The End of the American Empire
Remarks to East Bay Citizens for Peace, the Barrington
Congregational Church,
and the American Friends Service Committee
Ambassador Chas W. Freeman, Jr. (USFS, Ret.)
Senior Fellow, the Watson Institute for International and
Public Affairs
2 April 2016, Barrington, Rhode Island
I’m here to
talk about the end of the American empire.
But before I do I want to note that one of our most charming
characteristics as Americans is our amnesia.
I mean, we are so good at forgetting what we’ve done and where we did it
that we can hide our own Easter eggs.
I’m reminded of
the geezer – someone about my age – who was sitting in his living room having a
drink with his friend while his wife made dinner.
He said to his
friend, “you know, we went to a really terrific restaurant last week. You’d like it. Great atmosphere. Delicious food. Wonderful service.”
“What’s the
name of it?” his friend asked.
He scratched
his head. “Ah, ah. Ah.
What do you call those red flowers you give to women you love?”
His friend
hesitated. “A rose?”
“Right. Um, hey, Rose! What was the name of that restaurant we went
to last week?”
Americans like
to forget we ever had an empire or to claim that, if we did, we never really
wanted one. But the momentum of Manifest
Destiny made us an imperial power. It
carried us well beyond the shores of the continent we seized from its original
aboriginal and Mexican owners. The
Monroe Doctrine proclaimed an American sphere of influence in the Western
Hemisphere. But the American empire was
never limited to that sphere.
In 1854, the
United States deployed U.S. Marines to China and Japan, where they imposed our
first treaty ports. Somewhat like
Guantánamo, these were places in foreign countries where our law, not theirs,
prevailed, whether they liked it or not.
Also in 1854, U.S. gunboats began to sail up and down the Yangtze River (the
jugular vein of China), a practice that ended only in 1941, when Japan as well
as the Chinese went after us.
In 1893, the
United States engineered regime change in Hawaii. In 1898, we annexed the islands
outright. In that same year, we helped Cuba win its independence from Spain,
while confiscating the Spanish Empire’s remaining holdings in Asia and the
Americas: Guam, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico. Beginning in 1897, the U.S. Navy contested
Samoa with Germany. In 1899, we took
Samoa’s eastern islands for ourselves, establishing a naval base at Pago
Pago.
From 1899 to
1902, Americans killed an estimated 200,000 or more Filipinos who tried to gain
independence for their country from ours.
In 1903, we forced Cuba to cede a base at Guantánamo to us and detached Panamá from
Colombia. In later years, we occupied
Nicaragua, the Dominican Republic, parts of Mexico, and Haiti.
Blatant
American empire-building of this sort ended with World War II, when it was
replaced by a duel between us and those in our sphere of influence on one side
and the Soviet Union and countries in its sphere on the other. But the antipathies our earlier
empire-building created remain potent.
They played a significant role in Cuba’s decision to seek Soviet
protection after its revolution in 1959.
They inspired the Sandinista movement in Nicaragua. (Augusto César Sandino, whose name the
movement took, was the charismatic leader of the resistance to the 1922 - 1934 U.S.
occupation of Nicaragua.) In 1991, as
soon as the Cold War ended, the Philippines evicted U.S. bases and forces on
its territory.
Spheres of
influence are a more subtle form of dominance than empires per se. They subordinate
other states to a great power informally, without the necessity of treaties or
agreements. In the Cold War, we ruled
the roost in a sphere of influence called “the free world” – free only in the
sense that it included every country outside the competing Soviet sphere of
influence, whether democratic or aligned with the United States or not. With the end of the Cold War, we incorporated
most of the former Soviet sphere into our own, pushing our self-proclaimed
responsibility to manage everything within it right up to the borders of Russia
and China. Russia’s unwillingness to
accept that everything beyond its territory is ours to regulate is the root
cause of the crises in Georgia and Ukraine.
China’s unwillingness to acquiesce in perpetual U.S. dominance of its
near seas is the origin of the current tensions in the South China Sea.
The notion of a
sphere of influence that is global except for a few no-go zones in Russia and
China is now so deeply ingrained in the American psyche that our politicians
think it entirely natural to make a number of far-reaching assertions, like
these:
(1) The world is desperate for
Americans to lead it by making the rules, regulating global public goods,
policing the global commons, and doing in “bad guys” everywhere by whatever
means our president considers most expedient.
(2) America is losing influence by
not putting more boots on the ground in more places.
(3) The United States is the
indispensable arbiter of what the world’s international financial institutions
should do and how they should do it.
