The forever war, foregone

IF 2.6 1区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Darryl Li
{"title":"The forever war, foregone","authors":"Darryl Li","doi":"10.1111/aman.13976","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>What is there to say about a war largely consigned to the past without ever having ended? For those who experienced September 11, 2001, as an epochal event, the twentieth anniversary may have seemed more like a millstone than a milestone—a ritual made especially hollow by the recent advent of an even more decisively world-making pandemic.<sup>1</sup> Similarly, the appearance of this not-quite-anniversary collection several years later is a reminder not only of the collective exhaustion that we labor under but of a larger rearranging of priorities—or of proverbial deckchairs in the face of melting glaciers.</p><p>From its inception, cheerleaders and critics of what we can now call the “Forever War” warned that it would not end with the clarity of a surrender ritual or decisive battle. Instead, the Forever War's normalization and its obsolescence seem to have gone hand in hand. On the one hand, it is safe to say that globalized counterinsurgency against an ill-defined “Islamic” terrorist threat no longer enjoys pride of place as a central animating principle of the US imperium, as Washington becomes increasingly preoccupied with both Russia and China. At the same time, the Forever War unquestionably endures: its clearest juridical expression, the 2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF), continues to serve as the legal grounding for military operations from Afghanistan to Syria to Somalia.<sup>2</sup> Legislative discussions focus not on repeal, but on the extent of further expansion. The Forever War's institutional reconfigurations of the American state, including the advent and metastasis of the Department of Homeland Security—a cabinet agency whose budget is second only to the Pentagon's—will remain with us for many years to come. Somehow both forever and yet past, the Forever War may appear as <i>foregone</i>, in that it precedes the world we inhabit and shapes much of what is taken for granted about it.<sup>3</sup> And rather than ever being abolished or abrogated, the Forever War's most likely fate is to simply be superseded in favor of other, even more terrifying, forms of violence.</p><p>Against this temporal morass and the oblivion that it invites, we can plant our feet in this moment and face the closest thing to an event marking a sense of closure: the September 2021 US withdrawal from Afghanistan. Even after the successful conclusion of a withdrawal agreement with the Taliban, the United States continues to assert a right to project lethal violence into the country from “over the horizon” at will, as it did with the 2022 drone strike that killed al-Qa'ida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri. Less spectacular but far more consequential is the US decision to freeze billions of dollars in Afghan central bank assets deposited at the Federal Reserve in New York, a move that has pushed an already impoverished country further into immiseration and potential famine. To speak of the US war on Afghanistan in the past tense notwithstanding these ongoing forms of violence illustrates what it means for a war to be both forever and foregone. And the example of Iraq—in which the “nonlethal” lethality that Rubaii discusses in her article was inflicted through sanctions as a long precursor to invasion rather than coming in the aftermath of it—only further underscores the inadequacy of a linear or teleological concept of war's temporality.</p><p>In the meantime of this foregone forever, anthropologists materially situated in the Anglophone Global North have continued to do their work.<sup>4</sup> Early commentaries—including two articles published in the same issue of this journal (Abu-Lughod, <span>2002</span>; Mamdani, <span>2002</span>) and subsequently expanded into influential books—interrogated prevailing conceits in public discourse (see also Asad, <span>2007</span>)<sup>5</sup> and set basic parameters for anthropological critiques of what Zoltán Glück in this section calls the “security encounter.” In the Forever War's second decade, a wave of ethnographies took US militarism and security culture as primary targets of analysis (Gusterson, <span>2016</span>; MacLeish, <span>2013</span>; Masco, <span>2014</span>; Wool, <span>2015</span>). More recent years (cf. Rana, <span>2011</span>) have finally witnessed the advent of ethnographic accounts rooted in theorizing the Forever War as an imperial and thus necessarily transnational assemblage, in which much of the jailing, torturing, killing, and fighting is done by postcolonial states (Al-Bulushi, <span>forthcoming</span>; Li, <span>2018</span>; Tahir, <span>2017</span>). Such a transnational perspective thinks at different scales and also produces rich studies of how the Forever War has unfolded in “official” sites of war-making, such as Iraq (Rubaii, <span>2022</span>) and Afghanistan (Mojaddedi, <span>2019</span>), and even in the geographical heart of empire itself (Ghani, <span>2016</span>; Razavi, <span>2022</span>).</p><p>It is no coincidence, of course, that this turn has been largely pursued by diasporic scholars with connections to populations most directly exposed to the Forever War (al-Bulushi et al., <span>2023</span>, 213–14) and often inflected by the kind of feminist sensibilities and praxes so poignantly illustrated by the Hakyemez and Yasak article in this section. Another, more prosaic, factor also accounts for the temporality of scholarly production: the ever-lengthening gestation period of monographs from graduate training through the gauntlet of temporary postings to (ever-fewer) tenure-track positions.<sup>6</sup> While there is much to value about the slower pace of scholarly production compared to journalism and policy research, one cannot help but notice how the anthropology of the Forever War is coming into its own as the war itself passes into public oblivion in US public discourse and the scholarly fads driven by it.</p><p>Further reflection on the discipline's relationship with the Forever War is also instructive for the types of political postures and engagements that anthropology has permitted and punished. The Forever War came at a time when the discipline was emerging from a cycle of performative self-flagellation, whose own shortcomings and erasures have since attracted their own reassessments (Jobson &amp; Allen, <span>2016</span>). Anthropology's own seemingly forever foregone lies in a commitment to celebrating one great “turn” after another in what may be a giant circle. As a result, “critical” stances on the war in published anthropological scholarship have been in no short supply, as Glück notes.<sup>7</sup> Yet the material consequences of this tilt have been ambiguous at best. Several resolutions criticizing aspects of the Forever War passed in a nonquorum vote at the 2003 business meeting of the American Anthropological Association (AAA), only to be rejected or derailed by the executive board. Condemnation of the invasion of Iraq and US torture practices did not come until late 2006—in resolutions passed with quorum, and thus binding on the board—putting the AAA in lockstep with US elite public opinion, rather than ahead of it (Deeb &amp; Winegar, <span>2016</span>, 148–55, 160–61).<sup>8</sup></p><p>The tension between peer-reviewed jeremiads and milquetoast concern trolling is symptomatic of a period in US history in which widespread antiwar sentiment couldn't quite congeal into a robust antiwar movement. For the neoliberal era of capitalism was at the same time a postconscription era of US militarism, in which military labor under the flag was to be corralled through a combination of a “poverty draft” and private contractors (Moore, <span>2019</span>)—a silver bullet for any budding cross-class and multiracial solidarities of anti–Vietnam War mobilizations.<sup>9</sup> These are the parameters that shape the struggles with “legibility” that Lutz and Savell detail in their contribution to this section on the Costs of War project. Here, one must acknowledge an important erasure in both scholarship and politics on the issue: that of class.</p><p>Take what is arguably the discipline's finest moment in the Forever War: the widespread opposition to the appropriation of anthropological knowledge in the US Army's Human Terrain System (HTS) (Network of Concerned Anthropologists, <span>2009</span>). This is a success story, if evidenced by official condemnations and the paucity of “real” anthropologists—defined as those holding doctorates in the discipline—in the program. But absent from the debate were the class dynamics, the combination of debt and do-gooding (Graeber, <span>2007</span>), driving those who actually did join HTS. This disconnect was symptomatic of how the social worlds of both anthropology and the military had become narrower and more segregated, albeit in very different ways. And without a broader ecology of antiwar mobilization and class politicization to tap into, anthropology's condemnation of HTS remained a moral gesture (albeit a necessary one) rather than an act of sabotage. The guild could go forth with a conscience unstained by militarism, practicing a politics blissfully unencumbered by consequence.</p><p>As the forever foregone of US hegemony forces into relief questions of imperial decline, multipolarity, and “great power” conflict, anthropologists who fashion themselves as critics of empire and capital will struggle to reorient themselves. The tendency to nuance and the elevation of complexity over clarity and commitment may in some cases serve them well in mapping the dilemmas and compromises of fighting from inside the belly of one beast without forgetting the other leviathans that lurk about. But unless and until opposition to militarism and imperialism can find a new and robust social base in which to situate our thought, the discipline will likely remain as something like a discussant at so many a AAA conference panel, nodding to itself in an empty room.</p>","PeriodicalId":7697,"journal":{"name":"American Anthropologist","volume":"126 3","pages":"521-523"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/aman.13976","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Anthropologist","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/aman.13976","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"ANTHROPOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

