America hates losing. In life, the lies we tell ourselves are among the most effective. In war, the same is true about the lies we tell ourselves as a country to avoid admitting defeat. As yet another surge in Covid-19 cases spreads across the United States, the commander-in-chief has turned to old habits to deflect from that reality.
President Donald Trump’s Covid-19 denialism has been well-documented over the last eight months, but lately it has taken on a twist: insisting that the media is the only force interested in, and therefore distorting the threat of, the virus. In other words, it’s our fault for wanting to talk about how people are dying, when the country has moved on.
Until November 4th., Fake News Media is going full on Covid, Covid, Covid. We are rounding the turn. 99.9%.
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 27, 2020
Trump has been using one phrase in particular, “rounding the turn,” and slipping it into his coronavirus commentary since all the way back in March. If you want to take a trip down memory lane, “The Daily Show” has you covered:
Wait how many corners does this thing have pic.twitter.com/z1VX6lgEmm
— The Daily Show (@TheDailyShow) October 25, 2020
This pandemic has left politicians around the world struggling to adequately convey the seriousness of Covid-19 to their constituents. Many have landed on comparing the situation to a war or a battle — something violent and brutish that requires noble sacrifice for the virtuous to vanquish it. We’ve had a raft of commentary as to just why that framing is ineffective, and possibly harmful, given its countervailing tendency to “breed fear, which can in turn drive anxiety and panic,” as Yasmeen Serhan wrote in The Atlantic.
In mid-March, stay-at-home orders around the country had just begun to take effect. Trump was asked at his then-daily briefing whether he considered the U.S. “to be on a wartime footing, in terms of fighting this virus.” He answered that yes, he absolutely did. And what’s more, he said, “I view it as a, in a sense, a wartime president. I mean, that’s what we’re fighting. I mean, it’s — it’s a very tough situation. You’re — you have to do things.”
But today we find ourselves with the government writ large having abandoned that thinking — the rhetoric has turned away from war and into a resignation from the top administration officials that mitigation is a fool’s errand. But the president continues to insist that things are going just fine as that promised victory comes ever nearer. Trump’s rosy optimism in the face of harsh reality is, in a sense, the logical extension of framing the coronavirus response as a war to be won: America can’t allow itself to envision a world in which it has lost, and so it’s willing victory into existence by sheer blind faith.
America can’t allow itself to envision a world in which it’s lost, and so it’s willing victory into existence by sheer blind faith.
The beginnings of the so-called War on Terror in the early 2000s were filled with promises of swift military successes. The most technologically advanced country in the world had set itself on a course of action, so what could go wrong? That line of thinking played into the invasions of both Afghanistan and Iraq, as the conventional military engagements were easily won.
Operation Iraqi Freedom launched in March 2003. By that August, after disbanding the Iraqi army and promising to de-Baathify the government, U.S. forces found themselves under attack in what would turn out to be a lengthy insurgency. The guerrilla forces would go on to define the whole of the U.S. experience in Iraq — but right then? Well, things were going to be just fine, Lt. Col. Steve Russell told CNN.
“We’re seeing us turn the corner with these Fedayeen-type attacks,” Russell said. “Our soldiers here have done fantastic work, in either killing them or capturing them — going after their leadership.”
President George W. Bush was eager to highlight the progress the Iraqi army had made against the insurgents two years later, in 2005, when he quoted an “Iraqi first lieutenant named Shoqutt,” who describes the transformation of his unit this way: “I really think we’ve turned the corner here. At first, the whole country didn’t take us seriously. Now things are different. Our guys are hungry to demonstrate their skill and to show the world.”
Vice President Dick Cheney saw similar cause for optimism when he spoke with a Marine corporal a month later. “I think we’ve turned the corner, if you will,” Cheney said. “I think when we look back from 10 years hence, we’ll see that the year ’05 was in fact a watershed year here in Iraq.”
Fast-forward another two years, to 2007. By then, at least 3,000 U.S. personnel had been killed fighting Iraqi insurgents and Al Qaeda in Iraq, the latter of which formed in response to the American occupation. The “surge” had sent as many as 160,000 U.S. forces to finally achieve security so the Iraqi government could take control. Conservative commentator Charles Krauthammer wrote this about the bountiful achievements that were piling up:









