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Has US Empire Benefited the World?
In a recent column,
Thomas Friedman, probably the most influential “internationalist” —
read: proponent of U.S. interventionism in faraway places — has finally
discovered that the United States must soon turn inward and put
domestic economic growth first because of its massive public debt, huge
federal budget deficit, and looming fiscal crisis caused by a dramatic
automatic escalation in entitlements spending.
Eureka, the foreign policy rapture has begun!
The real problem with Friedman’s piece is not him reaching a conclusion that was obvious even before the onset of the Great Recession of 2008, but that he laments how dangerous the world will be without the steady guiding hand of the United States.
Friedman writes, and most Americans will be eager to believe, that the diminished interventionism of the now “frugal superpower” will be bad for the world because:
“[T]he most unique and important feature of U.S. foreign policy over the last century has been the degree to which America’s diplomats and naval, air, and ground forces provided global public goods — from open seas to open trade and from containment to counterterrorism — that benefited many others besides us.
“U.S. power has been the key force maintaining global stability, and providing global governance, for the last 70 years. That role will not disappear, but it will certainly shrink.”
Then Friedman, whose muse is Michael Mandelbaum of Johns Hopkins University, quotes Mandelbaum as opining:
“When Britain could no longer provide global governance, the United States stepped in to replace it. No country now stands ready to replace the United States, so the loss to international peace and prosperity has the potential to be greater as America pulls back than when Britain did.”
But have the British Empire and the American Empire been all that good for the world? The world somehow got by before they came along.
The American public and many of its foreign policy experts praise the British Empire for ensuring stability, when they probably should examine its violent and often brutal colonial subjugation of what it regarded as inferior races for economic gain.
Adolf Hitler admired the British Empire, but thought it too brutal.
As for the American Empire, it is littered with foreign policy interventions that caused more international problems than they solved.
American entry into World War I led to a string of disasters that the world has never fully recovered from. Without the decisive U.S. entry into the first European war in its history in contravention of the Monroe Doctrine, a win by Germany, then merely a constitutional monarchy with a bombastic king, in a 10-round decision would have led only to the incremental adjustment of European borders to German advantage.
Instead, U.S. entry to tip the balance of the war inadvertently brought about an allied victory that rubbed Germany’s nose in the dirt — demanding a war guilt clause for a conflict in which blame should have been shared across Europe, requiring harsh reparations on an economically drained nation, and deposing Kaiser Wilhelm II.
The latter demand paved the way for the rise of Adolf Hitler, who exploited the war guilt clause, reparations, and the economic depression to rise to power and attempt to conquer Europe. World War II was merely a resumption of World War I two decades later.
The likely U.S. entry into World War I also kept the Russian provisional government (succeeding the fallen czar) involved in the conflict — increasing the probability of winning and providing much needed aid to do so.
Had the Russian government sued for peace earlier, Vladimir Lenin could not have used the unpopular war to bring a communist government to power. The post-World War II Cold War was borne out of the ashes of World War I.
During that Cold War, the U.S. created the national security state, the first large peacetime army in American history, and a far-flung empire of military bases, unneeded alliances (especially after the advent of nuclear weapons to protect the homeland), foreign military interventions, and large amounts of foreign aid.
Instead of spending much money and many lives (in brushfire wars in the developing world) to conduct an expansive worldwide Cold War against communism, a cheaper approach to accelerate the Soviet Empire’s collapse — as many empires have fallen over the course of history, by financial exhaustion — would have been smarter.
With a less interventionist and less costly U.S. foreign policy, Soviet finances would have been depleted even faster than they were by the costs of providing aid and governance to basket cases they took over in the developing world.
During the Cold War, the U.S. also encouraged the spread of radical Islam around the world to counter godless communism, including providing aid to the anti-Soviet mujahedeen to “give the USSR another Vietnam.” As an unintended consequence of supporting such Islamic militancy, the U.S. created the biggest threat to its homeland since the War of 1812 — al-Qaeda.
Indirectly, the U.S. also helped encourage another strand of radical Islam in Iran. In 1953, it helped overthrow the democratically elected Mossadegh government in Iran, which led to the restoration of the autocratic shah. Radical Islam has gained support in many Muslim countries because the only dissent that is permitted against authoritarian governments is in the mosques.
The United States has supported such autocrats, for example, the shah’s Iran and Egypt’s Mubarak today. The shah’s oppression led to the radical Khomeini revolution and to Iran being a problem to its neighbors.
