Petraeus: The Problem with Heroic Hagiography

Submitted by: Mike Spindell, guest blogger

DCIA_David_PetraeusThis week I read a story at my favorite investigative journalistic website http://whowhatwhy.com . It concerned the back story about the abrupt fall from grace of CIA Director General David Petraeus, which occurred when it was discovered that his biographer was also his mistress. I’ll provide a link to the story below and a brief synopsis of its conclusions, but it is less the reality of Petraeus’ fall, than the rise of military “heroes” that interests me. A theme that is closely woven into human history since the beginnings of civilization is the myth of the great military leader who rises up to gain command and “saves” the country from evil, external enemies. As the Iraq and Afghanistan wars became a harsh reality of our existence after the trauma of 9/11, one military figure appeared to capture our attention and become invested with the intelligence and the courage to fight our “enemies” and protect the American Way of Life. David Petraeus became that “hero”, was generally given bi-partisan deference and credited with wisdom and talents far beyond his peers. While our governmental system is based on civilian leadership of our military, in the person of the President and his appointees, it seemed that throughout the prosecution of these two ill-starred conflicts the Bush and then Obama administrations deferred to a position of “what would Petraeus do?”

It has been said that history is the chronicle of the winners and I believe there is some truth in that. In the Torah (Pentateuch to Christians) we see Moses, Joshua and David winning great victories for the Hebrews, often the underdogs. They are credited with having God on their side and so their victories are less those of strategy and more those of being “chosen” by God to carry out his will. This is indeed a recurrent theme throughout all civilizations and ethnicities when it comes to warfare. The mythology that grows around warfare is not one army’s defeat of another, but how individuals from the victorious army won through an almost “divine” intervention that gave them the skills to succeed.

The heroic portrayal of “saintly and heroic” individuals is called hagiography. While originally it referred to the glorification of “Saints”, the realities of the false histories produced through the ages of heroes proven to have “clay feet”, has added a more jaded and more prevalent definition of the word. “as a pejorative reference to the works of biographers and historians perceived to be uncritical or “reverential” to their subject” Hagiography exists as a style of propaganda that is used in the creation of mythology that informs a given society. A brief stroll though history will give you an idea of where I’m going with this premise.

Early works that created a mythological view of the military “great man” as the shaper of history can be seen in still pertinent writings of “poets” from two widely different cultures. In Greece we have the works of the “Iliad” and the “Odyssey” attributed to the poet Homer. This greatest of Greek poets is said to have lived about 850 BCE and he writes of a golden era of heroic Greek history, thought to be the 12th Century BCE. Thus his writings are of a similar era to the “Torah” and from the study of mythology would seem to be part of a common thread in the development of civilization. In the “Iliad” we have the story of the Ten Year Trojan War. While there is indeed some evidence that this “War” actually took place in some form, obviously the “Iliad” is not to be construed as an accurate retelling of history. What is of significance, however, is that it became a formative tale of the Greek people and its heroes shaping the mythology of the burgeoning Hellenist civilization. The central Hero of the Iliad is Achilles. Achilles was so powerful a fighter that his absence, pouting over a slight, throughout most of the siege of Troy, prevents the massive Greek army from overcoming the Trojans. The Trojans greatest hero is the noble warrior Hector. Hector’s killing of Achilles best friend draws Achilles to battle, where he kills Hector and thus the ill fate of Troy follows. To simplify the mythological implications from this epic tale we can say it is the example of a “Great Man” shaping history for mere mortals.

From India, thought to have been written in the 8th Century BCE, comes another great epic story that through its mythology shaped the sophisticated civilization there. “The Mahabharata” also gives an heroic account of a epic war that ended an dynasty and a age, shaping future history. Like the Greek works it is the battles of “Great Men” who shape the climax of this warfare and provide great victories.

