“The True Flag” and Wars of
Choice
Remarks to a Committee for the Republic Salon with Stephen
Kinzer
Ambassador Chas W. Freeman, Jr. (USFS, Ret.)
Senior Fellow, the Watson Institute for International and
Public Affairs, Brown University
October 26, 2017, Washington, D.C.
I’m Chas
Freeman. I chair the loose,
transpartisan coalition known as the Committee for the Republic. I want to welcome our members – especially
the contributors who sponsor these salons and make it possible for us to air
important issues that would otherwise go publicly unaddressed.
A very warm
welcome too to Stephen Kinzer. Stephen,
we are honored to have you back as our speaker at this evening’s
discussion. Your stalwart opposition to
the promiscuous interventionism that has replaced diplomacy in America’s
management of its foreign relations is directly relevant to the purposes of the
Committee for the Republic.
As you probably
know, the Committee came into being in 2003, when many here tonight worried
about how the American lurch into ill-defined wars in the Middle East might
damage the civil liberties and traditions of our republic. Sadly, these
concerns have proved justified, and, despite widening popular discomfort with
the state of the nation, things seem to be getting worse rather than
better. We Americans have come to accept
perpetual warfare as the norm for our society.
We now regard the “big government” and enormous national debt needed to
make constant war on other peoples and care for our own fallen warriors as
inescapable burdens on our body politic.
In military
affairs, for Americans, more is always better.
We have acquired a vested interest in big armies, big navies, big air
forces, big armaments industries, and big talk about how we will destroy
recalcitrant foreign societies. And
despite the clear language of our Constitution, we have stood ineffectually by
as Congress has yielded its power to authorize wars of choice to the Executive. The current, apparently limitless authority
of the president to launch wars at will, including nuclear wars, negates the
most distinctive and revolutionary element of our system of government: – the
decision to entrust the power to start wars exclusively to Congress.
The reason the
founders thought the Executive did not deserve such power is the focus of our
vice chair, John Henry’s latest, wittiest, and most entertaining play, The Republic for which We Stand. The play, which debuted to rave reviews in
Virginia, will be performed by members of the Committee – you know who you are
– in the Congressional Auditorium at the United States Capitol Visitors Center
on November 7. There, at 6:30 pm, the
Committee for the Republic will confer Defender of Liberty awards on a heroic
member or two of Congress for upholding congressional prerogatives with respect
to the war power. The play will begin at
7 pm. Have a look at the details on the
Committee’s website. I urge you to call
the play to the attention of your representatives in Congress. If they show up, they will enjoy some pretty
good slapstick while being reminded of the responsibilities the American people
have entrusted to them.
That’s 6:30 on
Tuesday, November 7, at the Congressional Auditorium of the Capitol Visitors
Center.
In our
republic, the President of the United States swears an oath to the Constitution
before delivering an inaugural address.
Based on some of what President Trump said during his campaign, I and
others had hoped we might hear something like this from him last January 20:
“I pledge to the American people that, as
your president and the commander-in-chief of your armed forces, I shall
vigorously defend the United States of America against any attack, but I will
initiate no war except upon a vote in Congress declaring it, defining its objectives,
and funding it, as required by our Constitution, which reserves the right to
authorize wars of choice to the Congress alone.
I have inherited multiple wars from my predecessors that were not so
authorized. I intend to submit these
wars, one-by-one, to Congress for consideration and an up-or-down vote. I will take the failure of Congress to
declare these wars as a mandate to end them on the best terms and as
expeditiously as possible.”
That is not
what we heard. If the president cannot
bring himself to say such words, we must look to the Congress to muster the
courage to assert its powers under the Constitution.
There is now
apparent concern about the currently unconstrained power of the president to
launch a nuclear attack on other nations at will. The answer to this and related anxieties is
to take steps to implement the Constitution.
We should clarify in legislation that any order by the president to our
military directing a non-retaliatory attack on another nation that has not been
explicitly approved by Congress is both illegal and an impeachable
offense. We should return to respect for
our founders’ carefully considered framework for decisions about war and
peace. My hope is that members of
Congress will yet form a bipartisan caucus devoted to promoting the
constitutional exercise of the war power.
All this is
very germane to the subject of this evening’s salon: Stephen Kinzer’s latest
book.
No one has been
more eloquent than Stephen, my friend and colleague at Brown’s Watson Institute
for International and Public Affairs, in making the case against a shoot-first,
think-later approach to foreign affairs.
Stephen, in your numerous op-eds and books, you have helped us
understand how self-adulation and self-righteousness can lead us to compromise
our ideals while wounding our national interests.
Ladies and
gentlemen, Stephen Kinzer’s new book, The
True Flag: Theodore Roosevelt, Mark Twain, and the Birth of American Empire,
wipes away a lot of national amnesia. It
shows how, at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century,
Americans earnestly debated whether to take Manifest Destiny global, thereby
contradicting the anti-imperialist principles on which our nation had been
founded. Our decision to do so continues
to influence our fate. The True Flag is at once a great read, a
delightful reminder of past American eloquence on issues central to our
national purposes and identity, and a reminder that populist nationalism can
sometimes overwhelm common sense.
In the opening
years of the twenty-first century we Americans have again made fateful
decisions about our role in the world.
We have chosen to go all out in
defense of the crumbling status quo, that is: the global military primacy
created by our past imperial belligerence.
But this time we have made our decisions without notable public debate
or discussion. The True Flag inspires us to do
better than that, while offering a cautionary tale about the consequences
of failing to do so.
Stephen, in addition
to telling us how – against our better judgment – we became an imperial power,
I hope you will give us your thoughts on what implications that has for our
present and future health as a nation.
Is there any reason to expect that we will be capable of breaking free
of our past?
The podium is
yours.
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