| Emperor George Jonathan Freedland
This war is un-American. That's an unlikely word to use, I know: it has an unhappy
provenance, associated forever with the McCarthyite hunt for reds under the beds, purging
anyone suspected of "un-American activities". Besides, for many outside the US,
the problem with this war is not that it's un-American - but all too American.
But that does an injustice to the US and its history. It assumes that
the Bush administration represents all America, at all times, when in fact the opposite is
true. For this administration, and this war, are not typical of the US. On the contrary,
on almost every measure, they are exceptions to the American rule.
The US was, after all, a country founded in a rebellion against
imperialism. Born in a war against a hated colonial oppressor, in the form of George III,
it still sees itself as the instinctive friend of all who struggle to kick out a foreign
occupier - and the last nation on earth to play the role of outside ruler.
Not for it the Greek, Roman or British path. For most of the last
century, the US steered well clear of the institutions of formal empire (the Philipines
was a lamentable exception). Responsibility was thrust upon it after 1945 in Germany and
Japan. But as a matter of deliberate intent, America sought neither viceroys ruling over
faraway lands nor a world map coloured with the stars and stripes. Influence, yes; puppets
and proxies, yes. But formal imperial rule, never.
Until now. George Bush has cast off the restraint which held back
America's 42 previous presidents - including his father. Now he is seeking, as an
unashamed objective, to get into the empire business, aiming to rule a post-Saddam Iraq
directly through an American governor-general, the retired soldier Jay Garner. As the
Guardian reported yesterday, Washington's plan for Baghdad consists of 23 ministries -
each one to be headed by an American. This is a form of foreign rule so direct we have not
seen its like since the last days of the British empire. It represents a break with
everything America has long believed in.
This is not to pretend that there is a single American ideal, still
less a single US foreign policy, maintained unbroken since 1776. There are, instead,
competing traditions, each able to trace its lineage to the founding of the republic. But
what's striking is that George Bush's war on Iraq is at odds with every single one of
them. Perhaps best known is Thomas Jefferson's call for an America which would not only
refuse to rule over other nations, it would avoid meddling in their affairs altogether. He
wanted no "entangling alliances". If America wished to export its brand of
liberty, it should do it not through force but by the simple power of its own example.
John Quincy Adams (before Bush, the only son of a president to become president), put it
best when he declared that America "goes not abroad in search of monsters to
destroy". Could there be a better description of Washington's pre-emptive pursuit of
Saddam Hussein?
The Jeffersonian tradition is not the only one to be broken by
Operation Iraqi Freedom. Last year the historian Walter Russell Mead identified three
other schools of US foreign policy. Looking at them now, it's clear that all are equally
incompatible with this war.
Those Mead calls Hamiltonians are keen on maintaining an international
system and preserving a balance of power - that means acknowledging equals in the world,
rather than seeking solo, hegemonic domination. So Bush, whose national security strategy
last year explicitly forbade the emergence of an equal to the US, is no follower of
Alexander Hamilton. Jacksonians, meanwhile, have always defined America's interests
narrowly: they would see no logic in travelling halfway across the world to invade a
country that poses no immediate, direct threat to the US. So Bush has defied Andrew
Jackson. Woodrow Wilson liked the idea of the US spreading democracy and rights across the
globe; banishing Saddam and freeing the people of Iraq might have appealed to him. But he
was the father of the League of Nations and would have been distressed by Washington's
disregard for the UN and its lack of international backing for this war.
Which brings us to a key un-American activity by this Bush
administration. Today's Washington has not only broken from the different strands of
wisdom which guided the US since its birth, but also from the model that shaped American
foreign policy since 1945. It's easy to forget this now, as US politicians and
commentators queue up to denounce international institutions as French-dominated,
limp-wristed, euro-faggot bodies barely worth the candle, but those bodies were almost all
American inventions. Whether it was Nato, the global financial architecture designed at
Bretton Woods or the UN itself, multilateralism was, at least in part, America's gift to
the world. Every president from Roosevelt to Bush Senior honoured those creations. Seeking
to change them in order to adapt to the 21st century is wholly legitimate; but drowning
them in derision is to trash an American idea.
The very notion of unprovoked, uninvited, long-term and country-wide
invasion is pretty un-American, too. When it thinks of itself, the US is a firm believer
in state sovereignty, refusing any innovation which might curb its jurisdiction over its
own affairs. Hence its opposition to the new international criminal court or indeed any
international treaties which might clip its wings. Yet the sovereignty of the state of
Iraq has been cheerfully violated by the US invasion. That can be defended - the scholar
and former Clinton official Philip Bobbitt says sovereignty is "forfeited" by
regimes which choke their own peoples - but it is, at the very least, a contradiction. The
US, which holds sovereignty sacred for itself, is engaged in a war which ignores it for
others.
The result is a sight which can look bizarre for those who have spent
much time in the US. Americans who, back home, resent even the most trivial state meddling
in their own affairs are determined to run the lives of a people on the other side of the
planet. In New Hampshire car number plates bear the legend, Live Free or Die; a state
motto is Don't Tread on Me. If a "government bureaucrat" comes near, even to
perform what would be considered a routine task in Britain, they are liable to get an
earful about the tyranny of Washington, DC. Yet Americans - whose passion for liberty is
so great they talk seriously about keeping guns in case they ever need to fight their own
government - assume Iraqis will welcome military rule by a foreign power.
Talk like this is not that comfortable in America just now; you'd be
denounced fairly swiftly as a Saddam apologist or a traitor. The limits of acceptable
discussion have narrowed sharply, just as civil liberties have taken a hammering as part
of the post-9/11 war on terror. You might fall foul of the Patriot Act, or be denounced
for insufficient love of country. There is something McCarthyite about the atmosphere
which has spawned this war, making Democrats too fearful to be an opposition worthy of the
name and closing down national debate. And things don't get much more un-American than
that.
“The Guardian”, April 2, 2003
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,927860,00.html
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