“The Mahabharata (Sanskrit Mahābhārata महाभारत, IPA: [məɦaːˈbʱaːrət̪ə]) is one of the two major Sanskrit epics of ancient India, the other being the Ramayana.[1]

Besides its epic narrative of the Kurukshetra War and the fates of the Kauravas and the Pandava princes, the Mahabharata contains much philosophical and devotional material, such as a discussion of the four “goals of life” or purusharthas (12.161). Among the principal works and stories that are a part of the Mahabharata are the Bhagavad Gita, the story of Damayanti, an abbreviated version of the Ramayana, and the Rishyasringa, often considered as works in their own right.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mahabharata

While I’ve actually read the “Bhagavad Gita” I claim no great understanding of the work except that it does glorify its larger then life heroes”. My knowledge of the Indian Cultural history is certainly not scholarly, but I can say that it is one of humanity’s greatest and oldest cultural heritages. We in the West never give it enough credit. My point though in mentioning these two magnificent works is that around the 8th Century BCE, throughout humanity a reshaping of how we humans viewed ourselves took place and transformed the foundational mythologies of human civilization into the one that is common today. At its base are “great/heroic” men, whose deeds shape our lives and whose fame derives from the wars they participate in. The use of this mythological meme is such that through history the mythology surrounding the “great man” has allowed those perceived as that type of  ”hero” to grasp, or come close to grasping power in our world.

A smattering of great names from history will reveal this tendency to mythologize the “great man” and allow the reader to see how similar this plays out throughout our world. Julius Caesar used his fame as a military leader to vault himself to the top of the Roman Empire. Constantine the Great followed a similar path. William the Conqueror, Henry V, Napoleon Bonaparte were the recipients of hagiography in their own and later times reinforcing this heroic image. In America, George Washington, became our first President because of his generalship. Andrew Jackson won “The Battle of New Orleans” two weeks after the war had ended. William Henry Harrison, a man with little else to recommend him used the “Battle of Tippecanoe” to attain the Presidency. U.S. Grant used his victory over the South to become a rather undistinguished President. Teddy Roosevelt made his name as the head of the “Rough Riders” in the Cuba. Dwight Eisenhower’s leadership of the allies in World War II and the hagiographical reverence that followed made him President. In truth not every military hero actually succeeds in attaining the high offices they seek and we can see Douglas McArthur, a hagiographic hero if there ever was one, ending his political rise in ignominy.

Whether successful in grabbing power, or not, the same old theme seems to play out repeatedly in human history. The theme is the glorification of military leaders making them potential political leaders. My view of this is that it rarely coincides that a military leader would make a great civilian leader, but that the ages of historical mythmaking have conditioned much of humanity to think that these “heroes” are those best suited to lead us all. A common thread in this today, is the compulsion of the mainstream media, historians and biographers to produce hagiography’s portraying these leaders as for more heroic than they actually are. With our modern media this glorification of people has accelerated far beyond the accomplishments they have actually had. We saw this especially clearly after 9/11. Such was the anger and fear engendered within the people and the “press” that we all longed to avenge ourselves against the “enemy”, which began as Osama Bin Laden, but morphed into other countries, one of which had no involvement whatsoever. While we expect wisdom and insight from our pundits and our press, we instead had them play stenographer to whatever Administration source fed them the propaganda of revenge. In a “good” vs. “evil” drama, portrayed simplistically as “The War on Terror”, the old human tendency to ennoble “heroes” to give substance to the “plotline” ran rampant. Thus Rudy Giuliani, a highly flawed individual whose popularity was at its nadir before 9/11, became “America’s Mayor” although all he really did was his expected job and in truth he did that badly. This brings me to General David Petraeus.

David Petraeus is by my estimation a brilliant man. He is charismatic, articulate, an adept writer and certainly an intellectual thinker. His military record is an outstanding one. His academic background is definitely distinguished and probably marked him early on as a coming force in our military establishment:

“Petraeus has a B.S. degree from the United States Military Academy, from which he graduated in 1974 as a distinguished cadet (top 5% of his class). He was the General George C. Marshall Award winner as the top graduate of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College class of 1983. He subsequently earned an M.P.A. in 1985 and a PhD degree in International Relations in 1987 from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. He later served as Assistant Professor of International Relations at the United States Military Academy and also completed a fellowship at Georgetown University. “  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Petraeus

In his military career he had experience all over the world, wherever there was a conflict that had U.S. involvement. While a review of his career history shows that he was no doubt well-known in military and government circles, it was the second Iraq War that catapulted him into the spotlight of public recognition and made him a hero in the eyes of most of the public and especially our mainstream media.

