Saturday, December 27, 2025

The Illusion of Strength: No Need to Deploy the National Guards

 The Illusion of Strength: When Optics Outshine Reality



In moments of national crisis, leaders often face a tension between perception and reality. The public sees uniforms, troops, and dramatic deployments as proof of strength. Yet behind the optics lies a quieter truth: the federal government already possesses a vast arsenal of agencies capable of enforcing law and order without exposing the military or National Guard.


This tension is best understood through the lens of chess. In chess, the queen is the most powerful piece—dramatic, sweeping, and capable of dominating the board. But wise players know that exposing the queen too early can be reckless. Pawns, knights, and bishops, though less glamorous, often secure victory by covering the board with discipline and precision.


So it is with federal power. The National Guard is the queen: visible, symbolic, and politically dramatic. But the federal agencies—ICE, FBI, Marshals, FPS, DEA, ATF—are the pawns, knights, and bishops. They move with less spectacle but achieve the same ends, often faster and with fewer risks. The reality is that the United States has more than enough manpower in these agencies today to quell disturbances in any city. The optics of deploying the Guard may look decisive, but the quieter consolidation of federal agents is often more effective and legally sound.


---


Eisenhower vs. Trump: Two Approaches


History offers a useful comparison.


• Eisenhower (1957, Little Rock): When Arkansas resisted school desegregation, Eisenhower invoked the Insurrection Act and sent the 101st Airborne Division alongside federalizing the Arkansas National Guard. At that time, federal agencies were too small and narrowly focused to handle such a confrontation. The FBI was limited in scope, the U.S. Marshals were small in number, and agencies like ICE or FPS didn’t even exist yet. Eisenhower had no choice but to use the military and Guard to enforce constitutional rights. The optics of soldiers escorting children into school sent a powerful message of federal authority, but it was also grounded in necessity.

• Trump (2025, Chicago attempt): Trump sought to federalize the Illinois National Guard to support immigration enforcement. The Supreme Court blocked the move, ruling he lacked statutory authority. Unlike Eisenhower, Trump had ample federal agencies at his disposal—ICE, FBI, Marshals, and others—but leaned on the Guard for optics. The reality was that federal agents could have fulfilled the mission. The push for Guard troops was more about political symbolism than operational necessity.



---


Perception vs. Reality


• Perception: Troops in fatigues patrolling city streets project strength, control, and “law and order.”

• Reality: Federal agencies today already have tens of thousands of personnel nationwide, with clear authority to act. They can surge into cities like Chicago without legal controversy.

• Lesson: Optics may win headlines, but substance wins stability. Just as in chess, victory comes not from exposing the queen, but from coordinating the quieter pieces.



---


Conclusion


The debate over the National Guard in Chicago is, in truth, a nothing burger when viewed through reality. The federal government has more than enough resources in its agencies to enforce law and order. The real issue is optics: leaders may prefer the dramatic image of troops in the streets, but the disciplined work of federal agents is what actually secures peace.


Like chess, governance requires discernment. The queen dazzles, but pawns, knights, and bishops win the game. Eisenhower understood this balance, using the military only because federal agencies lacked the resources in his era. Trump’s reliance on the Guard reflected a preference for optics over necessity. The lesson for citizens is clear: look beyond the spectacle. The real power lies in the pieces you don’t see.

No comments: