Wednesday, August 3, 2016
Tuesday, August 2, 2016
HE IS WAY AHEAD OF ME
I speculated that Trump might pull out of the race altogether. If you would like to know what would happen next, check out the FaceBook page of my brilliant law professor son Tobias Barrington Wolff, who has actually sought out and posted the relevant rules of the Republican Party. He is way ahead of me, as usual.
LIFE'S EMBARRASSING MOMENTS
All this talk about Gold Star families and Donald Trump’s
deferments has gotten me thinking once again about my own military experience,
if indeed you can call it that. [This
post is for those of you who have not read my autobiography. Those who have may return to reading the Critique of Pure Reason.] Academics of my age cohort and younger have
by and large not served in the military, but that was not true of those some
years older. I can still recall having
coffee at a meeting of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical
Association with Jack Rawls and Sylvain Bromberger and listening to them
reminisce about their experiences in World War II, Jack in the South Pacific
and Sylvain in the Battle of the Bulge in Europe.
A word of explanation for those too young to recall the
citizen army. After WW II, the U. S.
instituted the draft – Universal Military Training. Young men were required to register with the
Selective Service Administration at age eighteen, after which they were
eligible to be drafted until they reached twenty-six. Those who could prove that they were
registered full-time in a degree granting college or university and were in
good standing – i.e. had passing grades and no bills outstanding – could apply
for and receive a student deferment.
Once you had received a student deferment, you were by law eligible to
be drafted until age thirty-five, but the army really did not want to deal with
a bunch of out of shape and hard to manage thirty year olds, so if you got
enough deferments to make it to twenty-six, you were home free. An entire generation of academics chose
university teaching as a way of avoiding the draft.
The Viet Nam War was such a disaster for troop morale and
unit cohesion, what with enlisted men killing their own lieutenants to stop
them from ordering life-threatening patrols in the Southeast Asian jungles,
that the Pentagon switched to an all-volunteer army when it ended, raising the
pay and benefits, offering some measure of career choice, and attracting a
better educated group of enlistees. The
result, far superior for a nation with imperial ambitions and in need of a
highly trained, obedient fighting force, was that from then until the present
only a tiny fraction of the American public sends its sons and daughters into
harm’s way.
I was unable to avoid the draft by means of student deferments
because I made the mistake of earning my doctorate when I was only
twenty-three, right in the age sweet spot for the draft. I dodged the two year obligation by jumping
into the Massachusetts National Guard, which meant serving six months on active
duty directly after earning my degree and then doing five and a half years of once-a-week
meetings and two week summer camps. I
think I only fired my M-1 rifle twice and never pulled any duty more
life-threatening than turning out once to help move fallen tree limbs during a
hurricane that hit Boston.
Several years ago, Susie and I went back to Amherst, MA to
see friends, staying in the Courtyard Marriott Hotel in Hadley. While I was helping myself to the
complimentary breakfast there one morning, I made a joking reference to the
food as “not as good as the chow in Basic Training.” The man next to me in line said “Thank you
for your service.”
I have never been so mortified in my life.
YOU HEARD IT HERE FIRST [OR NOT -- WHO KNOWS]
Trump is now predicting that the election will be rigged. If the polls still show him losing, perhaps even badly, as we move into September, I think he will conjure up an excuse to bow out of the race -- literally to demand that his name be taken off the ballot. I do not think he is psychologically capable of confronting the prospect of losing, especially to a woman.
Monday, August 1, 2016
AND NOW FOR THE LIGHTER SIDE OF THE NEWS
Check out this Washington Post story [if you have access] according to which academic men cite themselves in their own journal articles fifty to seventy percent more often than do academic women. You gotta love it.
WHEW
Sam Wang says that Clinton got a median seven point bounce from her convention. I can breathe again.