“In 2003, Petraeus, then a Major General, saw combat for the first time when he commanded the 101st Airborne Division during V Corps’s drive to Baghdad. In a campaign chronicled in detail by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Rick Atkinson of The Washington Post in the book In the Company of Soldiers, Petraeus led his division through fierce fighting south of Baghdad, in Karbala, Hilla and Najaf. Following the fall of Baghdad, the division conducted the longest heliborne assault on record in order to reach Ninawa Province, where it would spend much of 2003. The 1st Brigade was responsible for the area south of Mosul, the 2nd Brigade for the city itself, and the 3rd Brigade for the region stretching toward the Syrian border. An often-repeated story of Petraeus’ time with the 101st is his asking of embedded The Washington Post reporter Rick Atkinson to “Tell me how this ends,” an anecdote he and other journalists have used to portray Petraeus as an early recognizer of the difficulties that would follow the fall of Baghdad.

In Mosul, a city of nearly two million people, Petraeus and the 101st employed classic counterinsurgency methods to build security and stability, including conducting targeted kinetic operations and using force judiciously, jump-starting the economy, building local security forces, staging elections for the city council within weeks of their arrival, overseeing a program of public works, reinvigorating the political process, and launching 4,500 reconstruction projects in Iraq. This approach can be attributed to Petraeus, who had been steeped in nation-building during his previous tours in nations such as Bosnia and Haiti and thus approached nation-building as a central military mission and who was “prepared to act while the civilian authority in Baghdad was still getting organized,” according to Michael Gordon of The New York Times.[63] Some Iraqis gave Petraeus the nickname ‘King David‘, which was later adopted by some of his colleagues. In 2004, Newsweek stated that “It’s widely accepted that no force worked harder to win Iraqi hearts and minds than the 101st Air Assault Division led by Petraeus.”

The General’s counter insurgency work in Mosul brought him media fame. He was a perfect candidate for hagiography given his brilliance, charisma and eagerness to give interviews. He appeared on “60 Minutes”, was featured in “Time” magazine and received many accolades from the adoring media pundits. As we remember the morass in Iraq, with its frequent bombings, deaths and terrorist activity, our media needed to find a hero to justify what was becoming an obvious debacle. The Bush Administration also needed a heroic figure to distract from the fact that this War was an inappropriate response to 9/11, which had killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqi’s and thousands of our troops. When it became apparent that there were no “weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq, we then received a justification from another hero “created” by another dubious war, Colin Powell and his famous “Pier One” rule: “If you break it, you buy it”. So Petraeus led the “surge” and we declared victory, while Iraq remained in chaos. Petraeus fame grew, ably assisted by his canny way of dealing with the media and the media’s tendency to produce hagiography, rather than reality.

As we now know, Petraeus’ downfall came from a scandal that flared when it became public knowledge that his female biographer, Patricia Broadwell, also became the lover of this married “hero”. That scandal had such an impact that if you now Google Petraeus, you find literally dozens of pages referring to the affair and little else detailing the other aspects of his career. So in the wake of the scandal this comes from the Wiki entry linked above, which deal with Petraeus’ efforts at self promotion:

“Petraeus had a strategy to influence military conditions by using the press relations effectively in the theater and in Washington, according to critics who assessed the general’s military career after his fall from power. On November 13, 2012, Lawrence Korb, Ray McGovern, and Gareth Porter appearing on Al Jazeera English assessed the general’s extensive military-media strategy linking his writings on counterguerrilla operations and subsequent military media efforts to his downfall with a female biographer. Critics observed that the Petraeus media strategy would prove damaging for American policy in the future because of the omissions and distorted interpretations that Washington policymakers, other experts, and the American public accepted from the highly effective Petraeus media contacts.

Military historians have noted the absence of field records for the Iraq and Afghanistan military campaigns, but have not personally been critical of the commanders in theater. One additional aspect of Petraeus’ career that has come under increased scrutiny since his affair came to light has been his lack of a direct combat record in relation to the many awards he received. In particular, his Bronze Star Medal with Valor device has been mentioned in several media reports and questioned by several former Army officers.”

As we know Petraeus’ career led him to become the Director of the CIA and prior to that:

 

“On October 31, 2008, Petraeus assumed command of the United States Central Command (USCENTCOM) headquartered in Tampa, Florida. Petraeus was responsible for U.S. operations in 20 countries spreading from Egypt to Pakistan—including Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom.”

 

“On June 23, 2010, President Obama announced that he would nominate Petraeus to succeed General Stanley A. McChrystal as the commander of U.S. Forces in Afghanistan. The change of command was prompted by McChrystal’s comments about the Obama administration and its policies in Afghanistan during an interview with Rolling Stone magazine. The nomination was technically a positional step down from his position as commander of Central Command, however the President said that he believed that he was the best man for the job.”

