America's
Hypocrisy on Foreign 'Provocations'
By Ted
Galen Carpenter
September
10, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
National Interest"
- A new mini-crisis erupted in late August near the
Strait of Hormuz when small patrol boats from Iran’s
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps intercepted and
continued to sail within a few hundred yards of a
U.S. destroyer, the USS Nitze. The Nitze responded
by firing warning shots.
U.S.
officials
immediately condemned the incident as a terrible
provocation, a theme that
members of the
American media
obediently echoed. No one seemed to question why
it was not provocative for the United States to sail
a heavily armed destroyer (along with other
warships) six thousand miles away from the American
homeland to operate within a few miles of the
Iranian coast. Yet Iran’s interception of that
warship was automatically deemed provocative.
This is a
theme that we have witnessed far too often: the
assumption that whatever the United States does
militarily in the international arena is not only
acceptable, but should be beyond challenge or
criticism. According to that reasoning, Washington
and its compliant allies had every right to enforce
a no-fly zone to influence the outcome of the
internecine conflict in Bosnia in the 1990s.
Likewise, the United States had every right to
impose similar restrictions in Iraq. When Serbian
leaders and Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein resisted
such measures, they were the ones escalating the
crises.
We see
similar logic today as the United States meddles in
Syria’s civil war. Again, Iran’s involvement in the
conflict roiling a neighboring state is
considered evidence of
nefarious goals. Likewise, American hawks
consider Russia’s intervention as outrageous and an
indication of odious motives, even though Syria
is barely six hundred miles from the southern
Russian border, and the governing Assads have been
Russian political clients for decades. Even the
Obama administration has
seethed about Vladimir Putin’s audacity in
sending Russian aircraft to back the beleaguered
regime of President Bashar al-Assad. Throughout the
American media, as well as the
political and foreign-policy communities,
Moscow’s military intrusion in Syria is considered
utterly illegitimate. And yet America’s intervention
from six thousand miles away is widely viewed as
not only proper but inescapable, for both
strategic and moral reasons.
The
attitude that no U.S. military action is ever
provocative emerges even when U.S. forces are
operating in the immediate security environs of
other major powers. Thus, the Navy’s so-called
freedom-of-navigation patrols in the South China
Sea, thousands of miles from the American homeland,
are portrayed as
perfectly normal—even though
Beijing objects
vehemently to them. Chinese naval and air
operations countering those patrols are, of course,
dangerous, provocative and
unacceptable. That is the case even though the
South China Sea is a lot closer to China than it is
to the United States.
A similar
double standard is evident regarding deployments
involving U.S. and Russian warships in both the
Baltic Sea and the Black Sea. There are
frequent U.S. complaints that Russian ships or
aircraft have
harassed American vessels. There is
never any apparent awareness that Moscow might
legitimately consider having U.S. military
operations in waters so close to Russia as a
security threat. Indeed, Obama administration
officials
summarily dismiss Moscow’s concerns and
objections.
Yet all we
would need to do in the cases of Iran, China and
Russia is engage in a basic thought exercise. How
would the United States respond if the naval forces
of another power sailed uninvited into waters close
to U.S. territorial waters—and did so repeatedly
despite Washington’s objections? It is unlikely that
either U.S. officials or the American people would
consider it a friendly act. Imagine the reaction,
for example, if a fleet of Chinese warships
routinely conducted ongoing “freedom of navigation”
exercises in the Gulf of Mexico. Likewise, it is
difficult to contemplate Americans remaining
indifferent to the sight of Russian destroyers and
cruisers in the waters off Cape Cod.
U.S.
officials and the American news media need to become
far more aware and sophisticated about how other
governments and populations perceive U.S. military
actions. The smug assumption that “we’re the good
guys, so nothing we do is wrong or provocative” is
both myopic and dangerous. From the perspective of
other countries, “reasonable” U.S. actions may seem
profoundly threatening. And despite the risks, some
of those countries no longer seem inclined to simply
cower before Washington’s might.
Ted Galen Carpenter, a senior fellow in defense and
foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute and a
contributing editor at the
National Interest, is
the author of 10 books and more than 600 articles on
international affairs. |