The New York Review of Books: The White Man Unburdened


Volume 50, Number 11 · July 17, 2003
Feature
The White Man Unburdened
By Norman Mailer
Exeunt: lightning and thunder, shock and awe. Dust, ash, fog, fire, smoke,
sand,
blood, and a good deal of waste now move to the wings. The stage, however,
remains occupied. The question posed at curtain-rise has not been answered.
Why
did we go to war? If no real weapons of mass destruction are found, the
question
will keen in pitch.
Or, if some weapons are uncovered in Iraq, it is likely that even more have
been
moved to new hiding places beyond the Iraqi border. Should horrific events
take
place, we can count on a predictable response: "Good, honest, innocent
Americans
died today because of evil al-Qaeda terrorists." Yes, we will hear the
President's voice before he even utters such words. (For those of us who are
not
happy with George W. Bush, we may as well recognize that living with him in
the
Oval Office is like being married to a mate who always says exactly what you
know in advance he or she is going to say, which helps to account for why
more
than half of America now appears to love him.)
The key question remains—why did we go to war? It is not yet answered. The
host
of responses has already produced a cognitive stew. But the most painful
single
ingredient at the moment is, of course, the discovery of the graves. We have
relieved the world of a monster who killed untold numbers, mega-numbers, of
victims. Nowhere is any emphasis put upon the fact that many of the bodies
were
of the Shiites of southern Iraq who have been decimated repeatedly in the
last
twelve years for daring to rebel against Saddam in the immediate aftermath
of
the Gulf War. Of course, we were the ones who encouraged them to revolt in
the
first place, and then failed to help them. Why? There may have been an
ongoing
argument in the first Bush administration which was finally won by those who
believed that a Shiite victory over Saddam could result in a host of Iraqi
imams
who might make common cause with the Iranian ayatollahs, Shiites joining
with
Shiites! Today, from the point of view of the remaining Iraqi Shiites, it
would
be hard for us to prove to them that they were not the victims of a double
cross. So they may look upon the graves that we congratulate ourselves for
having liberated as sepulchral voices calling out from their tombs—asking us
to
take a share of the blame. Which, of course, we will not.
Yes, our guilt for a great part of those bodies remains a large subtext and
Saddam was creating mass graves all through the 1970s and 1980s. He killed
Communists en masse in the 1970s, which didn't bother us a bit. Then he
slaughtered tens of thousands of Iraqis during the war with Iran—a time when
we
supported him. A horde of those newly discovered graves go back to that
period.
Of course, real killers never look back.
The administration, however, was concerned only with how best to expedite
the
war. They hastened to look for many a justifiable reason. The Iraqis were a
nuclear threat; they were teeming with weapons of mass destruction; they
were
working closely with al-Qaeda; they had even been the dirty geniuses behind
9/11. The reasons offered to the American public proved skimpy,
unverifiable,
and void of the realpolitik of our need to get a choke-hold on the Middle
East
for many a reason more than Israel- Palestine. We had to sell the war on
false
pretenses.
The intensity of the falsification could best be seen as a reflection of the
enormous damage 9/11 has brought to America's morale, particularly the
core—the
corporation. All the organization people high and low, managers, division
heads,
secretaries, salesmen, accountants, market specialists, all that congeries
of
corporate office American, plus all who had relatives, friends, or
classmates
who worked in the Twin Towers—the shock traveled into the fundament of the
American psyche. And the American working class identified with the warriors
who
were lost fighting that blaze, the firemen and the police, all instantly
ennobled.