Both these positions allowed Petraeus much press exposure and that exposure was overwhelmingly laden with praise and with deference. Finally this led to:

“On April 28, 2011, President Barack Obama announced that he had nominated Petraeus to become the new Director of the Central Intelligence Agency. The nomination was confirmed by the United States Senate 94–0 on June 30, 2011. Petraeus was sworn in at the White House on September 6[ and then ceremonially sworn in by Vice President Joe Biden at CIA Headquarters in Langley, Virginia on October 11, 2011.

Sometime in early 2012 the FBI became aware of Petraeus’ affair with Mrs. Broadwell. The information finally reached the Administration’s Executive level in the fall. Petraeus met with President Obama and gave his resignation on November 8, 2012. The rest is history, so they say, but do we understand the true history. Do we know that this was only about an extramarital affair, with a woman who went overboard in jealousy, or was there more threatening things in this story for the U.S. Government?

The WhoWhatWhy.com article this week is titled: “Petraeus: The Plot Thickens” written by: Douglas Lucas and Russ Baker. http://whowhatwhy.com/2013/02/05/petraeus-the-plot-thickens-1/

 The story begins with:

“Was the ambitious General David Petraeus targeted for take-down by competing interests in the US military/intelligence hierarchy—years before his abrupt downfall last year in an adultery scandal?

 Previously unreported documents analyzed by WhoWhatWhy suggest as much. They provide new insight into the scandalous extramarital romance that led to Petraeus’s resignation as CIA director in November after several years of rapid rise—going from a little-known general to a prospective presidential candidate in a stunningly brief time frame.

Among other revelations the documents show that:

 -Petraeus was suspected of having an extramarital affair nearly two years earlier than previously known.

 -Petraeus’s affair was known to foreign interests with a stake in a raging policy and turf battle in which Petraeus was an active party.

 -Those providing the “official” narrative of the affair—and an analysis of why it led to the unprecedented removal of America’s top spymaster— have been less than candid with the American people.

 According to internal emails of the Austin-based private intelligence firm Stratfor, General David Petraeus was drawing attention to his private life much earlier than previously believed. Because it was his private life that resulted in his being forced out as CIA director, alterations in our understanding of the time frame are significant.

Until now, the consensus has been that Petraeus began an affair with his biographer, Paula Broadwell, in the fall of 2011, after he retired from the military and took over the CIA”.

After providing the background of the affair and of the publicly known “evidence” the article goes on to say:

“But documents—researched by WhoWhatWhy and published for the first time as part of an investigative partnership with WikiLeaks—suggest otherwise. These documents characterize Petraeus as having regular dinners in early 2010 with Abdulwahab al-Hajri, then Yemen’s ambassador to the US, and note that Petraeus brought to at least one of those dinners a woman “not his wife”—whom the Yemenis believed was “his mistress.” It’s possible—although not confirmed—that this woman was Paula Broadwell, Petraeus’s biographer and mistress, who sent allegedly threatening emails that spawned the strange FBI investigation that precipitated the former Army general’s resignation on November 9, 2012.”

There are some very significant details revealed above. The first is that if the affair was carried on when Petraeus was still in the military then he was guilty of an offense that should lead to a Court Martial. It is against military law to commit adultery and many an enlisted man has actually been court martialled and imprisoned under that law. More importantly though is the allegation of Petraeus including a woman, possibly Broadwell, in what were essentially diplomatic talks held in a social situation. The story goes into many key situations in which Yemen is involved as a foreign policy broker.

The details provided in this article are much greater than the snippets I provide above. I would suggest that people read it in its entirety to see the possibly grave implications in this story that go the heart of U.S. foreign and military policy.  Implications of this go to the known wish of some in the Republican Party who saw Petraeus as a “can’t lose” Presidential candidate and to the internecine warfare that goes on in behind the scenes in our government and whether Petraeus was “taken out” by elements of the Military.

To my mind the Petraeus story is yet another instance where hagiography becomes propaganda and then morphs into mythology. While Petraeus indeed had some successes in the positions he occupied, none of those “successes” were remarkable and many of them were examples of hagiography by the mainstream media, gone wild. Why this military man would actually be considered as Presidential material escapes me, except from my knowledge of this being a repeated theme in world history. Humanity’s history is one of warfare and brutality and yet we glorify those who lead it and make them into almost “Olympian Heroes”.  As long as we lionize and overprize those with skill at killing people en masse then we will also remain a species at war with itself.

