Millenial Madness
by David Moberg
In These Times magazine, November
2004
History is likely to judge George W.
Bush's response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks as follows: He squandered
a unique opportunity for global cooperation on international security
in favor of a unilateralist and imperialist foreign policy that
aggravated terrorism, undermined American world leadership and
increased global instability; That's already the dominant viewpoint
in most of the world, and the American people are steadily moving
toward the same conclusion, if not quickly enough.
The invasion of Iraq was the first great
foray of the new Bush imperialism. But from the beginning of his
administration, the president rejected the multilateral framework
of international relations that had been growing stronger in recent
decades. Shortly after taking office Bush repudiated such key
treaties as the Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change, the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty; the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, the
NonProliferation of Nuclear Weapons Treaty and the International
Criminal Court. At the time of the terrorist attacks, the United
States also had failed to sign two international treaties designed
to curb terrorism.
'Whatever the shortcomings of such international
treaties, they all contribute to global and national security
and their rejection makes Americans less secure. The administration
argues that it is preserving American sovereignty; but as a new
study from the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy argues,
the administration willingly surrenders sovereignty in trade agreements
"that extend its control over the world's resources"
but is "less interested in those that promote the rights
of people and protect the planet."
The war in Iraq took unilateralism a giant
step forward with a war that, as U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan
recently noted, was illegal and is losing more legitimacy every
passing day. The collapse of the Iraqi army showed how little
of a threat Saddam posed to his neighbors, let alone the United
States. In early October, chief U.S. arms inspector Charles Duelfer
reported that Iraq destroyed virtually all its chemical and biological
weapons in 1991. And in an exhaustive October 3 report, the New
York Times revealed how the administration ignored and overrode
the preponderant intelligence analyses that cast doubt on its
false claims that Saddam had a nuclear weapons program.
Saddam had no connection to the World
Trade Center attacks, as the 9/n Commission concluded. And both
the CIA and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld even recently admitted
there is no proof of any connection between Saddam and al Qaeda.
It is now clear that Bush used 9/11 as
an excuse to carry out an invasion of Iraq that many of his top
administration officials had long advocated. But the question
remains: Why did the Bush administration want to go to war in
Iraq? And if this is the start of a new imperialism, what shape
will it take?
Political journalist John B. Judis provides
an invaluable historical perspective on these questions in his
new book The Folly of Empire: What George W Bush Could Learn from
Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson. Judis argues that since
its founding there has been in the United States a culture of
"civil millennialism' a notion that Americans are a chosen
people with a moral mission to change the world and create an
"empire for liberty:' Until the late 19th Century, that mission
was channeled into the conquest of the "savage" Indians
or expulsion of Mexicans as the nation expanded its reach. 'While
the precise mission and means changed over time, this sense of
righteous American exceptionalism was as important politically
as more self-interested economic ambitions. When the United States-confronted
with the European scramble for colonies in the late 19th Century-declared
war against Spain, there was a heated debate over whether our
conquest of the Philippines, for example, was a betrayal or an
embodiment of American ideals.
As Secretary of the Navy in the McKinley
administration, Theodore Roosevelt-a hero to neoconservatives
and to Bushlobbied for war with Spain. But, Judis notes, after
a long and bloody war against nationalist guerrillas in the Philippines
and nationalist resistance to other imperial forays, Roosevelt
lost faith in imperialism and turned toward the idea of an international
League of Peace. After his own imperial foray into Mexico, which
prompted antagonistic forces in Mexico to unite against the gringos,
President Woodrow Wilson even more adamantly decided that it was
impossible-and undesirable-to impose governments on other nations.
Wilson's ideals for the League of Nations,
despite the fatal dilution of support for national self-determination
and America's retreat into isolationism in the '20s and '3os,
defined the multilateral approach to global problem-solving that
became the basis of the United Nations. In the name of fighting
communism, however, the United States often opposed anti-imperialist
movements and manipulated multilateral institutions in the service
of its foreign policy. But after the collapse of the Soviet bloc,
Judis argues, the United States had an opportunity to pursue a
more ambitious multilateral approach. George H. W. Bush and Bill
Clinton both did so, but at the same time neoconservatives were
agitating for a new American imperialism.
Iraq was the target because neoconservatives
wanted to remake the governments of the Middle East, to secure
long-term US. access to oil, to open the economies to American
investment and to protect Israel through installation of governments
friendly to the United States. Besides falsifying the reasons
6r-invasion and casting the war in the millennial terms of good
against evil, the neoconservatives completely misunderstood the
political realities of the Middle East and reverted to the discredited
idea that military might alone can prevail in international relations.
As Judis argues, rebel Islamist groups are in many ways products
of anti-colonial sentiment, and consequently, the United States,
through its invasion of Iraq, is provoking the same nationalist
rebellion that earlier colonial powers did. In addition, the neoconservatives
misjudged the effectiveness of their ideologically driven economic
policies.
John Kerry and others have faulted Bush
for not having a plan for post-invasion Iraq, but as reporter
Naomi Klein argued in the September issue of Harper's magazine,
the United States did have a plan-a radical economic shock therapy
of privatization and unregulated opening of Iraq to the international
market. It was the International Monetary Fund strategy on steroids,
and it devastated the Iraqi economy, brought in no foreign investment,
and did as much as anything to generate the widespread and growing
insurgency.
Kerry offers the alternative of multilateralism,
but that is only part of what is necessary. Invading Iraq with
more allies was not the answer. The substance of multilateral
strategy must change as well. Multilateral imposition of the economic
plan the United States has tried to impose on Iraq would be no
more desirable. The IMF as it now exists is an example of multilateralism
that is often more destructive than helpful. The International
Criminal Court, on the other hand, is a more positive kind of
multilateral initiative.
Although Americans continue to believe
that theirs is the country chosen to bring freedom and democracy
to the world, a recent survey by the Chicago Council on Foreign
Relations found that the overwhelming majority of Americans endorse
a multilateral approach to international issues, reject the notion
of pre-emptive war, do not believe the United States should act
as global policeman and support treaties like the Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. On all these issues three-fourths or
more of Americans oppose the Bush administration positions.
In many other countries, both rich and
poor, people have a deep mistrust of the new multilateral global
economic order that gives power to corporations and financial
markets at the expense of workers and citizens. If John Kerry-should
he win-wants to provide a lasting alternative to Bush's new imperialism,
he will have to do more than emphasize multilateralism. He will
have to insure that the old colonialism is not simply replaced
with a new imperialism enforced multilaterally. And if he wants
to learn rather than repeat a history lesson from Teddy Roosevelt
and Woodrow Wilson, he will get out of Iraq as quickly as possible.
New World Order
Index
of Website
Home Page