book review of
Soldier
by Karen DeYoung
A Closer Look at Colin Powell:
The Evil of Banality
by Gary Kamiya, Der Spiegel
www.truthout.org/, October 12,
2006
{A new biography confirms that
Colin Powell went along with the Iraq war because he was following
orders. The tragic irony of the good soldier is that he deserted
the people he was trying to protect.}
In 2003, then Secretary of State Colin
Powell tried to convince the UN Security Council of Iraq's alleged
WMD program. He was unsuccessful.
On Sept. 19. 2005, eight months after
Colin Powell resigned as George W. Bush's secretary of state,
he gave a speech to the National War College. Afterward, an audience
member asked him to explain whether he really supported the Iraq
war and whether he had ever considered resigning. Powell replied
that he had proposed trying diplomacy before going to war, and
that Bush had agreed to try. Yet he had always known, he said,
that Bush might decide to invade Iraq later. When Bush did, Powell
said, "I supported him. I can't go on a long patrol and then
say 'never mind.'" Powell concluded by saying that no, he
had "never thought of resigning."
This story, which Karen DeYoung relates
at the outset of "Soldier," her competent but constrained
new biography of Powell, raises the crucial question that will
forever hang over the career of America's most famous soldier:
Why did he continue to give public support to a war that privately
he had grave doubts about? In fact, the story also provides the
answer. Powell's comparison of serving as secretary of state to
going on a combat patrol says it all: He stayed on the Bush team
because he was a loyal soldier, for whom resigning was not making
a principled stand but deserting his post. Powell's decision cleared
the way to a disastrous war, hideously bloody and apparently endless.
The war, according to a new study from the Lancet, has cost the
lives of 655,000 Iraqis so far, and the Army chief of staff has
announced that he plans to keep the current level of U.S. troops
in Iraq through 2010. But Powell seems incapable of grasping that
he very likely could have stopped the war, and his biographer
fails to sufficiently explore the issue.
Powell's military mind-set was the
main reason he supported the war, but it wasn't the only reason.
As DeYoung, an editor at the Washington Post, reveals, he was
also a profoundly cautious man, not particularly ideological and
not given to dramatic gestures or making waves. "He had risen
steadily through the military and four administrations by maintaining
a careful balance between deliberate prudence and intrepid competence,"
DeYoung writes. Powell's pride, and his past successes, also played
a role. She notes that Powell "had been winning bureaucratic
battles for so many years that he simply refused to acknowledge
the extent of the losses he had suffered. Beyond his soldier's
sense of duty, he saw even the threat of resignation as an acknowledgment
of defeat. He was a proud man, and he would never have let them
see him sweat." But the low-key professionalism that served
him well in his illustrious military career proved a fatal impediment
when it came to standing up to the radical ideologues in the Bush
administration - or indeed in even recognizing what he was dealing
with.
Unfortunately, none of these are exactly
earth-shaking revelations. DeYoung brings nuance and psychological
depth to her analysis, but most of us already believed Powell
went along with the Iraq war mainly because he was a loyal soldier
and a consummate bureaucratic survivor. It isn't DeYoung's fault
that she is unable to advance the story: The simple fact is that
there seems to be nothing else to say. Until he made the fatal
mistake of joining the Bush administration, Powell's life story
was inspiring to millions; his autobiography, "My American
Journey," was a bestseller. But his story, alas, didn't end
there. And its sad climax and depressing denouement is not only
thoroughly uninspiring, it's not even very interesting - unless
reading about a cautious executive's bureaucratic defeat is your
idea of a good time. Of course, Powell's bureaucratic downfall
had enormous consequences - but that still doesn't make it, or
him, ultimately very interesting. Hannah Arendt coined the famous
phrase "the banality of evil" to describe the Nazi war
criminals on trial at Nuremberg; Powell's unfortunate saga might
be called "the evil ofbanality."
DeYoung is a solid reporter and a
sympathetic but not hagiographic biographer, and she mines Colin
Powell's life story for all of the scarce nuggets she can. Its
outlines are familiar: Raised in the Bronx by hardworking Jamaican-born
parents, he was an indifferent student who suddenly shone when
he joined the ROTC. He served in Vietnam, and left disillusioned
by the war's execution but still believing in the rightness of
the cause: "The ends were justified, even if the means were
flawed." From then on, his military career went from one
dazzling triumph to the next, culminating in his appointment,
at age 52, as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, from which
position he led Gulf War I. He flirted with the possibility of
running for president, but ultimately decided he didn't have the
passion for the job. (Powell hated indecision, and his Hamlet-like
inability to make up his mind tormented him.) After starting his
career politically uncommitted, he became a Republican more by
default and loyalty to his colleagues than out of any particular
conviction: a moderate in politics as in all things, he described
himself as being at best "55 percent Republican."
DeYoung paints a portrait of a decent,
somewhat emotionally reticent man, a natural leader and team player
who thrived on order and self-discipline and disliked direct confrontation.
There is much to admire about Powell, not least his unself-conscious,
unself-pitying attitude toward race. Powell's mantra about his
blackness, which he learned from his parents, was, "My race
is somebody else's problem. It's not my problem." His deep
sense of comradeship with and loyalty to those serving in the
military, especially the lowest ranks, is also commendable. As
secretary of state under Bush, he tried to stick up for diplomacy
and multilateralism in a singularly hostile and dysfunctional,
indeed borderline bizarre, environment. He did his best to steer
Bush administration policy toward a more even-handed approach
to the Israeli-Palestinian crisis. He reined the hard-liners in
on North Korea, and tried to soften the blunt edges of Bush unilateralism
on Kyoto and other issues. He opposed the administration's draconian
moves to approve torture and disregard the Geneva Conventions.
Generally, and admirably, Powell was a voice of reason among the
strange stew of ignorant ideologues (Wolfowitz), enigmatic and
conniving bullies (Cheney and Rumsfeld), wet-behind-the-ears enablers
(Rice), and rigid, callow leaders (Bush) he found himself dealing
with.
But none of that will be remembered.
What will be is the act that will permanently define his career
- his presentation to the U.N. Security Council of the supposed
"evidence" that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.
Few acts of political theater have been as momentous. The painful
fact is that it was Powell's immense prestige, as much or more
than his arguments (which proved to be almost all bogus), that
sold the American people, Congress and the media on Bush's disastrous
war. It is, of course, impossible to say for sure, but had Powell
resigned in protest once it became clear to him that Bush, Cheney
and Rumsfeld were going to make war no matter what, there is a
good chance that the whole tricked-up case for going to Iraq would
have collapsed, and one of the greatest debacles in American history
would have been avoided.
For Powell, the moment of decision
was not his speech to the U.N. on Feb. 4, 2003 - by then he had
signed off on the war and was just following orders - but a private
meeting he had with Bush on Jan. 13. In that meeting, originally
reported by Bob Woodward in his 2004 book "Plan of Attack,"
Bush told Powell that he had decided to go to war and asked, "Are
you with me on this?" Powell replied, "Yes, sir, I will
support you. I'm with you, Mr. President." Describing Powell's
take on this meeting, DeYoung (who interviewed Powell extensively
for the book) writes, "When he thought immediately afterward
about what Bush had said, Powell divined a difference between
'reaching a conclusion and [making] a decision to be implemented.
Bush had concluded that war was the only way to resolve the situation,
but he had yet to order the invasion ... Nothing had really changed,
he thought. If Saddam capitulated completely, they could still
avoid war, and the best chance of achieving that was to convince
him that the Security Council was speaking with one voice."
So Powell continued with his diplomatic efforts.
Sympathetic to Powell's difficult
position, DeYoung does not point out the rather obvious casuistry
and self-deception involved in his somehow arriving at the conclusion
that "nothing had really changed" when the president
had just flatly told him he was going to war. (She also omits
some material found in Woodward's account that makes it even clearer
that Bush had definitely made up his mind, including the quote
"Time to put your war uniform on" and the paraphrase
"I just want to let you know that, Bush said, making it clear
that this was not a discussion.") And she dismisses the possibility
that Powell could have stopped the war by protesting or resigning.
