Global hegemony in the American Century was not
an accident of circumstance but an intentional
choice by a foreign-policy elite.
By Robert W. Merry
Tomorrow
the World: The Birth of U.S. Global
Supremacy, by Stephen Wertheim,
(Belknap Press: October 2020), 272
pages.
February 18, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - Probably the most
profound geopolitical development of the Twentieth
Century was the rise of America as the world’s
preeminent power during and after World War II.
We’re still living in what Henry Luce called the
American Century some eighty years after the
publisher proclaimed its inception. Historians have
put forth various interpretations for how and why
this happened: that America was always an
irrepressible nation whose expansionist impulses
presaged its hegemonic ambitions; that with all of
its resources and power, the country had no choice
but to embrace the challenge of global stability.
Now Stephen Wertheim, of the Quincy Institute and
Columbia University, propounds a provocative new
thesis: that the hegemonic temptation was the
product of a coterie of strategic planners from the
American foreign policy elite who crafted the notion
and sold it to the country by distorting America’s
distinct and “foundational” philosophy of
internationalism.
There’s some excellent history here as Wertheim
traces the perceptions and recommendations of
prominent thinkers struggling to keep up with a
world in flux. No sooner would they craft a grand
strategy for the future they foresaw than the
perceived future would be washed away by powerful
new developments. Ultimately they concluded that
their options narrowed to a single vision: world
primacy. “Six years after global supremacy was all
but inconceivable,” writes Wertheim, “it was now
indisputable.”
Wertheim goes awry a bit, though, in tracing the
broad sweep of U.S. international relations from
George Washington to Franklin Roosevelt. His
interpretation elides significant elements of that
rich story while interpreting others in questionable
ways.
In Werthheim’s view, America was born as an
internationalist nation, “promising and incarnating
a world governed by reason and rules, not force and
whim.” George Washington’s famous farewell call for
America to avoid “entangling alliances” was actually
a broader admonition against engaging in any form of
power politics in the world. That concept, “premised
on the ability of peaceful interaction to replace
clashing politics,” became a central element of the
American ethos.
Ultimately it found expression in the Wilsonian
enthusiasm that emerged most powerfully during World
War I, when intellectuals and politicians (led by
Wilson himself) formulated the concept of
eliminating war through disarmament, marshalled of
antiwar public opinion, and created global
organizations such as Wilson’s cherished League of
Nations. Peaceful discourse and adjudication of
transnational disputes would replace nationalist
impulses and balance-of-power maneuvering, and the
world would bathe in comity and peace.
As Wertheim tells it, this was America’s
fundamental foreign policy outlook throughout its
first century and a half, right up to Wilson’s
decision to take America into World War I alongside
the Allies.
But wasn’t that decision a violation of
Washington’s farewell warning? No, writes Wertheim,
because Wilson’s League was designed to “transform
the balance of power into a ‘community of power’ in
which ‘all unite to act in the same sense and with
the same purpose.”’ Wertheim explains that, under
the Wilson plan, the United States would
“Americanize Europe” by creating a universal
alliance with American participation. This would be
a “disentangling alliance” that would “forever end
the capacity of European alliances to ensnare the
United States.”
The key here is that the increasingly powerful
U.S. would not seek “to counterbalance or dominate
any rival but instead to render counterbalancing and
domination obsolete.” America would be the
progenitor of endless peace.
Of course America declined to join Wilson’s
League and rejected his broader vision, whether
entangling or disentangling. The country entered
what most historians have considered an
“isolationist” phase (a term that Wertheim abhors,
as we will see).
Then came World War II in Europe, which set
American planners to the task of developing a grand
strategy for what seemed like a new global order.
When Hitler conquered France and unleashed his bold
effort to destroy Britain’s defensive air power so
he could invade, the planners promptly grappled with
the American response to a Europe fully dominated by
Nazi Germany. Perhaps America could confine its
sphere of influence and central trading zone to the
Western Hemisphere, including Greenland and Canada
and encompassing all or most of South America. It
didn’t take long to see, however, that such a zone
would hardly sustain the U.S. economy.
Even adding a vast section of Asia, perhaps
including a powerful and aggressive Japan (a
daunting diplomatic challenge), wouldn’t solve the
economic problem while also posing new geopolitical
difficulties. The planners seemed stymied.
