The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

The Terrible Impulse to Rally Around Bad Leaders in a Crisis

So, Andrew Cuomo, the Governor of New York, had his approval ratings soar 30 percent during the Covid-19 pandemic. There is talk of him becoming the US President (presumably this means making him Biden’s VP candidate, then having Biden step aside).

He sounds good on TV.

Cuomo is attempting to cut funding for Medicaid because he refused to tax the rich, as the crisis continues. A panel Cuomo appointed has recommended 400 billion in cuts to hospitals. He repeatedly said New York City has too many hospital beds. He has let prisoners in New York jails stay in them even as he was warned they would be breeding grounds for the disease. He left going to isolation at least two weeks too long.

In other words, he’s a neoliberal who wants to cut key resources even during a crisis, and incompetent to boot.

Back after 9/11, we saw the same thing happen with Bush, Jr. Bush not only ignored warnings about Al-Qaeda’s intention to strike in the US, the actual government response on 9/11 was terrible–the US could not get armed jets into the air, only unarmed ones. It would have been a hilarious display of incompetence if it weren’t for the consequences. Canada had armedjets up before the US: I joked that, if we invaded the US, we could have destroyed the entire US Air Force on the ground (then given you universal health care).

Bush was an incompetent, stupid, and mentally challenged (listen to his speeches–he was impaired). He used the blank check given to him by the rally-round effect to take the country to war with Iraq, a disaster which has spawned disaster after disaster. The money and resources used in Iraq should have been spent on other things–on almost anything else–and the death, maiming, rape, and torture are his legacy, as well as the legacy of Americans who ran to an incompetent leader.

Something similar is happening in Britain. Boris Johnson, the PM, has had his party’s ratings soar. Boris is the fellow who originally didn’t want to do any social distancing at all, based on a herd immunity theory which amounted to “let the maximum number of people die and the hospital capacity be overwhelmed.” Personally, Boris bragged about shaking hands with infected Covid-19 patients, then going on and shaking hands with everybody else he met. Personally, a typhoid Mary. The Conservative party has spent ten years defunding the NHS, to the point where it has one of the lowest numbers of hospital beds per capita in the developed world.

Yet Johnson and the Conservative party’s ratings have gone up.

Trump’s ratings, while they have not soared, have gone up, and Trump’s Covid-19 reponse has been beyond incompetent, sliding into delusional, Emperor-has-no-clothes territory.

This tendency to rally around even incompetent leaders makes one despair for humanity. The correct response in all cases is contempt and an attempt, if possible, at removal of the corrupt and venal people in charge. Certainly, no one should be approving of the terrible jobs they have done.

All three of these leaders have, or will, use their increased power to do horrible things. The Coronavirus bailout bill, passed by Congress and approved by Trump, is a huge bailout of the rich, with crumbs for the poor and middle class. So little, in fact, that there may be widespread hunger soon. Cuomo is pushing forward with his cuts, and I’m sure Johnson will live down to expectations.

Incompetence and ideological blindness to the good of the people are, then, encouraged by the behaviour of the masses. This, it seems, is what they want.

We either break this cycle, or over the crises and catastrophes to come (and the 21st century will be a century of tragedy), we will lose billions of people we needn’t have.


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50 Comments

  1. Stirling S Newberry

    Also good is Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor in The New Yorker:

    https://www.newyorker.com/news/our-columnists/reality-has-endorsed-bernie-sanders

    This leads me to believe that the only compromise is to let the reality deniers die.

  2. Stirling S Newberry

    And this from xkcd:

    https://xkcd.com/2287/

  3. Trinity

    Who, exactly, is reporting these so-called approval levels? How accurate are they? How random is the sample on which they are based?

    Or put another way, who is floating these narratives?

    We cannot trust that they have any basis in reality, just because someone says so. Sometimes these stories are just reminders that TINA, in case anyone starts getting ideas otherwise. A reminder that resistance is futile.

    I often wonder just how stupid Americans really are, or the alternative of how stupid they are made to appear to be.

  4. I’m surprised he hasn’t been declared the dem’s presumptive nominee.

  5. Stirling S Newberry

    I wrote a long comment on this. In essence, the elite and the electorate both have the same reaction: ignore it until there is no other alternative.

  6. bruce wilder

    It is not just that people seem to have bad impulses and intuition about leaders as persons, but they also have bad judgments about policies in principle.

    I once got into a major struggle over the drift of the Wikipedia article on the Maginot Line. Apparently there are people who think it is a false myth that it was an ill-conceived failure as a strategy for defending France from German invasion.

    There are always easy pluralities for balanced budgets and for pointless wars. Skepticism about M4all is easy to gin up. Even “experts” can be found with predictably had judgment to back all kinds of foolish schemes and to deny the consequences.I

    Good, humane judgment requires work and recognition and often does not get either.

  7. Ché Pasa

    “Bad leaders” are apparently all we have access to.

    I haven’t seen a fully functional, competent and compassionate US presidency in my entire life. Some have been truly horrifying (I’d put the current one in that category), and most have gone off into self and money serving tangents, wars, and ideological delusions that have contributed to hundreds of millions of deaths.

    When the standard choice is that the opposition is always worse, then we’ll have nothing but bad leaders.

    The rally-effect in the inevitable crises is a natural, self-preservation response. It may turn out to be counter-productive (as we’ve seen many times). But the leaders rallied round are for the most part all we’ve got.

    The rally will last until it doesn’t. In the current situation, it’ll depend on how many die and where, how fast, and how complete the screw-ups become.

    It’s interesting that so far, there is no sign of defenestrating the leaders of Spain and Italy for their failures and cockups and the stacks of bodies that have resulted. That can change; it probably will. But not yet.

  8. GlassHammer

    Does the average American even distinguish the office of the presidency from the nation let alone the office from the man?

    My community steadfastly believes supporting the President and supporting the nation are one in the same. And, they strongly believe the man and the office are one in the same. Even when they complain about a leader they don’t like the complaints are mostly about the leader drawing attention to a distinction (normally between the man and the noble office) and forcing them lose the holistic view they love. To them you are the role, it is you, and if it’s a position at the top of the hierarchy then it is also us.

  9. “He sounds good on TV.”

    He sounds dramatic. He sounds like a Shakespearean actor. He sounds like a bad play. He sounds like someone that panic-stricken slow-witted people want to hear. He does not sound “good.”

  10. Blindly following a charismatic ‘leader’ to suicide, GlassHammer?

    Dragging the rest of us with you?

  11. GlassHammer

    Ten Bears

    Did I say in my post that I agreed with how my community views leaders?

    For the record I do not share their view but I do recognize that this is how they view leaders. And it’s important to recognize it because you can’t explain their actions otherwise.

    The only place I am dragging you is back to my first post.

  12. I can explain it: bare-footed barely literate rubes sprawled drooling Pavlovianly across a ‘couch’ the backseat out of a 1969 Chevy Suburban drunk on the Ambien, Prozac, Viagra and crotch-shots on Fox Kool-Aid, blindly following a charismatic ‘leader’ to suicide, dragging the rest of us with them.

    A minority, by-the-bye, imposing a tyranny upon the majority, upon the rest of us.

    There’s an Amendment for that.

  13. scruff

    In essence, the elite and the electorate both have the same reaction: ignore it until there is no other alternative.

    This brings to mind one of the more useful descriptors I’ve come across:

    Pollard’s Law of Human Behaviour: Humans have evolved to do what’s personally urgent for them (the unavoidable imperatives of the moment), then to do what’s easy, and then to do what’s fun. There is never time left for things that are seen as merely important.

    This description does not bode well for fixing things through electoral mechanisms.

  14. Willy

    I’m not speaking with my sister because I’m refusing to fix things anymore for her incompetent husband, for only a gas money payment. Yet before that, she rationalized having my fixed income father pay a complete stranger double the going rate for simple services which I could easily do for free. For most of her life she wasn’t a self-delusional nutjob and understood basic moral concepts like reciprocity and family decency.

    Something bad has happened to her.

    What does this have to do with the post? These are the kinds of people who rally around Dear Leaders like Trump, Obama and Biden. Greedy, corrupt and stupid. I theorize that in better managed times, they’d be kept in some kind of check by a better common wisdom culture, or something. But apparently some kind of mental pathology has taken hold or some kind of critical cultural restriction has been removed.

  15. different clue

    @Ten Bears,

    Re Cuomo: they are working on it as one of their possible choices. The MSDNC has been playing up Cuomo’s ” Outstandingly Leadershipfulness Abilitude” in hopes of conditioning the DemVoter masses for accepting a highly irregular Cuomo-for-Biden swapout.

    My sense is hardening into a firm prediction: the Democratic Party is conspiring on purpose to throw the election ( if there is one) to Donald Trump. The more states the Dems are able to lose by, the more vindicated I will feel in that prediction. If the Dems are able to throw the election by 45 or more states, I will consider my prediction proved and myself vindicated.

  16. anon y'mouse

    the only thing about this sudden lurch to Cuomo is evidencing exactly what was going on with the sudden enthusiasm for Bloomberg: even the Dems know that Biden is a disaster and have limited enthusiasm for him, his only rallying cry being “vote blue, no matter who”. so anyone who shows up emulating a “take charge” of get-it-doneness is going to get a surge behind them. too bad that surge wasn’t behind Sellout Bernie.

    you can take that for what it is worth, which is not a lot these days.

  17. Willy

    Bernie may believe that you get more flies with honey than vinegar.

