Calling in Reinforcements Before the National Guard Needs Them

I subscribe to The Atlantic and have been a subscriber for a decade or so. It would travel with me to Asia or long trips along with books to keep me busy on 12 or more-hour flights. It is not unusual to quote “The Atlantic. “

My Own Experience and What I know . . .

From my own military background and having grown up during sixties and being in the military in the late sixties into the early seventies. It was not my experience to be called out to a city or community to control riots, etc. We were not, period. That was the territory for the National Guard in states to be called out.

I find Trump calling out of active-duty 2nd Bn 7th Marines extremely unusual. The city already had 2,000 National Guard personnel deployed. Los Angeles has ~8,500 police officers. California has 6,400 State Police. And then there are other cities which can be called upon.

The last time (unless mistaken) Federal Troops and Marines were deployed was 1992. In 1970ish, 4th BN 10th Marines at Lejeune were trained for riot control. I was a part of that unit.

So, Trump calls in Federal Troops along with the National Guard? A show of strength and power?

Revolutions have a logic. The revolutionaries start with a big, transformative, impossible goal. They want to remake society, smash existing institutions, replace them with something different. They know they will do damage on the road to their utopia, and they know people will object. Committed to their ideology, the revolutionaries pursue their goals anyway.

Inevitably, a crisis appears. Perhaps many people, even most people, don’t want regime change, or don’t share the revolutionaries’ utopian vision. Perhaps there are unplanned disasters. Smashing institutions can have unexpected, sometimes catastrophic, consequences, as the history of post-revolutionary famines shows very well.

But whatever the nature of the crisis, it forces the revolutionaries to make a choice. Give up—or radicalize. Find compromises—or polarize society further. Slow down—or use violence.

The bloodiest, most damaging revolutions have all been shaped by people making the most extreme choices. When the Bolsheviks ran into opposition in 1918, they unleashed the Red Terror. When the Chinese Communists encountered resistance, Mao sent teenage Red Guards to torment professors and civil servants. Sometimes the violence was mere theater, lecture halls full of people demanding that victims recant. Sometimes it was real. But it always served a purpose: to provoke, to divide, and then to allow the revolutionaries to suspend the law, create an emergency, and rule by decree.