It’s time to leave behind old ideas of superpowers. A changing world brings new opportunities for peace and the chance to join a community of nations.
Aaron Hughes spent the spring of 2003 transporting supplies from Kuwait to Iraq as a soldier in the Army National Guard. Today, he is an outspoken anti-war activist.
"I didn't have an epiphany," Hughes says of his turnabout. "I just continually hoped that I could help the Iraqi people, that my fellow soldiers would be respected as human beings by the military. And after one year and three months over there, that hope was shattered." He thought his gun could be used to defend democracy only to "awake to my weapon pointed at the hungry, and I am the oppressor."
Hughes is now an artist who makes videos, performance art, and drawings that capture his experience in the Iraq War. In one particularly moving performance, he stopped traffic by drawing on the pavement of a busy intersection in Champaign, Illinois, with a sign reading "I am an Iraq War veteran. I am guilty. I am alone. I am drawing for peace." He likens his artwork to a spark of light. "In a desert you can see a match lit from miles away," Hughes says. "Although it's just a little match, it's still being seen, and it can empower a lot of people."
Aaron Hughes' journey from war to peace mirrors the larger shift in the United States since 2003. What had once been the opinion of a vocal minority-that the invasion of Iraq was wrong-has become the position of a no-longer-silent majority. There are now many points of light, many matches in the desert. The U.S. public rejects the centerpiece of the Bush foreign policy, namely its doctrine of attacking any country that poses even a hypothetical threat. Americans support across-the-board change in our relationships with other countries on issues from climate and trade to arms control to cooperation on ending wars in the Middle East and Africa. After years of standing out in the cold, U.S. citizens want to rejoin the family of nations.
True, Americans are fearful of terrorism. And both the Democratic and Republican parties share a blinkered consensus on national security. But the counter-narratives at the heart of Aaron Hughes' art and in the programs of social movements throughout the country are becoming more prominent. The polls suggest an overwhelming desire for change, even if the pols are behind the times. Meanwhile, the world has undergone a profound transformation in the last few years. All of this means that a dramatic shift in U.S. foreign policy, not seen since the days of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, may be just around the corner.
A Changing World
The administration of George W. Bush may well go down in history as the straw that broke the U.S. empire's back. The Bush administration replaced the Cold War with a "global war on terror" that dragged the country into an unlimited conflict with a dispersed adversary. The Bush team increased Pentagon spending by 70 percent and, along with generous tax giveaways to the wealthy, managed to erase all the deficit reductions of the Clinton era. In 2000, the United States recorded the largest budget surplus in its history: $230 billion. By 2002, even before the Iraq invasion, the Bush administration had taken the country $159 billion into the red. Goldman Sachs economists predict that the 2008 deficit will be $425 billion, which would be a new record.
All this money has not built the United States a strong economic foundation, nor has it bought Washington any new friends. The goodwill that flowed toward the United States from other nations after September 11-even from such unexpected quarters as North Korea, Iran, and Libya-quickly evaporated when their populations witnessed U.S. behavior in the "War on Terror." It didn't help that the United States rejected key international treaties such as the Kyoto protocol on global warming, withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) treaty in order to pursue a costly and technically questionable missile defense system, and unsigned the accession agreement to the International Criminal Court.
By shifting the tax structure in favor of corporations and the wealthy and by tilting the international playing field in favor of the rich, the United States has further widened the global divide between haves and have-nots. Add the metastasized military budget to the ballooning federal debt, the mortgage crisis, and the eroding manufacturing base and the United States begins to resemble an empire stretched thin to the breaking point, like 4th-century Rome or Britain of the 1930s. If recent U.S. history were a Greek tragedy, the triumphalist rhetoric coming out of Washington would qualify as the hubris that audiences expect just before the tragic fall.
By no means does all the responsibility fall on the shoulders of the Bush administration. In the 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States had a unique opportunity to help move the world from the Cold War system into a new, equitable global arrangement. Instead of strengthening the United Nations and taking the lead in shifting resources from the military into a much-anticipated "peace dividend," the Clinton administration tried to preserve the unipolar moment and the U.S. status as the largest military and economic power in the world.
In the 1990s, the United States maintained a sanctions regime against Iraq that killed hundreds of thousands of civilians, and conducted unilateral military actions against Serbia, Afghanistan, and Sudan. The Clinton administration failed to support a land mines treaty, pushed for a North American Free Trade Agreement that largely benefited big U.S. corporations, weakened the ABM treaty, and greatly expanded U.S. military exports. In the 1990s, Washington viewed international cooperation as a way to bolster the geo-economic power of the United States. By scorning international cooperation and relying instead on the unrestrained use of U.S. military power, the Bush administration went one step further in its attempt to remap the globe.
The next administration, Democratic or Republican, will face a world very different from that which confronted George W. Bush in 2000 or Bill Clinton in 1992. New centers of power are emerging in the form of China's new global economic and diplomatic reach, Russia's energy politics, India's economic leverage, and a new generation of Latin American leadership. The euro has a good chance of replacing the dollar as the world's currency, which would substantially undercut U.S. global power. Beyond governments, civil society has gained a new prominence as "the other superpower." Civil movements have forced military base closures, succeeded in securing an international convention on land mines, pushed the international financial community into granting substantial debt relief to impoverished countries, and helped to block further rounds of multilateral trade negotiations.
Americans want their country to stop being the neighborhood bully and instead to be a good neighbor. The nation's economy is flagging, our military is over-stretched, and our global legitimacy is exhausted. The public no longer wants to shoulder these costs of empire.
In deciding how to negotiate these demands for change and these changed realities, the United States faces a stark choice. In the next decade, we could try to maintain our grip on global power only to watch it slip through our fingers. Burdened by debt, armed to the teeth, and isolated from the world, the United States would become the "sick man" of North America, as the Ottomans were once labeled in Europe. Like many failing empires, we would be all the more dangerous the weaker we got.
Or the United States could try something unprecedented. We could turn our back on empire, much as Spain and Portugal did in the 1970s and the Soviet Union did in the late 1980s. But rather than waiting until the bitter end as these countries did, the United States could use its still considerable power to help create a more equitable world order that operates on a truly level playing field. Rome failed to pursue this option, and the Dark Ages ensued. The Ottomans, Romanovs, and Habsburgs likewise attempted to extend their imperial leases, and a barbarous world war was the result. By turning its back on global dominance, the United States can learn from the past and stop the Greek tragedy before its fatal denouement.
A Post-Superpower U.S.A.
How much difference will it make if a Republican or Democrat is elected president?
On some foreign policy issues, the Republican and Democratic candidates sound like they live on different planets. Both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama want to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq eventually, while John McCain is more supportive of Bush's surge than Bush himself. The Democrats are more sensible than the Republicans on climate change, trade, and overall global cooperation.
But in other respects, the two parties are indistinguishable. For instance, no major presidential candidate has called for freezing the military budget much less reducing it. And terrorism remains a central preoccupation of both parties even though other threats-rising temperatures, nuclear apocalypse-challenge the very existence of humanity.
Although both Clinton and Obama have called for closing the detention facility at Guantanamo, neither has challenged the "global war on terror" framework. Nor have they called for closing the Guantanamo base or any of the other 700-plus U.S. military bases around the world. By failing to challenge the half-trillion dollar military budget, the Democratic candidates will be hard-pressed to find the funds to pay for their comprehensive health care and education plans.
The polling data suggest that Americans are eager to embrace a considerably more positive, more cooperative, and more optimistic approach to international relations. A majority of Americans believe their country should play an active part in world affairs and that the United States "should do its share in efforts to solve international problems together with other countries." Most Americans prefer economic and diplomatic approaches to military action and believe that all countries should eliminate their nuclear weapons given a well-established international verification system. And Americans strongly believe that trade should help raise labor standards globally rather than precipitate a race to the bottom.
In other words, Americans want their country to stop being the neighborhood bully and instead act like a good neighbor. In this, Americans are not giving voice to utopian aspirations. The polls in fact reflect a new realism. The nation's economy is flagging, our military is over-stretched, and our global legitimacy is exhausted. The public no longer wants to shoulder these various costs of empire.
Until now, Americans have not translated this realism into political expression. When this happens, regardless of who is president, the days of the American empire will truly be numbered.
From the One to the Many
Rejecting militarism and empire would not be entirely unprecedented for the United States. There have been moments in the past when the country turned decisively toward global cooperation. During the 1930s, the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt adopted a "good neighbor policy" toward Latin America that replaced militarism with cooperation in allowing countries in the region to pursue their own models of political and economic development. Other important, if imperfect, programs have included the distribution of Marshall Plan aid to Europe after World War II, the creation of the Peace Corps during the Kennedy administration, and the adoption of a new human rights policy in the early years of Jimmy Carter's presidency.
To chart a new way in the world, we can look at these models from our own past. But we should also take a look around us.
The European Union is an example of what can happen when countries that once pursued global dominance and colonial empire decide instead to work together to solve common problems. The EU has been comparatively inclusive-expanding to embrace some countries from the former Soviet sphere and considering Turkey as well for membership. It has transferred income from the richer to the poorer parts of Europe, which has enabled countries like Ireland and Portugal to become prosperous. And with the principle of subsidiarity-the notion that authority should rest at the lowest possible level-the EU has attempted to preserve participatory democracy in what otherwise would be an all-encompassing bureaucracy. Through it all, the EU has generally favored cooperative diplomacy over military action. Although the EU is far from perfect, these initiatives still represent a distinct alternative to the U.S. go-it-alone ethos.
The United States should apply these approaches to the international system to make it similarly inclusive, economically equitable, and democratically rich. For this to happen, though, the United States must stop placing itself above the law. Only when we recognize the international rule of law will the specter of unilateralism fade away. The United States must acknowledge the higher power of international law in the same way that Germany and France accepted the sovereign power of European institutions.
European countries did not, of course, simply decide to create the European Union because their interests magically converged. Rather, the United States helped to push them together by amplifying the threat of the Soviet Union. This external threat helped to overwhelm the inevitable internal bickering among countries that imperiled European integration at several points after World War II.
The world today faces a similar cohesive threat. In place of the "red scare" there is the life-threatening "green scare" of climate change. All the countries of the world are affected by climate change, and this threat should convince them to redefine sovereignty in order to save the planet. The United States must show it can be part of the solution by once again taking the rule of law and international institutions seriously.
Through binding international mechanisms, the United States can help radically cut back on carbon emissions. It can achieve global security through agreements that shrink the arms trade and reduce nuclear arsenals eventually to zero. Other treaties could establish corporate codes of conduct and set a floor for labor and environmental standards in trade negotiations. The United Nations would need to be restructured to reflect post-Cold War realities and be given a financial shot in the arm to mount peacekeeping operations that can end simmering conflicts and prevent new ones.
The United States must lead by example, not by force. Our country is number one in several dubious categories-most powerful nuclear arsenal, largest greenhouse gas emitter, leading arms exporter, biggest military spender, greatest number of overseas military bases. So, if we want to change the world we have to start by changing ourselves.
Where Will Change Come From?
Politics is too important to be left to politicians. Hemmed in by powerful special interests, forced to devote an increasing amount of time to fundraising, and ever more beholden to focus groups and demographic calculations, politicians are less and less likely to come up with visionary plans or muster the courage to implement them.
Unless they are pushed to do so.
Social movements have in the past mobilized the American public behind dramatic shifts in U.S. policy. The civil rights movement and the women's movement have both remade U.S. society. The successes of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama would have been inconceivable a mere generation ago. They are remarkable people, but they also stand on the shoulders of powerful social movements.
Today, we need a different kind of social movement-one that focuses on U.S. foreign policy. Such a movement, drawing heavily on the peace and global justice efforts, would aim for nothing less than a transformation of the U.S. role in the world. This would be no mere change of politicians or adjustments to a few policies. It would be a change of truly global proportions.
After all, the pursuit of empire is neither feasible nor desirable. At this pivotal moment, it's time to strengthen the structures of international cooperation and consign empire once and for all to the dustbin of history.
John Feffer wrote this article as part of A Just Foreign Policy, the Summer 2008 issue of YES! Magazine. John is the co-director of Foreign Policy In Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies and the author of numerous articles and books.
We are grateful to the Institute for Policy Studies for their advice and editorial contributions to this issue of YES! Their paper, "Just Security: An Alternative Foreign Policy Framework," is here.
Delicious
Digg
StumbleUpon
Newsvine
Facebook
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
28 Comments so far
Show AllThe way to a just foreign policy would be for the US to mind it's own business, rather than try to play Empire.
Read Ron Paul's "A Foreign Policy of Freedom"
http://www.amazon.com/Foreign-Policy-Freedom-Commerce-Friendship/dp/0912...
It is a series of speeches he gave on the House floor during his 10 terms in Congress, many times as the lone voice of opposition to foreign intervention and policing the world. It is amazing to track through the book Ron Paul's warnings, most of which came true. He consistently warned Congress of the consequences of our meddling in the world, and realized even years before how our nation was headed for bankruptcy based on its foreign policy driven by special interests rather than national interests.
He remains the only voice in politics who is talking about preserving our nation by "reining in our empire."
Excellent No. 2 post by metania to Ostrogoth.
The Israel Lobby is the Third Rail in American politics. To question AIPAC is the quickest route to political suicide. It must be oppossed indirectly. One must go to the root of neoliberal economic ideology as experessed in the Project for the New American Century and the theology of neoliberal free market capitalism.
Good postong by chris on the much needed dynamics of Democracy.
Marvelous article by John Feffer in David Korten's Yes! magazine, but CommonDreams readers need to go to the basis of his writing, JUST SECURITY by the Foreign Policy on Focus. Google: Just Security by Foreign Policy in Focus.
The true major issue of this Presidential Election is composed of two oppossing forces. These two forces are best expressed by the 74 page study JUST SECURITY by Foreign Policy in Focus and the 92 page study by The Project for the New American Century.
This is the great issue of our times. The public and the MSM should demand both McCain and Obama address these two studies.
While visiting friends in Texas during the "nuclear threat" supposedly posed by North Korea last year I was asked: "Who do you think will fire the first nuclear weapon, Iran or North Korea?". My reply was that the first and second had already been fired, didn't he mean who will fire the third? Just another example of "American exceptionalism" in my opinion. Only countries approved by the US can have nuclear weapons? Iran and N.K. don't have these weapons and we are supposed to worry about them not the US which has thousands and is very belligerent?
He thought his gun could be used to defend democracy only to "awake to my weapon pointed at the hungry, and I am the oppressor."
then here is the point you either use the gun..to defend democracy or you use democracy to defend democracy..
you either defend democracy or you do not...
a veto is a block democractic vote...the unions used it for generations..
it is a staple of democratic negotiation...one has to use democracy to understand democracy...democracy is not about getting what you want.. it is about getting what every-body wants...one first has to find out just what it is that every-body does want....and hope to all heck and back that what ever that is..is healthy..if it is not then democracy is a merely a means to establish a dictatorship and rule by force....
in that case then the world itself is undemocratic and unrepresentive of the world community..
sooner or later the US will want to join the world community but it will have to leave it's ego at the door like every-body else..the U.N. is an attempt nothing more nothing less at making it's title a reality..the concept is the United Nations...the reality is an attempt to make that concept a reality
bit boring i know but that's what turns us on here in the rest of the planetary population..
Actually, until the Security Council is abolished, or at least its veto wielding power, the UN will continue to be undemocratic and unrepresentative of the world community, and remain the tool of those who have and do use the veto power.
the way towards a just Foriegn policy for all nations is through the U.N.
it is kind of self explantory...at least there you get to meet some of the Foriegners the policy is actualy refering to..LOL
trouble is with most american foriegn policy is that it is almost as if those making the policys can barely concieve of a world outside of the USA let alone understand it..which you would have to say is not the ideal climate for constructing policys..
The indicators are still tanking. Positive change will happen if anyone survives. Each day you can see further economic and moral decline, and each day is more shocking than the previous day. A sense of helplessness prevails and only hope remains. People are fearful and mostly frozen in place unable to react.
Those who know how to change things are overwhelmed by the negativity and arrogance of the oppressive majority. It doesn't look good.
The Empire"s New Don
There is a new dawn arising
a sort of sordid pretty in pink shrouded day
and change doesn't need to get up or dress
for more of the same don't need no redress
Venus shines best in the black
a spankin new Mars Don is on the rise
the empire red has born a new disguise
formernadervoter - As a Nader admirer for decades, I appreciate your point. But again, what we should be angry as a nation about is that all of our candidates must bow and scrape before AIPAC and be vetted by 3% of our population.
Anybody read The Pornography of Power by Scheer? Seems like lke and Washington had the right idea..._
The way to a just foreign policy is not by electing a Democrat who is rabidly pro Israel and anti Venezuela; not by electing a corporate Democrat with free trade default; not by electing a man who supports the corrupt regime in Colombia; not be electing someone who...
well, by now you should really know the policies of Obama
By VOA News
05 June 2008
"Iran says allegations by the International Atomic Energy Agency that Tehran is withholding details on its sensitive nuclear activities are based on fake evidence."
...fake evidence...like WMDs and yellowcake?
I've often wondered, while listening to Obama spout off about "change", what exactly he is planning to change? It appears as though nothing will change at all in an Obama presidency. He'll bend over to Israel and Wall Street... He'll keep the money flowing to the MIC. He'll keep on denying the US population any sense of wellbeing. In other words, yes, he may be more articulate than Bush, and more rational than McCain, but is he REALLY going to change anything for the better? I somehow doubt that... and the slide to fascism will continue unabated.
Ostrogoth is of course 100% correct, protestations, excuses and heads up asses notwithstanding.
GREENER THAN THOU: I meant the question as an unlikely hypothetical. However, wouldn't that be a new twist on the "peace dividend" if nations got the US military foot print taken out, and in exchange PAID us to leave, to decomission whatever was left behind, even if salvaging its metal structure for Chinese demolition purposes?
the American people were given a chance with Dennis Kucinich, maybe their last chance.
The way to a just foreign policy is exclusive third party exchange/association by all individuals. You can't have your cake and eat it too. If you want justice you have to suppress the elites. You have to win the class war. You have to end the exploitation. Get it into the K-12 civics curriculum, or face more of the same old same old. Your choice.
"Bush's foreign policy is the Israel lobby's foreign policy"
Spot on!!!
And it is the policy embraced by both parties for decades, and now by Obama, who will likely be our next president. Ugh !!!
No mention of OIL in this essay. The presence of OIL in the Pesian Gulf region was already known when Britain started planting European Jewish colonist in Palestine...
For the same reason Britain planted Scottish colonists in Ireland in 1606 - to create a forward base for conquest.
Interesting question, siouxrose, but here's a problem that I see with it.
I don't know the details of all US bases, but I do know that they are in other people's countries, so why should they have to pay us for their own land?
In Diego Garcia, I know that the original inhabitants were deported. In Yugoslavia, the US stole a farmer's land for the Bondsteel base. http://hannah.smith-family.com/archive/000959.html In Okinowa, the US occupies prime land. I am assuming that some of the Iraqi bases are on newly stolen land, and not just land taken from Hussein.
And mirf, millions of people in the US and around the world very vocally opposed the US invasion of Iraq. I'm not so sure about the opposition now. It seems that a lot of it is the redone Vietnam, "they won't let us win the war, so we should leave". I have never understood why people think they have a right to kill EVERYONE in another country, but they do, and if the military stops short of that, they consider it not trying hard enough to win. That's a lot of your opposition today.
"What had once been the opinion of a vocal minority-that the invasion of Iraq was wrong-has become the position of a no-longer-silent majority."
I might question both sides of the equation in this claim. I don't think those opposed were particularly vocal in 2003. Now, there is little talk of Iraq generally. The MSM claims it's yesterday's news. People seem to be going along with that, back in American Idol mode.
Metanoia (11:51 am), I was just commenting on what seemed like a glaring logical disconnect between Akhavi's and Feffer's articles. MSM journalists routinely ignore this disconnect. Why?
Sure, Feffer can't mention everything. But his article is entitled: "The Way to a Just Foreign Policy." Yes, the MIC, the oil lobby, imperialism, militarism etc, etc, have also been obstacles to a just US foreign policy, but the Israel lobby has been instrumental in pushing the US towards policies in the ME that are irrational, criminal, and suicidal as well as blatantly unfair. Most Americans know little or nothing about the Israel lobby; in my opinion the reason for their ignorance is the willful refusal of most US journalists to talk about it.
So that's why I'm bringing it up on CD.
FEFFER makes a grand case for a better world, and provides a telling example of how competition can be overcome (Europe) to promote efforts for the greater good (shared prosperity/peace in that case).
So here's my question. If the US owns 700 plus bases, perhaps the majority of these can be leased to the domestic governments from which they've been "congenially" seized. Whether sold, leased or rented... could not THAT $, added to negating the rationale for our obscene military budget, help pay off our debt? Now that's where Mars rules turns upside down promotes a better economic policy, one that might even BRING the same security all the propaganda supporting the various branches of military lays claim to!
I've always felt that evangelical religious fanaticism was one of the chief causes for the invasion and occupation of Iraq. The regime of George Wanker Bush is honeycombed with these zealots, these crusading waterwalkers bent on using "muscular Christianity" to destroy Islam. McCain will probably be the next president after concocting one of the filthiest, nastiest, most demeaning and racist campaigns in U.S. electoral history. What will he do about this insanity that is now so deeply ingrained in our foreign policy after 8 catastrophic, disastrous, ruinous years?
Ostrogoth-
You make the leap from this article's omission of Israel to what that omission says about US journalism. Although, I agree that American journalism is in a horrible state of disrepair, and very few reporters write on how America's connections to Israel drives its ME policy, there are a lot of things that Feffer doesn't mention. Does that mean that he is willfully ignoring them?
I found this article to be a more realistic assessment of what is needed in America than many I've read. Rather than placing responsibility for a change in course at the feet of politicians like so many are want to do, he lays that onus on the citizens. The only way that Israel and the AIPAC has achieved the level of influence it has is because the American people have laid down and given away their rights, they have failed to participate in this broken democracy. We could argue over why that has happened, but rather than focusing on what was left out of this article how about focusing on what was actually said. This is a call to arms that proffers a different vision of the way the future could unfold. Instead of nitpicking, how about doing something about it? Start leading/participating in some protests, boycotts, letter writing campaigns, sit-ins? Start informing the public on Israel's and the AIPAC's influence on ME policy...start telling everyone you know about it.
I know its hard but it will take about the same energy as pointing out what is wrong with the world, and be a lot more satisfying.
"The U.S. public rejects the centerpiece of the Bush foreign policy, namely its doctrine of attacking any country that poses even a hypothetical threat."
___________________________
Bush's foreign policy is the Israel lobby's foreign policy. See: "Obama Walks Fine Line at Major Pro-Israel Meet," by Khody Akhavi, posted on CD this morning. Feffer doesn't even mention Israel or AIPAC. A revealing omission that demonstrates what's wrong with US journalism and US foreign policy.
Until the US public understands why both MacCain and Obama are pandering to AIPAC, they'll never be able to understand why US policy in the ME is unjust and counterproductive, when not downright suicidal.