© Greg Groesch Battle worn Tea Party
Imagine
Tea Party extremists seizing control of a South Carolina town and the
Army being sent in to crush the rebellion. This farcical vision is now part of the discussion in professional military circles. At issue is an article in the respected
Small Wars Journal titled "Full Spectrum Operations in the Homeland: A 'Vision' of the Future."
It was written by retired
Army Col. Kevin Benson of the
Army's University of
Foreign Military and Cultural Studies at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., and
Jennifer Weber, a Civil War expert at the University of Kansas. It posits an "extremist militia motivated by the goals of the 'tea party' movement" seizing control of Darlington, S.C., in 2016, "occupying
City Hall, disbanding the city council and placing the mayor under house arrest." The rebels set up checkpoints on Interstate 95 and Interstate 20 looking for illegal aliens. It's a cartoonish and needlessly provocative scenario.
The article is a choppy patchwork of doctrinal jargon and liberal nightmare. The authors make a quasi-legal case for military action and then apply the
Army's Operating Concept 2016-2028 to the situation. They write bloodlessly that "once it is put into play, Americans will expect the
military to execute without pause and as professionally as if it were acting overseas."
They claim that "the Army cannot disappoint the American people, especially in such a moment," not pausing to consider that using such efficient, deadly force against U.S. citizens would create a monumental political backlash and severely erode government legitimacy.
The vision is hard to take seriously. As retired
ArmyBrig. Gen. Russell D. Howard, a former professor at
West Point, observed earlier in his career, "I am a colonel, colonels write a lot of crazy stuff, but no one listens to colonels, so I don't see the problem." Twenty years ago, then-Air Force Lt. Col. Charles J. Dunlap Jr. created a stir with an article in
Parameters titled "The Origins of the American Military Coup of 2012." It carried a disclaimer that the coup scenario was "purely a literary device intended to dramatize my concern over certain contemporary developments affecting the armed forces, and is emphatically not a prediction."
The scenario presented in
Small Wars Journal isn't a literary device but an operational lay-down intended to present the rationale and mechanisms for Americans to fight Americans.
Col. Benson and
Ms. Weber contend, "
Army officers are professionally obligated to consider the conduct of operations on U.S. soil." This is a dark, pessimistic and wrongheaded view of what military leaders should spend their time studying.
A professor at the Joint Forces Staff College was relieved of duty in June for uttering the heresy that the United States is at war with Islam. The Obama administration contended the professor had to be relieved because what he was teaching was not U.S. policy.
Because there is no disclaimer attached to the Small Wars piece, it is fair to ask, at least in Col. Benson's case, whether his views reflect official policy regarding the use of U.S. military force against American citizens.
Andrew Jackson faced down South Carolina in 1833 after that state demanded to take over tax collection at the port of Charleston. If South Carolina were not allowed to do so, they threatened to secede and form an army to defend their choice. Jackson called it act of insurrection bordering on treason, and promised to raise an army four times larger to crush the rebellion. He sent in the navy to make sure the taxes were collected and sent to Washington. His Force Bill of 1833 legalized what he'd done, after the fact. Certainly Lincoln had a copy of Jackson's Force Bill in front of him when the crisis reignited in the same location, in 1861.