The United States then helped Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Iran as a counterweight and eventually built up another future enemy. And these are only a few of the many examples of ill-fated U.S. meddling in faraway, non-strategic countries and regions of the world.
Of course, as Friedman alludes, the United States created the system of open trade, yet trade happens naturally and U.S. efforts merely institutionalized it. An era of free trade had preceded restricted markets during World War I and the Great Depression.
But to accurately portray U.S. interventionist empire-building, especially after World War II, is not to “always blame America first.” In fact, disagreeing with the government’s foreign policy is different from hating American’s society and way of life.
The founders of the United States, who are regularly idolized by most Americans, would roll over in their graves at the mutation of their traditional, peaceful, and restrained foreign policy into a militaristic, globe-girdling empire that is exhausting the country economically and ruining the republic that they created.
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56 Comments so far
Show AllShort answer.
NO.
This revisionist article is relatively full of contradictions.
Revisionist history indeed ! There is no "dramatic automated escalation in entitlement spending". All the money needed to fund Social Security beyond the lifetimes of anybody alive today was put into the Social Security safe over the years to sustain the program.
Unfortunately, the safe containing the money for Social Security has been emptied out by politicians using the money to fund earmarks for their campaign contributors.
Freidmen and other supply-siiders now want the taxpayers to ante up more money to refill the safe so they can privatize Social Security and redirect the replenished funds to Wall Street rather than distribute them to those of us who have been filling the safe for the past 40-50 or more years.
While many of us here at CD well understand the often hideous role the US has played in demolishing democracies the world over, it is interesting to speculate on the what-ifs regarding US interventions. The thought of US involvement in WW I perhaps directly leading to Hitler and WW II is interesting and plausible.
The author's take on the US's involvement in WWI was not entirely factual. European countries, in particular France, wanted to punish Germany. Wilson may have gone along with it, but that foolish approach was not something he wanted. I don't believe the author's view that the US entry into that war tipped the balance in favor of the Allies has much truth to it either. The war would have ended with Germany destroyed and decimated within a year or two anyway. WWI was started by European nations, not the US. Our nation's folly was imagining that conflict had anything to do with our security. Of course, it set a pattern of intervention into other nations' affairs, a pattern which continued to the present.
EXCELLENTLY explained by Drosera.
Thank you.
You are disagreeing with Winston Churchill. Good luck with that.
"Thomas Friedman,... — has finally discovered that the United States must soon turn inward and put domestic economic growth first because of its massive public debt, huge federal budget deficit, and looming fiscal crisis caused by a dramatic automatic escalation in entitlements spending."
I guess Friedman must finally be awakening to the reality that an escalation in entitlement and other costs are directly related to a "falling" dollar caused by an "increase in the money supply above and beyond economic growth" - otherwise know as INFLATION. Is he concerned that the government will approve another Quantitative Easing; a euphemism for printing money out of thin air to fund even more deficit spending for unecessary wars and empire building?
While the elitist protection racket continues, the American Dream for U.S. citizens continues to vanish. A society cannot survive these inflation costs if wages are not in lock-step with these increases. Any economist who doesn't understand simple economics 101 should find another career where their idiotic, economic failings won't harm entire populations.
Economists are unscientific quacks that are good at math. Economics is a circle jerk of solipsists each attempting to convince the others that he's the only one that exists. Though, you are correct about them being selected to push the elite's interests.
RichM, Yves Smith's fabulous new book, "ECONned" does a great job of excoriating many economists for many of the reasons that you note.
I read the book this summer and found it to be among the best insights into the deceit of modern (corporate paid) economic distortions in the service of this corporate/financial/militarist Empire that hides behind the facade of a two-party Vichy sham of democracy and faux scientific/technical distortions and fraud.
Economics, particularly as practiced by the 'black-arts' non-Keynesian fraudsters of the Chicago school of Ponzi achemists, has nothing to do with humanistic political-economics nor the development of a sustainable real economy.
The only criticism I had of Smith was that he seemed to let the corporate/financial economists off with less of a beating for their 'cover-up' of looting by the instrument of contrived negative externality dumping on society than did Simon Johnson and Joseph Stiglitz in their equally insightful recent books, "Freefall", and "Thirteen Bankers".
A very interesting movie trailer for Yves Smnith's bok can be viewed here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pIQFPkH3ILI
Best,
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Gail, with so many people out of work, your concern about inflation is rather too far ahead of the game at hand. With low demand and high personal debt, inflation is of little concern.
21st century inflation is different than 20th century inflation.
During the 20th century durable goods (houses, cars, etc.) experienced more inflation than other spending categories.