Submitted by: Mike Spindell. guest blogger

114 thoughts on “Petraeus: The Problem with Heroic Hagiography”

  1. Darren,

    David Petraeus was all mystique, and no substance. As I pointed out above, none of that fruit salad on his chest was for actual military achievement in combat. He has been a desk jockey and theoretical soldier all his career. I doubt seriously he has ever been shot at or fired a shot in defense of his country. He is a politician who pulled all the right strings and kissed all the right butts to be awarded all those ribbons for having good table manners and not being late for work.

    At least, Generals such as Colin Powell and Wesley Clark actually EARNED their stuff. Fully certified as, “Been there, done that, got the cap and t-shirt.”

  2. Another good article Mike. It is amazing how fast and how far Gen. Petraeus has fallen. I am surprised that he resigned so quickly with just the news of the affair. Especially in Washington. Where there is smoke there may be some fire!??

  3. The Hero General who receives the least scrutiny, as war hero, war strategist, civilian leader, President of the United States, is Ike. He had his Kay Southerby or however one spulls it and that got brushed back under the covers. He chose an evil Canival for Vice President and imposed him on us and that is forgotten. We should give him credit for his role in the interstate highway system and his late observation on his last day in office about “The Military Industrial Complex”. Another war hero who does not get enough credit for his war strategy and not enough for his job as President was Grant. It was trying times, both in the war and in the Presidency after that first Johnson character from Tennessee (Lincoln’s VP) left the Presidency.

    Generally, you dont want a military type to be President. (no pun intended) You want someone who can work Congress and who has great knowledge of law, politics and the world.

    Petreaus is like a dog in the dogpac who thinks all the females are his. When he was a kid they called him Stump Humper. No kidding, I learned that on the internet. Some guys just can not resist a very good looker like his biographer. Jeso, look at some of her photos. There you are off in Afghanistan eating in tents and this fox comes along and sits there asking about your childhood all day long looking in your eyes and flirts and what all and the next thing you know your thing is getting you in trouble. The Soviets would have paid a fortune to get her into Ike’s stable. Kay was not enough. People were more tolerant in Ike’s day. We all knew about Kay. A man’s gotta do what a man’s gotta do. Not now though. Its scandal scandal bo bamble.

  4. ” … often because they have checkered pasts themselves and don’t want that revealed.” (Darren Smith)

    Which is the only reason Petraeus has not been Court Martialed or prosecuted for the security breach he covered up when accepting the post as Director of the CIA.

    Also why so many of his buds in the CIA and his former bosses in the Executive have not been prosecuted on the torture issue.

    It’s the Jerry Ford school of thought … We must spare the
    citizens from the trauma of actually facing the reality that is their leadership. They like to tell themselves we’re just too weak to handle it.

  5. It is interesting how one person is elevated to near legend status and then, upon a fall from grace, none of the past achievments are remembered.

    Usually politicians give a welcome embrace to such people in order to equate themselves in the glory and then they become the prosecutors of the same person to have the glory in shooting them down, because they are the righteous and to project they are beyond reproach; often because they have checkered pasts themselves and don’t want that revealed.

  6. One more thing about Audie Murphy for any readers too young to remember him. He was too young to join the Army so lied about his age. He was also only 5’5″ tall. The Army did not correct the wrong birthday after his death, so that is the one on his tombstone in Arlington National Cemetery.

    Audie Murphy was the most decorated soldier in the history of the US military. And yet, look at his picture I posted at the link above.

    Then look at David Petraeus who never actually was shot at. As they say in Texas, all hat and no horse.

    Here is the link to Audie Murphy’s page on the site of the Congressional Medal of Honor Society.
    http://www.cmohs.org/recipient-detail/2907/murphy-audie-l.php

  7. According to the Jewish Encyclopedia, Nimrod was “the first Petraeus” (and the first of all the others created by “Heroic Hagiography”):

    As he was the first hunter he was consequently the first who introduced the eating of meat by man. He was also the first to make war on other peoples.

