Where Did
the American Century Go?
By Tom
Engelhardt
July 08,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Tom
Dispatch" -
Vladimir Putin
recently manned up and admitted it. The United
States remains the planet’s sole superpower, as it
has been since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
“America,” the Russian president
said, “is a great power. Today, probably, the
only superpower. We accept that.”
Think of
us, in fact, as the default superpower in an ever
more recalcitrant world.
Seventy-five years ago, at the edge of a global
conflagration among rival great powers and empires,
Henry Luce first suggested that the next century
could be ours. In February 1941, in his magazine
LIFE, he wrote a
famous essay entitled “The American Century.”
In it, he proclaimed that if only Americans would
think internationally, surge into the world, and
accept that they were already at war, the next
hundred years would be theirs. Just over nine
months later, the Japanese attacked the U.S. fleet
at Pearl Harbor, plunging the country into World War
II. At the time, however, Americans were still
riven and confused about how to deal with spreading
regional conflicts in Europe and Asia, as well as
the rise of fascism and the Nazis.
That moment
was indeed a horrific one, and yet it was also just
a heightened version of what had gone before. For
the previous half-millennium, there had seldom been
a moment when at least two (and often three or more)
European powers had not been in contention, often
armed and violent, for domination and for control of
significant parts of the planet. In those many
centuries, great powers rose and fell and new ones,
including Germany and Japan, came on the scene
girded for imperial battle. In the process, a modern
global arms race was launched to create ever more
advanced and devastating weaponry based on the
latest breakthroughs in the science of war. By
August 1945, this had led to the release of an
awesome form of primal energy in the first (and thus
far only)
use of nuclear weapons in wartime.
In the
years that followed, the United States and the
Soviet Union grew ever more “super” and took
possession of destructive capabilities once left, at
least in the human imagination, to the gods: the
power to annihilate not just one enemy on one
battlefield or one armada on one sea but
everything. In the nearly half-century of the Cold
War, the rivalry between them became apocalyptic in
nature as their
nuclear arsenals grew to monstrous proportions.
As a result, with the exception of the
Cuban Missile Crisis, they faced off against
each other indirectly in “limited” proxy wars that,
especially in Korea and Indochina, were of
unparalleled technological ferocity.
Then, in
1991, the Soviet Union imploded and, for the first
time in historical memory, there was only one power
that mattered. This was a reality even Henry Luce
might have found farfetched. Previously, the idea
of a single power so mighty that it alone loomed
over the planet was essentially relegated to
fictional fantasies about extraordinary evil. And
yet so it was -- or at least so it seemed,
especially to the leadership that took power in
Washington in the year 2000 and soon enough were
dreaming of a planetary Pax Americana.
In a
strange way, something similarly unimaginable
happened in Europe. On that continent laid waste by
two devastating twentieth-century wars, a single
“union” was formed, something that not so long
before would have been categorized as a madly
utopian project. The idea that centuries of
national rivalries and the rabid nationalism that
often went with it could somehow be tamed and that
former great powers and imperial contenders could be
subsumed in a single peaceful organization (even
if under the aegis of American global power) would
once have seemed like the most absurd of fictions.
And yet so it would be -- or so it seemed, at least
until recently.
A
Planetary Brexit?
We seldom
take in the strangeness of what’s happened on this
curious planet of ours. In the years after 1991, we
became so inured to the idea of a single superpower
globe and a single European economic and political
union that both, once utterly inconceivable, came to
seem too mundane to spend a lot of time thinking
about. And yet who would have believed that 75
years after Luce urged his country into that
American Century, there would, in military terms, be
no genuine rivals, no other truly great powers (only
regional ones) on Planet Earth?
So many
taken-for-granted things about our world were
considered utterly improbable before they happened.
Take China. I recall well the day in 1972 when,
after decades of non-contact and raging hostility,
we learned that President Richard Nixon and his
national security adviser, Henry Kissinger, were in
Beijing
meeting congenially with Communist leader Mao
Zedong. A friend called to tell me the news. I
thought he was joking and it struck me as a
ridiculously lame joke at that.
There’s
almost no way now to capture how improbable this
seemed at the time -- the leading communist
revolutionary on the planet chatting cheerily with
the prime representative of anti-communism. If,
however, you had told me then that, in the decades
to come, China would undergo a full-scale capitalist
revolution and become the
economic powerhouse of the planet, and that this
would be done under the leadership of Mao’s still
regnant communist party, I would have considered you
mad.
