By Doug Bandow
February
23, 2021 "Information
Clearing House"
- - "
Anti War"
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"All great powers" want to rule the world,
declared Robert Kagan, propagandist for America as
imperial power, democratic hegemon, aggressive
unipower, and perpetual war machine. However, they
typically fail. Wrote Kagan in a
new Foreign
Affairs article: "Much of the drama of the
past century resulted from great powers whose
aspirations exceeded their capacity."
The U.S. has a different problem, he contended.
The American people. Rather than realize their
unique calling to sacrifice themselves and obey
their betters when instructed to patrol the globe,
they continued to look inward.
They failed to realize that their destiny is to
impose order upon independent and subservient, judge
innocent and guilty, wage war upon great and small,
and, yes, kill anyone who and destroy anything which
gets in the way of fulfilling this sacred duty.
Instead of focusing on the wishes of Washington,
D.C., the world’s imperial city, and rising to the
greatness expected of them by supporting the
aggrandizements of a globally dominant America, they
focused on the local and personal – their careers
and educations, their communities and towns, their
clubs and associations, and their families and
friends.
Yes, he admitted, "they have met the challenges
of Nazism and Japanese imperialism, Soviet
communism, and radical Islamist terrorism." However,
they saw these efforts as "exceptional responses to
exceptional circumstances. They do not see
themselves as the primary defender of a certain kind
of world order; they have never embraced that
‘indispensable’ role."
Such a revelation could shock only a certified
ivory tower warrior, who believes that his
comparative advantage in life is coming up with wars
for patriotic young men and women across the country
to fight. Not to defend America. But to create and
preserve "a liberal world order" designed by the
foreign policy equivalent of a priestly class, of
which Kagan must be at least an archbishop or
cardinal. It would be tempting to dismiss such
arguments as the ravings of an accomplished, even
celebrated policy entrepreneur. However, top
officials have picked up these arguments, making
them central to dealing with the rest of the world.
Consider the egregious Madeleine Albright, former
UN ambassador and secretary of state, author of
multiple books and articles, member of endless
commissions and panels, and all-around Washington
paladin. She has become an apt if unusually
celebrated representative of the foreign policy
establishment. Preemptively channeling Robert Kagan
more than two decades ago,
she declared: "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."
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Being all-knowing and all-seeing naturally gives
the US the right to impose its will on the rest of
the world irrespective of the cost to others. As
Albright explained, when asked about the
humanitarian toll from sanctions on Iraq: "I think
this is a very hard choice, but the price – we think
the price is worth it." It is only appropriate that
those who peer through the glass darkly get to
decide that the death of hundreds of thousands of
other people is a necessary if unfortunate
consequence of achieving the wonderful future
planned by Washington. Indeed, those sacrificed
should feel honored that America chose them to lead
the way to Valhalla, or its modern equivalent.
Certainly, there should be no hesitation at
enforcing America’s will as expressed by those
looking ahead to chart America’s course. As Albright
put it to Colin Powell, then the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, "What’s the use of having
this superb military you’re always talking about if
we can’t use it?" There is a grand global chess game
to play and someone must fulfill the role of gambit
pawns. In this case members of the armed forces.
Of course, after two decades filled with Middle
Eastern debacles, Albright’s claims of
foresightedness and moral certitude look ever more
ludicrous. And Kagan does not try to deny reality.
Americans have not played their designated role
particularly well: "Their continental view of the
world has produced a century of wild oscillations –
indifference followed by panic, mobilization and
intervention followed by retreat and retrenchment."
In short, the nation’s international disasters
are all the American people’s fault. Washington
is filled with perceptive, sagacious, even visionary
analysts like Kagan and courageous, outspoken, and
determined public servants like Albright. They want
to save the world – and perhaps the universe beyond.
Unfortunately, Americans have failed them and the
rest of the Blob.
Kagan criticized Americans’ "intolerance for the
messy and unending business of preserving a general
peace and acting to forestall threats. In both
cases, Americans had one foot out the door the
moment they entered, which hampered their ability to
gain control of difficult situations. This on-again,
off-again approach has confused and misled allies
and adversaries, often to the point of spurring
conflicts that could have been avoided by a clear
and steady application of American power and
influence."
Foolish people. They should be enthusiastically
sacrificing their earnings and even lives to save
the world at Kagan’s direction. Instead, they are
acting like citizens in a republic and deciding on
their own fate. Focused on themselves, those around
them, their community, and their nation. How
ludicrously myopic! How terribly selfish! Where is
conscription when we need it?
However, Kagan, never one to abandon trying to
get Americans to follow his Siren song of perpetual
war, wrote hopefully: "If the twenty-first century
is not to follow the same pattern – most
dangerously, in the competition with China – then
Americans will need to stop looking for the exits
and accept the role that fate and their own power
have thrust upon them. Perhaps after four years of
President Donald Trump, Americans are ready for some
straight talk."
Robert Kagan’s message to Americans: Prepare to
die. It is your destiny. But don’t worry, be happy!
If he has his way, the 21st century
won’t be pretty. For other people, anyway. No doubt
he will write more books, pen more articles, appear
at more conferences, and profitably ply the
policy-making trade while his wife, Victoria Nuland,
fills another position in another administration,
busy implementing his vision and bringing the rest
of the world to heel.
Like Albright, Kagan makes more than a few
dubious assumptions:
- Fate and America’s own power make the
role he favors America’s destiny. This is
unmitigated hogwash. Americans can choose their
own future. They need not defend every rich
industrialized country on the planet. They need
not attempt to fix every Middle Eastern nation
that collapses. They need not try to impose
Washington’s every dictate on every other
nation. And do all these forever. These are
choices, made day after day and year after year.
Americans can, and should, make different
decisions from those advocated by Kagan.
- Running the world is expensive. As
long as other people are doing the paying, Kagan
appears not to be concerned about the costs of
intervention. An outsize military budget is the
price of an activist foreign policy. Lengthy and
interminable conflicts are a constant. The risk
of big wars grows along with military guarantees
and truculent conduct. Americans die and suffer
grievous injuries. Foreign peoples also die,
sometimes in prodigious numbers. Domestic
liberty, prosperity, and stability suffer in the
perpetual warfare state. Terrorism arises from
US meddling abroad. The price of forcing
recalcitrant foreign states to comply will only
grow alongside the expansion of their economic
and military power, perhaps buttressed by the
spread of nuclear weapons.
- Going to war is a small price for being
global dictatress. In Kagan’s view,
Americans are lazy, spending only a small
fraction of their country’s GDP on the military
and deploying only a small proportion of its
population overseas. However, wrote Kagan: "Were
Americans to shift to a war footing, or even a
Cold War-type footing in response to some
Chinese action – for instance, an attack on
Taiwan – the United States would look like a
very different animal." Yes, but what makes war
with a nuclear armed power worthwhile? Would he
do the same over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands?
Scarborough Shoal? Hong Kong? Xinjiang? Glib
talk about preserving a liberal international
order tells us little about what Americans would
be paying so much for.
- Other countries will surrender
fundamental interests whenever America demands
that they do so. "Perhaps the Chinese,
careful students of history that they are, will
not make the mistake that others have made in
misjudging the United States," Kagan writes. Or
maybe not. Even many young Chinese are rabid
nationalists who believe Taiwan is part of China
and dislike criticism of their homeland. Threats
against Beijing and other nations tend to enrage
opposition rather than force capitulation. This
is apparent elsewhere too. Brutal sanctions and
threats of military invasion have not brought
even the weak states of Cuba, Iran, North Korea,
and Venezuela to heel. Endlessly expanding
sanctions on Moscow and increasingly lethal
military aid to Ukraine have not caused Russian
nationalists to genuflect toward Washington and
disgorge Crimea. Rather, every US threat spurs
other nations to develop new and/or enhance old
deterrents.
- International social engineers are the
prescient policymakers celebrated by Albright.
Actually, court intellectuals like Kagan, along
with those they purport to advise, have gotten
much of the last century wrong as Washington
bungled its interventions. World War I was a
great disaster, made worse by America’s
involvement, which allowed a catastrophic
result: imposition of one side’s "liberal"
European order rather than a compromise
considering the interests of all. US
intervention in Asia spurred Japan’s attack on
Pearl Harbor which, but for Adolf Hitler’s
foolish declaration of war on America, would
have turned Washington’s attention away from the
decisive global theater of Europe. The Vietnam
War devastated that country and cost the US
dearly; the aftermath suggested that Washington
spent years fighting a chimera, a nonexistent
threat that dissipated almost immediately after
America’s withdrawal. Disastrous bungling in
unimportant conflicts with limited impact on
America and the West has only accelerated:
Lebanon, Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Yemen.
- Future victory is certain if only the
myopic public finally follows Kagan’s selfless
direction. He declared that "the only hope
for preserving liberalism at home and abroad is
the maintenance of a world order conducive to
liberalism, and the only power capable of
upholding such an order is the United States."
Kagan failed to explain why this is true. In
young, weak America, liberalism survived and
even thrived for decades despite the illiberal
world beyond. If America’s dominant foreign role
ever was necessary, it was in, say, 1950: much
of Europe lay prostrate from World War II while
a dangerous Soviet Union appeared to be on the
march, seen by some as "the future that works."
However, that world is gone. Nevertheless,
reliance on America continued even as the West
recovered and prospered because Washington
insisted on primacy against all, including
nominal friends. Certainly, wealthy allies are
not inclined to challenge the US over
responsibilities Americans insisted on carrying.
Contra Kagan, that should change. The US would
be more secure if American entanglement was less
even if the world was messier. Indeed, on 9/11
terrorism came to the homeland because
Washington had needlessly taken on so many
foreign fights as its own.
No surprise, Kagan wants the Biden administration
to tell the American people "that the task of
maintaining a world order is unending and fraught
with costs but preferable to the alternative." That
once might have been true. But not today. There are
other nations, both capable and dependent upon the
same order. Moreover, the US – awash in endless
debt, bedeviled by severe domestic problems, divided
dramatically into warring political factions – no
longer can afford to play global hegemon at such
cost to its own population. Alas, outside the ivory
towers hosting Kagan and other members of the Blob,
Americans across the nation are looking more like
Helots than Spartans. Kagan should remember his
assessment of "great powers whose aspirations
exceeded their capacity."
Americans should be involved in the world. But
the finest form of internationalism is not endless
war. Americans know that, which is why Donald Trump
did not arise in a vacuum. Kagan’s demand that
Americans overspread the earth imposing Washington’s
rules is likely to continue driving them inward.
President Joe Biden would better fulfill his
responsibility to the American people by
refashioning US foreign policy, restricting the use
of American power to protect this nation instead of
to reorder the world.
Doug Bandow is a Senior Fellow at the Cato
Institute. A former Special Assistant to President
Ronald Reagan, he is author of Foreign Follies:
America’s New Global Empire.