By Seth
Cropsey
Friday,
December 09, 2022
Americans have
long been rightly proud of our military. But that might be changing. A recent
Reagan Institute poll indicates that only 48 percent of
Americans had “a great deal of confidence” in the military. Last year,
confidence hovered at similar levels, around 45 percent. But compared with
2018, this is a precipitous drop — just four years ago, 70 percent of Americans
expressed significant confidence in the military.
The
reason for this decline? Sixty-two percent of Americans said the military had
become politicized, thereby reducing their trust in it as an institution.
Cultural questions are seeping into the last major nonpartisan institution in
American life.
Indeed,
in late November, Senator Marco Rubio and Representative Chip Roy published a brief bulletin that provided
further evidence of this disturbing trend: namely, that the U.S. military
services, and especially military educational institutions, are increasingly
incapable of avoiding culture-war questions. The issue is one of prioritization:
The military in general, and the service academies in particular, cannot become
cultural battlefields. The Navy is especially vulnerable to the pernicious,
distracting influence of these nebulous cultural questions. If left unchecked,
the Naval Academy’s new practices will sap readiness and competence from the
future force.
The
modern American culture war has become encompassing in scope. It now permeates
every factor of national life. Fortunately, the past year has not seen
large-scale instances of civil violence. But the reality remains that the
United States is deeply polarized, split coastal blue and central red states
with decidedly different views of human personhood, family life, gender and
sexuality, and overall human flourishing.
The
liberal polity, in its modern sense, is designed to survive
these tensions. The American republic is politically, economically, and
geographically expansive enough to enable individuals and communities
to pursue happiness in diverging manners. The very fact that the American
system has cracked only once, and then only over the most fundamental of
judicial questions — that of human enslavement — is a testament to
its durability.
But for
the liberal model to work, a handful of questions must remain beyond the reach
of political debate. Property rights and protections on speech, assembly, and
belief are probably the two areas that require credible pre-commitment on the state’s
part. If men can neither secure the means to their self-preservation nor pursue
happiness as they define it, society will shatter like a wine glass struck by a
hammer.
Yet
internal protections on behavior and property do not ensure the liberal polity’s
continuation. Equally relevant is the external component. The liberal state
does not typically remain free from threats for long. Liberal political norms
are typically joined with capitalist economic systems and democratic representative
government. There are tensions between all three aspects, but
fundamentally, all are mutually reinforcing, even if cultural and historical
context modifies the type of liberal-capitalist democracy in question.
These
states commonly perform poorly at foreign affairs. Their
international acumen typically stems from the non-liberal or pre-liberal
features of their political systems, namely executives with the power and
expansive authority of monarchs. The international environment is harsh,
competitive, and often violent. Liberal democratic capitalist domestic politics
may be competitive, but the nature of its harshness and violence is drastically
distinct, and far more restrained, from that of any other regime. This places
the liberal statesman at an inherent disadvantage when facing authoritarian
counterparts.
This
demands a robust, professional, forward-leading military that can deter and
defeat long-term threats. The United States has had this sort of military for
virtually its entire existence. Indeed, it is remarkable that the only issue
the U.S. has consistently faced is poor resourcing. Apart from
during the Civil War, the U.S. military has remained nonpartisan, generally
apolitical, and thoroughly subservient to civilian control. Even when
segregation was the moeurs of American political life, the
military remained relatively aloof, integrating far more rapidly than the rest
of society.
However,
the status quo has shifted in recent years. General officers have become far
more common at the highest levels of power, for example, threatening to link
officer careers to partisan politics, a fact that undeniably motivated General
Mark Milley’s full-throated defense of a variety of left-of-center academic
theories last summer. “I’ve read Mao Zedong. I’ve read Karl Marx. I’ve
read Lenin. That doesn’t make me a communist,” said the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, in a comment that entirely misses the point. There are
left-wing critiques of capitalism with which those who have proper education
should wrestle, although Mao and Lenin are not among those thinkers who should
be given credence. But regardless, the point is that one must, in a liberal
society, take these ideas with a proper degree of skepticism. These
ideas have penetrated both the entirety of the modern educational establishment
and, increasingly, the service academies.
The
Naval Academy has become a venue for the transmission of critical theory and
the whole host of diversity, equity, and inclusion measures. The Naval
Academy has traveled farther down the critical-race rabbit hole than any other
professional military institution. It has embraced culture-war trends wholly
unencumbered by self-reflection. When the Naval Academy teaches courses on “the
social and physical constructs of race, gender, and ethnicity in the context of
social inequality in America,” provides its faculty with resources on Ibrahim
Kendi’s How to Be an Antiracist and Robin DiAngelo’s White
Fragility, and is reviewing its admissions process to identify points of
bias, the issue has become pernicious. Ultimately, this unsavory constellation
of viewpoints has transformed philosophy (whose serious consideration proponents
of these views actively seek to silence) into radical ideology.
The
Rubio–Roy report chronicles many instances of pernicious cultural
modifications, all stemming from the embrace of this ideology. They include
defense secretary Lloyd Austin’s counter-extremism stand-down order — a
mandatory series of training events on extremism with no identifiable
intellectual or strategic coherence — and Milley’s sympathies for
left-of-center educational fads that treat the 20th century’s “professional
revolutionaries” as serious thinkers. These trends identify the
United States as an irredeemably sinful polity, founded to preserve and
propagate white supremacy, which is of course part and parcel with liberalism,
capitalism, and representative government. America holds “promise” under this
ideology only insofar as it can be destroyed and rebuilt under a completely
different set of intellectual premises. These premises are overwhelmingly
Marxist in nature — capitalism and democracy, for instance, are violent because
they are systemically racist; hence racial and class-based hegemony
are essentially identical.
The
issue is not an articulated critique of liberalism. A vital strength of liberal
society is its ability to incubate critics who assess and test its systems, thereby
ensuring a degree of experimentation and modification not possible in ossified
illiberal states. It is rather that the criticism made is based on poor
history, shoddy social science, and badly decayed philosophy. But even so,
liberal society should be able to withstand any number of asinine viewpoints.
The
danger is most clear, rather, when faddish ideology implants itself within
military educational institutions. A professional military is unique. Its
members must devote virtually all their attention to honing their craft. Any
moment not spent preparing to fight is, in effect, wasted. Sailors, whether
enlisted or commissioned, have even greater day-to-day responsibilities, given
their need to maintain large, sophisticated pieces of equipment while deployed
for months on end.
There is
no combat need for a DEI initiative at the Naval Academy. And there is now a
DEI office, complete with an annual conference, a series of curriculum advisory
materials, and functionally undefined power to weigh in on academic choices. These
programs are precisely what those university administrators throughout the
United States have used to modify institutional behavior replacing inquiry with
ideology. This is exactly the intention of those who will control the Navy’s
DEI programs. There is now a diversity peer-educator program that emphasizes
linguistic correctness in student interactions. That is to say, the program
embraces the code words and linguistic tropes that the educated, refined upper
classes demand employ as rites of passage, and denies those who reject this
deeply classist, intellectually bankrupt cultural trend. There will almost
certainly be additional curricular requirements, social regulations, and in
time, modified admissions practices based upon shoddy philosophy and warped
principles. If the Naval Academy and the other branches don’t reject these
teachings, then we won’t just have to worry about declining trust in our
military. We’ll have to worry about its declining effectiveness.
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