    But methinks this is old school thinking, from back in a time when people considered greed a vice. He really needs to call out his “friend” Biden for what he is.

  18. Hugh

    Cuomo is an interesting example. In the current crisis, he has shown himself to be a very good executive. That is he executes a policy well. The problem is that most of the policies he has backed up to now are neoliberal garbage.

    I agree with anon y’mouse. The media and the Establishment Democrats have talked up a whole string of candidates, even before Biden entered into the race in hopes of keep Doddering Joe out and then as an alternative to him. Even after they pulled the rug out from the primary process and coronated Old Joe, anybody but Sanders dontcha know, they would replace this empty suit in a second if they could.

  19. Hugh

    I am listening to the daily White House presser on the coronavirus. Be afraid. Be very afraid. Trump is a blithering idiot. He rambles, and lies and lies and lies. Did you know that New York is hoarding ventilators? Oh, and they are making tons of ventilators now. But they are complicated so hard to make, but simple too. He’s off talking about his impeachment now. He’s getting A+s (Not clear from whom). And New York has a ship now like nothing anyone has ever seen, except for the one in California. Did he instill a sense of false confidence by saying COVID-19 would pass? No, because it will at some point. Was he late? No,he was really early. Early, early, early. That’s why he let Mardi Gras happen. Because he said let it rip. Let it rip and 2.2 million are going to die. So we are early. Early, early, early. Finally they cut away. They should cut Trump’s mike whenever he starts talking. Lies and idiocy. Idiocy and lies. Except for Fauci a total waste of time. All it tells you that if Trump is anywhere near this thing, we are #ucked, %ucked, &ucked.

  20. Willy

    Quite the DNC pickle. Cant have Bernie gotta get rid of Joe. AOC can be seen on Fox News criticizing Cuomo for favoring the rich, and then Cuomo gets sick. I await the miraculous recovery and then leading America heroically away from Trump, Bernie and Joe. This whole thing is like a bad soap opera on powerful drugs.

  21. Ché Pasa

    Ah. I didn’t realize this was a bash-Cuomo/bash-DNC post; I thought it was a more general criticism of the human tendency to follow bad leaders during a crisis, Cuomo being a current example. But with many, many more. The Sainted Winston Churchill was a monster, after all,

    Well, I’ve seen some of Cuomo’s updates. Gavin Newsom’s, Pritzker’s, and several other governors’ efforts as well, including my own. Throw a few mayors in for good measure. All fall somewhere on the better side of the Trump ShartShow, even that absurd governor of Texas. They’re all more logical, coherent, and usefully informative.

    Cuomo’s stand out for the extent of personal information and amount of empathy he shows. I haven’t seen that from the others, certainly not from Trump or Pence. Sometimes Cuomo goes too far, sharing too much information (IMHO) but I guess a lot of people like it.

    As for whether he’s being groomed to replace Old Joe? I doubt it. At this point, it doesn’t look like there will be a Democratic Convention, at least not before September or October, and there may not be an election, either, depending on the severity of the Outbreak come November. I suspect the Congress will not come back into session because it cannot. Too many members out sick, too many risks those old men and women don’t want to take. DC will be severely infected; seems like all the cities will be. And the death toll will be… big.

    And there will be a lot of social unrest. We’ve seen hints of what’s to come. Food running out, no way to pay the mortgage or the rent for many millions. No medical care available in much of the country except for treating or not treating the virus, and all of it inadequate. Piles and piles of bodies… Breakdowns are already happening. Think how much worse it will become before it gets better.

    Cuomo will have more than enough on his hands in New York.

  22. anon y'mouse

    i don’t take it as a “bash Cuomo” post, necessarily. but people in our culture are very easily soothed by the image, and care little at all about the substance or details. and the inverse is quite true with someone like Sanders—no one will listen to him spout out the absolute correct solutions to this crisis because he is “old” and “shouty”, seems like a “cult of personality” and hasn’t “gotten things done”. it seems to matter not at all what someone says anymore, as long as they do it confidently and with flourish.

    lots of scared children out there need big strong Daddy to ride to the rescue.

    let’s face it, most of what put tRUMP onto the map was his ego and bluster.

  23. StewartM

    Bruce

    Apparently there are people who think it is a false myth that it was an ill-conceived failure as a strategy for defending France from German invasion.

    If you meant the “There are people who think the Maginot line did what it was supposed to, and wasn’t the blame for the French defeat in 1940”, then having read a few opinions on it, count me among them. I recall a Dunningan and Nofi article years ago that said, in essence, France could have had for the same money the Maginot line AND a modern tank force, just like the Germans had the (longer) Siegfried line and a modern tank force. In fact the Maginot Line (costing $100 million USD) was a bargain compared to its German counterpart, the Siegfried line (costing estimates $300-600 million) but few people go around saying “oh, the Siegfried Line was a waste of money”. The Siegfried Line did cost the Allies an additional estimated 140,000 casualties to overcome in 1944-1945 despite being thinly held.

  24. StewartM

    Hugh

    Cuomo is an interesting example. In the current crisis, he has shown himself to be a very good executive. That is he executes a policy well.

    That’s my take as well. “Competency” is a double-edged sword, it’s highly desirable when someone attempts to do something good, but highly undesirable when someone attempts evil. Reagan was a dumbass, but he did appoint competent (but evil) people; and we’d been better off if he had appointed incompetents.

    If you’re in a car and the incompetent driver seems determined to drive you over a cliff, one hopes for incompetency.

  25. Eric Anderson

    “Hopelessly passing your time in the grassland away
    Only dimly aware of a certain unease in the air
    You better watch out
    There may be dogs about
    I’ve looked over Jordan, and I have seen
    Things are not what they seem
    What do you get for pretending the danger’s not real
    Meek and obedient you follow the leader
    Down well trodden corridors into the valley of steel
    What a surprise
    The look of terminal shock in your eyes
    Now things are really what they seem
    No, this is no bad dream
    The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want
    He makes me down to lie
    Through pastures green He leadeth me the silent waters by
    With bright knives he releaseth my soul
    He maketh me to hang on hooks in high places
    He converteth me to lamb cutlets
    For lo, He hath great power, and great hunger
    When cometh the day we lowly ones
    Through quiet reflection, and great dedication
    Master the art of karate
    Lo, we shall rise up
    And then we’ll make the bugger’s eyes water
    Bleating and babbling we fell on his neck with a scream
    Wave upon wave of demented avengers
    March cheerfully out of obscurity into the dream
    Have you heard the news?
    The dogs are dead
    You better stay home
    And do as you’re told
    Get out of the road if you want to grow old

    — “Sheep” by Roger Waters

  26. bruce wilder

    The Maginot Line was suppose to enable a successful defense of France from a rapid German invasion — that it did not do. In retrospect, it did not do anything except absorb resources, design the French army for immobility and create a false sense of security.

    The Siegfried Line in the 1930s did not amount to much more than a propaganda talking point. In 1944, of course, the Germans got more serious about it and poured resources into it. U.S. casualty rates especially among infantry had a lot to do with Eisenhower’s dubious choices. Did the Siegfried Line enable the Battle of the Bulge or did Eisenhower’s missteps? That requires deep expertise to argue.

    But, the Maginot Line as exemplary failure is an easy argument, because the context is one of catastrophic failure. To argue that the Maginot Line was a success on its own terms sounds like the surgeon congratulating himself on a successful operation despite the death of the patient. The frame of the argument is untenable because of the historic outcome of the only test of the strategy of which the Maginot Line was an integral component part.

  27. Stirling S Newberry

    “France could have had for the same money the Maginot line AND a modern tank force, just like the Germans had the (longer) Siegfried line and a modern tank force. In fact the Maginot Line (costing $100 million USD) was a bargain compared to its German counterpart”

    The French had a modern tank force. That was not the problem.

  28. bruce wilder

    it seems to matter not at all what someone says anymore, as long as they do it confidently and with flourish

    for quite a long time, the professional critics of politics with few exceptions have engaged in theatre criticism of an insipid kind.

    you can certainly argue that there appears to be a market demand for such a thing, but the only fact is that there is a market supply. the ptb seem to like rule by idiocy

    i think a lot of Trump’s appeal back in 2016 was that in the wild meanderings of his stream-of-consciousness speaking style, he would stumble into saying some truth or at least something not-so-coded that the listener needed an interpreter

    American elites generally are a stupid, incompetent lot who cannot bear to admit that they are rightly mistrusted. But, most speak “seriously” in a coded language meant to be impenetrable.

    Trump is personally absurdly incompetent, but the incompetence that has gotten the U.S. into catastrophic failure territory runs very, very deep in a whole social class and in a neoliberal economic system shaped by elite betrayal of the country as a whole.

    Trump’s inability to speak coherently is a cosmetic issue. The morons at the CDC who could neither develop a test nor distribute it nor write strategically sensible protocols for its use — that is more serious. The people who went on morning talk shows poo-pooing the need to wear masks in public a few weeks ago illustrate a more systematic level of social breakdown.

    Now, maybe, we are in the quiet time before violence begins to erupt on a large scale. That is when authoritarian “seriousness” goes vicious. We will see.

    Did you see Harari’s Time.com essay? It fairly dripped with the self-regard of the PMC that got us into this mess. He actually gave U.S. leadership in the GFC of 2008 as a positive example of global cooperation with no hint of irony.

  29. Stirling S Newberry

    It is amazing how the counselors love zoom, while the students have problems with it. Disconnect.

    I also, on a different note, found that the is another take on Akutagawa’s story “In a Grove” – the source for Kurosawa’s film Rashomon – the “wife” of the samurai is in fact a man.

