America's exceptionalism will ultimately
be its downfall
By Marco Carnelos
September 15, 2021 -- "Information
Clearing House -
"Middle
East Eye" - If what
has happened to America during the past 20 years
- the "war on terror", the wars in
Iraq and
Afghanistan, the 2008 financial crisis, Donald
Trump’s election, the Covid-19 pandemic, the assault
on the US Capitol and, ultimately, the humiliating
exit from Kabul - feels like deja vu, that's
because it is.
The fall of
Kabul to the Taliban takes the mind back to
Saigon and the 1970s, another difficult decade for
America.
Back then, as now, the US had been polarised by
widespread protests and had been humiliated after
the Vietnam war, with America's European and Asian
allies puzzled by its behaviour. The US's unilateral
decision to remove the dollar from the gold standard
hugely disrupted the global financial system.
The decade after the turbulent 1970s saw
America preside over the most transformational
event of the 20th-century’s second half: the end
of the Cold War
The Watergate scandal put an abrupt end to
Richard Nixon’s so-called imperial presidency. Two
oil shocks, at the beginning and end of the decade -
partly attributed to US mishandling of the Yom
Kippur War and the Iranian revolution, including the
humiliating US hostage crisis - set in motion a
global recession and widespread concerns and
anxieties about American power.
Yet in the decade following the turbulent 1970s,
America reinvented itself, presiding over the single
most transformational event of the 20th-century’s
second half: the end of the Cold War and the
subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union (only
hastened by the USSR's fatal mistake of invading
Afghanistan in 1979). America's unipolar era had
arrived.
A few years later, radical Islam and 9/11 offered
America another challenge. What followed is well
known: an era of US hyperpower that may have just
symbolically ended in Kabul.
China is now replacing radical Islam as America’s
enemy number one; a chilling reminder of another
die-hard attitude of western (American) liberal
interventionism: its
pathological need for an enemy to justify and
protect its way of life, identity and hegemony.
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Some thinkers,
and the current American
president, Joe Biden, are now busily justifying
the withdrawal from Afghanistan as a better way to
address the more compelling threat represented by
Beijing and its refusal to accept a world order
based on rules established by America.
In a recent
essay, the neoconservative Robert Kagan claimed:
“In the real world, the only hope for preserving
liberalism at home [in the US] 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.”
If such beliefs were only held by arch-neocons
like Kagan, it might be fine. But unfortunately,
they are also held by the Biden administration, as
witnessed by its first Interim National Security
Strategic Guidance
document.
“When we defend equal rights of all people," it
read, "we ensure that those rights are protected for
our own children here in America.”
In essence, these are all manifestations
of American exceptionalism.
Henry Kissinger explained it as the belief that
American principles are "universal and that the
governments that do not practise them are not fully
legitimised. A notion so much rooted in the American
thinking… that it induces [them] to think that a
part of the world lives in an unsatisfactory,
provisional, situation and that one day it will be
redeemed [by America]". The net result is a latent
conflict between the US and much of the world.
There is now a growing feeling that the US's
unipolar moment is not only ending but has been
squandered. Long before Kabul’s fall, many in the
international community had been asking if a major
new era of world history was upon us and a new world
order in the making. And, if so, according to which
rules and decided by whom?
Global thinkers
Recently,
the Economist invited some global thinkers to
address the topic of American power.
Francis Fukuyama emphasised that America
“overestimated the effectiveness of military power
to bring about fundamental political change, even as
it underestimated the impact of its free-market
economic model on global finance”. While he
correctly pointed to mistaken calculations, he
ignored the core roots which may have driven them.
Niall Ferguson framed America’s demise with the
British imperial experience, but he succeeded only
in asserting banalities, such as that “the retreat
from global dominance is rarely a peaceful process”
and in blaming Barack Obama’s renunciation of global
policing as the trigger for Russian intervention in
both Ukraine and Syria.
If American power is to be defined by its
relationship with China over the next
decades, it is essential that the US avoids
repeating its historical mistakes
Henry Kissinger explained what went wrong in
Afghanistan by emphasising only America's “inability
to define attainable goals and to link them in a way
that is sustainable by the American political
process”.
Robert Kaplan asserted that, in the era of
climate change and of the fourth industrial
revolution, where conflicts revolve around big data,
artificial intelligence, 5G, cyberwar and quantum
computing, geography still matters, and it still
helps the US.
Hardly any of them addressed the big elephant in
the room where US power is concerned: American
exceptionalism. Perhaps unsurprisingly, this was
mentioned by one of the few non-western thinkers the
Economist consulted - the Indian novelist
Arundhati Roy.
If American power is to be defined by its
relationship with China over the next decades, as
Peter Beinart warned
recently, it is essential that the US should avoid
repeating its historical mistakes.
Hard and soft power
American power has always involved a fine-tuned
combination of hard and soft power which, through
deterrence and inspiration, paved the way to Cold
War victory.
Over the last four decades, China has been very
smart in its use of soft power, such as through its
massive Belt and Road Initiative. Washington has not
only lost its skills in blending hard and soft
power, but it has also been too keen on using the
hard one. When it did opt for soft power, it used
sanctions buttressed by the weaponisation of the
dollar and the US Treasury’s financial blacklisting
of foes and friends alike.
As Obama once said of the US: "Just because we
have the best hammer, does not mean that every
problem is a nail."
Rebuilding America’s power means rebuilding its
soft power, with less emphasis on relentlessly
emphasising the US as the only country which can
guarantee peace, freedom, economic growth and
prosperity. Pretending to sustain a rules-based
world order only on a binary choice - either you are
with us, or you are against us - is not the best
recruiting tool.
Quite useful also would be the dropping of the
conviction that any country questioning the liberal
and globalised world order is evil and immoral, an
example of fanaticism typical of a retrograde
civilisation and, above all, that such questioning
always constitutes a threat to the security of the
United States.
Most importantly, restoring American credibility
requires the abandonment of the frequently practised
hubristic belief that the rules of such a world
order apply to all nations but the US.
Arnold Toynbee said that the encounter between
the West and the world has been modern history’s
capital event.
Now, after five centuries of western dominance,
marked by the Renaissance, the great geographical
discoveries, the Enlightenment, the political,
industrial and scientific revolutions and, since
1917, progressively led by the United States, the
world as we have always known it might become more
complex and multipolar.
The rise of Eurasia, climate change, pandemics
and the fourth industrial revolution mean that the
West might not occupy centre stage in the future.
The 21st century is seeing a tectonic historical
shift.
Instead of framing it as an epic clash between
democracy and authoritarianism, for the sole purpose
of maintaining its more and more unsustainable
hegemony, America would do better to manage this
process constructively and pragmatically.
To make a start, it must drop its flaunted
exceptionalism.
Marco Carnelos is a former Italian diplomat.
He has been assigned to Somalia, Australia and the
United Nations. He served in the foreign policy
staff of three Italian prime ministers between 1995
and 2011. More recently he has been Middle East
peace process coordinator special envoy for Syria
for the Italian government and, until November 2017,
Italy's ambassador to Iraq.
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