It was a political bonanza for Bush provided he could deliver an appropriate
sense of revenge to the millions— or is it the tens of millions?—who
identified
directly with those incinerated in the Twin Towers. When Osama bin Laden
failed
to be captured by the posses we sent to Afghanistan, Bush was thrust back to
ongoing domestic problems that did not give any immediate suggestion that
they
could prove solution-friendly. The economy was sinking, the market was down,
and
some classic bastions of American faith (corporate integrity, the FBI, and
the
Catholic Church—to cite but three) had each suffered a separate and grievous
loss of face. Increasing joblessness was undermining national morale. Since
our
administration was conceivably not ready to tackle any one of the serious
problems looming before them that did not involve enriching the top, it was
natural for the administration to feel an impulse to move into larger
ventures,
thrusts into the empyrean—war! We could say we went to war because we very
much
needed a successful war as a species of psychic rejuvenation. Any major
excuse
would do—nuclear threat, terrorist nests, weapons of mass destruction —we
could
always make the final claim that we were liberating the Iraqis. Who could
argue
with that? One could not. One could only ask: What will the cost be to our
democracy?
Be it said that the administration knew something a good many of us did
not—it
knew that we had a very good, perhaps even an extraordinarily good, if
essentially untested, group of armed forces, a skilled, disciplined,
well-motivated military, career-focused and run by a field-rank and general
staff who were intelligent, articulate, and considerably less corrupt than
any
other power cohort in America.
In such a pass, how could the White House fail to use them? They would prove
quintessential morale-builders to a core element of American life— those
tens of
millions of Americans who had been spiritually wounded by 9/11. They could
also
serve an even larger group, which had once been near to 50 percent of the
population, and remained key to the President's political footing. This
group
had taken a real beating. As a matter of collective ego, the good average
white
American male had had very little to nourish his morale since the job market
had
gone bad, nothing, in fact, unless he happened to be a member of the armed
forces. There, it was certainly different. The armed forces had become the
paradigmatic equal of a great young athlete looking to test his true size.
Could
it be that there was a bozo out in the boondocks who was made to order, and
his
name was Iraq? Iraq had a tough rep, but not much was left to him inside. A
dream opponent. A desert war is designed for an air force whose
state-of-the-art
is comparable in perfection to a top-flight fashion model on a runway. Yes,
we
would liberate the Iraqis.
So we went ahead against all obstacles—of which the UN was the first.
Wantonly,
shamelessly, proudly, exuberantly, at least one half of our prodigiously
divided
America could hardly wait for the new war. We understood that our television
was
going to be terrific. And it was. Sanitized but terrific —which is, after
all,
exactly what network and good cable television are supposed to be.



And there were other factors for using our military skills, minor but
significant: these reasons return us to the ongoing malaise of the white
American male. He had been taking a daily drubbing over the last thirty
years.
For better or worse, the women's movement has had its breakthrough successes
and
the old, easy white male ego has withered in the glare. Even the consolation
of
rooting for his team on TV had been skewed. For many, there was now
measurably
less reward in watching sports than there used to be, a clear and declarable
loss. The great white stars of yesteryear were for the most part gone, gone
in
football, in basketball, in boxing, and half gone in baseball. Black genius
now
prevailed in all these sports (and the Hispanics were coming up fast; even
the
Asians were beginning to make their mark). We white men were now left with
half
of tennis (at least its male half), and might also point to ice hockey,
skiing,
soccer, golf (with the notable exception of the Tiger), as well as lacrosse,
track, swimming, and the World Wrestling Federation—remnants of a once great
and
glorious white athletic centrality.
Of course, there were sports fans who loved the stars on their favorite
teams
without regard to race. Sometimes, they even liked black athletes the most.
Such
white men tended to be liberals. They were no use to Bush. He needed to take
care of his more immediate constituency. If he had a covert strength, it was
his
knowledge of the unspoken things that bothered American white men the
most—just
those matters they were not always ready to admit to themselves. The first
was
that people hipped on sports can get overaddicted to victory. Sports, the
corporate ethic (advertising), and the American flag had become a
go-for-the-win
triumvirate that had developed many psychic connections with the military.
After all, war was, with all else, the most dramatic and serious
extrapolation
of sports. The concept of victory could be seen by some as the noblest
species
of profit in union with patriotism. So Bush knew that a big victory in an
easy
war would work for the good white American male. If blacks and Hispanics
were
representative of their share of the population in the enlisted ranks, still
they were not a majority, and the faces of the officer corps (as seen on the
tube) suggested that the percentage of white men increased as one rose in
rank
to field and general officers. Moreover, we had knockout tank echelons,
Super-Marines, and—one magical ace in the hole—the best air force that ever
existed. If we could not find our machismo anywhere else, we could certainly
count on the interface between combat and technology. Let me then advance
the
offensive suggestion that this may have been one of the covert but real
reasons
we went looking for war. We knew we were likely to be good at it.
In the course, however, of all the quick events of the last few months, our
military passed through a transmogrification. Indeed, it was one hellion of
a
morph. We went, willy-nilly, from a potentially great athlete to serving as
an
emergency intern required to operate at high speed on an awfully sick
patient
full of frustration, outrage, and violence. Now in the last month, even as
the
patient is getting stitched up somewhat, a new and troubling question
arises:
Have any fresh medicines been developed to deal with what seem to be teeming
infections? Do we really know how to treat livid suppurations? Or would it
be
better to just keep trusting our great American luck, our faith in our
divinely
protected can-do luck? We are, by custom, gung-ho. If these suppurations
prove
to be unmanageable, or just too time-consuming, may we not leave them
behind? We
could move on to the next venue. Syria, we might declare in our best John
Wayne
voice: You can run, but you can't hide. Saudi Arabia, you overrated tank of
blubber, do you need us more than ever? And Iran, watch it, we have eyes for
you. You could be a real meal. Because when we fight, we feel good, we are
ready
to go, and then go some more. We have had a taste. Why, there's a basketful
of
billions to be made in the Middle East just so long as we can stay ahead of
the
trillions of debts that are coming after us back home.



