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After
September 11th: Chances for a Left Foreign Policy1
A leftist (or "progressive") American intellectual is expected
to criticize his government.2 That seems to be
the reason that many Europeans were astonished, for example,
to find the name of a Socialist intellectual like Michael
Walzer co-existing peacefully with people of rather different
convictions on petitions supporting the Bush administration
response to September 11th.3 And when the progressive
American speaks foreign tongues, it is expected that he will
go on to deplore American isolationism--or unilateralism,
or both, as sins of equal evil. He will be expected, in short,
to be more European than the Europeans. Hence, let me say
at the outset, in French, that "tout comprendre n'est pas
tout pardoner." [to understand is not to forgive.] And let
me explain myself by adding, in German, a sort of Feuerbachian
Umkehrung of Marx's famous 11th Thesis: "Die Politiker haben
die Welt nur verändern wollen, es kommt aber darauf an, sie
zu verstehen." [The politicians have only sought to change
the world; what is crucial, rather, is to understand it.]
I will propose here some ideas toward elaborating a leftist
approach (which is not simply an alternative) to current American
foreign policy choices. But to do so, I must first criticize
some interpretations of those policies because they use categories
that describe foreign policy choices as they existed during
the Cold War but are only apparently relevant today. I will
then sketch an historical framework for understanding some
constants in American foreign policy choices as part of a
democratic political dynamic. In this context, the
task of the intellectual changes; criticism no longer suffices.
The difference between the left and the right is replaced
by an opposition between democratic and anti-democratic politics.
The progressive intellectual--and the Europeans who worry
about the American hegemon without thinking about their own
"democratic deficit"--have to imagine forms of political intervention
that encourage the openness of democratic debate while avoiding
the anti-political temptations that are particularly strong
in the sphere of foreign policy.4
1. Are the old Categories still useful?
The first reactions to September 11th were that nothing would
remain the same, that the old political clichés had lost their
meaning, and that Leftist intellectuals could not simply repeat
their hardy stance of opposition and the pacifist opposition
to power.5 Yet that cannot be true; change does
not occur overnight. Geo-political relations remain over the
long term; political cultures do not change in the blink of
an eye nor do national habits. And recent surveys of public
attitudes toward government or toward basic liberties show
a remarkable constancy. (Indeed, one finds similar to reactions
to the Pearl Harbor emergency, save that Americans now are
more tolerant of Muslims than they were then of Japanese).6
Perhaps, as many Europeans told us, America was finally entering
the real world, forced out of her narcissism and compelled
to recognize that if she is a primus, she is nonetheless
a primus inter pares, among equals. But that expectation
has yet to manifest itself concretely.7
The political response of the Bush administration seemed to
reflect the weight of habit. This was the unilateralist government
that had refused to sign the Kyoto accords, denounced the
ABM treaty that interfered with their dream of a missile defense,
and were determined to eliminate Saddam Hussein regardless
of the opinion of its allies. Those allies' invocation of
Article 5 of the NATO treaty as an expression of solidarity
was briefly noted and quickly forgotten as the Bush team took
its own initiatives in Afghanistan, accepting token offerings
from the allies while giving them no voice in return. Its
attitude was summed up in Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld's
pithy remark that this time (as opposed to the haggling that
almost crippled the intervention in Kosovo) the mission would
determine the coalition rather than the coalition determining
the mission. The fact that Rumsfeld referred to a coalition,
not an alliance, is significant: an alliance implies a shared
global vision elaborated by consultation and deliberation
among equals; a coalition is heteroclite, uses its members
as expendable "spare parts" to fill temporary needs. Similar
disdain for multilateral cooperation was starkly evident in
the recent decision by Washington to "un-sign" (rather than
simply not send to the Senate for ratification) the Rome treaty
creating an international court; at a time when the "war"
on terrorism would seem to call for such a trans-national
institution, the Bush administration defiantly insisted that
it would go its own way.
