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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (3533)4/10/2002 4:05:39 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15516
 
Empire isn't the American way
William Pfaff International Herald Tribune
Tuesday, April 9, 2002

Addiction in Washington

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PARIS Ever since communism collapsed, the notion
has been put about in Washington that the United
States should exercise its unrivaled power as an
empire. This is held to be the way to bring stability
to international society and solve the problems of
terrorism, rogue nations, weapons of mass
destruction and so forth.

To some in Washington, empire seems a career
opportunity. To the ordinary American, I suspect, it
simply looks like trouble. Military "empire" the
United States already has. In the narrow military
dimension, it dominates the world. But this is not
readily translated into political power. The Bush
administration has until now been unable to do
anything about the war in the Middle East, where
the United States identifies two of its most
important national interests: a strategic interest in
oil and political interest in the security of Israel.


The administration has let an unchecked
Israeli-Palestinian war do immense damage to the
overall American position in the Middle East and
cause much harm elsewhere.


The "imperial" solution would have been to dictate
terms of a political settlement and enforce them,
with military power if necessary, against one side or
the other or against both sides.

Secretary of State Colin Powell's coming visit to the
region does not promise an imperial solution. It
promises ultimately unsuccessful efforts to get
another cease-fire and to start negotiations anew,
on terms that will fail.

Afghanistan is slipping backward because of
Washington's reluctance to assume an "imperial"
role there, assuming that the foreign and domestic
political costs would be too high.


Advocates of American empire are usually seduced
by the notion that Washington's imperial authority
would be accepted as positive, and that the empire
would therefore be consensual. This idea rests on
the uninformed assumption that the United States
is generally seen abroad as benevolent.

Powell should explain to the president that even in
allied Europe, disposed for more than 50 years to
think well of America, Washington's exercise of
power is seen as a serious international problem.

American unilateralism, which mostly used to be a
containable matter of congressional egos and
petulance, has now been turned into a foreign policy
by the Bush administration. This undermines the
fragile structure of international law and convention
built up during the last three centuries, to which
the United States made important contributions.


International law, since the 17th century, has
rested on two principles: national sovereignty and
the legal equality of nations, both of which
Washington ignores whenever convenient.

American political, economic and cultural influence
is not generally stabilizing. It uproots stable
structures, for good or for ill. It means to do so. The
Bush administration is a crusading government.
There seem to be many in the administration who
are convinced that military force can impose
desirable political solutions. They think that Ariel
Sharon has been doing a good job. Brute force can
solve political problems, but it usually creates
others. A solution for Israel's problem would be to
drive the Palestinians into neighboring countries.
One doubts that this is the road to lasting peace in
the Middle East.


The statesman Edmund Burke once remarked that
no greater calamity can befall a nation than to break
with its past. The American past has been the rule
of law, constitutional order, a free press, suspicion of
power politics, avoidance of foreign entanglements
and even hostility to standing armies.


The country's one adventure into imperialism, in
1898, proved not very satisfactory, and 18 years after
fighting a war to acquire the Philippines, Congress
promised the islands independence.

The Cold War broke America from that past. For a
long time one could think that when the Cold War
ended the United States would return to its better
past. It hasn't happened.

The proposals for empire offered today are not
intellectually serious, but they are significant. The
political class and bureaucracy have become
addicted to international power. They want more.
The question is whether the people will follow.


International Herald Tribune Los Angeles Times
Syndicate International

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