Be it said: the motives that lead to a nation's major historical acts can
probably rise no higher than the spiritual understanding of its leadership.
While George W. may not know as much as he believes he knows about the
dispositions of God's blessing, he is driving us at high speed all the same
—this man at the wheel whose most legitimate boast might be that he knew how
to
parlay the part-ownership of a major-league baseball team into a
gubernatorial
win in Texas. And—shall we ever forget?—was catapulted, by legal finesse and
finagling, into a now-tainted but still almighty hymn: Hail to the Chief!
No, we will rise no higher than the spiritual understanding of our
leadership.
And now that the ardor of victory has begun to cool, some will see how it is
flawed. For we are victim once again of all those advertising sciences that
depend on mendacity and manipulation. We have been gulled about the real
reasons
for this war, tweaked and poked by some of the best button-pushers around to
believe that we won a noble and necessary contest when, in fact, the
opponent
was a hollowed-out palooka whose monstrosities were ebbing into old age.
Perhaps he was not that old. Perhaps Saddam made a decision to go
underground
with as much wealth as he had spirited away, and would fund al-Qaeda or some
extension of it in a collaboration of sorts with Osama bin Laden—a new
underground team, the Incompatible Terrorist Twins. That is a hypothesis as
mad
as the world we are beginning to live in.
Democracy, more than any other political system, depends on a modicum of
honesty. Ultimately, it is much at the mercy of a leader who has never been
embarrassed by himself. What is to be said of a man who spent two years in
the
Air Force of the National Guard (as a way of not having to go to Vietnam)
and
proceeded—like many another spoiled and wealthy father's son—not to bother
to
show up for duty in his second year of service? Most of us have episodes in
our
youth that can cause us shame on reflection. It is a mark of maturation that
we
do not try to profit from our early lacks and vices but do our best to learn
from them. Bush proceeded, however, to turn his declaration of the Iraqi
campaign's end into a mighty fashion show. He chose—this overnight clone of
Honest Abe—to arrive on the deck of the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln on
an
S-3B Viking jet that came in with a dramatic tail-hook landing. The carrier
was
easily within helicopter range of San Diego but G.W. would not have been
able to
show himself in flight regalia, and so would not have been able to
demonstrate
how well he wore the uniform he had not honored. Jack Kennedy, a war hero,
was
always in civvies while he was commander in chief. So was General
Eisenhower.
George W. Bush, who might, if he had been entirely on his own, have made a
world-class male model (since he never takes an awkward photograph),
proceeded
to tote the flight helmet and sport the flight suit. There he was for the
photo-op looking like one more great guy among the great guys. Let us hope
that
our democracy will survive these nonstop foulings of the nest.

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