And mind
you, that’s just to begin to mention the
improbabilities of the present moment. After all,
in what fantasies -- ever -- about a globe with a
single dominant power, would anyone have imagined
that it might fail so utterly to bring the world to
anything approximating heel? If you had told Henry
Luce, or me, or anyone else, including the masters
of the universe in Washington in 1991, that the only
superpower left on Earth, with the
best-funded, mightiest, most technologically
destructive and advanced military imaginable, would,
on September 11, 2001, be goaded by a group
so modest in size and power as to be barely
noticeable into a series of never-ending wars across
the Greater Middle East and Africa, we would have
found that beyond improbable.
Who would
have believed a movie or novel in which that same
power, without national enemies of any significance
in any of the regions where the fighting was taking
place, would struggle unsuccessfully, year after
year, to subdue scattered, lightly armed insurgents
(aka “terrorists”) across a disintegrating region?
Who could have imagined that every measure
Washington took to assert its might only seemed to
blow back (or blow somewhere, anyway)? Who would
have believed that its full-scale invasion of one
weak Middle Eastern country, its “mission
accomplished” moment, would in the end prove a
trip through “the
gates of hell”? Who would have imagined that
such an invasion could punch a hole in the oil
heartlands of the region that, 13 years later, is
still a bleeding wound, now seemingly beyond repair,
or that it would set loose a principle of chaos and
disintegration that seems to be
spreading like a planetary Brexit?
And what if
I told you that, after 15 years of such behavior,
the only thing the leaders of that superpower can
now imagine doing in the increasingly wrecked lands
where they carry on their struggles is yet
more of everything that hasn’t worked in all
that time? Meanwhile -- how improbable is this? --
in its “homeland,” there is essentially no one,
neither a movement in the streets, nor critical
voices in the corridors of power protesting what’s
happening or even exploring or suggesting other
paths into the future.
Imagine
that, wherever you looked, except in the borderlands
of (and waters off) Russia and China, that single
superpower was essentially unopposed and yet its
ability to apply its unique status effectively in
these years has been in eternal free-fall -- even in
perfectly peaceable areas to which it was closely
allied. As an example, consider this: the president
of that sole superpower flies to London and, in an
England that (like much of Europe) hasn’t said no to
Washington about anything of genuine significance in
decades, strongly urges the British not to exit (or
“Brexit”) the European Union (EU). He backs up his
suggestion with a clearly stated
threat. If they do so, he says, our closest
trans-Atlantic partner will find itself at “the back
of the queue” when it comes to future trade deals
with Washington.
Remember,
we’re talking about a country that has, in these
years, seconded the U.S. endlessly. As David Sanger
of the New York Times recently (and
delicately)
put it:
“No
country shares Washington’s worldview quite the
way Britain does, [American officials] say; it
has long been the United States’ most willing
security ally, most effective intelligence
partner and greatest enthusiast of the
free-trade mantras that have been a keystone of
America’s internationalist approach. And few
nations were as willing to put a thumb as firmly
on the scales of European debates in ways that
benefit the United States.”
By now, of
course, we all know how the populace of our most
loyal ally, the other side of that “special
relationship,” reacted -- with anger
at the president’s intervention and with a
vote to exit the European Union not long after. In
its wake, fears are rising of further
Frexits and
Nexits that might crack the EU open and usher in
a new era of nationalist feeling in Europe.
Failed World?
As goes
Britain, so, it seems, goes the world. Give
Washington real credit for much of this. Those
post-9/11 dreams of global domination shared by the
top leadership of the Bush administration proved
wildly destructive and it’s gotten no better since.
Consider the vast swath of the planet where the
devastation is most obvious: the Greater Middle East
and North Africa. Then ask yourself: Are we still
in the American Century? And if not, whose (or
what) century are we in?