21st century inflation is more concentrated on insurance, education, taxes, medical costs. and in the not too distant future...energy, water, sewage and food.
For the past 30 years the US Gov. has become better than Enron at cooking the books when it comes to unemployment and inflation statistics, so don't expect the rate of inflation you and I experience to in any way resemble the Govt's. consumer price index and other inflation idexes.
The author doesn't even challenge Friedman's assertion, that the "massive public debt, huge federal budget deficit, and looming fiscal crisis" is "caused by a dramatic automatic escalation in entitlements spending."
Indeed. No mention of war spending at all. No mention that the USA spends double per capita of comparable countries on health care because of the insurance industry. Then there is the prison industrial complex. etc etc
Friedman is just making a long winded apologetic for austerity measures against the working classes and their "entitlements".
Well, you know, when you look at the demographics and Medicare, there is quite a bit of truth in the assertion. The new health care legislation should help, but it's still a problem.
How will the new health insurance legislation help?
Well, first it helps senior citizens in at least a couple of ways. The prescription drug "doughnut hole" is shrunk and will save senior citizens $250 / year and possibly more. Preventive care is now free. That is huge. Secondly, as far as the economic health of Medicare, the Medicare Trustees say at least a dozen years have been added to the financial solvency of the present system with the new legislation. Some of the ways that this was done include lowering federal subsidies to Medicare private health plans, putting hospitals, nursing homes, and home health agencies on notice that annual increases will be cut, and devoting more resources to eliminate fraud.
The solutions you mentioned are solutions to problems 100% contrived by Billy Tauzin and other government health care architects. If Tauzin (and later Obama) had not prohibited Medicare from negotiating drug prices, there would not have been a doughnut hole problem to solve in the first place*.
Tauzin's 2003 medicare drug industry corporate welfare bill combined with Obamacare's generous corporate welfare DO lend credence to Freidmen's assertion that there will be "automatic entitlement escalation", with drug and insurance companies (not medical consumers) being the entitled parties.
*Keep in mind that no other nation or even the US Veterans Administration has ever been prohibited from negotiating drug prices.
"Obamacare" does allow some new negotiation of drug prices. I don't know the details.
Obamacare is the apex of shell game stategy that allows polticians to tell us that during the next 10 years the cost of Medicare or other costs will go down. The thing they don't tell you is that the amount of money the Federal government spends during the next ten years will go down while the amount of money state and local governments, and patients spend will go way UP.
Great posts: Alan M, Ray & Rich M.
You're a touch fussy here, Rich. I was asked how the legislation helps. I answered from the point of view of both the Medicare recipient and our federal budget. Sorry that I was overly informative. In the case of preventive care your logic is sadly lacking. As an extreme example, a few vitamin A pills can possibly save a person from going blind. In this case a few pennies for vitamins can save society a great deal in the care of a blind person for decades. I won't go into the other 10,000+ possibilities, but I hope you now understand that preventive care is a winning idea in every possible way.
Friedman represents here the coming massive assault on Social Security and Medicare. Millionaire or multi millionaire that he is, it is of no concern to him. He's got his.
deleted double post, oops!
If the USA was truly a benefit, nobody would call it "Empire".
I can't stand that hack Friedman... I hope a grand piano falls on him and squashes him like the cockroach he is.
And if a massive toilet seat falls on Dawd or Brooks, so much the better.
I wish I could improve on Jack Kane's expose of that vile scrivener, Friedman. How is it that evolution allows such human ugliness to crawl on the face of this beautiful planet!
Roses are red, violets are blue
But David Brooks eats shit.
I wonder if he is a shadow relative of Milton Friedman?
When I first read this essay, its original title was "No Tears Needed Over the Demise of the US Empire" when it was published at antiwar.com September 8, http://original.antiwar.com/eland/2010/09/07/no-tears-needed/
It isn't Eland's purpose to question Friedman's assumptions about the cause of the Empire's meltdown; rather, he is celebrating Friedman's "rapture" and questioning his assumptions about what if any benefit the US Empire provided, which is why we have a new title for this republication.
There are many What If? moments in history. For example, George Seldes, the highly respected US newsman during the first half of the 20th century, and several of his fellows were able to cross the lines into German territory on 11 November 1918 on a quest to interview Hindinberg, the overall German commander. Several days later after quite an adventure, Seldes and company were able to interview Hindinberg--talk about a VERY MAJOR scoop--but their scoop was siezed by Allied Propaganda Control and the great story was kept from being published and its main message--a message that would have made it almost imposible for Hitler's rise: US entry into the war was THE #1 Factor in Germany's defeat--there was no "stab in the back" for Hitler and his propagandists to use. And the book where that story was finally published--You Can't Print That--contains many more stories that provide the basis for other What Ifs?
Totally disgusted with the events at Versailles, Keynes wrote a very prescient book, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, that quite accurately predicted what would come from the "unfinished" "peace" conference, an outcome for which Wilson was very much to blame. The copy of that book I read at university had almost new like pages despite its 1919 priniting, which informed me almost no one had read it out of all the several thousand history majors and grad students that had come before me. So, what does that say about the PhDs? I used lots of material from that book when I taught to prove to students that what was to come after WW1 was totally predictible, because it WAS, and by someone who wasn't a nobody.
Those are just two out of many hundreds of examples I could provide to prove that ALL historical writing is revisionist--even what are called Primary Sources, and that accusing someone of being a Revisionsit is meant as a perjorative like Conspiracy Theorist.
Empires, by definition, are brutal and uncivilized. Thus, they can never be benevolent, although they can certainly benefit a very narrow strata of society in the Metropole and the Satraps and Comprodores in the conquered territories. That is why the term Empire was buried for almost two centuries by the popular press as a descriptive term for the USA, although the term was/is used quite often by historians because it's quite apt. And that's why teaching 7th graders what the term Empire really means and then including the USA in a list of Empires past and present is a very unsettling act for those not wanting reality to intrude into the classroom and for students to learn about that reality.
KARLOF: Fascinating post. I am grateful that you bring a knowledge of history to this forum; and it's one that goes beyond anything my teachers taught! I sometimes feel like I'm back at university (here) thanks to commentators such as yourself.
GAIL/RICH M: Great posts, too.
Having been a teacher and professor at high schools, community colleges and universities I can assure you that very few institutions allow faculty the freedom to let facts get in the way of the good story.
I agree. I also learned how a professor can get the facts known despite the good story.
Karlof1
Perhaps this book, which gives an overview of The Great War and which I myself have ordered, may be of interest to you and your class.
http://www.amazon.com/War-End-All-Wars-World/dp/0547026862/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1284598315&sr=1-1
The URL got truncated. Is this book Freedman's The War to End All Wars: World War I?
Karlof1
Yes, that is the one. It is aimed primarily at a younger audience and received a pretty decent review from last Sunday's New York Times Book Review. What sounds encouraging from the review is that the book is not simply about the military battles that happened in that war but also about the carnage that was inflicted upon those who had participated in that conflict.
Thanks for the review tip. What I want to know is how the book treats the events leading to the war, from roughly 1900-1914, and especially Germany's aims. Then, I want to see how it treats the Versailles conference and Wilson's domestic failure with the League, which is a part of the war depite its occurance several years after.
Edit--Just read the short review. It fails as it follows the usual BS about how the war's start "led to a swift offensive. It could have ended there..." when it's been made very clear by Fischer just what Germany's War aims were--and it was most definately NOT a limited war. This is most unfortunate as the book is directed at children, which means it serves an an Indoctrination device. If young readers were told the truth about the Kaiser's racial hatred of Slavs and his desire for Lebenschraum long before Hitler wrote about the same as his War Aim, then they might have the chance to develop a deeper understanding of human nature and why racial hatred is such a powerful evil. That the book was reviewed by a non-historian is also very poor form; I would probably grade it rather harshly, as I've just done.
All these pundits talk about Social Security as an "entitlement", the same way as they talk about Welfare as an entitlement. They aren't the same. Nobody paid into welfare to qualify for it. _Everybody_ paid into Social Security, and the government is obligated to pay us all back, according to the share we paid into it. That makes it _not_ an entitlement. Same with Medicare ... we pay something out of our pay checks toward it, and the government has an obligation to pay out in our behalf.
Actually, it's possible to NOT pay into SS, my aunt being an example--39 years of teaching and not one cent taken from her check or paid by her school district into the SS Trust Fund. So, of course, she doesn't get any SS monies OR Medicare coverage, the latter she could purchase if desired.
The public employees whom I know that were not required to pay into social security all have pension programs that allowed tham to retire at age 55 rather than waiting until age 65 (or more) and get better benefits than social security provided. The law also allows these non-contributors to get 1/2 of the value the social security benefit of a spouse to whom they were married for 10 years or more.
It is an entitlement because you are entitled to it. Welfare and Social Security are paid by taxes. When you pay taxes you are entitled to welfare. Entitlement means it is your right, which it is because it was paid for, it is not a gift. Even if you don't pay taxes, somebody did and their money entitles you to welfare. The money for this programs has already been provided and is therefore owed, hence entitlement.
I have a better title:
Has US Empire (Heroin, Genocide, Mass-Murder) Benefited the World?
This structure and past empires are grounded in pyramid dynamics, which is
why they have a limited lifespan. They grow by assuming control, either
politically or economically, of new territories, positioning themselves to cream
off surpluses from an ever-expanding geographical area in a form of
involuntary buy-in. In the past political control through invasion or physical
colonization was more common, but latterly globalization has enabled the
development of a sophisticated system of economic control based on
international debt slavery, supplemented with economic colonization for the
purpose of resource extraction. Both resources and financial surpluses, in the
form of perpetual interest payments, could be efficiently extracted from the
periphery and accumulated at the centre
Now the empire has spanned the globe and there is nowhere else to conquer.
Once this happens then its game over. The system will start to cannibalize
itself. Which, is the phase we are entering. Whether it is a stair-step decline
over decades or the whole financial system just seizes up as the global debt
bomb goes off over the next few years, it’s going down.
No doubt, in a general sense, though, it's kind of run into wall. But, I agree, it will get more aggressive in it's exploits and there is more squeezing to be had. We should see a dramatically increasing under class internally and probably more failing states globally. As well as increased tension in the oil producing regions. At it's core, it is a predatory system and can't behave anyway else
Good description of Informal Empire or Informal Colonization.
Yes, we once again experience the "closing of the frontier," the USA's Frontier being formally declared closed in 1890 prompting Turner to formulate his Frontier Thesis that became so influential for all the wrong reasons. Star Trek's opening words: "Space, the final frontier." A few years before, JFK said these words during his "Moon Speech" at Rice University: "What was once the furthest outpost on the old frontier of the West will be the furthest outpost on the new frontier of science and space." But humans from this planet will likely never colonize space--Too much war and not enough peace negated that slim possibility.
The current Frontier being closed is Capitalism's exponential growth, foreclosed by ecological Overshoot. Close behind it will be the closing of the complexity humnaity's constructed, also by Ecological Overshoot. The closing of these frontiers will drastically alter human culture and humanity's relationship to the planet and to each other. I doubt Turner could have conceived how vast the US Empire's frontier would grow after giving his speech and publishing his thesis. Likewise, I find it hard to envision what the planet will look like by 2100, although I'm certain it will be vastly altered negatively.
Good points, Karlof
Which is why, the US is the final empire.
Among other things, it's our distorted definitions of "defense" and entitlement, that don't allow us to see that bankrolling private mercenary armies (using US tax dollars for privateers' profits -- talk about inefficient) independent of whether we have funds available or not, is the SUPER-Entitlement of all times,
Policies that lead to our current conflicts are regularly created by private parties INTERESTED in the conflicts, without all them citizens having to worry their pretty little heads about the logic or appropriateness of it all ...
Meanwhile, big financial institutions gamble with family homes and savings and do a "stick-em-up" of our Treasury to pay for the losses (monetary and social) on the home gambling debt ... !!!
Might that, too, not smack of some form of Entitlement on the part of the manipulative wealth-wielders??
Capitalism has enslaved the people of the world by transferring the earth's bounty to the few.
Thomas Paine wanted "Agrarian Justice."
"Poverty, therefore, is a thing created by that which is called civilized life. It exists not in the natural state."
If you have never read "Agrarian Justice", I highly recommend it. It is only a few pages long. AJ is arguably the best writing to come out of the enlightenment.
http://www.thomaspaine.org/Archives/agjst.html
Good stuff, I've never seen that before. he was on the right track.
"Land, as before said, is the free gift of the Creator in common to the human race. Personal property is the effect of society; and it is as impossible for an individual to acquire personal property without the aid of society, as it is for him to make land originally. "
Dr M King Hubbert, discoverer of peak oil math and technocrat
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=114x13604
Since also the energy-cost of maintaining a human being exceeds by a large amount his ability to repay, we can abandon the fiction that what one is to receive is in payment for what one has done, and recognize that what we are really doing is utilizing the bounty that nature has provided us
"The founders of the United States, who are regularly idolized by most Americans, would roll over in their graves at the mutation of their traditional, peaceful, and restrained foreign policy into a militaristic, globe-girdling empire that is exhausting the country economically and ruining the republic that they created."
yeah? What about the Monroe Doctrine? That was a peaceful and restrained policy, wasn't it?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monroe_Doctrine
Who is this fool?