BOOKS
Beware Prophecies of Civil War
The idea that such a catastrophe is unavoidable in
America is inflammatory and corrosive.
By Fintan
O’Toole
illustration
of hand holding a card that says DISCORD at the bottom, with cannons, flames,
riflemen, and swords that form the shape of a face
Michael
George Haddad
DECEMBER
16, 2021
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2022/01/america-civil-war-prophecies/620850/
In january
1972, when I was a 13-year-old boy in Dublin, my father came home from work and
told us to prepare for civil war. He was not a bloodthirsty zealot, nor was he
given to hysterical outbursts. He was calm and rueful, but also grimly certain:
Civil war was coming to Ireland, whether we wanted it or not. He and my brother,
who was 16, and I, when I got older, would all be up in Northern Ireland with
guns, fighting for the Catholics against the Protestants.
What made
him so sure of our fate was that the British army’s parachute regiment had
opened fire on the streets of Derry, after an illegal but essentially peaceful
civil-rights march. Troops killed 13 unarmed people, mortally wounded another,
and shot more than a dozen others. Intercommunal violence had been gradually
escalating, but this seemed to be a tipping point. There were just two sides
now, and we all would have to pick one. It was them or us.
The
conditions for civil war did indeed seem to exist at that moment. Northern
Irish society had become viciously polarized between one tribe that felt itself
to have suffered oppression and another one fearful that the loss of its power
and privilege would lead to annihilation by its ancient enemies. Both sides had
long-established traditions of paramilitary violence. The state—in this case
both the local Protestant-dominated administration in Belfast and the British
government in London—was not only unable to stop the meltdown into anarchy; it
was, as the massacre in Derry proved, joining in.
Yet my
father’s fears were not fulfilled. There was a horrible, 30-year conflict that
brought death to thousands and varying degrees of misery to millions. There was
terrible cruelty and abysmal atrocity. There were decades of despair in which
it seemed impossible that a polity that had imploded could ever be rebuilt. But
the conflict never did rise to the level of civil war.
However,
the belief that there was going to be a civil war in Ireland made everything
worse. Once that idea takes hold, it has a force of its own. The demagogues
warn that the other side is mobilizing. They are coming for us. Not only do we
have to defend ourselves, but we have to deny them the advantage of making the
first move. The logic of the preemptive strike sets in: Do it to them before
they do it to you. The other side, of course, is thinking the same thing. That
year, 1972, was one of the most murderous in Northern Ireland precisely because
this doomsday mentality was shared by ordinary, rational people like my father.
Premonitions of civil war served not as portents to be heeded, but as a warrant
for carnage.
Could the
same thing happen in the United States? Much of American culture is already
primed for the final battle. There is a very deep strain of apocalyptic fantasy
in fundamentalist Christianity. Armageddon may be horrible, but it is not to be
feared, because it will be the harbinger of eternal bliss for the elect and
eternal damnation for their foes. On what used to be referred to as the far
right, but perhaps should now simply be called the armed wing of the Republican
Party, the imminence of civil war is a given.
Indeed, the
conflict can be imagined not as America’s future, but as its present. In an
interview with The Atlantic published in November 2020, two months before the
invasion of the U.S. Capitol on January 6, the founder of the Oath Keepers,
Stewart Rhodes, declared: “Let’s not fuck around.” He added, “We’ve descended
into civil war.” The following month, the FBI, warning of possible attacks on
state capitols, said that members of the so-called boogaloo movement “believe
an impending insurgency against the government is forthcoming and some believe
they should accelerate the timeline with armed, antigovernment actions leading
to a civil war.”
Premonitions of civil war in Ireland served not as
portents to be heeded, but as a warrant for carnage.
After
January 6, mainstream Republicans picked up the theme. Much of the American
right is spoiling for a fight, in the most literal sense. Which is one good
reason to be very cautious about echoing, as the Canadian journalist and
novelist Stephen Marche does in The Next Civil War: Dispatches From the
American Future, the claim that America “is already in a state of civil strife,
on the threshold of civil war.” These prophecies have a way of being
self-fulfilling.
