Don't Blame the Masses
By
Stephen Kinzer
August 07, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Boston
Globe"
- Whether or not the world is in an
unusually bad state these days, it
certainly seems so. Even Americans,
famous for our lack of interest in world
affairs, now closely follow news from
far away. Much of it is frightening.
Terror attacks are claiming innocent
lives around the world. Syria is being
torn apart. China and Russia boldly
pursue their national interests and defy
American dictates. Turkish democracy is
evaporating. Iran and Saudi Arabia are
at each other’s throats. Wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan drag on interminably.
The European Union is staggering, with
Britain quitting and others perhaps to
follow. Meanwhile, several European
countries are drifting toward right-wing
authoritarianism. Donald Trump’s
campaign threatens to take the United
States in the same direction.
This is the opposite of what many
Americans expected. The collapse of the
Soviet Union in 1991 set off a wave of
triumphalism in the West. Americans
welcomed the “end of history” and
presumed that all countries would
quickly adopt political and economic
systems like ours. There was to be a
“peace dividend” as tranquility settled
over the globe. People would become more
prosperous. Nations would cooperate. All
would gratefully submit to America’s
will.
Those were delusions. The world has gone
in precisely the opposite direction,
toward tribalism and conflict. We are
now paying the price for grave
misjudgments.
The first was our misunderstanding of
the Soviet collapse. It was a Soviet
failure, but we interpreted it as an
epochal American victory. That led us to
believe that in a post-Cold War world,
American power would grow, turning us
into a global hegemon that other
countries would happily follow. This was
never realistic.
Moments of change require adaptation,
but the United States is not good at
adapting. We are used to being in
charge. This blinded us to the reality
that as other countries began rising,
our relative power would inevitably
decline. Rather than shifting to a less
assertive and more cooperative foreign
policy, we continued to insist that
America must reign supreme. When we
declared that we would not tolerate the
emergence of another “peer power,” we
expected that other countries would
blithely obey. Instead they ignore us.
We interpret this as defiance and seek
to punish the offenders. That has
greatly intensified tensions between the
United States and the countries we are
told to consider our chief adversaries,
Russia and China.
The ideological conflict of the Cold War
was so intense that when it ended,
Americans assumed tranquility would
follow. In fact, the Cold War was simply
a temporary phenomenon that masked
centuries-old political, social,
cultural, and religious conflicts.
Nationalism and tribalism, which began
shaping the world long before Communism
was invented, have reemerged rather than
fading away.
Our wrongheaded reaction to the end of
the Cold War was America’s first major
contribution to today’s global turmoil.
The next was our decision to invade
Iraq. That invasion continues to shape
the world. The recent surge in Islamist
terror is one of its long-term results.
So are the refugee flows that have
destabilized Europe and contributed to
the rise of extremist political
movements there. It is an object lesson
in the long-term effects of intervening
in faraway lands — a lesson we still
seem not to have learned.
Because we interpreted the end of the
Cold War as the ultimate vindication of
America’s economic system, we
intensified our push toward the next
level of capitalism, called
globalization. It was presented as a
project that would benefit everyone.
Instead it has turned out to be a
nightmare for many working people.
Thanks to “disruption” and the “global
supply chain,” many American workers who
could once support families with secure,
decent-paying jobs must now hope they
can be hired as greeters at Walmart.
Meanwhile, a handful of super-rich
financiers manipulate our political
system to cement their hold on the
nation’s wealth.
Our leaders told us that the end of the
Cold War would make America more
powerful than ever, that we had to
invade Iraq because Iraq was developing
weapons of mass destruction, and that
deregulating our economy and signing
trade deals would improve the lives of
ordinary people. We cannot be surprised
that as the scope of those deceptions
became clear, people would become angry.
American elites are hardly the only ones
who have cynically misled their people.
The same happened in Europe. “Ever
closer union” was another product of the
dopey optimism that infected the West in
the 1990s. It ignored the evident fact
that most Europeans, like most people
everywhere, feel loyalty to their own
nation or group, and that this loyalty
is not easily transferrable to diffuse
and distant conglomerations. The EU has
been run largely for the benefit of the
business class. Ordinary Europeans have
come to realize this, and it has angered
them. The same anger is enveloping
countries from Egypt and Nigeria to
Brazil and Venezuela.
In
our complex modern age, the
interdependent world does not run
smoothly by itself. It requires
farsighted leadership that takes the
fate of ordinary people seriously and
favors diplomacy over coercive force.
Blaming the masses for stupidly
supporting demagogic politicians is
mistaken. People quite reasonably resent
what their leaders have done to them
over the last quarter century. They
demand something different, whatever it
is. That is the central cause of the new
world disorder.
Stephen Kinzer is an American author,
journalist and academic. A former
newspaper reporter, the veteran New York
Times correspondent has filed stories
from more than fifty countries on five
continents, as well as published several
books.
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2016 Boston Globe Media Partners, LLC