Three Exceptional Facts About America
It’s Safe to Be Paranoid in the U.S.
By Tom Engelhardt
Given the cluttered landscape of the last 14 years, can you even
faintly remember the moment when the Berlin Wall came down, the Cold War
ended in a stunned silence of shock and triumph in Washington, Eastern
Europe was freed, Germany unified, and the Soviet Union vanished from
the face of the Earth? At that epochal moment, six centuries of imperial
rivalries ended. Only one mighty power was left.
There hadn’t been a moment like it in historical memory: a single
“hyperpower” with a military force beyond compare looming over a planet
without rivals. Under the circumstances, what couldn’t Washington hope
for? The eternal domination of the Middle East and all that oil? A
planetary Pax Americana for generations to come? Why not? After all, not even the Romans and the British at the height of their empires had experienced a world quite like this one.
Now, leap a quarter of a century to the present and note the rising
tide of paranoia in this country and the litany of predictions of doom
and disaster. Consider the extremity of fear and gloom in the party of
Ronald “It’s Morning Again in America” Reagan in what are called “debates”
among its presidential candidates, and it’s hard not to imagine that we
aren't at the precipice of the decline and fall of just about
everything. The American Century? So much sawdust on the floor of
history.
If, however, you look at the country that its top politicians can now
hardly mention without defensively wielding the words “exceptional” or
“indispensable,” the truly exceptional thing is this: as a great power,
the United States still stands alone on planet Earth and Americans can
exhibit all the paranoia they want in remarkable safety and security.
Here, then, are three exceptional facts of our moment.
Exceptional Fact #1: Failure Is Success, or the U.S. Remains the Sole Superpower
If you were to isolate the single most striking, if little discussed,
aspect of American foreign policy in the first 15 years of this
century, it might be that Washington’s inability to apply its power
successfully just about anywhere confirms that very power; in other
words, failure is a marker of success. Let me explain.http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176050/tomgram%3A_engelhardt%2C_the_superpower_as_victim/#more
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