ONCE MORE
A commentator identified as “anonymous” adverted to an
earlier debate on this blog with a link to a video by Professor Stephen
Cohen. “Matt” responded and linked to a
piece by Masha Gessen. I urge those who
are interested to follow the links to the video and the essay. Rather than enter that debate directly, I
should like to provide some context, the effect of which will be to reinforce my
assertion that Donald J. Trump poses a very much greater threat of nuclear war
than Hillary Rodham Clinton. I hesitate
to re-enter this dispute, because, quite honestly, I find arguing about the
subject stressful, but this matter is so important – so transcendently
important, if I may advert to my Kant studies – that I think I should make what
may be a useful contribution to the discussion.
The invention and spread of nuclear weapons completely
changed a fundamental concept of military strategy and foreign policy that had
formed the centerpiece of military thinking for ten thousand years, namely the
concept of defense. The history of military strategy was, until
the 1950’s, a story of the see-saw relationship between offense and
defense. Clubs and swords, strong
offensive weapons, were countered with shields and body armor, strong defensive
weapons. Shields and body armor prompted
the invention of spears and bows and arrows, which made it possible to launch attacks
from a distance beyond the reach of clubs and swords. Mounted warriors overwhelmed foot soldiers,
castles and moats defended against mounted soldiers, catapults, ladders, and
movable towers threatened castles, and so on and on to tanks, artillery, bombers,
fighter planes, and antiaircraft batteries.
The balance between offense and defense continually shifted, with now
one and now the other temporarily getting the upper hand.
Inasmuch as actual battlefield experience was far and away
the best source of specific practical knowledge about the relative strengths of
offensive and defensive weaponry, strategic planners tended to be senior
military officers with battlefield credentials.
One consequence of this fact, much commented upon, was that the generals
were forever fighting the last war because only a handful of them at any moment
were capable of envisioning the strategy-changing consequences of new weapons
or weapons delivery systems.
All of this completely changed with the invention of nuclear
weapons. Even the relatively small
fission bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki by American pilots – only one bomb
in each instance – destroyed the targets and killed more than a hundred
thousand people. The next generation of
fusion bombs were quite literally one thousand times more destructive –
measured in millions of tons rather
than thousands of tons of TNT. A single thermonuclear
weapon – an H-Bomb, so-called – was and is capable of completely obliterating a
large city and killing millions of people.
Conventional bombs, even large bombs containing a ton or
more of explosive, can be delivered by manned bombers. But each bomb by itself is not capable of
destroying even a village. It is necessary
to send fleets of bombers carrying hundreds of bombs to have a significant
effect in an all-out war. Now, no
defense can shoot down all of the attacking bombers in a raid, but that is not
necessary, militarily. A kill rate as
high as twenty or thirty percent is devastating for the attacking force over
the course of a bombing campaign because the planes are scarce, and the pilots
even scarcer. An effective air defense
can make a bombing campaign unsustainable.
But because of the destructive power of nuclear weapons, anything less
than an impossible to achieve one hundred percent defense is a loser. The invention of intercontinental ballistic
missiles, which cannot be defended against at all, completed the transformation
of military strategy.
The only practical response to the threat of a nuclear
attack is to deter the enemy from even launching the attack. In short, the age-old concept of defense gave way to the radically new
concept of deterrence. Now, defense is a military concept, but
deterrence is a psychological concept. Furthermore,
no one had ever had any experience of a war fought on both sides with nuclear
weapons. Consequently, battlefield experience
is useless in devising policies designed to deter an enemy from launching a
nuclear attack. It is for this reason
that in the 1960’s and 70’s, the American government began drawing on the
supposed professional expertise of academic psychologists, political scientists,
and economists collected together in quasi-private organizations referred to as
Think Tanks.
Now, combine this development in military weaponry and
strategy with the familiar and ancient struggle between contending imperial
states, each seeking to extend its imperium and pressing up against states also
attempting to extend their spheres of influence and control. Imperial competitors armed with nuclear
weapons clearly pose a mortal threat to civilization itself. In a world with two super-powers, each
seeking to extend its hegemony as far as possible – in short, in a world dominated
by the United States and the Soviet Union – the survival of human life as we know it depended on a Balance of
Terror appropriately referred to as Mutual Assured Destruction, or MAD.
It is crucially important to understand that if a nation
armed with nuclear weapons decides to launch a nuclear attack on another
nation, there is absolutely nothing that can be done to stop it. One can threaten a nation-ending retaliatory
attack, and one can arrange one’s nuclear weapons and command systems so that
they can be used to retaliate even after a nuclear attack. One can warn one’s potential attacker of
this. One can even, if need be, admit representatives
of one’s enemy to one’s most secret military bases to prove that one has and
can deploy this retaliatory force. But if the enemy chooses to commit suicide
by attacking nevertheless, there is nothing one can do to stop him or her.
Consequently, all one can do, so long as the world is armed
with nuclear weapons, is hope that those in a position to deploy them are
rational, well-informed, sufficiently self-disciplined not to act impulsively
or irrationally in situations of great stress, and not suicidal.
Under these ideal circumstances [if I may speak ironically],
the principal threat is miscalculation.
[I leave to one side accidental nuclear war, which is a separate
problem.] To take a contemporary
example, Barack Obama might mistakenly conclude that Vladimir Putin would not
respond to the inclusion of former Soviet Socialist Republics under the NATO
umbrella by launching a nuclear attack.
Or Vladimir Putin might mistakenly conclude that Barack Obama would back
down if Russian troops were to march into Poland. And so forth.
In the fairly brief history of nuclear weapons, the world has come to
the brink of obliteration only once, in the Fall of 1962. John F. Kennedy is the only American president
who has ever really risked nuclear war.
We are all fortunate that Khrushchev was somewhat saner and more cautious
than Kennedy.
So long as the world is a patchwork of ambitious imperial
hegemons each seeking to expand its sphere of influence against its rival
hegemons, all armed with nuclear weapons, we live under the threat of nuclear
war, each of us relying on the rationality, self-interest, and disciplined
self-control of our rivals. It is a
self-deluding error to imagine that the United States simply seeks truth,
justice, and the American way, to quote Superman. It is
equally self-deluding to suppose that Vladimir Putin merely wants to get along
and does not wish to be pushed around by America. Russia and America [and China] are nuclear
powers with long-settled imperial aims, each seeking to expand its sphere of
control and influence as far as possible without risking or actively choosing
nuclear war.
Is there an alternative to this state of affairs? Well, that has been my concern [and that of
many others wiser and more knowledgeable than I] for the past half century and
more. This is not the time to talk about
that, save to point out that the structure of the system of hegemonic imperial
powers would not alter if America were unilaterally to opt out of it. All that would change would be the identity
of the players and the contours of their spheres of power.
All of which brings me to Clinton versus Trump. I have foresworn the use of technical psychological
terms in my attempts to characterize the two of them, but I have not ceased to
make judgments about their character and abilities based on whatever
information I can acquire and whatever understanding of human beings eighty-two
years of experience has afforded me. I judge
Clinton to be thoroughly committed to the post-war American hegemonic imperial project,
as has every single Democratic and Republican
presidential nominee since 1945. I
also judge her to be intelligent, quite knowledgeable, deliberate and cautious
in her decisions, and prepared to seek and to be influenced by the advice of
senior members of the American military establishment. She is, in this regard, a perfectly ordinary
presidential candidate.
I judge Trump to be ignorant, a slow learner, impulsive,
dangerously affected by what he conceives to be insults to his status or
prestige, needy for constant reassurances of his personal dominance, and very
short on the imagination required to foresee and weigh the consequences of his
actions.
I conclude therefore that the danger of a nuclear war is a
good deal greater with Trump as president than with Clinton as president. Inasmuch as I said, some while back on this
blog, that this consideration alone outweighs lexicographically all other
considerations, I conclude that we must do whatever we can to elect Clinton.
Now, may I please get back to the Critique?
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