(4) Even if they change, American values always
represent universal norms, from which other cultures deviate at their
peril. Thus, profanity, sacrilege, and
blasphemy – all of which were not so long ago anathema to Americans – are now
basic human rights to be insisted upon internationally. So are indulgence in homosexuality, climate
change denial, the sale of GM foodstuffs, and the consumption of alcohol.
And so forth.
These American
conceits are, of course, delusional.
They are all the more unpersuasive to foreigners because everyone can
see that America is now in a schizophrenic muddle – able to open fire at
perceived enemies but delusional, distracted, and internally divided to the
point of political paralysis. The
ongoing “sequester” is a national decision not to make decisions about national
priorities or how to pay for them.
Congress has walked off the job, leaving decisions about war and peace
to the president and turning economic policy over to the Fed, which has now run
out of options. Almost half of our
senators had time to write to America's adversaries in Tehran to disavow the
authority of the president to represent us internationally as the Constitution
and the laws prescribe. But they won’t
make time to consider treaties, nominees for public office, or budget
proposals. Politicians who long asserted
that “Washington is broken” appear to take pride in themselves for finally having
broken it. The run-up to the 2016
presidential election is providing ongoing evidence that the United States is
currently suffering from the political equivalent of a nervous breakdown.
Congress may be
on strike against the rest of the government, but our soldiers, sailors,
airmen, and marines remain hard at work.
Since the turn of the century, they have been kept busy fighting a
series of ill-conceived wars – all of which they have lost or are losing. The major achievement of multiple
interventions in the Muslim world has been to demonstrate that the use of force
is not the answer to very many problems but that there are few problems it
cannot aggravate. Our repeated inability
to win and end our wars has damaged our prestige with our allies and adversaries
alike. Still, with the Congress engaged
in a walkout from its legislative responsibilities and the public in revolt
against the mess in Washington, American global leadership is not much in
evidence except on the battlefield, where its results are not impressive.
Diplomacy-free
foreign policy blows up enough things to liven up the TV news but it generates
terrorist blowback and it’s expensive.
There is a direct line of causation between European and American
interventions in the Middle East and the bombings in Boston, Paris, and
Brussels as well as the flood of refugees now inundating Europe. And so far this century, we’ve racked up over
$6 trillion in outlays and future financial obligations in wars that fail to
achieve much, if anything, other than breeding anti-American terrorists with
global reach.
We borrowed the
money to conduct these military activities abroad at the expense of investing
in our homeland. What we have to show
for staggering additions to our national debt is falling living standards for
all but the “one percent,” a shrinking middle class, a rising fear of
terrorism, rotting infrastructure, unattended forest fires, and eroding civil
liberties. Yet, with the notable
exception of Bernie Sanders, every major party candidate for president promises
not just to continue -- but to double down on -- the policies that produced
this mess.
Small wonder
that both U.S. allies and adversaries now consider the United States the most
erratic and unpredictable element in the current world disorder. You can’t retain the respect of either
citizens or foreigners when you refuse to learn from experience. You can’t lead when no one, including you
yourself, knows what you’re up to or why.
You won’t have the respect of allies and they won’t follow you if, as in
the case of Iraq, you insist that they join you in entering an obvious ambush
on the basis of falsified intelligence.
You can’t retain the loyalty of protégés and partners when you abandon
them when they’re in trouble, as we did with Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak. You can’t continue to control the global
monetary system when, as in the case of the IMF and World Bank, you renege on
promises to reform and fund them.
And you can’t
expect to accomplish much by launching wars and then asking your military
commanders to figure out what their objectives should be, and what might
constitute sufficient success to make peace.
But that’s what we’ve been doing.
Our generals and admirals have long been taught that they are to
implement, not make policy. But what if
the civilian leadership is clueless or deluded?
What if there is no feasible policy objective attached to military
campaigns?
We went into
Afghanistan to take out the perpetrators of 9/11 and punish the Taliban regime
that had sheltered them. We did that,
but we’re still there. Why? Because we can be? To promote girls’ education? Against Islamic government? To protect the world’s heroin supply? No one can provide a clear answer.
We went into
Iraq to ensure that weapons of mass destruction that did not exist did not fall
into the hands of terrorists who did not exist until our arrival created
them. We’re still there. Why?
Is it to ensure the rule of the Sh`ia majority in Iraq? To secure Iraq for Iranian influence? To divide Iraq between Kurds and Sunni and
Sh`ia Arabs? To protect China’s access
to Iraqi oil? To combat the terrorists
our presence creates? Or what? No one can provide a clear answer.
