US in Search of a Cause?
By Patrick J. Buchanan
October 23, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "If the Cold War is
over, what's the point of being an American?" said Rabbit Angstrom,
the protagonist of the John Updike novels.
A haunting remark, since, for 40 years, America
was largely united on the proposition that our survival depended
upon our victory over communism in the Cold War.
We had a cause then. By and large, we stood
together through the crises in the first decades of that Cold War —
the Berlin blockade, Stalin's atom bomb and the fall of China to
Mao, the Korean War, the Hungarian revolution, the Cuban missile
crisis, and on into Vietnam.
We accepted the conscription of our young men. We
accepted wars in Asia, and, if need be, in Europe, to check the
Soviet Empire.
Vietnam sundered that unity.
By 1967, the Gene McCarthy-Robert Kennedy wing of
the Democratic Party had broken with the Cold War consensus. "We
have gotten over our inordinate fear of communism," said Jimmy
Carter.
The Reagan Republicans and George H. W. Bush would
pick up the torch and lead the nation to victory in the last decade
of that Cold War that had been a defining cause of the American
nation.
But when it was over in 1990, America was suddenly
at a loss for a new cause to live for, fight for and, if need be,
see its sons die for.
Bush 1, after leading a coalition that drove
Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait, declared that America's cause would be
the building of a "New World Order." But few Americans bought in.
Sixteen months after his victory parade up
Constitution Avenue, after Bush had reached 90 percent approval, 62
percent of his country's electorate voted to replace him with Bill
Clinton or Ross Perot.
Clinton pursued liberal interventionism in the
Balkans, leading to 78 days of bombing Serbia, and he regretted not
intervening in Rwanda to halt the genocide.
George W. Bush promised a "humble" foreign policy.
But 9/11 put an end to that. After driving the Taliban from power
and Osama Bin Laden out of Afghanistan, he declared that America's
new goal was preventing an "axis of evil" — Iraq, Iran, North Korea
— from acquiring nuclear weapons. Then, Bush marched us up to
Baghdad.
The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq lasted years
longer and cost far more in blood and treasure than Bush had
anticipated.
At the peak of his prestige, like Pope Urban II,
Bush declared a global crusade for democracy.
This ended like many of the crusades. Democratic
elections were won by Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza and, after
the Arab Spring, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt.
Barack Obama promised to end the Bush wars and
bring the troops home. And he was rewarded with two terms by a
country that has shown minimal enthusiasm for more wars in the
Middle East.
Obama is now openly mocking the McCainiacs.
"Right now, if I was taking the advice of some of
the members of Congress who holler all the time, we'd be in, like,
seven wars right now," he told a group of veterans and Gold Star
mothers of slain U.S. soldiers.
This reluctance to begin wars or intervene in wars
— be it in Syria, Iraq, Iran, Ukraine — seems to comport with the
wishes of the country. And this new reality raises serious
questions.
What is America's cause today? What is our mission
in the world? For what end, other than defending our citizens, vital
interests and crucial allies, would we be willing to send a great
army to fight — as we did in Korea, Vietnam, Kuwait, Iraq and
Afghanistan?
Are all the global causes of Bush I, Clinton, Bush
II over?
Where is the coherence, the consistency, of U.S.
policy in the Middle East that should cause us to draw red lines,
and fight if they are crossed?
If our belief in democracy demands the ouster of
the dictator Assad in Damascus, how can we ally with the theocratic
monarchy in Riyadh, the Sunni king sitting atop a Shiite majority in
Bahrain, and the Egyptian general on his throne in Cairo, who took
power in a military coup against a democratically elected Muslim
government?
Other than supporting Israel, maintaining access
to Gulf oil and resisting ISIS and al-Qaida, upon what do Americans
agree?
Henry Kissinger seeks a restoration of the
crumbling strategic architecture. Neocons and interventionist
liberals want to confront Russia and Iran. Reluctant
interventionists like Obama, Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders think
we should stay out of other wars there.
"When a people is divided within itself about the
conduct of its foreign relations, it is unable to agree on the
determination of its true interests," wrote Walter Lippmann at the
climax of World War II:
"Thus, its course in foreign policy depends, in
Hamilton's words, not on reflection and choice but on accident and
force."
America is a nation divided, not only upon the
means we should use to attain our ends in the world, but upon the
ends themselves.
Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of the new
book "The Greatest Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose From Defeat to
Create the New Majority." To find out more about Patrick Buchanan
and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit
the Creators Web page at www.creators.com.