COVID-19
Exposed the Fraud of ‘American Exceptionalism’
Our leaders were so preoccupied with remaking the world
they failed to see that our country was falling apart
around them.
By Daniel Larison
May 29, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Has
the time come to bury the conceit of American
exceptionalism? In an article for the American edition
of The Spectator, Quincy Institute President
Andrew Bacevich
concludes just that:
The
coronavirus pandemic is a curse. It should also
serve as an opportunity, Americans at long last
realizing that they are not God’s agents. Out of
suffering and loss, humility and self-awareness
might emerge. We can only hope.
The heart of
the American exceptionalism in question is American
hubris. It is based on the assumption that we are better
than the rest of the world, and that this superiority
both entitles and obligates us to take on an outsized
role in the world.
In our
current foreign policy debates, the phrase “American
exceptionalism” has served as a shorthand for justifying
and celebrating U.S. dominance, and when necessary it
has served as a blanket excuse for U.S. wrongdoing.
Seongjong Song defined it in an
2015 article for The
Korean Journal of International Studies this way:
“American exceptionalism is the belief that the US is
“qualitatively different” from all other nations.” In
practice, that has meant that the U.S. does not consider
itself to be bound by the same rules that apply to other
states, and it reserves the right to interfere whenever
and wherever it wishes.
American
exceptionalism has been used in our political debates as
an ideological purity test to determine whether certain
political leaders are sufficiently supportive of an
activist and interventionist foreign policy. The main
purpose of invoking American exceptionalism in foreign
policy debate has been to denigrate less hawkish policy
views as unpatriotic and beyond the pale. The phrase was
often used as a partisan cudgel in the previous decade
as the Obama administration’s critics tried to cast
doubt on the former president’s acceptance of this idea,
but in the years since then it has become a rallying
point for devotees of U.S. primacy regardless of party.
There was an explosion in the use of the phrase in just
the first few years of the 2010s compared with the
previous decades. Song cited a study that showed this
massive increase:
Exceptionalist discourse is on the rise in American
politics. Terrence McCoy (2012) found that the term
“American exceptionalism” appeared in US
publications 457 times between 1980 and 2000,
climbing to 2,558 times in the 2000s and 4,172 times
in 2010-12.
The more
that U.S. policies have proved “American exceptionalism”
to be a pernicious myth at odds with reality, the more
we have heard the phrase used to defend those policies.
Republican hawks began the decade by accusing Obama of
not believing in this “exceptionalism,” and some
Democratic hawks closed it out by
“reclaiming” the idea
on behalf of their own discredited foreign policy
vision. There may be differences in emphasis between the
two camps, but there is a consensus that the U.S. has
special rights and privileges that other nations cannot
have. That has translated into waging unnecessary wars,
assuming excessive overseas burdens, and trampling on
the rights of other states, and all the while
congratulating ourselves on how virtuous we are for
doing all of it.
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The
contemporary version of American exceptionalism is tied
up inextricably with the belief that the U.S. is the
“indispensable nation.” According to this view, without
U.S. “leadership” other countries will be unable or
unwilling to respond to major international problems and
threats. We have seen just how divorced from reality
that belief is in just the last few months. There has
been no meaningful U.S. leadership in response to the
pandemic, but for the most part our allies have managed
on their own fairly well. In the absence of U.S.
“leadership,” many other countries have demonstrated
that they haven’t really needed the U.S. Our
“indispensability” is a story that we like to tell
ourselves, but it isn’t true. Not only are we no longer
indispensable, but as Micah Zenko
pointed out many years
ago, we never were.
It was 22 years
ago when then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
publicly declared the United States to be the
“indispensable nation”: “If we have to use force, it is
because we are America; we are the indispensable nation.
We stand tall and we see further than other countries
into the future, and we see the danger here to all of
us.”
In a
recent
interview with The
New York Times, Albright sounded much less sure of
her old position: “There’s nothing in the definition of
indispensable that says “alone.” It means that the
United States needs to be engaged with its partners. And
people’s backgrounds make a difference.” Albright’s
original statement was an aggressive assertion that
America was both extraordinarily powerful and unusually
farsighted, and that legitimized the frequent U.S.
recourse to using force.
After two
decades of calamitous failures that have highlighted our
weaknesses and foolishness, even she can’t muster up the
old enthusiasm that she once had. No one could look back
at the last 20 years of U.S. foreign policy and still
honestly say that “we see further” into the future than
others. Not only are we no better than other countries
at anticipating and preparing for future dangers, but
judging from the country’s lack of preparedness for a
pandemic we are actually far behind many of the
countries that we have presumed to “lead.” It is
impossible to square our official self-congratulatory
rhetoric with the reality of a government that is
incapable of protecting its citizens from disaster.
The poor
U.S. response to the pandemic has not only exposed many
of the country’s serious faults, but it has also caused
a crisis of faith in the prevailing mythology that
American political leaders and pundits have been
promoting for decades. This found expression most
recently in a rather odd
article in The New
York Times last week. The framing of the story
makes it into a lament for a collapsing ideology:
The
pandemic sweeping the globe has done more than take
lives and livelihoods from New Delhi to New York. It
is shaking fundamental assumptions about American
exceptionalism — the special role the United States
played for decades after World War II as the reach
of its values and power made it a global leader and
example to the world.
The curious
thing about this description is that it takes for
granted that “fundamental assumptions about American
exceptionalism” haven’t been thoroughly shaken long
before now. The “special role” mentioned here was never
going to last forever, and in some respects it was more
imaginary than real. It was a period in our history that
we should seek to understand and learn from, but we also
need to recognize that it was transitory and already
ended some time ago.
If
American exceptionalism is now “on trial,” as another
recent article
put it, it is because
it offered up a pleasing but false picture of how we
relate to the rest of the world. Over the last two
decades, we have seen that picture diverge more and more
from real life. The false picture gives political
leaders an excuse to take reckless and disastrous
actions as long as they can spin them as being
expressions of “who we are” as a country. At the same
time, they remain blind to the country’s real
vulnerabilities. It is a measure of how powerful the
illusion of American exceptionalism is that it still has
such a hold on so many people’s minds even now, but it
has not been a harmless illusion.
While our
leaders have been patting themselves on the back for the
enlightened “leadership” that they imagine they are
providing to the world, they have neglected the
country’s urgent needs and allowed many parts of our
system to fall into disrepair and ruin. They have also
visited enormous destruction on many other countries in
the name of “helping” them. The same hubris that has
warped foreign policy decisions over the decades has
encouraged a dangerous complacency about the problems in
our own country. We can’t let that continue. Our leaders
were so preoccupied with trying to remake other parts of
the world that they failed to see that our country was
falling apart all around them.
American
exceptionalism has been the story that our leaders told
us to excuse their neglect of America. It is a
flattering story, but ultimately it is a vain one that
distracts us from protecting our own country and people.
We would do well if we put away this boastful fantasy
and learned how to live like a normal nation.
Daniel
Larison is a senior editor at TAC, where he also keeps a
solo
blog. He has been
published in the New York Times Book Review, Dallas
Morning News, World Politics Review, Politico Magazine,
Orthodox Life, Front Porch Republic, The American Scene,
and Culture11, and was a columnist for The Week. He
holds a PhD in history from the University of Chicago,
and resides in Lancaster, PA. Follow him on
Twitter.
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