Amidst this
inexcusable confusion, our Congress now routinely asks combatant commanders to
make policy recommendations independent of those proposed by their civilian
commander-in-chief or the secretary of state.
Our generals not only provide such advice; they openly advocate actions
in places like Ukraine and the South China Sea that undercut White House
guidance while appeasing hawkish congressional opinion. We must add the erosion of civilian control
of the military to the lengthening list of constitutional crises our imperial
adventurism is brewing up. In a land of
bewildered civilians, the military offer can-do attitudes and discipline that
are comparatively appealing. But
American militarism now has a well-attested record of failure to deliver
anything but escalating violence and debt.
This brings me
to the sources of civilian incompetence.
As President Obama recently said, there’s a Washington playbook that
dictates military action as the first response to international
challenges. This is the game we’ve been
playing – and losing – all around the world.
The cause of our misadventures is homemade, not foreign. And it is structural, not a consequence of
the party in power or who’s in the Oval Office.
The evolution of the National Security Council Staff helps understand
why.
The National
Security Council is a cabinet body established in 1947 as the Cold War began to
discuss and coordinate policy as directed by the president. It originally had no staff or policy role
independent of the cabinet. The modern
NSC staff began with President Kennedy.
He wanted a few assistants to help him run a hands-on, activist foreign
policy. So far, so good. But the staff he created has grown over
decades to replace the cabinet as the center of gravity in Washington’s
decisions on foreign affairs. And, as it
has evolved, its main task has become to make sure that foreign relations don’t
get the president in trouble in Washington.
Kennedy’s
initial NSC staff numbered six men, some of whom, like McGeorge Bundy and Walt
Rostow, achieved infamy as the authors of the Vietnam War. Twenty years later, when Ronald Reagan took
office, the NSC staff had grown to around 50.
By the time Barack Obama became president in 2009, it numbered about
370, plus another 230 or so people off the books and on temporary duty, for a
total of around 600. The bloat has not
abated. If anyone knows how many men and
women now man the NSC, he or she is not talking. The NSC staff, like the department of
defense, has never been audited.
What was once a
personal staff for the president has long since become an independent agency
whose official and temporary employees duplicate the subject expertise of
executive branch departments. This
relieves the president of the need to draw on the insights, resources, and
checks and balances of the government as a whole, while enabling the
centralization of power in the White House.
The NSC staff has achieved critical mass. It has become a bureaucracy whose officers
look mainly to each other for affirmation, not to the civil, military, foreign,
or intelligence services.. Their focus
is on protecting or enhancing the president’s domestic political reputation by
trimming foreign policy to the parameters of the Washington bubble. Results abroad are important mainly to the
extent they serve this objective.
From the
National Security Adviser on down, NSC staff members are not confirmed by the
Senate. They are immune from
congressional or public oversight on grounds of executive privilege. Recent cabinet secretaries – especially
secretaries of defense – have consistently complained that NSC staffers no
longer coordinate and monitor policy formulation and implementation but seek to
direct policy and to carry out diplomatic and military policy functions on
their own. This leaves the cabinet
departments to clean up after them as well as cover for them in congressional
testimony. Remember Oliver North, the
Iran-Contra fiasco, and the key-shaped cake?
That episode suggested that the Keystone Cops might have seized control
of our foreign policy. That was a
glimpse of a future that has now arrived.
Size and numbers matter.
Among other things, they foster overspecialization. This creates what the Chinese call the 井底之蛙 [“jĭng dĭ zhī wā”] phenomenon – the narrow vision of a frog at the bottom of a well.
The frog looks up and sees a tiny circle of light that it imagines is
the entire universe outside its habitat.
With so many people now on the NSC staff, there are now a hundred frogs
in a hundred wells, each evaluating what is happening in the world by the
little bit of reality it perceives.
There is no effective process that synergizes a comprehensive
appreciation of trends, events, and their causes from these fragmentary
views.
This
decision-making structure makes strategic reasoning next to impossible. It all
but guarantees that the response to any stimulus will be narrowly
tactical. It focuses the government on
the buzz du jour in Washington, not
what is important to the long-term wellbeing of the United States. And it makes
its decisions mainly by reference to their impact at home, not abroad. Not incidentally, this system also removes
foreign policy from the congressional oversight that the Constitution prescribes. As such, it adds to the rancor in relations
between the executive and legislative branches of the federal establishment.
In many ways
too, the NSC staff has evolved to
resemble the machinery in a planetarium.
It turns this way and that and, to those within its ambit, the heavens
appear to turn with it. But this is an
apparatus that projects illusions.