    (Nimrod, Jewish Encyclopedia, emphasis added). A Hebrew historian says of Nimrod:

    He also gradually changed the government into tyrannyto bring them [the people] into a constant dependence on his power

    (The Antiquities of the Jews, by Titus Flavius Josephus, 1:4:2:113-114, emphasis added). Thus, Nimrod is the model myth for all “warriors”, all military aficionados.

  8. David Petraeus did NOT distinguish himself in combat. If you look at the photos of him with all those rows of ribbons, they are not topped with the CIB (Combat Infantryman’s Badge). That is the bar depicting a Revolutionary War Kentucky rifle on a blue background. It is awarded to heroes who actually….you know….served in combat. The only combat related ribbon amongst all that fruit salad is a Bronze Star, and that was a unit citation that Petraeus commanded from a desk. A unit citation is not an award for individual heroism, but is given to a whole unit. I am not going to post a link, but just put his name into the Google Images search. Makes me want to lose my cookies.

    Compare that man with Audie Murphy. The rules are that you either wear three rows of flash, or all of them. Real heroes tend to be modest.

    Here is a picture of Lt. Audie Murphy, and note he IS wearing his CIB above his ribbons. And then there is that little matter of the blue watermarked ribbon around his neck. General David Petraeus could not find a tall enough stepladder to climb in order to kiss Audie Murphy’s butt.

    http://www.hood.army.mil/history/1950/images/murphy.jpg

  9. Eisenhower’s affair with Kay Sommersby certainly didn’t prevent him from becoming President, but the difference is that corporate media actually helped to expose Petraeus, and if they had done their job in exposing the fact that 9/11 was an inside job, there wouldn’t have been any excuses for the illegal Bush wars and resultant war crimes, to say nothing of the
    waste of so many lives and the destruction of two countries — all to benefit Israel, U.S. military, defense contractors, private security firms like Blackrock, and of course the energy industry and companies that profit by rebuilding what we’ve bombed, and the construction of the largest embassy in the world…to provide a place to watch over the financial interests of certain American special interest groups.

  10. West Point Think Tank Buries the Dynamite

    Saturday, 26 January 2013
    by Mikey Weinstein

    http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/14155-west-point-think-tank-buries-the-dynamite

    Excerpt:

    The United States Military Academy at West Point’s Combating Terrorism Center (CTC) is often referred to as a “think tank,” whose primary mission is to inform and shape counterterrorism policy and strategy. CTC’s recent study on domestic right-wing terrorist groups clearly reveals that more taxpayer-funded “tanking” than thinking goes on at the CTC. Indeed, after carefully reviewing the study myself, I am confident that the ladies and gentlemen that worked on this project have gone down in flames in the attempted accomplishment of their mission.

    The CTC attempts to aim a blinding spotlight at the Racist/White Supremacist Movement, the Anti-Federalist Movement, and the Christian fundamentalist Movement and their potential for violence. While exorbitant amounts of money and time were wasted on the CTC’s flimsy, tissue-thin report, it fails to focus so much as a dim penlight on a far greater threat to the liberty of our brave military personnel. Allow me to fill in the blanks for you.

    We at the Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF) consider the report pathetically cold consolation to the countless members of our military whose Constitutionally-guaranteed civil and human rights are unceasingly violated by vicious attacks from a far greater and more sinister enemy within. continues…

  11. Sorry to interrupt a thread about some over-inflated ego in a government supplied cloths but I thought this was interesting considering the attention the story about an imaginary grenade got – apparently rocks are now called “imaginary grenades”
    http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/front-range/loveland/mom-says-son-suspended-for-throwing-imaginary-grenade-but-her-criminal-history-clouds-credibility?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

  12. Evolution, Revolution and the US Senate Confirmation of Lt. Gen. Robert L. Caslen

    Wednesday, 06 February 2013 09:23

    By Mikey Weinstein

    http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/14375-evolution-revolution-and-the-us-senate-confirmation-of-lt-general-robert-l-caslen

    “Since receiving word a little over a week ago of President Obama’s nomination of Lt. General Robert L. “Aroma of Jesus Christ” Caslen to become the next Superintendent (i.e. “Commander”) of West Point, I have been voraciously digesting volumes of information in order to determine what position I should take on his pending Senate confirmation. West Point faculty, staff, cadets, concerned parents of current West Point cadets, and even near-term future cadets (entering in a few months with the Class of 2017) have been stridently begging and beseeching me to use the Military Religious Freedom Foundation’s (MRFF’s) hard-won military influence and take immediate action in order to ensure that this man, who once publicly demonstrated that his personal mission of Christian proselytizing and evangelism was significantly superior to his sworn oath of commission to the United States Constitution in the scandalous Christian Embassy video (Caslen appears from approximately 4:04 to 4:14 in the linked video), would never again be given the chance to produce another religiously hostile and toxic environment for those who don’t share his faith as the most senior ranking officer at West Point.