If you had
told me in 1975, when the Vietnam War finally ended
some 34 years after Luce wrote that essay and 28
years before the U.S. invaded Iraq that, in 1979,
Washington would
become involved in a decade-long war in
Afghanistan, I would have been stunned. If you had
told me in 1975 that, in 2001, it would invade that
same country and launch a second Afghan War, still
underway 15 years later with no end in sight, I
wouldn’t have believed you. A quarter-century of
American wars and
still counting in a country that, in 1975, most
Americans might not have been able to locate on a
map. If you had added that, starting in 1990, the
U.S. would be involved in three successive wars in
Iraq, the third of which is still ongoing, I might
have been speechless. And that’s not to mention
interventions of various sorts, also ongoing, in
Somalia, Pakistan, Yemen, Libya, and Syria -- none,
by the way, by any normal standards successful.
If you were
to do a little tabulation of the results of these
years of American Century-ism across the Greater
Middle East, you would discover a signature kind of
chaos. In the early years of this century,
officials of the Bush administration often referred
to the region from China’s western border to
northern Africa as an “arc
of instability.” That phrase was meant to
embody their explanation for letting the U.S.
military loose there: to bring order and, of course,
democracy to those lands. And with modest
exceptions, it was indeed true that most of the
Greater Middle East was then ruled by repressive,
autocratic, or regressive regimes of various sorts.
It was, however, still a reasonably orderly region.
Now, it actually is an arc of instability filled
with states that are
collapsing left and right, cities and towns that
are
being leveled, and terror outfits, each worse
than the last, that are
spreading in the regional rubble. Religious and
ethnic divisions of every sort are sharpening and
conflicts within countries, or what’s left of them,
are on the rise.
Most of the
places where the U.S. has let its military and its
air power loose -- Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen,
Libya, Somalia, and Syria – are now either failed or
failing states. Under the circumstances, it might
be reasonable to suggest that the very term “failed
state” is outdated, and not just because it places
all the blame for what’s happened on the indigenous
people of a country. After all, if the arc of
instability is now in any way “united,” it’s mainly
thanks to spreading terror groups and perhaps the
Islamic State
brand.
Moreover,
in the stunted imagination of present-day
Washington, the only policies imaginable in response
to all this are
highly militarized and call for more of the
same: more
air power in the skies over distant
battlefields,
more boots on the ground, more
private contractors and hired guns, more
munitions and weaponry (surprising amounts of which
have, in these years,
ended up in the
hands not of allied forces, but of Washington’s
enemies), more special operations raids, more
drone assassination
campaigns, and at home, more surveillance, more
powers for the national security state, more...
well, you know the story.
For such a
world, a new term is needed. Perhaps something like
failed region. This, it seems, is one
thing that the American Century has come to mean 75
years after Henry Luce urged it into existence. And
perhaps lurking in the undergrowth as well is
another phrase, one not quite yet imaginable but
thoroughly chilling: failed world.
With this
in mind, imagine what the Obama administration’s
“pivot” to Asia could mean in the long run, or the
recent U.S.-NATO
pivot to the Baltics and Eastern Europe. If
huge swaths of the planet have begun to
disintegrate in an era when the worst the U.S.
faced in the way of opponents has been minority
insurgencies and terror outfits, or more recently a
terror caliphate, consider for a moment what kinds
of chaos could come to regions where a potentially
hostile power remains. And by the way, don’t for a
second think that, even if the Islamic State is
finally defeated, worse can’t emerge from the chaos
and rubble of the failed region that it will leave
behind. It can and, odds on, it will.
All of this
gives the very idea of an American Century new
meaning. Can there be any question that this is not
the century of Henry Luce, nor the one that American
political and military leaders dreamed of when the
Soviet Union collapsed? What comes to mind instead
is the sentiment the Roman historian Tacitus put in
the mouth of Calgacus, a chieftain in what is now
Scotland, speaking of the Roman conquests of his
time: “They make a desert and call it peace.”
Perhaps
this is no longer really the American century at
all, despite the continuing status of the U.S. as
the planet’s sole superpower. A recent
U.N. report estimates that, in 2015, a record 65
million people were uprooted, mainly in the Greater
Middle East. Tens of millions of them crossed
borders and became refugees, including staggering
numbers of children, many separated from their
parents. So perhaps this really is the century of
the lost child.
What could
be sadder?
Tom Engelhardt is a co-founder of the
American Empire Project and the
author of The United States of Fear as well
as a history of the Cold War,
The End of Victory Culture. He is a fellow
of the
Nation Institute and runs
TomDispatch.com. His latest book is
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a
Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.
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Copyright
2016 Tom Engelhardt
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