  30. Gonna’ have to think about that a bit Stir, lol, but first impression: eyup.

  31. Hugh

    Not sure how the Maginot Line discussion came up. The problem with it was that, for political reasons, it did not extend along the French frontier with Belgium. The Belgians saw such an extension as an abandonment and betrayal of them. So it didn’t happen. Instead the French used a mixture of infantry and armor there. The problem with the armor was that it was scattered and fairly static, deployed in support of infantry. De Gaulle pretty much made his bones by breaking the rules, concentrating his tanks and going mobile with them. He had success against German forces, but he didn’t control the whole line and so couldn’t stop the onslaught.

  32. Cuomo has banned the use of hydroxychloroquine for use, in NY, against covid-19, except for clinical trials. No reason given. So much for a guy who crows about his transparency. If he was smarter, he would have urged Trump to order the production of massive quantities of it, to meet any and all anticipated domestic need for it. (Any leftover could be donated to countries dealing with malaria.) It costs a few pennies per pill, in Africa.

    Even if, for now, a ban has some justification, so that legacy use of it for rheumatoid arthritis and lupus isn’t interrupted.

    Of course, if Trump had half a brain, he would have done so, already, unless he knows for a fact that the “free market” will meet the potential demand. You know, just like it’s done for PPE and masks. /s

    Dr. Oz, in an interview with Sean Hannity, has stated that he believes the reason for the ban is to allow for the legacy users to have their regular supply. Sean Hannity, apparently, just hopes that Trump is making sure that potential demand is met; or else, will luck out, with small enough net fatalities that everybody forgets about all his boneheaded decisions, and non-decisions. Sean Hannity, who has the President’s ear, doesn’t urge Trump to use his authority, under the Defense Production Act, to ORDER domestic production of HQ. (India has recently banned its export.)

    Hope is not a plan. What is it that these people don’t understand about “exponential growth”? With a doubling period of just a few days?

  33. Stirling S Newberry

    “So it didn’t happen. Instead, the French used a mixture of infantry and armor there. The problem with the armor was that it was scattered and fairly static, deployed in support of infantry. ”

    Correct. The problem wasn’t the amount, it was its deployment – contrast this with the German-style with mobile panzer units.

  34. Stirling S Newberry

    “Hope is not a plan. What is it that these people don’t understand about “exponential growth”? With a doubling period of just a few days?”

    Years they understand, it is the “miracle of compound interest.” Days is a fraud with humans – reeks of MLM.

  35. bruce wilder

    I introduced the Maginot Line as an example of how people can fail to recognize strategic failure for failure, even in retrospect. Understanding collective strategy (policy) is hard, apparently, which becomes a corollary to the problem of recognizing good leaders and good leadership. (There have been notable exceptions in history: Lincoln was a great leader and the people managed to choose him despite various handicaps such as his appearance. The Union managed almost despite itself to find a workable military grand strategy due in part to the genius of Winfield Scott; the Confederacy never did have a coherent grand strategy and its military strategy was unworkable as a result, despite the reputations of Lee and some other general officers.)

    French strategy in WWII under the military leadership of Gamelin was wholly incoherent and the contradictions and blindness repeated fractally all the way down. The combination of Maginot on the French-German border and sweeping North into Belgium failed because the Germans came thru the Ardennes, on the French border by the way but where no wall had been extended and which area was lightly defended. Coming thru the Ardennes the Germans flanked the French and British forces in Belgium. The latter wore themselves out moving vast distances to no effect.

    In retrospect, and one would think at the time, the right thing for the French to do in 1939 was to invade Germany massively while the Germans were in Poland, but that idea went nowhere. That was the main chance and it was foregone, marking the leadership as fools.

    The French R-35 light tank was a rapidly evolving design as was true generally at the time. DeGaulle’s battalion was the only one that had radios! As I recall, the R-35 numbered maybe in the neighborhood of 1500. Many broke down in the long-distance sweeping about in Belgium and were ill-suited in any role but infantry support in any case. The much improved latest models of the R-35 (commonly called R-40) suitable for better tactical deployment showed up only as France was already lost.

  36. Mark Pontin

    On the French tank controversy: Almost 80 percent of French tanks didn’t have radios. A military force can’t do — or deploy to counter — maneuver warfare, if it it can’t communicate to act as a networked, cooperating force.

    And I’ve heard the claim that in the minority of French tanks that_ did_ have radios, it was one-way radio because the French command wanted to send orders but didn’t want its forces talking back or discussing its orders. French tanks vis-à-vis German Panzers were well-enough matched. The Germans simply ran rings around them.

    The French had form on this sort of obtuseness.

    in the Franco-Prussian war of 1870, both sides had machine-guns, forex. But the French mounted theirs on railroad cars and could only get them as near the front line as railroad lines happened to run, while the Germans mounted their machine guns on horse-drawn carts. As in WWII, the German ran rings around them and advanced all the way to capture Paris.

    As for the French high command’s obtuseness in WWI, most of you have seen Kubrick’s PATHS OF GLORY, which tells part of that appalling story.

    As a consequence of knowing they’d be shot if they refused to fight, the French poilus in WWI several times marched into the front line and then no man’s land making baa’ing noises en masse —a collective bit of gallows humor/protest about being lambs sent to the slaughter. Come to think of it, the motto of the French Foreign Legion is, “March or die.”

    A networked force will always run rings around a less networked force.

    (Well, unless it’s the American military, and even then nobody doubts the American military’s superior capability to destroy everything. But that doesn’t necessarily win wars.)

  37. StewartM

    Bruce Wilder

    But, the Maginot Line as exemplary failure is an easy argument, because the context is one of catastrophic failure. To argue that the Maginot Line was a success on its own terms sounds like the surgeon congratulating himself on a successful operation despite the death of the patient. The frame of the argument is untenable because of the historic outcome of the only test of the strategy of which the Maginot Line was an integral component part.

    I think a better analogy would be, say, Michael Jordan scoring 35, 45, 50 or more points in the 1980s in games his Chicago Bulls lose. According to your argument, Jordan was ‘an integral part’ of those losses, no matter how well he did his part. Most people would not accept the validity of the argument, saying that the lack of contributions from his teammates, and possibly coaching, were the reason for Jordan’s Bulls being knocked form the playoffs. The reason why they would say that was that Jordan and the Bulls later won six NBA titles once the talent and coaching around him were improved.

    The Maginot line did *not* cost a fortune. The Siegfried line in equivalent dollars cost at least 3x, and maybe 6x, more, yet most people who proclaim the Maginot line an expensive failure don’t extend that judgement to the Siegfried line. Nor do they consider the fortifications around Kursk an expensive failure, nor the fortifications in East Prussia that cost the Soviets dearly in their 1944-45 advances, nor the Gustav line which cost the Allies almost 100,000 casualties and took over six months to overcome. They don’t consider these failures even though the Maginot line did its job better than any of these.

    The Jordan-Bulls analogy holds. Sterling is correct, the French (and British) had a lot of tanks, some of which were qualitatively superior in armor and firepower, but were deficient in other ways. But they were largely thought of as infantry support assists; they had 5 ‘light’ mechanized and 4 armored divisions, but these were new and untrained, and most of their tanks were distributed among the infantry (this was what I meant by the French didn’t have a ‘modern tank force’; I’m talking of the organization, not the hardware). This meant, given the German doctrine of concentrating their armor (largely massed in 9 panzer and 3 motorized infantry divisions looking at their order of battle) that usually when German tanks met French tanks, the Germans enjoyed numerical superiority because their tanks fought in massed units while the French were spread out. When this was not the case, the French could achieve draws (like Hannut) or even win (Moncornet).

    Also (think of coaching and Phil Jackson in our NBA analogy; whose ‘triangle offense’ made defensive schemes to contain Jordan more difficult) the Manstein plan of feinting as if they were repeating the 1914 Schlieffen Plan then cutting through the Ardennes behind the advancing French/British forces just happened to niche exactly with British/French expectations–as they were expecting the Germans to repeat the Schlieffen plan, they stepped right into von Manstein’s trap.

    There are thus plenty of reasons the French lost in 1940. The Maginot line was not one of them. The French already had the hardware too, it wasn’t as if they lacked tanks. Building the Maginot line did not prevent the French from also outnumbering the Germans in tanks! They were just not organized effectively and their doctrine for employment was dated. And finally, even despite this, if the French and British had not made the Mother of Strategic blunders by walking straight into von Manstein”s trap, they still could well have held out like they did in 1914. In chess terms, the French and British were in a game where they had a pawn up and were in a reasonably good defensive position, then promptly blundered away their queen. That blunder was enough by itself to lose.

    Finally consider this–if the French had NO Maginot line, and sunk their money into oodles of more tanks, if they had used these the same way they did they’d probably would have lost just as badly, and very likely even worse they did. The Maginot line effectively did cut off the most direct route from Germany to France. The Maginot line held out so well against repeated German attacks that the troops in it had to be ordered to surrender in June 1940. They were stunned to hear France had lost.

  38. Benjamin

    @bruce wilder
    @Hugh

    The Maginot Line worked exactly as intended. And it wasn’t any kind of political compromise.

    The widespread understanding of the Line and its ‘failure’ amounts to “the stupid Frenchies built an impenetrable wall to keep the Germans out, and the Germans just went around it, hurr hurr, stupid frogs”. This is completely wrong.

    The Line was designed to be too costly to directly assault not to prevent a German invasion but to force the invasion to go around the Line, along predictable routes through Belgium. This was directly inspired by the German’s Schlieffen Plan getting bogged down and thrown off its time table in Belgium at the start of WWI.

    And none of this is historical revisionism. The entire French defense plan leading up to WW2 was closely coordinated with Belgium. What I’m describing literally was the plan cooked up in the 1930s.

    The Line worked perfectly. Where the plan fell apart was in the second stage with the field armies. But that doesn’t make the Line a failure.

    And since it came up, the Siegfried Line actually was a failure. Both in practice and in conception. Because it actually was designed to be used in active defense. But fixed fortifications are a bad idea in modern warfare, especially when your enemy completely controls the skies and has artillery dominance. The Maginot Line was designed to force a battle of field armies, which it did. The Siegfried Line was designed to actually be held, an impossible task, and thus it failed.

  39. Ian Welsh

    Smart stuff Benjamin.

  40. bruce wilder

    @Benjamin

    The Line was designed to be too costly to directly assault not . . . to force the invasion to go around the Line, along predictable routes through Belgium.

    A fair summary of intent. But, in the event, the Line did NOT succeed in forcing the Germans to pass along the predicted lines thru Belgium.

    In the event, the Germans passed not thru northern Belgium in a redux of the Schlieffen wheel on a path toward Paris, but through the Ardennes on their way to the Channel aiming to flank and encircle the French overextended in Belgium. The Maginot Line had not been extended far enough to block the passage thru the Ardennes.

    “The Line worked perfectly” is an absurdity. It did not force the Germans to “pass along predicted lines” and the consequence was the misuse and misplacement of the field armies.

    If anything, the Line fed the delusion that France was secure enough that it would have time to respond, time to build up its forces, et cetera. And, that France, with British help, could win a long war. Or, that it could and should adopt a defensive posture. The furious effort in 1939-40 to extend something similar to the Maginot Line along the Franco-Belgian border thru ill-suited terrain reveals how far strategic thinking had broken down into incoherence on all levels of the French state.

    It is a narrative hook to say something like, “contrary to received wisdom, the Maginot Line . . . blah, blah, blah”. My objection to that storytelling motif in this context is that the rhetoric undermines the insight that successful policy succeeds by cooperation; policy must be coherent, its elements must work together. It is true that some of the major fortresses of the Maginot Line resisted and even some of the minor ones required a huge German effort to overcome, but that is too narrow a criteria for success. In the context of events, it ought to be clear that the Line both as an idea and as actual military fortifications contributed to the incoherence of French thinking and planning that was their undoing.

    Narrowing the context to look, the Germans were not able take such and such fort for four days, misses the point that the Line unhinged French strategic thinking. And, given the sequence of events from 1918 to 1939, it is not hard to trace the twists and turns down that dark alley to defeat.

    In the context of this thread, it stands as an example of how a people can rally around bad strategy as well as bad strategists.

  41. Hugh

    Initial planning for the Maginot Line began in 1925 with the creation of the Commission de défense des frontières (CDF). This was superseded in 1927 by the Commission d’organisation des régions fortifiées (CORF). Its proposals were then sent to the Minister of War to be acted on.

    It was part of French military doctrine that the defense of Northern France would take place largely on Belgian soil and in conjunction with their Belgian allies. To funnel German forces in this direction, a heavily fortified line was built in the Northeast from Luxemburg to Switzerland. This came to be known as the Maginot Line, although originally this name applied to all fortifications and deployments from the Channel to the Mediterranean. This doctrine was dealt a severe blow when Belgium went neutral on October 14, 1936.

    Construction of fortifications along the Belgium and Luxemburg borders began in 1937 and lasted into 1940 (WWII began on September 3, 1939). These were piecemeal, left to the choice of regional commanders, and much weaker than the Maginot Line proper. The danger of a German thrust through the Vosges in eastern Belgium/Luxemburg, because of the terrain, was largely ignored. And due to limited resources and even more limited thinking, there was little or no compensation for defensive lines being pushed back out of Belgium and substantially lengthened.

  42. Hugh

    Sorry, said Vosges. Meant the Ardennes.

  43. KT Chong

    There is no national leader in the world who is worse than Xi Jinping.

  44. Benjamin

    @bruce wilder

    No, it worked perfectly. It did exactly what it was intended to do. The Ardennes wasn’t blocked off because it was (incorrectly) viewed as already being a natural barrier that didn’t need supplementing. The fact is that the purpose of the Line was to force the assault through Belgium. It did exactly that. The failures came from elsewhere.

    “It is true that some of the major fortresses of the Maginot Line resisted and even some of the minor ones required a huge German effort to overcome, but that is too narrow a criteria for success.”

    Good thing this was never the purpose of the Line then. It wasn’t meant to resist attack. It was meant to be too much trouble to seriously assault, forcing an attack through Belgium. Basically it was designed to not be used, like a fleet in being.

    I get the point you’re making, that all parts of a plan need to work together for full success. But that doesn’t change the fact that the Maginot Line part of the plan worked as intended, contrary to the popular myth that presents it as some sort of naive failure (“the Krauts just went around it! Silly surrender-monkeys!”).

    In some alternate universe where the French won the Battle of France, I’m guessing the Line would be the part of the plan that wasn’t changed much or at all. It was the field armies that failed, not the Line.

  45. Hugh

    It is strange the storyline that China got the coronavirus right. They screwed up from the get-go and even before that: uncontrolled urbanization, lack of hygiene in their food markets, then arresting the doctor who first reported the outbreak, the delay in closing down Wuhan, giving millions the chance to leave, the completely unreliable nature of any of their statistics, the allowing of who knows how many people to leave the country and so infect the world. Yes, they eventually did clamp down, but there is no indication that a second wave could not occur.

  46. Ian Welsh

    The point Benjamin is making about the Maginot line has also been made by the foreign policy columnist Eric Margolis a few times.

  47. bruce wilder

    @Benjamin

    You keep saying “the purpose of the Line was to force the assault through Belgium. It did exactly that.”

    But, it did not “exactly” do that! Why do I have to repeat myself?

  48. Hugh

    If you take it that the purpose of the Maginot Line was to deter a German attack, then it failed. On the other hand, you could argue that the Line worked exactly as planned –for the Germans, keeping much of the French army tied down in the Northeast as they attacked in the Northwest. On the other other hand, the French were correct that the Germans would lose “une guerre de longue durée,” a war extending over a long period of time because they would eventually be outmatched by the resources their opponents could bring to bear. They were incorrect about how the Maginot Line would play into this or that this would be accomplished,not by the French and English, but by the Americans and Russians.

  49. Mark Pontin

    For heaven’s sake, is this still going? Come on —

    Von Clausewitz: “No battle plan survives contact with the enemy.”

    Mike Tyson: “Everybody has a plan till they get hit in the face.”

    The French high command were inflexibly relying on their enemy doing what the French high command expected and wished them to do once the fighting arrived.

    That’s the worst kind of strategic planning and the mark of an incompetent, arrogant elite. Burce is absolutely right.

  50. StewartM

    Mark Pontin:

    That’s the worst kind of strategic planning and the mark of an incompetent, arrogant elite.

    No, the French high command may have been incompetent (but then again, the Germans were also lucky, and the French plan could still have and would have worked just given just a few slight alterations in luck here or there) but they were not ‘arrogant’. More “terrified’, “intimated’, “spooked”, or “having an inferiority complex”. But that should be completely understandable given the holocaust the French went through. Americans, to my mind, have no damn business criticizing the French as even our Civil War did not exact the same relative death toll the French suffered; we have no conception of its impacts. The French knew full well their strategic weaknesses, and planned for it. Their failure was one of execution, not of conception.

    What is the myth in WWII is not that the Maginot line was a failure, but that ‘fixed fortifications did not work’. But they did work; they won battles, or even after they failed they exacted fearful costs on the attacker in both lives and time. In fact, they tended become more and more effective as the war went on, instead of less so.

    Also, in fact–although I myself repeated as a cause of for the French defeat that “the French to a much larger extent distributed their armor across their infantry divisions, while the Germans had piled them into panzer divisions”–all true enough, by 1940 terms But even here, the French were not being “stuck in the past” or hopelessly misguided. Quite the contrary, in fact, one could argue that the French were *prescient*, for as the war went on *everyone* started to do likewise. The triumphant Allied armies that rolled across Europe in 1944-45 had a *greater distribution of armor in infantry divisions as opposed in armored divisons*, relatively speaking, than did the French. The Germans too, had started following suit in 1943, shifting more and more of their armor production into tank destroyers/assault guns, to be meted out to their infantry divisions to bolster their antitank capability, and the Soviets started adding independent tank regiments and assault gun regiments to their rifle corps. Everyone by mid-war and later was adding more armor to their infantry divisions, based on the lessons being learned by combat. So how does this make the French ‘old-fashioned’ or ‘stupid’?

    The concept behind the Maginot line and the French approach in 1940 was fine. In chess terms, they were playing defensively and ‘safe’ (see my comment about timidity), something like Caro-Kann defense, an opening that has a reputation for being solid and hard-to-crack. And the Caro-Kann is a perfectly sound defense on the Grandmaster level–it’s a favorite of World Champions such as Capablanca, Botvinnik, Petrosian and Karpov, Yet if you play it and make bad moves and blunder away your queen, then you’re going to lose against any competition above absolute novice chess. But you would lose because you made inept moves and tactical errors, not because your conception was bad or that the Caro-Kann is an inferior opening destined to fail.

    Same with the Maginot line stratgey.

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