After Hitler failed to gain dominance over
British skies, thus ending any immediate prospect of
an invasion and seemingly preserving the British
Empire, a new concept emerged: combine the Western
Hemisphere with the Pacific basin and the British
Empire into a vast area encompassing nearly all of
the non-German world. As Wertheim puts it, “Finally,
after months of study, the planners had discovered
that if German domination of Europe endured, the
United States had to dominate almost everywhere
else.” This “everywhere else” became known as the
Grand Area, and it was based on the imperative that
Germany must be confined to continental Europe and
that only American leadership could ensure the
success of that enterprise.
This dealt a fearsome blow to what Wertheim
considered America’s foundational internationalism,
the Wilsonian concept of peaceful dispute
adjudication. He writes: “Out of the death of
internationalism as contemporaries had known it, and
the faltering of British hegemony, U.S. global
supremacy was born.” But it still had to be sold to
the American people, and that led to two new
developments. First, partisans of hegemony demonized
opposition thinkers as “isolationists,” a new term
of opprobrium designed to put naysayers on their
heels. “By developing the pejorative concept of
isolationism,” writes Werthheim, “and applying it to
all advocates of limits on military intervention,
American officials and intellectuals found a way to
make global supremacy sound unimpeachable.”
They also conceived the idea of a United Nations
to gather other states into the fold and thus
“convince the American public that U.S. leadership
would be inclusive, rule bound, and worthy of
support.” In other words, it was a ruse to help the
elites supplant the old notion of placid
internationalism with armed supremacy.
Thus do we see, in Wertheim’s telling, how a
small group of wayward intellectuals, back in the
chaos years of World War II, hijacked the country’s
intrinsic internationalist philosophy and reshaped
it into something else entirely, inconsistent with
traditional Americanism, namely a credo of power
politics and global supremacy.
No doubt many opponents of the foreign policy
aggressiveness of today’s Republican neocons and
Democratic humanitarian interventionists will
embrace Wertheim as a sturdy ally in their cause.
But they should note that he builds his thesis upon
a foundation of dubious history.
George Washington was not a forerunner to Woodrow
Wilson, and warning against entangling alliances
circa 1797 can’t be logically equated to advocating
world government in 1919. Neither can one draw an
accurate picture of American foreign policy thinking
without noting the force of American nationalism,
which played a major role (though of course not the
only role) in the formulation of U.S. international
relations throughout American history. John
Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago calls it
“the most powerful ideology in the modern world.”
Wertheim hardly mentions it.
He argues that we shouldn’t consider America’s
expansionist zeal under James Polk in the 1840s as
representing power politics because, after all, the
United States was simply consolidating its position
on its own continent while eschewing the acquisition
of Cuba or all of Mexico (as opposed to gobbling up
merely half of Mexico in an aggressive war). But
when in history did a major power, after
consolidating its position in its own neighborhood,
stop there? Did Rome? Did the Ottomans? Did the
British? Neither did America.
Similarly, Wertheim disputes any link to power
politics on the part of the United States at the
turn of the last century by noting that America
“continued to stay politically and militarily apart
from the European alliance system while intensifying
efforts to transform power politics globally.”
The latter part here is false. America built up
its navy just in time to destroy Spain’s Pacific and
Atlantic fleets, kick that waning empire out of the
Caribbean, free Cuba from Spanish dominion, and take
the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico. If that
wasn’t power politics, the term has no meaning. For
that matter, why did the United States annex the
globally strategic islands of Hawaii, from which
America could project power far into Asia? And why
did it build the Panama Canal, which allowed it to
concentrate more naval firepower more quickly in
more places?
No, America wasn’t born as a benign
instrumentality of peace destined to calm the waters
of international conflict through means never before
seen in any successful guise in the annals of human
history. America was born like every other nation,
into a world of conflict and danger, buffeted by
swirls of power, ambition, and potentially hostile
forces. The country proved remarkably adept, like
its mother nation, in the arts of self-reliance,
self-defense, popular government—and expansionism.
It was therefore natural that when the world
turned upside down and power interrelationships got
tossed into the air like confetti, those U.S.
planners would perceive American power as the
greatest hope for stability in the world as well as
the greatest hope for U.S. security. For the first
45 years of the new era, the Cold War, America
played its role largely with aplomb. Then it went
awry when the world changed and the country’s elites
could neither see the transformation nor adjust to
it.
Wertheim is correct in positing that America’s
current foreign policy follies are a product of its
leaders’ insistence on clinging to the same ideas
that emerged from the minds of those strategic
planners back in the 1940s. But in his effort to
tell the story of how we got here, he gets it only
partially right.
Robert W.
Merry, former Wall Street Journal
Washington correspondent and CEO of Congressional
Quarterly, is the author of biographies of James
Polk and William McKinley.
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