Inside its event horizon, everything is comfortingly predictable. Outside – who knows? – there may be a
hurricane brewing. This is a system that
creates and implements foreign policies suited to Washington narratives but
detached from external realities, often to the point of delusion, as America’s
misadventures in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Syria illustrate. And the system never admits mistakes. To do so would be a political gaffe, even if
it might be a learning experience.
We have come up
with a hell of a way to run a government, let alone an informal empire
manifested as a sphere of influence. In
case you haven’t noticed, it isn’t effective at either task. At home, the American people feel that they
have been reduced to the status of the chorus in a Greek tragedy. They can see the blind self-destructiveness
of what the actors on the political stage are doing and can moan out loud about
it. But they cannot stop the actors from
proceeding toward their (and our) doom.
Abroad, our
allies watch and are disheartened by what they see. Our client states and partners are
dismayed. Our adversaries are simply
dumbfounded. And our influence is ebbing
away.
Whatever the
cure for our foul mood and foreigners’ doubts about us may be, it is not
spending more money on our armed forces, piling up more debt with military
Keynesianism, or pretending that the world yearns for us to make all its decisions
for it or to be its policeman. But
that’s what almost all our politicians now urge as the cure to our sense that
our nation has lost its groove. Doing
what they propose will not reduce the threat of foreign attack or restore the
domestic tranquility that terrorist blowback has disturbed. It will not rebuild our broken roads, rickety
bridges, or underperforming educational system.
It will not reindustrialize America or modernize our
infrastructure. It will not enable us to
cope with the geo-economic challenge of China, to compete effectively with
Russian diplomacy, or to halt the metastasis of Islamist fanaticism. And it will not eliminate the losses
of international credibility that foolish and poorly executed policies have
incubated. The cause of those losses is
not any weakness on the part of the U.S. military.
Americans will
not regain our national composure and the respect of our allies, friends, and
adversaries abroad until we recognize their interests and perspectives as well
as our own, stop lecturing them about what they need to do, and
concentrate on fixing the shambles we’ve made here at home. There’s a long list of self-destructive
behavior to correct and an equally long list of to-dos before us. Americans need both to focus on getting our
act together domestically and to rediscover diplomacy as an alternative to the
use of force.
Both the
president and the Congress now honor the Constitution ever more in the breach. In our system, money talks to such an extent
that the Supreme Court has equated it to speech. Our politicians are prepared to prostitute
themselves to both domestic and foreign causes for cash.
Policy dialogue
has become tendentiously representative of special interests, uncivil,
uninformed, and inconclusive. American
political campaigns are interminable, uncouth, and full of deliberately
deceptive advertizing. We are showing
the world how great republics and empires die, not how they make sound
decisions or defend spheres of influence.
Spheres of
influence entail liabilities for those who manage them but not necessarily for
the countries they incorporate. Take the
Philippines, for example. Secure in the
American sphere, it did not bother to acquire a navy or an air force before
suddenly – in the mid-1970s – asserting ownership of islands long claimed by
China in the nearby South China Sea and seizing and settling them. China has belatedly reacted. The Philippines still has no air and naval
power to speak of. Now it wants the
United States to return in sufficient force to defend its claims against those
of China. Military confrontations are
us! So we're dutifully doing so.
It’s gratifying
to be wanted. Other than that, what’s in
this for us? A possible American war
with China? Even if such a war were wise,
who would go to war with China with us on behalf of Filipino claims to
worthless sandbars, rocks, and reefs?
Surely it would be better to promote a diplomatic resolution of
competing claims than to help ramp up a military confrontation.
The conflicts
in the South China Sea are first and foremost about the control of territory –
sovereignty over islets and rocks that
generate rights over adjacent seas and seabeds.
Our arguments with China are often described by U.S. officials as about
“freedom of navigation.” If by this they
mean assuring the unobstructed passage of commercial shipping through the area,
the challenge is entirely conjectural.
This sort of freedom of navigation has never been threatened or
compromised there. It is not irrelevant
that its most self-interested champion is China. A plurality of goods in the South China Sea
are in transit to and from Chinese ports or transported in Chinese ships.
But what we
mean by freedom of navigation is the right of the U.S. Navy to continue unilaterally
to police the global commons off Asia, as it has been for seventy years, and
the right of our navy to lurk at China’s twelve-mile limit while preparing and
practicing to cross it in the event of a US-China conflict over Taiwan or some
other casus belli. Not surprisingly, the Chinese object to both
propositions, as we would if the People’s Liberation Army Navy were to attempt
to do the same twelve miles off Block Island or a dozen miles from Pearl
Harbor, Norfolk, or San Diego.
We persist, not
just because China is the current enemy of choice of our military planners and
armaments industry, but because we are determined to perpetuate our unilateral
dominance of the world’s seas. But such
dominance does not reflect current power balances, let alone those of the
future. Unilateral dominance is a possibility
whose time is passing or may already have passed. What is needed now is a turn toward
partnership.
This might
include trying to build a framework for sharing the burdens of assuring freedom
of navigation with China, Japan, the European Union and other major economic
powers who fear its disruption. As the
world’s largest trading nation, about to overtake Greece and Japan as the owner
of the world’s largest shipping fleet, China has more at stake in the
continuation of untrammeled international commerce than any other country. Why not leverage that interest to the
advantage of a recrafted world and Asian-Pacific order that protects our
interests at lower cost and lessened risk of conflict with a nuclear power?
We might try a
little diplomacy elsewhere as well. In
practice, we have aided and abetted those who prefer a Syria in endless,
agonized turmoil to one allied with Iran.
Our policy has consisted of funneling weapons to Syrian and foreign
opponents of the Assad government, some of whom rival our worst enemies in
their fanaticism and savagery. Five
years on, with at least 350,000 dead and over ten million Syrians driven from
their homes, the Assad government has not fallen. Perhaps it’s time to admit that we didn’t
just ignore international law but seriously miscalculated political realities
in our effort to overthrow the Syrian government.
Russia’s deft
empowerment of diplomacy through its recent, limited use of force in Syria has
now opened an apparent path to peace.
Perhaps it’s time to set aside Cold War antipathies and explore that
path. This appears to be what Secretary
of State John Kerry is finally doing with his Russian counterpart, Sergei
Lavrov. Peace in Syria is the key to putting
down Da`esh (the so-called “caliphate” that straddles the vanished border
between Syria and Iraq). Only peace can
end the refugee flows that are destabilizing Europe as well as the Levant. It is good that we seem at last to be
recognizing that bombing and strafing are pointless unless tied to feasible
diplomatic objectives.
There is also
some reason to hope that we may be moving toward greater realism and a more
purposive approach to Ukraine. Ukraine
needs political and economic reform more than it needs weapons and military
training. Only if Ukraine is at peace
with its internal differences can it be secured as a neutral bridge and buffer
between Russia and the rest of Europe.
Demonizing Mr. Putin will not achieve this. Doing so will require embarking on a search
for common ground with Russia.
Unfortunately,
as the moronic Islamophobia that has characterized the so-called debates
between presidential candidates illustrates, there is at present no comparable
trend toward realism in our approach to Muslim terrorism. We need to face up to the fact that U.S.
interventions and other coercive measures have killed as many as two million
Muslims in recent decades. One does not
need an elaborate review of the history of European Christian and Jewish colonialism
in the Middle East or American collusion with both to understand the sources of
Arab rage or the zeal of some Muslims for revenge. Reciprocating Islamist murderousness with our
own is no way to end terrorist violence.
Twenty-two
percent of the world’s people are Muslim.
Allowing bombing campaigns and drone warfare to define our relationship
with them is a recipe for endless terrorist backlash against us. In the Middle East, the United States is now
locked in a death-filled dance with fanatic enemies, ungrateful client states,
alienated allies, and resurgent adversaries.
Terrorists are over here because we are over there. We’d be better off standing down from our
efforts to sort out the problems of the Islamic world. Muslims are more likely to be able to cure
their own ills than we are to do this for them.
The next
administration needs to begin with the realization that unilateralism in the
defense of a global sphere of influence does not and cannot work. The pursuit of partnership with the world
beyond our borders has a much better chance of success. Americans need to bring our ambitions into
balance with our interests and the resources we are prepared to devote to
them.
We need a
peaceful international environment to rebuild our country. To achieve this, we must erase our strategy
deficit. To do that, the next
administration must fix the broken policymaking apparatus in Washington. It must rediscover the merits of measures
short of war, learn how to use military power sparingly to support rather than
supplant diplomacy, and cultivate the habit of asking “and then what?” before
beginning military campaigns.
When he was
asked in 1787 what system he and our other founding fathers had given Americans,
Benjamin Franklin famously replied, "a republic, if you can keep
it." For two centuries, we kept it. Now, if we cannot repair the incivility,
dysfunction, and corruption of our politics, we will lose our republic as well
as our imperium. America's problems were
made in the USA, by Americans, not by refugees, immigrants, or foreigners. They cry out for Americans to fix them.
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