What is there to say about a war largely consigned to the past without ever having ended? For those who experienced September 11, 2001, as an epochal event, the twentieth anniversary may have seemed more like a millstone than a milestone—a ritual made especially hollow by the recent advent of an even more decisively world-making pandemic.1 Similarly, the appearance of this not-quite-anniversary collection several years later is a reminder not only of the collective exhaustion that we labor under but of a larger rearranging of priorities—or of proverbial deckchairs in the face of melting glaciers.

From its inception, cheerleaders and critics of what we can now call the “Forever War” warned that it would not end with the clarity of a surrender ritual or decisive battle. Instead, the Forever War's normalization and its obsolescence seem to have gone hand in hand. On the one hand, it is safe to say that globalized counterinsurgency against an ill-defined “Islamic” terrorist threat no longer enjoys pride of place as a central animating principle of the US imperium, as Washington becomes increasingly preoccupied with both Russia and China. At the same time, the Forever War unquestionably endures: its clearest juridical expression, the 2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF), continues to serve as the legal grounding for military operations from Afghanistan to Syria to Somalia.2 Legislative discussions focus not on repeal, but on the extent of further expansion. The Forever War's institutional reconfigurations of the American state, including the advent and metastasis of the Department of Homeland Security—a cabinet agency whose budget is second only to the Pentagon's—will remain with us for many years to come. Somehow both forever and yet past, the Forever War may appear as foregone, in that it precedes the world we inhabit and shapes much of what is taken for granted about it.3 And rather than ever being abolished or abrogated, the Forever War's most likely fate is to simply be superseded in favor of other, even more terrifying, forms of violence.

Against this temporal morass and the oblivion that it invites, we can plant our feet in this moment and face the closest thing to an event marking a sense of closure: the September 2021 US withdrawal from Afghanistan. Even after the successful conclusion of a withdrawal agreement with the Taliban, the United States continues to assert a right to project lethal violence into the country from “over the horizon” at will, as it did with the 2022 drone strike that killed al-Qa'ida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri. Less spectacular but far more consequential is the US decision to freeze billions of dollars in Afghan central bank assets deposited at the Federal Reserve in New York, a move that has pushed an already impoverished country further into immiseration and potential famine. To speak of the US war on Afghanistan in the past tense notwithstanding these ongoing forms of violence illustrates what it means for a war to be both forever and foregone. And the example of Iraq—in which the “nonlethal” lethality that Rubaii discusses in her article was inflicted through sanctions as a long precursor to invasion rather than coming in the aftermath of it—only further underscores the inadequacy of a linear or teleological concept of war's temporality.

In the meantime of this foregone forever, anthropologists materially situated in the Anglophone Global North have continued to do their work.4 Early commentaries—including two articles published in the same issue of this journal (Abu-Lughod, 2002; Mamdani, 2002) and subsequently expanded into influential books—interrogated prevailing conceits in public discourse (see also Asad, 2007)5 and set basic parameters for anthropological critiques of what Zoltán Glück in this section calls the “security encounter.” In the Forever War's second decade, a wave of ethnographies took US militarism and security culture as primary targets of analysis (Gusterson, 2016; MacLeish, 2013; Masco, 2014; Wool, 2015). More recent years (cf. Rana, 2011) have finally witnessed the advent of ethnographic accounts rooted in theorizing the Forever War as an imperial and thus necessarily transnational assemblage, in which much of the jailing, torturing, killing, and fighting is done by postcolonial states (Al-Bulushi, forthcoming; Li, 2018; Tahir, 2017). Such a transnational perspective thinks at different scales and also produces rich studies of how the Forever War has unfolded in “official” sites of war-making, such as Iraq (Rubaii, 2022) and Afghanistan (Mojaddedi, 2019), and even in the geographical heart of empire itself (Ghani, 2016; Razavi, 2022).

