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The Grand Illusion of American Power
The other day I went to hear my favorite soldier-scholar, Andrew Bacevich, give a talk at Boston University, where he teaches. A retired colonel and Vietnam veteran, Bacevich's new book is called "The Limits of Power, The end of American Exceptionalism."
Bacevich has migrated from a conservative outlook to what might be called a neo-Niebuhrean position - his thinking being influenced by the theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, whom Bacevich calls "the most clear-eyed of American prophets."
Niebuhr warned against "dreams of managing history," a combination of arrogance and narcissism that posed a moral threat. That's why Niebuhr is often held in contempt by neo-conservatives for whom power is everything. Bacevich's concern is that the dream has become a physical threat that could lead to America's inevitable decline.
There is a mythical American narrative, according to Bacevich, that the United States is a nation "providentially set apart in the New World and wanting nothing more than to tend to its own affairs," only grudgingly responding to calls for global leadership "in order to preserve the possibility of freedom." In reality, the United States has sought expansion, first by pushing west until it reached the sea, then through a brief period of direct colonialism, and more recently through a ruthless if indirect imperial policy of control. It worked spectacularly. The United States became a great power replete with material abundance.
Right around the time of the Vietnam War, Bacevich argues, this began to unravel. Trade imbalances, federal deficits, "mushrooming entitlements, plummeting savings rates, and energy dependence" led us to become a debtor nation, counting on others to foot the bill. "The positive correlation between expansion, power, abundance, and freedom began to become undone . . . Further efforts at expansionism have led to the squandering of American power," according to Bacevich.
The actions of the Bush administration after 9/11 may have been designed to make the United States safe from another attack. But the chosen method was nothing less than to "assert American power throughout the Greater Middle East . . . to transform this region, to employ American power, both hard and soft, to impose order while ensuring stability, order, access, and adherence to American norms - in essence to establish unambiguous US hegemony so that the Islamic world will no longer serve as a breeding ground for terrorists who wish to kill us."
The grand illusion of American power as a transformative agent is evident in what Bush's lieutenants had to say. "We have a choice," said Donald Rumsfeld in September, 2001. Either we change the way we live, "which is unacceptable," or we "change the way they live, and we chose the latter. " Or as Douglas Feith would later put it: America's purpose was to "transform the Middle East and the broader world of Islam generally."
This grand imperial overreach never had a chance. Transforming Islam can only be done by Muslims themselves, in their own due time. The new "liberated" Iraq has not changed the Middle East. The passions of the Middle East have transformed Iraq, perhaps more stable now than a year ago but in no way destined to achieve what Bush, Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice, et al wanted and expected.
The net result is that much of the world now looks on the Bush administration's resurrection of Woodrow Wilson's ideals and the expansion of democracy as a cover for coercion and bare-knuckle dominance. As Bacevich says, Bush always confused strategy with ideology.
Militarily, we threw containment and deterrence out the window, banking on the "shock and awe" of preventive war. It hasn't worked. We are bogged down in two wars with an end to neither in sight.
Bacevich doesn't see the November election as necessarily producing a beneficial change. John McCain touts the stalemated Iraq war as a success, while Barack Obama calls for more effort in Afghanistan. In Bacevich's view, it is the entire doctrine of preventive war that has proved a failure. There has to be a better way than occupying Muslim countries.
Both McCain and Obama "implicitly endorse the global war on terror as the essential core of US policy," while in reality it's the entire concept that needs to be rethought.
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31 Comments so far
Show AllThe Jaded Prole
The primary difference in foreign policy is that Obama will be a more competent and less hot-headed imperialist. That is questionably a good thing.
The Jaded Prole
The problem with your reasoning is that Obama is not condemning the [illegal] occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq as being immoral and war crimes. You actually state that "Obama will be a more competent and less hot-headed imperialist." Competent imperialist? As George Carlin might say, now there is an oxymoron to stand in awe of. I hardly think that being a competent imperialist is something that should make one proud. Being the fact that this proves that both Obama and McCain are outright militants, it also demonstrates what little difference there is between these two major candidates.
It's the society, rather than Obama, that is militarist; it is not possible for the majority of Americans to grasp the difference between "this occupation is immoral" and "my son/husband/brother/pal is immoral for being in Iraq or Afghanistan". The Anglo-Teutonic heritage is too deeply etched in the symbolism of national political culture. In terms of that culture, Obama is daring even for calling the Iraq invasion "the wrong war".
It doesn't seem like a tremendous difference if one thinks in absolute terms; but given the context, it has a great significance.
Moreover, Obama's political philosophy is not militarist; it isn't even confrontational, but is in fact concilatory.
WHO says something is even more important than WHAT is said; John McCain professed shock at Obama's declaration that he would take action over Pakistan's border were he to receive certain intelligence & the Pakistan government would refuse to take action. McCain pretended to have a principle -- "You can't invade a sovereign country" -- which he had already shown great willingness to violate; Obama noted very carefully conditions under which he believed action would be justifiable. Everything one notes in the public record about Obama is that he makes careful distinctions & then tries very hard to remain within them.
Saint-Just
I am stunned [though since this is coming from an Obama fan, I probably should not be] that you are actually attempting to draw a moral equivalence between Obama's [alleged] humanitarian foreign policy and that of John McCain. If Obama, if he is elected, decided to order US forces into Pakistan and Afghanistan and those American forces kill innocent Pakistanis and Afghans, those people will still be very dead, despite Obama's [alleged] noble intentions. To make an obvious point, those innocent civilians and children certainly would not end up being murdered [all in the name of the bogus Global War on Terror] if the [alleged] agent of hope did not order American forces into those countries in the first place. Since there were no third party and independent candidates present in those debates [those formerly connected to the Democratic and Republican parties made sure of that], that obvious truth was not brought out to the American people and because of that, the American people will be falsely led to believe that Obama will somehow be able to "manage" the occupations and future invasions better than McCain.
Yeah. It's really sad that the best we can do is to vote for someone who will do the wrong thing better.
Sad and scary. We're sitting ducks. We're spread all over the world after pissing off (and on) so much of it. We couldn't even defend our own nation on 9-11. How long did it take to summon a couple of fighters? How long before the SECOND tower was hit. How long before Washington itself was attacked? 45 an hour...more? Now we don't even have the nads to build a memorial tower, scared that it too, will be brought down.
All those trillions and trillions for "defense", all to--not protect America--but to bully and intimidate the world, for Wall Street and Washington.
Don't support the war machine by again voting for evil.
Show your resistance. Vote Nader or McKinney --or don't vote at all. It will make no difference otherwise.
Unfortunately, Americans are crazy about war. If the next prez is smart, he'll announce that he's turning the War on Terror over to the police (with help from the zillion-dollar military when absolutely needed); then declare a "War" on Carbon.
Great post. No one could win an election here talking about peace. And the suggestion about a war on carbon and a police action is right on.
A bankrupt U.S. can't continue to fight for the hegemony. When hearing Obama, it seems he's on the right path of disarming the U.S. and withdrawing U.S. forces from overseas assignments, hopefully all of them. But, there's two problems with Obama. One, he doesn't go far enough. All of the nuclear warheads and missles need be dismantled and second, he preaches hope when hope isn't the right formula. Rather, U.S. Americans should embrace dispair and the finality of the sentence to be imposed upon them for their crimes. Only through reduction to hoplessness and the animalistic violence that is sure to follow can the deconstruction of American society be sufficiently complete to allow some foriegn power of competence to take over this system and reconstruct it in a less world toxic form.
"When hearing Obama, it seems he's on the right path of disarming the U.S. and withdrawing U.S. forces from overseas assignments, hopefully all of them. But, there's two problems with Obama."
You heard that from Obama? I'd really like to hear that from Obama.
I'm voting for the guy but I certainly never heard anything like that - more the opposite.
Yea, that sounds more like what McCain has accused Obama of. If Obama were the guy McCain is accusing him of being, I would be sending Obama a thousand bucks and volunteering for his campaign!
This article is old hat. But at least its ideas are making it out into the mainstream.
Check out Alternate Radio - http://www.alternativeradio.org/
It aired an hour long chat yesterday with Bacevich. His observations are NOT passé or old hat.
But I could be wrong !
Has anyone noticed that neither BO or JM ever utter the phrase "world peace" or even the word "peace" (unless they're lying about peace between Israel and everyone else?) Apparently, both are fatalists who believe the best we can hope for is a little less deadly conflict...
Frank1569
Yet Obama and his supporters wish to portray the Democratic candidate as being an antiwar candidate. Or, as an Obama supporter mentioned in an earlier comment apparently with a straight face, a benign imperialist.
Dennis Kucinich talked about Peace all the time. But then again, he was unelectable.
Rumsfeld: Changing our way of life is unacceptable.
G. H. W. Bush: The American way of life is non-negotiable.
So here we are: obese, living in a degraded environment that has been half paved-over, with runaway global warming and we can't even get a candidate for leadership that is taken seriously who will admit that our way of life has to change.
We'd rather go to war with the whole world than admit that.
Old news. Lets hope that Obama can do better in forign policy than Bush/Cheney. Heck, I could send Erroll, moonpie and ezeflyer to negotiate and get a better foreign policy than those guys.
tommy_slothrop
Shame on you for remembering anything those two said.
The last sentence says:
Obama "implicitly endorse[s] the global war on terror as the essential core of US policy,"
He's assumed the position of the framework of neocons basing his policy on the Global War on Terror. He's more of the Same.
As Bacevich says, Bush always confused strategy with ideology.
George Wanker Bush does not understand either one. The man someone described as "a high functioning moron" is incapable of such a thing. If he could memorize a little French he would simply say, "L'etat c'est moi", then give you the finger and walk away.
Bacevich is absolutely correct that it's long past time for Americans to have an adult conversation about the long term consequences of the neocons' embrace of the discredited notion of preemptive or preventative war under the Bush doctrine. I was hoping that the Obama camp was going to move at least that far during the course the campaign and presidential debates, but he continues to play that critical national security issue way too close to the vest for my taste.
Already, without the 2008 votes having been cast or counted, Obama inaugurated, or an Obama administration put into place inside the DC beltway, we have the right wing commentariat blaming all that is unstable and threatening on the international stage upon the Democrats' claimed lack of principle and sturdy resolve. How many times will we be told that the "success of the surge" proves raw militarism can work to achieve stable political change in Iraq and the Middle East, with no attempt at a response to that dangerous assertion? How long do you think it will take for return of the perpetual "Middle East crisis" du jour to be blamed squarely upon Americans' failure to stay the course that George W. and John McCain so bravely laid out for us?
Preemptive war is inherently destabilizing as both a strategy and an ideology. Sabre rattling, and eventually waging preemptive war against those we unilaterally identify as "rogue" nation states expands the number of nation state actors (entities that possess covert intelligence capabilities and potential access to nukes) that are fearful of and hostile towards the government of the United States. Just look how Iran and North Korea reacted to being declared part of an Axis of Evil in Bush's state of the union address.
If successfully waging preemptive war does achieve regime change ("Mission Accomplished!"), the rules of engagement invariably used to maintain a high tech US military occupation presence in places like Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Horn of Africa invevitably produce civilian casualties - quickly turning nationalism into anti-Americanism, and generating an ever increasing flow of insurgents and radicalized wannabe international terrorists from within the local population. It is universal human nature to react adversely to the sight of foreign troops killing your neighbors and relatives.
Over the long term, preemptive war is both reckless and self-defeating. Whether we are looking at the individual school yard bully, urban gangs violently marking out neighborhood turf, or national governments operating through use of high visibility military power, the end result usually ends up the same: what goes around comes around, and he who extolls the manly virtue of landing the first blow will wind up blind sided really, really bad someday.
That's what inevitably happens when you multiply your mortal enemies, and declare it's morally okay to cast the first stone.
Bill from Saginaw
Bill from Saginaw
This quote from Obama last year in Foreign Affairs should continue to make you wary: "We must consider using military force in circumstances beyond self-defense.."
The Empire Has No Clothes
The empire has no clothes no attire
It’s only destination is to acquire
hyping freedom called ‘war on terror’
a genocide washed awe and shocker
like a boxcar bound for Auschwitz/ AbuGraib
the pursuit of power knows no bounds
The world is ours... our extermination camp
The empire has an invisible hand and brain
like a runaway plunder powered corporate train
destination Aufwiedersehen.
The empire has an invisible hand and brain
like wordless prophets pimping gain
a new world order built on pain
star spangled in a barren dying plain
NICE!
rocyahsoul@yahoo.com
www.lamegame.name
Daniel Vincent Kelley
"The actions of the Bush administration after 9/11 may have been designed to make the United States safe from another attack."
Um, yeah right...
And deregulation in the late 90s must have been to protect US consumers.
Elbridge Gerry on the floor of the constitutional convention:
Rep. Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts: "Whenever governments mean to invade the rights and liberties of the people, they always attempt to destroy the militia, in order to raise an army upon their ruins." (spoken during floor debate over the Second Amendment, I Annals of Congress at 750, August 17, 1789.)
Rep. Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts: "What, sir, is the use of a militia? It is to prevent the establishment of a standing army, the bane of liberty." Rep. of Massachusetts, I Annals of Congress at 750 (August 17, 1789).
rocyahsoul@yahoo.com
www.lamegame.name
Daniel Vincent Kelley
This article has fully explained why the debates were SO boring from the foreign policy angle.
Both men were speaking from positions firmly within the established paradigm. The only discussion is not one worthy of those to whom we look for leadership. It was a low-mid brow conversation among a couple of bureaucrats charged with maintaining the system.
Neither one of them would dare to ask or answer the questions:
Are the Iraqi casualties and displaced families worth it? How does the destruction we've wreaked upon the Iraqi people compare to that perpetrated by Saddam?
If the civilian body count of Afghanis exceeds the number of 9/11 victims, aren't they permitted to bomb our government and occupy our capital by sheer precendent?
If we could augment our Intelligence networks and enhance our security at home to prevent another attack, then isn't the entire GWOT based solely on vengeance?
Why isn't Israel a signator to the NPT while Iran (one vertex of the axis of evil) is and is in good standing - El Baradei's vascillating notwithstanding?
Why has Sweden taken in more Iraqi refugees than the USA? In fact, the US accepts very few refugees fleeing the disaster we've created. Don't we have an obligation to the people we are supposedly trying to help?
Why is there little to no evidence of Iranian involvement in Iraq despite all the assertions of Iranian culpability in planting IEDs and funneling weapons? Why no mention of Iran's role in negotiating with Moqtada al-Sadr?
And finally: Whatever happened to Osama Bin-Laden? We've taken down 2 countries and are expanding the conflict to a 3rd country which also happens to be a nuclear-armed ally. But, there's still no sign of OBL? The Taliban allowed OBL to remain within their borders. Does that justify eradicating that government? Taliban != Al-Qaeda.
Why isn't anyone asking any questions? I thought moderators were supposed to be more than just alarm clocks. Just what the hell do these people have such awesome reputations for?
No gods, no kings
If WWII had not occured, the US would not have become a world power, the only reason we became a world power was because Europe was in shambles after WW II. We should bring all our troops home, re-open closed bases around the country to assist the local economy and circle the wagons and tell the rest of the world to go to hell! The next time Europe wants our help, tell them to stick it!! Place heavy teriffs on imported goods to spure manufacturing here at home. The US can produce all the goods we need any way.
The US was already a world power, having been made such by Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson.
The reason we had WWII was because people thought they could "circle the wagons and tell the rest of the world to go to hell".
And as for Europe "needing" our help, the idea is pretty laughable. France didn't require US help after De Gaulle kicked us out.
As Gandalf the Grey tells Frodo, "You can fence yourselves in; you cannot fence the world forever out."
How to win enemies---are we safer now?
KABUL, Afghanistan – A U.S.-led coalition airstrike hit an Afghan army checkpoint early Wednesday, killing eight soldiers and wounding four others, Afghan officials said. The strike hit an army checkpoint in Sayed Kheil area of Khost province in eastern Afghanistan, said Arsallah Jamal, the province's governor. The potential friendly-fire incident could further strain relations between the government of President Hamid Karzai and its foreign backers.
KABUL, Oct. 22 (Xinhua) -- Nine Afghan soldiers were killed and three others sustained injures as the international troops carried out air strikes against suspected Taliban hideouts in Afghanistan's eastern province of Khost early Wednesday, Afghan Defense Ministry said in a press release.
As long as the Americans see themselves as some kind of Chosen People or Herrenvolk, the rest of the world can't expect anything from them. Other empires have crumbled and fallen, so this one won't be the first one, nor the last. It's just too bad it takes so much to change an entire nation's mind-set. How many 9/11 and crises does it take to come to the understanding that the US is just one (big) country, and that imposing one's will by power never lasts?
I see a basic paradigm here based upon the Christian empire mindset and using missionaries as the first large scale psy ops operations in the western world.
This 'democratization' based empire building is an easily sold belief that we must convert and take over for the good of 'their souls'. They may not realize it now, but we are 'saving' them from their 'savage', undemocratic and thus unChristian ways. This is easily accepted by an American mindset which is based in Christian evangelism -- "we know what is best for you, and God wants us to spread the 'Word' and the missionaries are "God's army".
Christian exceptionalism is identical to American exceptionalism. We are the ones who know what is best for all other people. God blesses all that we do, even if it is torture. Sound familiar? It MUST be right if WE do it.
The change of thinking and belief that needs to occur is really rooted in Christianity itself. I am not advocating atheism, either. But I am speaking of the theocracy that really IS America. All countries and societies really do have their roots in the religious mythologies that have arisen within any particular area.
However it does seem that the belief in conquering in the name of a religion, although endemic to all wars-- (my God is stronger than your God), has been most fervent and far reaching in the name of Christianity. Constantinian influence has never faded.
I believe that until we stop this absurd need to prove that this particular mythology is the 'right' one, by forcing everyone else to buy into it we will continue on the path of self destruction. It is obvious. It is also obvious that only people who really doubt their own beliefs NEED to force them on others. They are deeply threatened by anyone who doesn't see reality the same way.
The utter foolish naivete of evangelism--people who can't even comprehend a world view different from their own, forcing their insipid and provincial ideas about the complex nature of reality is quite obnoxious in the least. It begins with the Pope all the way to Jerry Falwellian mindsets. The Catholic Church just has a longer history and can impress the world by basically owning the art of the Middle ages.