    You see, Lt. General Caslen is a devout, evangelical Christian. Was it that fact alone that has caused so many in the last few days to petition me for MRFF’s expeditious and aggressive intervention to prevent his U.S. Senate confirmation? No, not in the slightest. MRFF is truly honored to enjoy a plethora of evangelical military MRFF clients, MRFF donors, and even treasured and beloved MRFF staff who share Caslen’s evangelical version of the Christian faith. Indeed, it was never Caslen’s chosen denomination of Christianity, nor his professed personal relationship with Jesus Christ, which was the gravamen of our unconstitutional charges and effusive outrage. Far from it. What WAS the source of this “anti-Caslen” fury was the time, place, and manner in which the General chose to promote and practice his faith. He chose wrong on all three categories – egregiously so. Well, that was then and this is now. ” continues…

  13. http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/articles/20130207_3

    “…the National Security Agency (NSA) carried out electronic surveillance of the personal and official phone calls of then-Multi-National Security Transition Command Iraq (MNSTC-I) commander General David Petraeus as early as 2004. In addition, NSA maintained surveillance of the personal phone calls of Petraeus’s wife Holly.

    The NSA discovered in 2004 that Petraeus was having an affair with Paula Broadwell, the rising Army officer star who was a specialist on counter-terrorism and the Middle East. ….”
    .
    .
    .
    “The stated NSA policy on eavesdropping on phone calls of “U.S. persons” is spelled out in United States Signals Intelligence Directive No. 18 (USSID 18). While Petraeus’s official government phones and email accounts in Iraq and other military commands where he was present are fair game for monitoring for operational security, or OPSEC purposes, his personal phone and email accounts were off-limits to NSA eavesdroppers. Holly Petraeus’s private communications were completely off-limits and were those of Broadwell while she was using her private phone and email to communicate with Petraeus or anyone else.

    However, after 9/11, the NSA believed it was no longer bound by the constraints of USSID 18 and it began conducting wholesale eavesdropping on politicians, senior military officers, journalists, business executives, and others in order to place in storage any embarrassing information that could later be used to blackmail or apply pressure on a targeted individual. The George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations have used stored raw NSA intercept information to apply such pressure and conduct such blackmail, according to our sources.

    The NSA eventually turned over transcripts of Petraeus’s private phone calls and emails to the FBI long before he became subject to a national security investigation in October 2012.”

  14. Petraeus, or so I understand, took a page from the British in Malaysia during their communist insurgency. I think the press and the people make too much of the man. His marriage was dedicated to his career, his design for “his” insurgency strategy was probably based on some old dead Brit’s plan in Malaysia.

    All in all, I think self-promoting opportunist is an apt designation for the man. Apparently he didnt even have enough character to honor his contract with his wife. I think we are lucky he did not advance farther than he did. Vanity, ambition and lack of character are a recipe for disaster. It played out in the microcosm of his life. Thank providence he was not inflicted on the American people as president.

  15. “For over a thousand years Roman conquerors returning from the wars enjoyed the honor of triumph, a tumultuous parade. In the procession came trumpeteers, musicians and strange animals from conquered territories, together with carts laden with treasure and captured armaments. The conquerors rode in a triumphal chariot, the dazed prisoners walking in chains before him. Sometimes his children robed in white stood with him in the chariot or rode the trace horses. A slave stood behind the conqueror holding a golden crown and whispering in his ear a warning: that all glory is fleeting.”
    – Gen. George C. Patton [even if he didnt say it, it is still applicable]

    Former Secretary of State James Baker once said, “Someone asked me what was the most important thing I had learned since being in Washington. I replied that it was the fact that temporal power is fleeting.” Baker went on to observe that once driving through the White House gates he saw a man walking alone on Pennsylvania Avenue and recognized him as having been Secretary of State in a previous administration. “There he was alone – no reporters, no security, no adoring public, no trappings of power. Just one solitary man alone with his thoughts. And that mental picture continually serves to remind me of the impermanence of power and the impermanence of place.”

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