Instead, she seems to argue - although in a curiously indirect
way, via an anonymous source - that it was already too late, and
that he had no real power to influence events.
She writes, "Even if Powell had
wanted to protest, the moment for real dissent had long passed,
one senior State Department official later reflected. The only
argument against invasion that might ever succeeded - that it
would undermine the larger war on terrorism - 'would have had
to have been made early on,' in the spring and early summer of
2002. It was an argument that Powell had not made. Instead, the
secretary had tried to play for time and erect roadblocks to slow
the march to war, in hopes that something would stop it. But administration
hard-liners, in their hurry to get to Baghdad, had rolled right
over him."
DeYoung goes on, "[T]hose who
would later cite the January 13 meeting with Bush as a moment
when he should have considered resigning on principle misunderstood
both his undaunted sense of the possible and his view of the Iraq
situation."
These arguments are unconvincing.
Despite the claims made by the unnamed State Department source,
it is far from clear that an earlier argument that invading Iraq
would undermine the war on terrorism would have had any effect.
The hawks wanted their war, and it is highly questionable that
any arguments would have changed their mind. Second, her statement
that Powell's critics "misunderstood" him is beside
the point. They understood him well enough - they just didn't
agree with his actions. What she calls his "undaunted sense
of the possible," Powell's critics saw as willful self-delusion.
In one sense, DeYoung's reference
to "his view of the Iraq situation" - i.e., the fact
that he shared certain hawkish beliefs - renders these debates
and recriminations moot. Those opposed to the war tend to assume
that Powell was on their side, but it isn't that simple. As DeYoung
notes, Powell was no dove; he wanted to see Saddam gone, and although
he was aware of the risks, he wasn't opposed to a war as long
as it was done right. Still, it should have been amply clear to
Powell that the war was notbeing done right - and he did nothing.
The most glaring omission, not just
in this passage but in the book in general, is DeYoung's failure
to explore Powell's own awareness, or lack thereof, of how much
power he wielded as the most popular and trusted figure by far
in the administration. Woodward, in his omniscient style, raises
the key issue in "Plan of Attack": "He had not
underestimated the extent to which the president had decided that
letting the bastard remain was no longer an option. But he probably
had underestimated his own usefulness to a president and vice
president determined on war."
Woodward's point is that Powell failed
to grasp, or did not want to grasp, the power he had as the most
trusted and moderate member of the administration. DeYoung never
explores this crucial point; in fact, she does not seem to have
asked Powell about it. Her portrait of Powell certainly makes
clear that everything about the man - his deference to authority
and the line of command, his caution, his unwillingness to break
out of what he perceived as the parameters of his role - made
it difficult for him to interject himself into the game in the
same way that his peers, Cheney and Rumsfeld, did. But it's an
issue one would like to have seen raised with him.
Indeed, "Soldier" would
have been a more interesting book if DeYoung had spent less time
on the earlier part of Powell's career -- much of which is well
chronicled in his autobiography and which yields little insight
into this buttoned-down man -- and more on his fateful relationship
with the Bush team. It doesn't help DeYoung that her book appeared
at the same time as her Post colleague Bob Woodward's "State
of Denial," which paints a vivid portrait of Powell's conflicts
with his colleagues and contains scoops her book doesn't. For
example, Woodward reports that Powell wanted Rumsfeld out, at
one point telling White House Chief of Staff Andy Card that "If
I go, Don [Rumsfeld] should go." Some of it is a matter of
tone: Woodward's book, with its breezier style and rougher edges,
creates more of a sense that Powell was aware of the shark pool
he was swimming in. This question of Powell's awareness, his personal
sense of who he was dealing with, is key: The more aware he was,
the less excuse he has for not standing up.
At the end of "Soldier,"
DeYoung writes, "Political Washington rehashed moments when
Powell might have played his ultimate trump card. Perhaps overestimating
their own political courage, some moderate Republicans insisted
privately that they would have lined up behind him if he had only
given them a sign." She then quotes various sources explaining
once again why he didn't. "'It's easy for us to say, why
didn't he just go in there and tell the president he's going to
resign,' reflected one senior State Department official who had
thought long and hard about the possibility that Powell would
quit. 'But this man was a military officer for thirty-five years.
When I go to see the president ... I understand that I voted for
the guy and I'll vote for the next guy. That's the great thing
about America. He's not the king ... But a military officer who's
spent decades saying 'whatever the president of the United States
tells me to do I will do because that's an order - that's different.'"
Retired Gen. Anthony Zinni praised
Powell for his ability to stay above the fray of office infighting,
but added a darker note: "Powell is a pretty ambitious guy.
I don't think it was in him to stop this by bringing down his
president."
Powell is a sympathetic character,
and DeYoung does a good job of allowing us to see the situation
from his perspective. But Zinni's words are a reminder that the
obedience of the soldier and the caution of the bureaucrat can
also be self-serving -- and prevent one from doing what has to
be done. There are higher duties than the military ones, or even
the personal codes one lives by.
The tragic irony is that by failing
to try to derail Bush's misguided war, Powell betrayed the very
people he most wanted to protect: the soldiers. In "Plan
of Attack," Woodward characterizes Powell's reaction to his
fateful Jan. 13 meeting with Bush. "No way on God's earth
could he walk away at that point. It would have been an unthinkable
act of disloyalty to the president, to Powell's own soldier's
code, to the United States military, and mostly to the several
hundred thousand who would be going to war. The kids were the
ones who fought, Powell often reminded himself."
Today, almost 3,000 of those kids
are dead, many thousands more are shattered in mind and body,
the number of dead Iraqis has passed 650,000 and the U.S. government
wants to stay the course for at least four more years. Can Powell
still believe that his act of "loyalty" was worthy of
the name?
Just what Powell thinks about any
of this these days is unclear. In a March 2005 interview with
DeYoung, Powell rebuked media reports, "as he put it, that
'Powell must be so distraught.' 'Why am I distraught?' he said
testily. 'We are working on our relationships ... look at what
we've done with Russia, China, NATO, the E.U.'" And Powell
went on to cite his foreign policy successes.
Woodward, in his new book, strikes
a different note - and throws down the gauntlet to Powell far
more directly than DeYoung ever does. In an interview with Sen.
Carl Levin, D-Mich., Woodward tells Levin, "I thought Powell
was in anguish about what had happened in Iraq, with 130,000 troops
still stuck there, facing an ever-growing insurgency.
"'I don't want to hear about
his anguish,' Levin said, nearly exploding in anger. 'I don't
have the stomach to hear his anguish. He is so smart and his instincts
are so decent and good that I just can't accept his anguish. I
expected more than anguish.'
"'What did you want?' I asked.
'An apology?'
"'Honesty. I wanted honesty.
I don't want to read a year later or two years later that this
is the worst moment of his life or something ... Powell had the
potential to change the course here. He's the only one who had
potential to.'
"'How could he have done that?'
I asked.
"'If he had told the president
that this is the wrong course,' Levin said. 'I don't think he
ever realized what power lay in his hands, and that's an abdication.
I think Powell has tremendous power' ...
"'When Bush asked Powell in January
2003 if he would be with him in the war, Levin said, Powell was
at the peak of his influence.
"'Can you imagine what would
have happened if he'd said, "I've got to give that a little
thought"? Can you imagine the power of that one person to
change the course? He had it.'"
DeYoung's book confirms what we already
suspected about why Powell was not able to rise to the greatest
challenge of his life. Like most good biographies, it leaves us
with a feeling of inevitability. And in the case of Powell, a
decent human being, that feeling is doubly bitter - for him, and
for the country he wanted to serve but ultimately let down.
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