It may be that this picture of unilateral immobility is overdrawn;
foreign policy is always a work-in-process that is subject
to many different influences. Some of those influences are
personal-and so the optimists remind us that Colin Powell
remains secretary of state;8 and after many long
months of silent co-operation motivated by fear of electoral
backlash, the Congress, and the democratic party, seem to
be asserting their critical autonomy. There are other, external,
influences, the grist of "realism" in foreign policy mills-which
is why the intention of eliminating Saddam Hussein has been
put on hold, and the US has finally found it necessary to
play a role in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (even though
it seems unsure what that role is to be, and how it is to
be played, and whether it can influence either the Israelis
or the Saudis). Still other influences are domestic and electoral-as
when a free-trading President imposes steel tariffs to win
votes in Pennsylvania and Ohio, supports agricultural subsidies
for the same purpose in Iowa and Nebraska, or pursues an antiquated
Cuban embargo in deference to votes in Florida (also needed
to re-elect his brother as governor). It is hard to measure
the weight of these incremental shifts, or the backlash that
they could bring, for example, among supporters of a new round
of global trade expansion.
Those who want to see an incremental learning process rather
than immobility suggest that a President who had barely traveled
outside the country, and a Congress whose majority leadership
takes pride in its provincialism,9 have abandoned
the historical American politics of isolationism. Insofar
as foreign policy played a role in the 2000 campaign, it was
epitomized in Bush's denunciation of so-called "nation-building"
and multi-lateral interventions into the affairs of others.10
Thus, on taking office, the not-quite legitimate president
broke with tradition by ostentatiously reserving his first
visit for Canada, and his next for Mexico (neglecting England,
and Europe). In this regard, a major victim of September 11th
has been the agenda of intra-continental free trade: an expanded
Nafta, regularization of immigration with the new, democratically
elected Mexican president, and regained fast-track trade liberalization
authority (now euphemistically called "trade enhancement").
Commerce cannot replace politics, nor can it hide political
imperatives. The tariff on steel products has harmed relations
with a Brazil; Chile has received no rewards for its liberal
economic policies, while Argentina confronts the results of
a dollarized economy out of control. The war-on-terrorism
has added complications to the early and simple agenda. To
take a recent example, how can one decrease tariffs on tuna
fishing for the drug-infested, unstable regime in Columbia
when this will create unemployment among the Muslim fishermen
in the terrorist-harboring regions of the Philippines?11
In this context, it appears that the Bush administration has
moved from isolationism toward a recognition of a multi-facetted
world whose complexity it could not master. As a result, it
has now sought to reduce this complexity by exerting unilateral
control. Not for nothing does the US spend more on national
defense than the next 15 nations together; not for
nothing do the Americans tell their European allies: modernize
or be marginalized. And whereas the Europeans protest
and demand to be treated as equals, the recent signing of
a new (475 word, ignoring among other things tactical weapons)
missile treaty as well as acceptance of American withdrawal
from the ABM treaty suggests that the Russia of Mr. Putin
has understood the hard realities of a new American century.
Europe, on the other hand, seems to be fulfilling the (low)
expectations of Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, who recalls bitterly
his period as US Ambassador to NATO a quarter century ago,
in 1973-4.
But are these categories--isolationism, multilateralism and
unilateralism--still useful for a characterization of American
foreign policy? Isolationism has a long tradition; but it
stands opposed to both multilateralism and unilateralism,
which are themselves opposites. This duality leads to confusion;
it conceals differences that, particularly in the new post-Cold
War era, are politically important. Think of some recent examples.
Unilateralism need not be the action of an imperial power
snuffing out freedom as it works its will; it may be necessary
when the wrangling of coalition partners prevents action at
times when human rights (or lives) are in peril, as in Bosnia,
Kosovo or recent cases in Africa. Multilateralism can be functional
for the creation of a world of mutual interdependence whose
members will reciprocally civilize each other's behavior;
but it can also be a formula for pious words that make impossible
practical deeds-as in the cases just mentioned. Even isolationism
can have different meanings. It need not be the stance that
wishes to hear or see no evil which is condemned to pay the
price of its good-natured naiveté; non-action denounced as
isolationism may be the recognition that not every problem
can be solved immediately and that simple solutions cannot
be imposed upon people unwilling or unable to admit them-indeed,
there are problems that can only be solved after they fester
until the times are ripe.12
2. Categorizing Democratic Dynamics
There are good reasons, both geographical and historical,
to repeat the usual description of US foreign policy as congenitally
isolationist. One of the founding moments of American democracy,
George Washington's "Farewell Address," marks not only a recognition
of the limits of political power in a pluralist society but
contains also the warning to his countrymen to avoid "entangling
alliances." This phrase, learned by every American school
child, has become what Walter Russell Mead calls "the foreign
policy equivalent of the Bill of Rights..."13 One
of the goals of Mead's remarkable new book, Special Providence.
American Foreign Policy and How it Changed the World,
is to show that, even before the creation of the new nation--indeed,
as a political condition of its creation, which depended on
French, Dutch and Spanish alliances-Americans knew, and practiced
skillfully, the art of foreign policy. More than that, Mead's
claim is that-as opposed to the contemporary stereotype-foreign
policy has been one of the chief issues dividing the contesting
political parties, at least until the achievement of a certain
"mythical" modus vivendi with the outbreak of the Cold War.14
As opposed to the now-ambivalent categories inherited from
the Cold War, Mead analyzes historically and illustrates pragmatically
four currents associated with historical figures of the American
past. The result goes beyond the dichotomy with which Henry
Kissinger introduced his Diplomacy, when he distinguished
the naïve idealism of Wilson from the hardened balance-of-power
realism of Theodore Roosevelt.15 Mead's first category
reflects the primacy of business and commerce throughout American
foreign relations: Hamiltonians stress the alliance
of government and business to insure stability at home and
integration into the world economy. Wilsonians then
introduce a moral dimension that wants to spread American
values in order to create a peaceful world under the rule
of law. Jeffersonians strive above all to protect democracy
at home, and therefore avoid unsavory alliances by Hamiltonians
and risks of war run by Wilsonians. Finally, populist Jacksonians
insist that domestic and foreign policy must insure the security
and well-being of the people; while they don't seek foreign
quarrels, when war becomes necessary, these Jacksonians demand
that it be fought to the finish.
Because of their historical specificity, Mead's categories
are able to take into account the dynamics of political competition
because, in order to remain the same, each of them must mutate
as political conditions change. This flexibility is double:
it takes into account changed socio-economic conditions as
well as the contending political parties. For example, the
original Hamiltonian vision of the way to achieve the primacy
of trade and commerce was formulated in Hamilton's "Report
on Industries," which defended the protection of "infant industries"
by means of a high tariff. Such protectionist policies could
only be maintained at the end of the 19th century because
protected industries still paid good wages and guaranteed
secure jobs. By the middle of the 20th century, however, American
economic power meant that lower tariffs (i.e., free trade)
would benefit the economy--but now wages and jobs came under
pressure. If a new Hamiltonian policy was to be enacted, it
would have to find new allies, perhaps among the (nationalist)
Jacksonians, since its former supporters had gone either to
the Wilsonians (the NGOs opposing exploitation) or to the
Jeffersonians (attacking business power as a threat to democracy).
Hamiltonian politics would, in other words, have to change
in order to remain the same.
Mead's categories also permit the tracing of a multitude of
potential cross-alliances in changing historical conditions.
His account of the Wilsonians' "missionary spirit"-- which
antedated Woodrow Wilson-- clarifies the status of his categories.
This spirit was present at the foundation, when the colonists
left the Old World to seek not only religious freedom but
the blessings that accompanied it. Their heirs expanded this
mission, taking their creed across the continents, and bringing
in their wake government interventions that to the non-historian's
eye could look like a new colonialism. But the Wilsonians
had no monopoly on virtue; the Jeffersonian democratic creed
not only competed with their moralism but warned against its
excesses, fearing that such interventions could become a threat
to the foundations of democracy.16 Where the Wilsonian
might fight "a war to end all wars," the Jeffersonian would
seek to negotiate, try to put off the moment of decision,
or stand on the sidelines while cheering for the virtuous.
But at this point, the temporary alliance of Jeffersonians
with those Jacksonians who supported a democracy because it
left them alone would come under pressure, since these populist
Westerners were slow to anger but fierce in self-defense once
aroused. At this point, the Jacksonians' populism could turn
into a patriotism that rejoins the Hamiltonians in defense
of a national cause that holds together as long as neither
side looks too closely at its own premises.
Leaving aside the historian's question of the accuracy of
these classifications, they do seem to offer a recognizable
picture of America. What is significant is that they do not
coincide with actual party lines; they point rather to the
ingredients of shifting coalitions, and they can reflect different
policy goals-or lead participants to change their policies
(or to compromise) in order to maintain their original intentions.
Mead attributes the success of American foreign policy to
the competition among these basic categories; and he recognizes
that the domination of one or the other would be harmful (which
is why he dismisses at the outset the "myth" of the Cold War
and a unified America for which only one policy is possible
or just). His critics deplore this flexibility because it
lacks predictive power; his thesis seems non-falsifiable because
he can always explain post festum new combinations
or splits and realignments.17 For example, Hamiltonians
among the Clinton administration appealed to the civilizing
effects of Montesquieu's "doux commerce" while Hamiltonians
in the Bush camp are more crudely pro-business. Wilsonians
might well ally themselves with the former, who are making
the world safe for their own (modern forms of) missionary
work; but other Wilsonians would insist that globalization
destroys the dignity of indigenous cultures. This second group
could in turn find allies among those Jeffersonians whose
fear for the fragility of democracy leads them toward isolationism.
But the historical fact that Jeffersonian fear of big government
led many of them to oppose US entry into World War I, to reject
the League of Nations and above all to appease the new totalitarians
in the 1930s discredited this orientation. What remained of
their influence depended on an alliance with the Jacksonians,
which disintegrated with the Vietnam war. Both tendencies
were appalled by the effects of the war at home and by the
corrupt Vietnamese government it defended; but the Jeffersonians
wanted to cut-and-run which, to the Jacksonians, was a violation
of a code of honor that cut more deeply than the fear for
the safety of domestic democracy.
Mead draws two conclusions from his analysis. The first is
that the interplay of these four political tendencies accounts
for the unquestionable successes of American foreign policy,
including the victory in the Cold War. He wants his readers
to learn from this history, and to recognize that foreign
policy has been fundamental to the history of American democracy.
The second conclusion is more contemporary and pragmatic.
He suggests that the Hamiltonian and Wilsonian came together
after 1989 to provide the basis of the New World Order, whose
"the rise and retreat" he chronicles. Free trade plus globalization
joined with increasingly powerful NGOs to pursue the creation
of rule of law and the spread of democracy while protecting
human rights. But this coalition was short lived; the other
two tendencies affirmed themselves, and history did not come
to an end, after all. What then of "the future of American
foreign policy"? "I believe", says Mead, "[that] I owe it
to readers to declare my preference among the schools." His
carefully hedged adhesion is to Jeffersonianism, whose "caution,"
and "conservation of... liberty and lives, and...passion for
limits" is said, finally, to be the ideal that motivated John
Quincy Adams and James Monroe in 1823.18
I want to propose a different conclusion from Mead's stimulating
account. The constant interplay among the four categories
that he describes means that none of them can uphold the claim
that it has a monopoly on wisdom, that it expresses the unique
national interest, or even that it expresses the vox populi.
Mead's analysis suggests that foreign policy success, particularly
in the post-Cold War world, is not predicated on such (real
or imagined) national unity; indeed, the totalitarian disasters
of the 20th century in the Soviet, German (and Japanese) cases
resulted from just such unitary presuppositions. The task
of the democratic intellectual is not to propose another vision
of unity that claims to be superior to those failed attempts.
That was the project of the progressive intellectuals who
rallied to Jack Kennedy, only to find themselves unable to
escape from their Vietnam nightmare because their politics
was defined by the moral imperatives of Cold War anti-communism.
But their equally moralist left wing critics could only adopt
an "anti-anti-communist" stance which had nothing political
to offer, especially in the domain of foreign policy. Mead's
account suggests the direction in which to search for a new
politics; although he doesn't say it in so many words, democracy
for him is not simply a means; it can also be an end to be
sought in the post-Cold War world.
3. Political Dynamics in the Post-Cold
War World
The end of the Cold War appeared to leave the US alone on
a world stage that had no overarching structure. Omnipotence
was coupled uneasily with impotence, in the Balkans, in Rwanda,
in the pious words and absent deeds of the Clinton years.
In 1994, Henry Kissinger argued in Diplomacy that the
ethical basis of the unity of American Cold War politics was
useless in the emerging political-strategic world; American
power was in fact limited and could be exercised only if it
rediscovered the principles of diplomatic realism of which
Kissinger claimed to be a master. Seven years later, in Does
America Need a Foreign Policy?, in his first chapter,
Kissinger posed the question: "America at the Apex: Empire
or Leader?" Empire, he argued, is not a policy; it confuses
strategy with economics, while ignoring the political , cultural
and spiritual impact of the new technological world. Leadership
is exercised through alliances, such as NATO. An alliance
differs from a guarantee of collective security, which is
merely a juridical promise that, like a UN resolution, will
not be carried out if major participants fail to act.19
Europe, argues Kissinger, could become merely such a zone
of collective security if America does not revitalize and
repoliticize the NATO alliance. This is the more important
since a unified Europe (either in the German Fischer proposal,
or in the French multi-speed mode, or in Blair's confederal
version) would face the US only once decisions had been made,
at which point it would not be possible to revise them as
a result of discussion with the Americans. Kissinger's worry
is clear, but his formula for leadership leaves no role for
a European partner (only for European partners: divide
et imperia is an earlier form of Kissinger's favored Realpolitik).
Kissinger's rejection of the old political concept of empire
may be too facile (and self-interested); after all, the power
and reach of 21st century America has no historical parallels.
Recall the time when optimism about a Soviet revival under
Gorbachev's perestroika was widespread; historian Paul
Kennedy's best-seller, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers:
Economic Change and Military Conflict from 1500 to 2000
(1987),convinced many that the result of America's "imperial
overreach" would be an inevitable decline. Today, Paul Kennedy
has to admit that while Rome was limited by the Persian and
Chinese empires, and the size of the British navy was equal
only to the next two navies, the US stands alone. More aggressively,
the Wall Street Journal editorialist, Max Boot, writing
in the conservative The Weekly Standard, suggests that
September 11th resulted not from foreign resentment at America's
action in the world but from the insufficient involvement
of the US in its true mission. In the same vein, Robert D.
Kaplan, whose Balkan Ghosts (1993) was said to have
dissuaded Clinton from his aggressive "lift and strike" option
for Bosnia, drew a similarly a-moral lesson in Warrior
Politics: Why Leadership Demands a Pagan Ethos (2001).
If order is to be imposed in an anarchic world, the American
cop will have to do the job-and he will be applauded for his
work by willing masses already seduced by the pleasures promised
by America's vaunted "soft power."20
What theorists of empire forget is that America acquired its
hegemony without any specific political project other than
its moral righteousness-the end of the Cold War was more a
Soviet defeat than an American victory (an arms-race-to-the-death,
what the Germans call tot-rüsten rather than a duel
of utopias). Indeed, Bush's national security advisor Condoleezza
Rice wrote in Foreign Affairs in 2000 that since the
end of the Cold War American foreign policy seemed to have
lost its direction.21 She was not alone in that
analysis. But she is not alone either, today, in her revision
of that analysis, whose new premise is that the post-September
11th period is "analogous to 1945-47," when the doctrine of
containment was elaborated and made operational. But the author
of the remarkable article that contains Ms. Rice's recent
claim, Nicholas Lemann, puts her analysis into a broader and
more worrisome imperial context, one that began under the
direction of Bush père, aided by then-Defense Minister Cheney,
who proposed its own hard-nosed vision of a post-Cold War
world, only to watch with frustration as Bill Clinton--in
the words of Condoleeza Rice's Foreign Affairs article--was
guilty of "an extraordinary neglect of the fiduciary responsibilities
of the commander in chief."22
The proposed post-Cold War imperial policy is often associated
with the names of deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz
and Vice-President Cheney. Its academic label was provided
by Zalmay Khalizad (now American proconsul in Afghanistan):
it is the passage from "containment to global leadership."
This project, or vision, seems to have only become truly possible
with the shedding of American blood on September 11th. However
America acquired its hegemonic position, its rulers now intend
to keep it, by all means necessary. And those means include
pre-emptive strikes (possibly even nuclear)23,
the redrawing of regional maps, and the intervention needed
to create what is called euphemistically a "democratic zone
of peace." Another, less euphemistic label for this project
is proposed by Colin Powell's chief intellectual advisor,
Richard Haass, who occupies the office first held by George
Kennan, the father of containment theory. In an interview
with Lemann, the State Department's Richard Haass suggests
that there are "limits of sovereignty" that prevent governments
from abusing the rights of their citizens; and there are legitimate
interventions that prevent them from doing so. More important,
such limits also prevent governments from supporting terrorism
or from the production of weapons of mass destruction-whose
possession legitimates "preventive, or peremptory, self-defense."
Obviously, such a policy would have its first application
in Iraq, permitting the son to fulfill the task left for him
by his father.
But, are the proponents of such a policy right in thinking
that September 11th will permit them to gain public support?
The cynic might reply that the manner in which this administration
has used the metaphor of the war-on-terror to prevent not
just dissent but even the questioning of its policies by members
of the opposition (or by Republicans like Richard Shelby or
Dan Burton) will insure public support by its manipulations.
What can the progressive intellectual do in the face of this
onslaught? What can Europe do?
Turning first to the intellectual, from whose position I began
this discussion, he is assumed to be a critic of the American
policy. The stance of the intellectual as critic is an old
one. During the Cold War, the progressive intellectual could
only be a critic of one of the competing world systems, without
reflecting on the manner in which his critique implied at
least tacit support of the other system. In the American context,
this meant that the left was "anti-anti-communist,"
with the result that it had nothing positive to defend, no
ideals to realize, no project for the future. Typical of this
attitude was the oldest existing weekly journal of the left,
The Nation.24 To put the matter differently,
the leftist intellectual acquired the habit of finding all
glasses to be half-empty; there was never any question of
finding it to be half-full... and in need of further positive
measures. As a result, at the end of the Cold War (if not
before, which is another debate), the left made no contributions
to ongoing political debates, and was blind to its Eastern
compagnons.
But "the" left was and is (and should not be) so unified,
as these last remarks imply. There was an anti-totalitarian
left too, one that contributed to the overcoming of the Soviet
order. It was not so strong in the US as for example in France.
Learning from Eastern European dissidents who recognized the
need to insure rights and freedoms, this new left recognized
the radical political implications of democracy-which is not
simply another justification of capitalist economic exploitation.
Although it was a minority among the left, this new direction
(and its Eastern friends) seized upon Basket III of the 1975
Helsinki Accords, which conservatives denounced as a sell-out
in which the West recognized the legitimacy of the Soviet
imperium. Despite Henry Kissinger's attempt to reclaim this
achievement for himself,25 there is no reason for
a progressive left to let him take the credit and play the
democrat. Why should the left not claim that the glass is
half-full? There is no reason, for example, for a critical
left not to agree with the State Department's Richard Haass
about the limits of sovereignty (although it might dissent
from the possible pre-emptive nuclear strikes suggested by
Paul Wolfowitz). The left should favor interventions to encourage
democracy.
In this same context, one sees how the categorial framework
of Walter Russell Mead offers a possible guideline for European
political action as well. Two points in particular seem promising.
If it is true that the democratic nature of American foreign
policy depends on the constant interaction--call it checks-and-balances--of
the four political tendencies, then Europeans should be on
guard to insure that their words and actions do not favor
the domination of one or the other tendency. Democracy in
US foreign policy is good for Europe as well. Second, the
lability of the flexible categories, which can enter into
various alliances at different historical conjunctures, suggests
that European reaction to American actions needs to bear in
mind that these policies are not the result of a single unified
will expressing itself in the one and only form it can possibly
take. American actions result from multiple interactions;
the imposition of a tariff on steel, or the decision to intervene
in Iraq, are not pre-ordained; they result from political
coalition building, and there is no reason only to criticize
when the fact that coalitions are built by partners means
that the temporary alliances can also be drawn apart and reconfigured
by sufficiently subtle approaches. In a word, as with the
intellectual, Europe has to remember that, despite appearances,
America remains a republican democracy, plural in its values
and open to the future. It is a glass that only appears half-empty;
if we understand that it is also half-full, we are on our
way to realizing what Marx should have intended when he wrote
the 11th Feuerbach Thesis, with which I proposed to begin
this discussion of intellectuals and foreign policy.
Footnotes
1 This is
the English version of a lecture given in Bremen on June 13
2002, at a conference organized by the Heinrich-Boell Stiftung.
The (somewhat different) German text appears in the monthly
journal Kommune, published in Frankfurt, in its September
2002 issue. The title of the paper was chosen by the conference
organizers; its presentation was followed by a Franco-German
debate on its implications.
2 The exception that proves the rule is the scandal
that arose 50 years ago when Partisan Review published
its famous issue, "Our Country and Our Culture," in its May/June
1952 issue.
3 The petition in question apparently never appeared
in this country--I was informed of it by my German colleagues.
Another sign of communication gaps between the continents.
4 See also my essay "What's New After September
11?" which appears on this website as well as in Esprit
in its September 2002 issue, and in the German journal Internationale
Politik und Gesellschaft. A condensed version appeared
in Italian in Reset in June.
5 This is of course not true for all leftist intellectuals--or
intellectuals who think of themselves as leftists, as is the
case most clearly for Noam Chomsky, whose blame-America-first
politics have not changed since September 11th. In German,
c.f. the pre-September article by Jörg Lau, "Onkel"Noam aus
dem Netz," in Die Zeit, Nr. 31, 26 Juli, 2001, p. 29.
More generally, c.f., the biting criticism of similar positions
by Ian Buruma and Avishai Margalit, published under the ironic
title alluding to Edward Said's famous polemic, "Occidentalism,"
in New York Review of Books, January 17, 2002, pp.
4-7.
6 C.f., Adam Clymer, "US Attitudes Altered Little
By Sept. 11, Pollsters Say," New York Times, May 20,
2002, p. A. 12, reporting on the 57th annual meeting of the
American Association for Public Opinion Research. Attitudes
toward gun control and capital punishment did not change;
nor, despite the perception that religion had become more
important for people, did patterns of church attendance. While
the public did support some more restrictions of civil liberties,
this was typical of past crises, and was expected to recede,
as in the past. Nor was there greater support for an increased
role of government more generally, despite predictions by
commentators, including this one!
7 Despite my own hopes immediately following September
11th. C.f., my article written 3 days after the attacks and
published in the October issue of Kommune as "Krieg
oder Frieden"; and in Esprit also in October and in
November in Italian in Reset.
8 And Colin Powell too seems to think that he has
been able to change the attitudes of the president, as he
notes in a recent interview, pointing to Bush's having learned
from the "bad handling" of Kyoto, and the lesson of patience
in dealing with the Chinese after the downing of a US spy
plane. The latter case taught Mr. Bush to let his subordinates,
including the State Department, "shape the situation for the
president for a little while." C.f., David E. Sanger, "On
the Job, Bush has Mastered Diplomacy 101, His Aides Say,"
in New York Times, May 22, 2002, pp. 1, 10.
9 Texas Republican Dick Armey, the House majority
leader, takes pride in never having traveled to Europe. Tom
DeLay, the House whip soon to replace Armey as leader, has
recently been voicing his misgivings about the Enlightenment.
C.f., Harold Meyerson, "Axis of Incompetence," The American
Prospect, May 20, 2002, pp. 18-19.
10 There is a long and honorable precedent for
this attitude, which is perhaps best articulated by John Quincy
Adams, the theoretical force behind the creation of the Monroe
Doctrine which long-guided American foreign policy after 1821.
Sounding perhaps like the "compassionate conservative" that
Bush wanted to represent, Adams wrote that "[w]herever the
standard of freedom and independence has been or shall be
unfurled, there will be America's heart, her benedictions
and her prayers. But she goes not abroad in search of monsters
to destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and independence
of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of her own...
She well knows that by once enlisting under other banners
than her own...she would involve herself beyond the power
of extrication... She might become the dictatress of the world.
She would no longer be the ruler of her own spirit." It is
worth noting that I am citing this passage from Henry Kissinger's
Does America Need a Foreign Policy? (New York: Simon
& Schuster, 2001), p. 238.
11 C.f., the news analysis by Keith Bradsher, "Quandary
on Trade," in the New York Times, May 21, 2002, p.
W. 1.
12 Isolationism can also take an aggressive form,
as in the previously mentioned case of Chomsky, for whom whatever
the US does is harmful; or it can be adopted by his right-wing
political opposite, Patrick Buchanan, whose recent book is
called America, A Republic not an Empire.
13 Walter Russell Mead, Special Providence.
American Foreign Policy and How it Changed the World (New
York: Knopf, 2001), p. 59. I will make use of Mead's categories,
but do so in a different context. Mead's concern, as his subtitle
indicates, is to vindicate the success of a democratic foreign
policy; mine is to look at the dynamic underlying that politics.
Mead is a diplomatic historian who uses his framework to re-tell
a coherent story, but his categories are too general to deal
adequately with contemporary politics, as is clear in former
Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs James P. Rubin's
review in The New Republic (March 18, 2002, pp. 29-33).
14 That this diplomatic involvement was not simply
verbal or commercial is argued also in a recent book by Wall
Street Journal editor, Max Boot, The Savage Wars of
Peace (New York: Basic Books, 2002). Boot discusses what
he calls "small wars" which led America in the 114 years before
1900 to undertake 184 landings on foreign soil. Mead's first
chapter is a lengthy factual refutation of claims that America
has always been isolationist and indifferent to foreign policy.
15 Henry Kissinger, Diplomacy (New York:
Simon & Schuster, 1994). In fact, Kissinger begins with a
chapter on the post-Cold War "New World Order," that argues
for the relevance of re-reading the history of diplomacy.
He then presents Roosevelt and Wilson under the title "The
Hinge," before returning directly to Richelieu, William of
Orange and Pitt. Without overemphasis, Mead's book is clearly
directed against Kissinger's European "realist" orientation.
He suggests that once America became a dominant economic power,
and particularly with the "myths" of the Cold War, the economic
dimension of American foreign policy was forgotten and the
image of an immature "isolationist" America that had now grown
up could become dominant. C.f., chapter 3, "Changing the Paradigms."
16 Mead assimilates John Quincy Adams to the Jeffersonian
creed--despite the political differences that had separated
Adams' father and Jefferson. Mead cites as one proof of his
claim the same passage from Adams cited by Kissinger in Note
3, above. This would seem to imply that the "compassionate
conservative" Bush was also a Jeffersonian--despite his clearly
Hamiltonian trade policies. But as was seen in the text, the
modern Hamiltonians needed new allies--why not seek them out
here, among Jeffersonians who, like everyone else, had to
change their politics in order to remain consistent with themselves?
17 This is the argument of James P. Rubin's review,
op. cit. (note 8, above). Rubin is unfair, however,
in that he uses a series of newspaper columns published by
Mead over the past decade in the Los Angeles Times
to show the inconsistency of Mead's own political analysis.
This confuses the task of the editorialist and that of the
political historian.
18 Mead, op. cit., pp. 331, 334.
19 Kissinger was writing before Donald Rumsfeld
had invented the above-mentioned distinction between an alliance
that determines a mission and a mission that determines the
alliance. One has to admit that Kissinger is, like it or not,
an historically schooled thinker--which is not the case for
the present regime. For a critique of Kissinger, c.f., Stanley
Hoffmann's review-essay, "Yesterday's Realism," in The
American Prospect, July 20, 2002, pp. 33-37. Hoffmann
argues that Kissinger "dodges the problem that has plagued
realists ever since Morgenthau... Is there a clearly defined
and delimited national interest?" His answer is that "[w]hile
Wilson's hyperbolic statements rejecting 'a standard of national
selfishness' are easy to dismiss, his belief that this age
requires us also to think about 'the interest of mankind'
is not so easily ignored." (p. 36) As I have suggested following
Mead, Hoffmann too concludes that "on the whole, Wilsonians
understand better than realists do: that what happens within
a country is often more decisive than calculations of power
balance." (p. 37)
20 For a summary of these arguments, c.f., Emily
Eakin, "All Roads Lead to D.C.," New York Times, March
31, 2002.
21 Condoleezza Rice, "Promoting the National Interest,"
Foreign Affairs, January/February 2000, pp. 45-62.
22 C.f., Nicolas Lemann, "The Next World Order,"
The New Yorker, April 1, 2002, pp. 42-48. The citation
from Condoleezza Rice is on p. 51 of the above-mentioned article.
23 By a curious detour through primitive Afghan
conditions: how to get to caves? How do dig deep? This is
an example of a (coherent) logic run wild, a precautionary
example.
24 It is worth noting that, in the wake of September
11th, The Nation did open to more serious debate, for
example between the still-consistently anti-American Alexander
Coburn and his more critical colleague, Christopher Hitchens,
both Britons who have long written mainly in the US left-press.
25 C.f., Diplomacy, op. cit., pp. 759-761.
But Kissinger has to admit that without the dissidents there
would not have been a break-through. It is worth noting that
in this context, Kissinger brings up once again (p. 756) the
above-cited passage from John Quincy Adams to explain his
position-viz., to cheer on the dissidents while remaining
on the side-lines.
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