It is no coincidence, of course, that this turn has been largely pursued by diasporic scholars with connections to populations most directly exposed to the Forever War (al-Bulushi et al., 2023, 213–14) and often inflected by the kind of feminist sensibilities and praxes so poignantly illustrated by the Hakyemez and Yasak article in this section. Another, more prosaic, factor also accounts for the temporality of scholarly production: the ever-lengthening gestation period of monographs from graduate training through the gauntlet of temporary postings to (ever-fewer) tenure-track positions.6 While there is much to value about the slower pace of scholarly production compared to journalism and policy research, one cannot help but notice how the anthropology of the Forever War is coming into its own as the war itself passes into public oblivion in US public discourse and the scholarly fads driven by it.

Further reflection on the discipline's relationship with the Forever War is also instructive for the types of political postures and engagements that anthropology has permitted and punished. The Forever War came at a time when the discipline was emerging from a cycle of performative self-flagellation, whose own shortcomings and erasures have since attracted their own reassessments (Jobson & Allen, 2016). Anthropology's own seemingly forever foregone lies in a commitment to celebrating one great “turn” after another in what may be a giant circle. As a result, “critical” stances on the war in published anthropological scholarship have been in no short supply, as Glück notes.7 Yet the material consequences of this tilt have been ambiguous at best. Several resolutions criticizing aspects of the Forever War passed in a nonquorum vote at the 2003 business meeting of the American Anthropological Association (AAA), only to be rejected or derailed by the executive board. Condemnation of the invasion of Iraq and US torture practices did not come until late 2006—in resolutions passed with quorum, and thus binding on the board—putting the AAA in lockstep with US elite public opinion, rather than ahead of it (Deeb & Winegar, 2016, 148–55, 160–61).8

The tension between peer-reviewed jeremiads and milquetoast concern trolling is symptomatic of a period in US history in which widespread antiwar sentiment couldn't quite congeal into a robust antiwar movement. For the neoliberal era of capitalism was at the same time a postconscription era of US militarism, in which military labor under the flag was to be corralled through a combination of a “poverty draft” and private contractors (Moore, 2019)—a silver bullet for any budding cross-class and multiracial solidarities of anti–Vietnam War mobilizations.9 These are the parameters that shape the struggles with “legibility” that Lutz and Savell detail in their contribution to this section on the Costs of War project. Here, one must acknowledge an important erasure in both scholarship and politics on the issue: that of class.

Take what is arguably the discipline's finest moment in the Forever War: the widespread opposition to the appropriation of anthropological knowledge in the US Army's Human Terrain System (HTS) (Network of Concerned Anthropologists, 2009). This is a success story, if evidenced by official condemnations and the paucity of “real” anthropologists—defined as those holding doctorates in the discipline—in the program. But absent from the debate were the class dynamics, the combination of debt and do-gooding (Graeber, 2007), driving those who actually did join HTS. This disconnect was symptomatic of how the social worlds of both anthropology and the military had become narrower and more segregated, albeit in very different ways. And without a broader ecology of antiwar mobilization and class politicization to tap into, anthropology's condemnation of HTS remained a moral gesture (albeit a necessary one) rather than an act of sabotage. The guild could go forth with a conscience unstained by militarism, practicing a politics blissfully unencumbered by consequence.

As the forever foregone of US hegemony forces into relief questions of imperial decline, multipolarity, and “great power” conflict, anthropologists who fashion themselves as critics of empire and capital will struggle to reorient themselves. The tendency to nuance and the elevation of complexity over clarity and commitment may in some cases serve them well in mapping the dilemmas and compromises of fighting from inside the belly of one beast without forgetting the other leviathans that lurk about. But unless and until opposition to militarism and imperialism can find a new and robust social base in which to situate our thought, the discipline will likely remain as something like a discussant at so many a AAA conference panel, nodding to itself in an empty room.

