This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 2, Feb. 11-17, 2007
By
Gabriel Kolko Nearly all wars in the
twentieth century have both surprised and disillusioned all leaders, whatever
their nationality. Given the political, social, and human elements involved in
every conflict, and the near certainty that these mercurial ingredients
will interact to produce unanticipated consequences, leaders who calculate the
outcome of wars as essentially predictable military events are invariably doomed
to disappointment. The theory and the reality of warfare conflict immensely,
for the results of wars can never be known in advance. Blind men and women have been
the motor of modern history and the source of endless misery and destruction.
Aspiring leaders of great powers can neither understand nor admit the fact that
their strategies are extremely dangerous because
statecraft by its very nature always calculates the ability of a nation's
military and economic resources to overcome whatever challenges it confronts.
To reject such traditional reasoning, and to question the value of conventional
wisdom and react to international crises realistically on the basis of past
failures would make them unsuited to command. The result is that politicians
succeed in terms of their personal careers, states make monumental errors, and
people suffer. The great nations of Europe and Japan put such illusions into
practice repeatedly before 1945. At the beginning of the 21st century only the
U.S. has the will to maintain a global foreign policy and to intervene
everywhere it believes necessary. Today and in the near future, America will
make the decisions that will lead to war or peace, and the fate of much of the
world is largely in its hands. It thinks it possesses the arms and a spectrum of
military strategies all predicated on a triumphant activist role for itself. It
believes that its economy can afford interventionism, and that the American
public will support whatever actions necessary to set the affairs of some
country or region on the political path it deems essential. This grandiose
ambition is bipartisan and, details notwithstanding, both parties have always
shared a consensus on it. The obsession with power and the conviction
that armies can produce the political outcome a nation’s leaders desire is by no
means an exclusively American illusion. It is a notion that goes back many
centuries and has produced the main wars of modern times. The rule of force has
been with mankind a very long time, and the assumptions behind it have plagued
its history for centuries. But unlike the leaders of most European nations or
Japan, the United States’ leaders have not gained insight from the calamities
that have so seared modern history. Folly is scarcely an American monopoly, but
resistance to learning when grave errors have been committed is almost
proportionate to the resources available to repeat them. The Germans learned
their lesson after two defeats, the Japanese after World War Two, and both
nations found wars too exhausting and politically dangerous. America still
believes that if firepower fails to master a situation the solution is to use it
more precisely and much more of it. In this regard it is exceptional – past
failures have not made it any wiser. Wars are at least as likely today as any time
over the past century. Of great importance is the end of Soviet hegemony in
East Europe and Moscow's restraining influence elsewhere. But the proliferation
of nuclear technology and other means of mass destruction have also made large
parts of the world far more dangerous. Deadly local wars with conventional
weapons in Africa, the Balkans, Middle East, and elsewhere have multiplied since
the 1960s. Europe, especially Germany, and Japan are far stronger and more
independent than at any time since 1945, and China's rapidly expanding economy
has given it a vastly more important role in Asia. Ideologically, Communism’s
demise means that the simplified bipolarism that Washington used to explain the
world ceased after 1990 to have any value. With it, the alliances created
nominally to resist Communism have either been abolished or are a shadow of
their original selves; they have no reason for existence. The crisis in NATO,
essentially, reflects this diffusion of all forms of power and the diminution of
American hegemony. Economically, the capitalist nations have resumed their
rivalries, and these have become more intense with the growth of their economies
and the decline in the dollar – which by 2004 was as weak as it has been in over
50 years. These states have a great deal in common ideologically, but
concretely they are increasingly rivals. The virtual monopoly of nuclear
weapons that existed about a quarter-century ago has ended with proliferation. Whether it is called a "multipolar" world, to
use President Jacques Chirac’s expression in November 2004, in which Europe,
China, India, and even eventually South America follow their own interests, or
another definition, the direction is clear. There may or may not be "a
fundamental restructuring of the global order," as the chairman of the CIA’s
National Intelligence Council presciently reflected in April 2003, but the
conclusion was unavoidable "that we are facing a more fluid and complicated set
of alignments than anything we have seen since the formation of the Atlantic
alliance in 1949." Terrorism and the global economy have defied overwhelming
American military power: "Our smart bombs aren’t that smart." All of the many factors considered – ranging
from events in Africa and the Middle East and Afghanistan to the breakup of
Yugoslavia – wars, whether civil or between states, remain the principal (but
scarcely the only) challenge confronting humanity in the twenty-first century.
Ecological disasters relentlessly affecting all dimensions of the environment
are also insidious because of the unwillingness of the crucial nations – above
all the United States – to adopt measures essential for reversing their damage.
The challenges facing humanity have never been so complex and threatening, and
the end of the Cold War, while one precondition of progress, is scarcely reason
for complacency or optimism. The problems the world confronts far transcend the
Communist-capitalist tensions, many of which were mainly symptoms of the far
greater intellectual, political, and economic problems that plagued the world
before 1917 – and still exist. Whatever its original intention, America's
interventions can lead to open-ended commitments in both duration and effort.
They may last a short time, and usually do, but unforeseen events can cause the
U.S. to spend far more resources than it originally anticipated, causing it in
the name of its "credibility" or some other doctrine to get into situations
which are disastrous and which in the end produce defeats and will leave America
much worse off. Vietnam is the leading example of this but Iraq, however
different in degree, is the same. Should it confront even some of the forty or
more nations that now have terrorist networks then it will in one manner or
another intervene everywhere, but especially in Africa and the Middle East. The
consequences of such commitments will be unpredictable. The U.S. has more determined and probably
more numerous enemies today than at any time, and many of those who hate it are
ready and able to inflict destruction on its shores. Its interventions often
triumphed in the purely military sense, which is all the Pentagon worries about,
but in all too many cases they have been political failures and eventually led
to greater American military and political involvement. Its virtually
instinctive activist mentality has caused it to get into situations where it
often had no interests, much less durable solutions to a nation’s problems, and
thereby repeatedly creating disasters and enduring enmities. America has power
without wisdom, and cannot, despite its repeated experiences, recognize the
limits of its ultra-sophisticated military technology. The result has been
folly, and hatred, which is a recipe for disasters. September 11 confirmed
that, and war has come to its shores. That the U.S. end its self-appointed global
mission of regulating all problems, wherever, whenever, or however it wishes to
do so, is an essential precondition of stemming, much less reversing, the
accumulated deterioration of world affairs and wars. We should not ignore the
countless ethical and other reasons it has no more right or capacity to do so
than any state over the past century, whatever justifications they evoked. The
problems, as the history of the past century shows, are much greater than
America’s role in the world; but at the present time its actions are decisive
and whether there is war or peace will be decided far more often in Washington
than any other place. Ultimately, there will not be peace in the world unless
all nations relinquish war as an instrument of policy, not only because of
ethical or moral reasoning but because wars have become deadlier and more
destructive of social institutions. A precondition of peace is for nations not
to attempt to impose their visions on others, adjudicate their differences, and
never to assume that their need for the economic or strategic resources of
another country warrants interference of any sort in its internal affairs. But September 11 proved that after a
half-century of interventions America has managed to be increasingly hated. It
has failed abysmally to bring peace and security to the world. Its role as a
rogue superpower and promiscuous, cynical interventionist has been spectacularly
unsuccessful even on its own terms. It is squandering vast economic resources,
and it has now endangered the physical security of Americans at home. To cease
the damage the U.S. causes abroad is also to fulfill the responsibilities that
America’s politicians have to their own people. But there is not the slightest
sign at this point that voters will call them to account, and neither the
American population nor its political leaders are likely to agree to such
far-reaching changes in foreign policy. The issues are far too grave to wait
for American attitudes and its political process to be transformed. The world
will be safer to the extent that the U.S.’ alliances are dissolved and it is
isolated, and that is happening for many reasons, ranging from the
unilateralism, hubris, and preemptory style of the Bush Administration to the
fact that with the demise of Communism the world’s political alignments are
changing dramatically. Communism and fascism were both outcomes of
the fatal errors in the international order and affairs of states that the First
World War spawned. In part, the Soviet system's disintegration was the result
of the fact it was the aberrant consequence of a destructive and abnormal war,
but at least as important was its leaders' loss of confidence in socialism. But
suicidal Muslims are, to a great extent, the outcome of a half-century of
America's interference in the Middle East and Islamic world, which radicalized
so many young men ready to die for a faith. Just as the wars of 1914–18 and
1939–45 created Bolsheviks, the U.S.’ repeated grave errors, however different
the context or times, have produced their own abnormal, negative reactions.
The twenty-first century has begun very badly because of America’s continued
aggressive policies. These are far more dangerous than those of the preceding
century. The destructive potential of weaponry has increased exponentially and
many more people and nations have access to it. What would once have been
considered relatively minor foreign policy problems now have potentially far
greater consequences. It all augurs very badly. The world has reached the most
dangerous point in recent, perhaps all of history. There are threats of war and
instability unlike anything that prevailed when a Soviet-led bloc existed. Even if the U.S. abstains from interference
and tailors its actions to fit this troubled reality, there will be serious
problems throughout much of the world. Internecine civil conflicts will
continue, as well as wars between nations armed with an increasing variety of
much more destructive weapons available from outside powers, of which the U.S.
remains, by far, the most important. Many of these sources of conflicts have
independent roots, but both principles and experiences justify America staying
out of them and leaving the world alone. Both the American people and those
involved directly will be far better off without foreign interference, whatever
nation attempts it. The U.S.’ leaders are not creating peace or
security at home or stability abroad. The reverse is the case: its interventions
have been counterproductive and its foreign policy is a disaster. Americans and
those people who are the objects of successive administrations’ efforts would be
far better off if the U.S. did nothing, closed its bases overseas and withdrew
its fleets everywhere, and allowed the rest of world to find its own way.
Communism is dead, and Europe and Japan are powerful and both can and will take
care of their own interests. The U.S. must adapt to these facts. But if it
continues as it has over the past half-century, attempting to attain the
vainglorious but irrational ambition to run the world, then there will be even
deeper crises and it will inflict wars and turmoil on many nations as well as on
its own people. And it will fail yet again, for all states that have gone to
war over the past centuries have not achieved the objectives for which they
sacrificed so much blood, passion, and resources. They have only produced
endless misery and upheavals of every kind. From The
Age of War: The United States Confronts the World by Gabriel Kolko.
Copyright © 2006 by
Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc. Used with permission of the publisher. February 1, 2007 Gabriel Kolko is the author, among other
works, of
Century of War: Politics, Conflicts and Society Since 1914,
Another Century of War?, and
Anatomy of a War: Vietnam, the United States and the Modern Historical
Experience. His latest book is
The Age of War. Copyright © 2006 Gabriel Kolko © 2007 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.
The Age of Perpetual
Conflict
The U.S.’ leaders are not
creating peace or security at home or stability abroad. The reverse is the case:
its interventions have been counterproductive and its foreign policy is a
disaster. Americans and those people who are the objects of successive
administrations’ efforts would be far better off if the U.S. did nothing, closed
its bases overseas and withdrew its fleets everywhere, and allowed the rest of
world to find its own way.
Posted by Bulatlat