepts from the United States in the near future.
Despite the criticism offered by American officials vis-à-vis the debt burden
incurred by Pakistan in the implementation of CPEC, Pakistan should continue to
diversify its options and relationships with emerging superpowers.
With the US
having done away with its commitment to furthering the cause of human rights,
the choice to ally with other illiberal countries no longer represents a
repudiation of human rights and other liberal principles.
The chances
that Donald Trump will be re-elected in the US appear to be good.
Despite
being quite far into the process, the Democratic Party is struggling to find a
candidate strong enough to beat him. Impeachment is also guaranteed to fail in
the US Senate. If President Trump has in his first term been pardoning war
criminals, he in his second term is likely to be even more erratic, doing
whatever he wants to whomever he wants.
With such
uncertainty as the basis of US foreign policy, the most prudent path would be
to maintain a safe distance. If not, Pakistan may end up being like one of the
victims of Mike Gallagher’s killing sprees — nameless and powerless, and chased
by a monster.
Rafia
Zakaria is an attorney teaching constitutional law and political philosophy.
Original
Headline: American killer
Source: The Dawn, Pakistan
URL: http://www.newageislam.com/islam-and-the-west/rafia-zakaria/washington’s-exercise-of-power-over-the-past-two-decades-has-been-brash-and-brutish/d/120398