永远的战争,前功尽弃
对于一场在很大程度上已成为过去但却从未结束的战争,还有什么可说的呢?对于那些经历过 2001 年 9 月 11 日这一划时代事件的人来说,20 周年纪念与其说是一个里程碑,不如说是一块磨刀石--由于最近出现了一种更具有决定性影响世界的流行病,这一仪式显得尤为空洞。同样,几年后这本并不算周年纪念的文集的出现,不仅提醒了我们所承受的集体疲惫,也提醒了更大范围内优先事项的重新安排--或者说是面对冰川融化时众所周知的躺椅的重新安排。从一开始,我们现在可以称之为 "永远的战争 "的拉拉队长和批评家们就警告说,这场战争不会以投降仪式或决战的明确方式结束。相反,"永恒战争 "的正常化和过时似乎是相辅相成的。一方面,可以肯定地说,随着华盛顿越来越关注俄罗斯和中国,针对定义不明的 "伊斯兰 "恐怖主义威胁的全球化反叛乱行动不再是美国统治的核心激励原则。与此同时,"永远的战争 "无疑仍在继续:其最明确的司法表述--2001 年《使用军事力量授权法》(AUMF)--继续成为从阿富汗到叙利亚再到索马里的军事行动的法律依据。2 立法讨论的重点不是废除,而是进一步扩张的程度。"永远的战争 "对美国国家体制的重构,包括国土安全部--其预算仅次于五角大楼的内阁机构--的出现和蜕变,将在未来许多年与我们同在。在某种程度上,永远的战争既是永恒的,又是过去的,它似乎是注定要发生的,因为它先于我们所居住的世界,并塑造了这个世界的许多理所当然的东西。面对这种时空的泥沼和它所带来的遗忘,我们可以在此刻站稳脚跟,面对一个最接近于终结感的事件:2021 年 9 月美国从阿富汗撤军。即使在与塔利班成功达成撤军协议之后,美国仍继续宣称有权随意从 "地平线 "的另一端向阿富汗投射致命的暴力,2022 年的无人机袭击就击毙了 "基地 "组织领导人埃曼-扎瓦希里。美国决定冻结阿富汗中央银行存放在纽约联邦储备委员会的数十亿美元资产,这一举动虽然不那么引人注目,但却影响深远,它将这个本已贫困的国家进一步推向凋敝和潜在的饥荒。尽管这些暴力形式仍在继续,但以过去时态谈论美国对阿富汗的战争,说明了一场战争的永远和前功尽弃意味着什么。鲁巴伊在其文章中讨论的伊拉克的 "非致命 "杀伤力是通过制裁造成的,是入侵的长期前奏,而不是在入侵之后发生的,这个例子进一步强调了线性或目的论的战争时间性概念的不足。早期的评论--包括发表在本刊同一期上的两篇文章(Abu-Lughod,2002 年;Mamdani,2002 年),随后扩展为颇具影响力的书籍--对公共话语中流行的观念进行了质疑(另见 Asad,2007 年)5 ,并为佐尔坦-格吕克(Zoltán Glück)在本节中所称的 "安全遭遇 "的人类学批判设定了基本参数。在 "永远的战争 "的第二个十年,一波民族志将美国军国主义和安全文化作为主要分析对象(Gusterson, 2016; MacLeish, 2013; Masco, 2014; Wool, 2015)。最近几年(参见拉纳,2011 年),终于出现了一些人种学著作,它们将 "永远的战争 "理论化为一种帝国主义,因此必然是一种跨国组合,其中大部分监禁、酷刑、杀戮和战斗都是由后殖民国家完成的(Al-Bulushi,即将出版;Li,2018 年;Tahir,2017 年)。这种跨国视角在不同尺度上进行思考,也产生了丰富的研究,探讨永恒战争如何在伊拉克(Rubaii, 2022)和阿富汗(Mojaddedi, 2019)等 "官方 "战争制造地,甚至在帝国本身的地理中心(Ghani, 2016; Razavi, 2022)展开。
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来源期刊
American Anthropologist
American Anthropologist ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
11.40%
发文量
114
期刊介绍: American Anthropologist is the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association, reaching well over 12,000 readers with each issue. The journal advances the Association mission through publishing articles that add to, integrate, synthesize, and interpret anthropological knowledge; commentaries and essays on issues of importance to the discipline; and reviews of books, films, sound recordings and exhibits.
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