Imperial overreach is accelerating the global decline of America
The disastrous foreign policies of the US have left it more
isolated than ever, and China is standing by to take over
By Martin Jacques
03/28/06 "The
Guardian" -- -- 'Our power, then, has the grave
liability of rendering our theories about the world immune from
failure. But by becoming deaf to easily discerned warning signs,
we may ignore long-term costs that result from our actions and
dismiss reverses that should lead to a re-examination of our
goals and means."
These are the words of Henry Hyde, chairman of the House
international relations committee and a Republican congressman,
in a recent speech. Hyde argues that such is the overweening
power of the US that it may not hear or recognise the signals
when its policy goes badly wrong, a thinly veiled reference to
Iraq. He then takes issue with the idea that the US can export
democracy around the world as deeply misguided and potentially
dangerous. He argues: "A broad and energetic promotion of
democracy in other countries that will not enjoy our long-term
and guiding presence may equate not to peace and stability but
to revolution ... There is no evidence that we or anyone can
guide from afar revolutions we have set in motion. We can more
easily destabilise friends and others and give life to chaos and
to avowed enemies than ensure outcomes in service of our
interests and security."
It is clear that the US occupation of Iraq has been a disaster
from almost every angle one can think of, most of all for the
Iraqi people, not least for American foreign policy. The
unpicking of the imperial logic that led to it has already
commenced: Hyde's speech is an example, and so is Francis
Fukuyama's new book After the Neocons, a merciless critique of
Bush's foreign policy and the school of thought that lay behind
it. The war was a delayed product of the end of the cold war and
the triumphalist mentality that imbued the neocons and
eventually seduced the US. But triumphalism is a dangerous brew,
more suited to intoxication than hard-headed analysis. And so it
has proved. The US still has to reap the whirlwind for its
stunning feat of imperial overreach.
In becoming so catastrophically engaged in the Middle East,
making the region its overwhelming global priority, it
downgraded the importance of everywhere else, taking its eye off
the ball in a crucial region such as east Asia, which in the
long run will be far more important to the US's strategic
interests than the Middle East. As such, the Iraqi adventure
represented a major misreading of global trends and how they are
likely to impact on the US. Hyde is clearly thinking in these
terms: "We are well advanced into an unformed era in which new
and unfamiliar enemies are gathering forces, where a phalanx of
aspiring competitors must inevitably constrain and focus
options. In a world where the ratios of strength narrow, the
consequences of miscalculation will become progressively more
debilitating. The costs of golden theories [by which he means
the worldwide promotion of democracy] will be paid for in the
base coin of our interests."
The promotion of the idea of the war against terror as the
central priority of US policy had little to do with the actual
threat posed by al-Qaida, which was always hugely exaggerated by
the Bush administration, as events over the last four and a half
years have shown. Al-Qaida never posed a threat to the US except
in terms of the odd terrorist outrage. Making it the central
thrust of US foreign policy, in other words, had nothing to do
with the al-Qaida threat and everything to do with the Bush
administration seeking to mobilise US public opinion behind a
neoconservative foreign policy. There followed the tenuous - in
reality nonexistent - link with Saddam, which provided in large
measure the justification for the invasion of Iraq, an act which
now threatens to unravel the bizarre adventurism, personified by
Donald Rumsfeld, which has been the hallmark of Bush foreign
policy since 9/11. The latter has come unstuck in the killing
fields of Iraq in the most profound way imaginable.
Hyde alludes to a new "unformed" world and "a phalanx of
aspiring competitors". On this he is absolutely right. The world
is in the midst of a monumental process of change that, within
the next 10 years or so, could leave the US as only the second
largest economy in the world after China and commanding, with
the rise of China and India, a steadily contracting share of
global output. It will no longer be able to boss the world
around in the fashion of the neoconservative dream: its power to
do so will be constrained by the power of others, notably China,
while it will also find it increasingly difficult to fund the
military and diplomatic costs of being the world's sole
superpower. If the US is already under financial pressure from
its twin deficits and the ballooning costs of Iraq, then imagine
the difficulties it will find itself in within two decades in a
very different kind of world.
Hyde concludes by warning against the delusions of triumphalism
and cautioning that the future should not be seen as an
extension of the present: "A few brief years ago, history was
proclaimed to be at an end, our victory engraved in unyielding
stone, our pre-eminence garlanded with permanence. But we must
remember that Britain's majestic rule vanished in a few short
years, undermined by unforeseen catastrophic events and by new
threats that eventually overwhelmed the palisades of the past.
The life of pre-eminence, as with all life on this planet, has a
mortal end. To allow our enormous power to delude us into seeing
the world as a passive thing waiting for us to recreate it in an
image of our choosing will hasten the day when we have little
freedom to choose anything at all."
That the world will be very different within the next two
decades, if not rather sooner, is clear; yet there is scant
recognition of this fact and what it might mean - not least in
our own increasingly provincial country. The overwhelming
preoccupation of the Bush administration (and Blair for that
matter) with Iraq, the Middle East and Islam, speaks of a
failure to understand the deeper forces that are reshaping the
world and an overriding obsession with realising and exploiting
the US's temporary status as the sole global superpower. Such a
myopic view can only hasten the decline of the US as a global
power, a process that has already started.
The Bush administration stands guilty of an extraordinary act of
imperial overreach which has left the US more internationally
isolated than ever before, seriously stretched financially, and
guilty of neglect in east Asia and elsewhere. Iraq was supposed
to signal the US's new global might: in fact, it may well prove
to be a harbinger of its decline. And that decline could be far
more precipitous than anyone has previously reckoned. Once the
bubble of US power has been pricked, in a global context already
tilting in other directions, it could deflate rather more
quickly than has been imagined. Hyde's warnings should be taken
seriously.
· Martin Jacques is a senior visiting research fellow at the
Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore
Martinjacques@aol.com
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