Admittedly,
if there were to be another American civil war, and if future historians were
to look back on its origins, they would find them quite easily in recent
events. It is news to no one that the United States is deeply polarized, that
its divisions are not just political but social and cultural, that even its
response to a global pandemic became a tribal combat zone, that its system of
federal governance gives a minority the power to frustrate and repress the
majority, that much of its media discourse is toxic, that one half of a
two-party system has entered a postdemocratic phase, and that, uniquely among
developed states, it tolerates the existence of several hundred private armies
equipped with battle-grade weaponry.
It is also
true that the American system of government is extraordinarily difficult to
change by peaceful means. Most successful democracies have mechanisms that
allow them to respond to new conditions and challenges by amending their
constitutions and reforming their institutions. But the U.S. Constitution has
inertia built into it. What realistic prospect is there of changing the
composition of the Senate, even as it becomes more and more unrepresentative of
the population? It is not hard to imagine those future historians defining
American democracy as a political life form that could not adapt to its
environment and therefore did not survive.
It is one
thing, however, to acknowledge the real possibility that the U.S. could break
apart and could do so violently. It is quite another to frame that possibility
as an inevitability. The descent into civil war is always hellish. America has
still not recovered from the fratricidal slaughter of the 1860s. Even so, the
American Civil War was relatively contained compared with what happened to
Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution, to Bosnia after the breakup of
Yugoslavia, or to Congo from 1998 to 2003. The idea that such a catastrophe is
imminent and unavoidable must be handled with extreme care. It is both
flammable and corrosive.
Marche
clearly does not intend to be either of these things, and in speculating about
various possible catalysts for chaos in the U.S., he writes more in sorrow than
in anger, more as a lament than a provocation. Marche’s thought experiment
begins, however, with two conceptual problems that he never manages to resolve.
The first
of these difficulties is that, as the German poet and essayist Hans Magnus
Enzensberger put it in his 1994 book Civil Wars, “there is no useful Theory of
Civil War.” It isn’t a staple in military school—Carl von Clausewitz’s bible,
On War, has nothing to say about it. There are plenty of descriptions of this or
that episode of internal conflict. Thucydides gave us the first one, History of
the Peloponnesian War, 2,500 years ago. But as Enzensberger writes, “It’s not
just that the mad reality eludes formal legal definition. Even the strategies
of the military high commands fail in the face of the new world order which
trades under the name of civil war. The unprecedented comes into sudden and
explosive contact with the atavistic.”
This mad
reality is impossible to map onto a country as vast, diverse, and demographically
fluid as the United States already is, still less onto how it might be at some
unspecified time in the future. Marche has a broad notion that his putative
civil war will take the form of one or more armed insurrections against the
federal government, which will be put down with extreme violence by the
official military. This repression will in turn fuel a cycle of insurgency and
counterinsurgency. Under the strain, the U.S. will fracture into several
independent nations. All of this is quite imaginable as far as it goes. But
such a scenario does not actually go very far in defining this sort of turmoil
as a civil war. Indeed, Marche himself envisages that, while “one way or
another, the United States is coming to an end,” this dissolution could in theory
be a “civilized separation.”
But this
possibility does not sit well with the doomsaying that is his book’s primary
purpose. Nor is it internally coherent. Marche seems to think that a secession
by Texas might be consensual because Texas is a “single-party state.” This
would be news to the 46.5 percent of its voters who supported Joe Biden in the
2020 election. How would they feel about losing their American citizenship and
being told that they now owe their allegiance to the Republic of Texas? If we
really do want to imagine a future of violent conflict, would it not be just as
much within seceding states as among supposedly discrete geographic and
ideological blocs?
The
secession of California as well as Texas is just one of five “dispatches” that
Marche writes from his imagined future. He begins with an eminently plausible
and well-told tale of a local sheriff who takes a stand against the
government’s closure for repair of a bridge used by most of his constituents.
The right-wing media make him a hero figure, and he exploits the publicity
brilliantly. The bridge becomes a magnet for militias, white supremacists, and
anti-government cultists. The standoff is brought to an end by a military
assault, resulting in mass casualties and creating, on the right, both a casus
belli and martyrs for the cause. Marche’s other dispatches describe the
assassination of a U.S. president by a radicalized young loner; a combination
of environmental disasters, with drought causing food shortages and a massive
hurricane destroying much of New York; and the outbreak of insurrectionary
violence and the equally violent responses to it.
All of
these scenarios are well researched and eloquently presented. But how they
relate to one another, or whether the conflicts they involve can really be
regarded as a civil war, is never clear. Civil wars need mass participation,
and how that could be mobilized across a subcontinent is not at all obvious. Marche
seems to endorse the claim of the military historian Peter Mansoor that the
pandemonium “would very much be a free-for-all, neighbor on neighbor, based on
beliefs and skin colors and religion.” His scenarios, either separately or
cumulatively, do not show how or why the U.S. arrives at this Hobbesian state.
Marche’s
other conceptual problem is that, in order to dramatize all of this as a sudden
and terrible collapse, he creates a ridiculously high baseline of American
democratic normalcy. “A decade ago,” he writes, “American stability and global
supremacy were a given … The United States was synonymous with the glory of
democracy.” In this steady state, “a president was once the unquestioned
representative of the American people’s will.” The U.S. Congress was “the
greatest deliberative body in the world.”
These
claims are risible. After the lies that underpinned the invasion of Iraq and
the abject failures of Congress to impose any real accountability for the
conduct of the War on Terror, the beacon of American democracy was pretty dim.
Has the sacred legitimacy of any U.S. president been unquestioned, ever? Did we
imagine the visceral hatred of Bill Clinton among Republicans or Donald Trump’s
insistence that Barack Obama was not even a proper American, let alone the
embodiment of the people’s will?
This
failure of historical perspective means that Marche can ignore the evidence
that political violence, much of it driven by racism, is not a new threat. Even
if we leave aside the actual Civil War, it has long been endemic in the U.S.
Were the wars of extermination against American Indians not civil wars too?
What about the brutal obliteration of the Black community in Greenwood, in
Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 1921—should that not be seen as an episode in a long,
undeclared war on Black Americans by white supremacists? The devastating riots
in cities across America that followed the assassination of Martin Luther King
Jr. in 1968, and in Los Angeles after the beating of Rodney King in 1992, sure
looked like the kind of intercommunal violence that Marche conjures as a
specter from the future. Arguably, the real problem for the U.S. is not that it
can be torn apart by political violence, but that it has learned to live with
it.
This is
happening again—even the attempted coup of January 6 is already, for much of
the political culture, normalized. Marche is so intent on the coming
catastrophe that he seems unable to focus on what is in front of his nose. He
writes, for example, that the assault on the Capitol cannot be regarded as an
insurrection, because “the rioters were only loosely organized and possessed
little political support and no military support.” The third of these claims is
broadly true (though military veterans featured heavily among the attackers). The
first is at best dubious. The second is bizarre: The attack was incited by the
man who was still the sitting president of the United States and had, both at
the time and subsequently, widespread support within the Republican Party.
In this
context, feverish talk of civil war has the paradoxical effect of making the
current reality seem, by way of contrast, not so bad. The comforting fiction
that the U.S. used to be a glorious and settled democracy prevents any
reckoning with the fact that its current crisis is not a terrible departure
from the past but rather a product of the unresolved contradictions of its
history. The dark fantasy of Armageddon distracts from the more prosaic and
obvious necessity to uphold the law and establish political and legal accountability
for those who encourage others to defy it. Scary stories about the future are
redundant when the task of dealing with the present is so urgent.
This
article appears in the January/February 2022 print edition with the headline
“Dangerous Prophecies.” When you buy a book using a link on this page, we
receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário