The Power and
the Glory
Myths of American
exceptionalism
By Howard Zinn
11/24/06 "Boston
Review"
-- -- The notion of American exceptionalism — that the
United States alone has the right, whether by divine
sanction or moral obligation, to bring civilization, or
democracy, or liberty to the rest of the world, by
violence if necessary—is not new. It started as early as
1630 in the Massachusetts Bay Colony when Governor John
Winthrop uttered the words that centuries later would be
quoted by Ronald Reagan. Winthrop called the
Massachusetts Bay Colony a “city upon a hill.” Reagan
embellished a little, calling it a “shining city on a
hill.”
The idea of a city
on a hill is heartwarming. It suggests what George Bush
has spoken of: that the United States is a beacon of
liberty and democracy. People can look to us and learn
from and emulate us.
In reality, we
have never been just a city on a hill. A few years after
Governor Winthrop uttered his famous words, the people
in the city on a hill moved out to massacre the Pequot
Indians. Here’s a description by William Bradford, an
early settler, of Captain John Mason’s attack on a
Pequot village.
Those that escaped the
fire were slain with the sword, some hewed to
pieces, others run through with their rapiers, so as
they were quickly dispatched and very few escaped.
It was conceived that they thus destroyed about 400
at this time. It was a fearful sight to see them
thus frying in the fire and the streams of blood
quenching the same, and horrible was the stink and
scent thereof; but the victory seemed a sweet
sacrifice, and they gave the praise thereof to God,
who had wrought so wonderfully for them, thus to
enclose their enemies in their hands and give them
so speedy a victory over so proud and insulting an
enemy.
The kind of
massacre described by Bradford occurs again and again as
Americans march west to the Pacific and south to the
Gulf of Mexico. (In fact our celebrated war of
liberation, the American Revolution, was disastrous for
the Indians. Colonists had been restrained from
encroaching on the Indian territory by the British and
the boundary set up in their Proclamation of 1763.
American independence wiped out that boundary.)
Expanding into
another territory, occupying that territory, and dealing
harshly with people who resist occupation has been a
persistent fact of American history from the first
settlements to the present day. And this was often
accompanied from very early on with a particular form of
American exceptionalism: the idea that American
expansion is divinely ordained. On the eve of the war
with Mexico in the middle of the 19th century, just
after the United States annexed Texas, the editor and
writer John O’Sullivan coined the famous phrase
“manifest destiny.” He said it was “the fulfillment of
our manifest destiny to overspread the continent
allotted by Providence for the free development of our
yearly multiplying millions.” At the beginning of the
20th century, when the United States invaded the
Philippines, President McKinley said that the decision
to take the Philippines came to him one night when he
got down on his knees and prayed, and God told him to
take the Philippines.
Invoking God has
been a habit for American presidents throughout the
nation’s history, but George W. Bush has made a
specialty of it. For an article in the Israeli newspaper
Ha’aretz, the reporter talked with Palestinian
leaders who had met with Bush. One of them reported that
Bush told him, “God told me to strike at al Qaeda. And I
struck them. And then he instructed me to strike at
Saddam, which I did. And now I am determined to solve
the problem in the Middle East.” It’s hard to know if
the quote is authentic, especially because it is so
literate. But it certainly is consistent with Bush’s
oft-expressed claims. A more credible story comes from a
Bush supporter, Richard Lamb, the president of the
Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern
Baptist Convention, who says that during the election
campaign Bush told him, “I believe God wants me to be
president. But if that doesn’t happen, that’s okay.”
Divine ordination
is a very dangerous idea, especially when combined with
military power (the United States has 10,000 nuclear
weapons, with military bases in a hundred different
countries and warships on every sea). With God’s
approval, you need no human standard of morality. Anyone
today who claims the support of God might be embarrassed
to recall that the Nazi storm troopers had inscribed on
their belts, “Gott mit uns” (“God with us”).
Not every American
leader claimed divine sanction, but the idea persisted
that the United States was uniquely justified in using
its power to expand throughout the world. In 1945, at
the end of World War II, Henry Luce, the owner of a vast
chain of media enterprises—Time, Life,
Fortune—declared that this would be “the
American Century,” that victory in the war gave the
United States the right “to exert upon the world the
full impact of our influence, for such purposes as we
see fit and by such means as we see fit.”
This confident
prophecy was acted out all through the rest of the 20th
century. Almost immediately after World War II the
United States penetrated the oil regions of the Middle
East by special arrangement with Saudi Arabia. It
established military bases in Japan, Korea, the
Philippines, and a number of Pacific islands. In the
next decades it orchestrated right-wing coups in Iran,
Guatemala, and Chile, and gave military aid to various
dictatorships in the Caribbean. In an attempt to
establish a foothold in Southeast Asia it invaded
Vietnam and bombed Laos and Cambodia.
The existence of
the Soviet Union, even with its acquisition of nuclear
weapons, did not block this expansion. In fact, the
exaggerated threat of “world communism” gave the United
States a powerful justification for expanding all over
the globe, and soon it had military bases in a hundred
countries. Presumably, only the United States stood in
the way of the Soviet conquest of the world.
Can we believe
that it was the existence of the Soviet Union that
brought about the aggressive militarism of the United
States? If so, how do we explain all the violent
expansion before 1917? A hundred years before the
Bolshevik Revolution, American armies were annihilating
Indian tribes, clearing the great expanse of the West in
an early example of what we now call “ethnic cleansing.”
And with the continent conquered, the nation began to
look overseas.
On the eve of the
20th century, as American armies moved into Cuba and the
Philippines, American exceptionalism did not always mean
that the United States wanted to go it alone. The nation
was willing—indeed, eager—to join the small group of
Western imperial powers that it would one day supersede.
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge wrote at the time, “The great
nations are rapidly absorbing for their future
expansion, and their present defense all the waste
places of the earth. . . . As one of the great nations
of the world the United States must not fall out of the
line of march.” Surely, the nationalistic spirit in
other countries has often led them to see their
expansion as uniquely moral, but this country has
carried the claim farthest.
American
exceptionalism was never more clearly expressed than by
Secretary of War Elihu Root, who in 1899 declared, “The
American soldier is different from all other soldiers of
all other countries since the world began. He is the
advance guard of liberty and justice, of law and order,
and of peace and happiness.” At the time he was saying
this, American soldiers in the Philippines were starting
a bloodbath which would take the lives of 600,000
Filipinos.
The idea that
America is different because its military actions are
for the benefit of others becomes particularly
persuasive when it is put forth by leaders presumed to
be liberals, orprogressives. For instance, Woodrow
Wilson, always high on the list of “liberal” presidents,
labeled both by scholars and the popular culture as an
“idealist,” was ruthless in his use of military power
against weaker nations. He sent the navy to bombard and
occupy the Mexican port of Vera Cruz in 1914 because the
Mexicans had arrested some American sailors. He sent the
marines into Haiti in 1915, and when the Haitians
resisted, thousands were killed.
The following year
American marines occupied the Dominican Republic. The
occupations of Haiti and the Dominican Republic lasted
many years. And Wilson, who had been elected in 1916
saying, “There is such a thing as a nation being too
proud to fight,” soon sent young Americans into the
slaughterhouse of the European war.
Theodore Roosevelt
was considered a “progressive” and indeed ran for
president on the Progressive Party ticket in 1912. But
he was a lover of war and a supporter of the conquest of
the Philippines—he had congratulated the general who
wiped out a Filipino village of 600 people in 1906. He
had promulgated the 1904 “Roosevelt Corollary” to the
Monroe Doctrine, which justified the occupation of small
countries in the Caribbean as bringing them “stability.”
During the Cold
War, many American “liberals” became caught up in a kind
of hysteria about the Soviet expansion, which was
certainly real in Eastern Europe but was greatly
exaggerated as a threat to western Europe and the United
States. During the period of McCarthyism the Senate’s
quintessential liberal, Hubert Humphrey, proposed
detention camps for suspected subversives who in times
of “national emergency” could be held without trial.
After the
disintegration of the Soviet Union and the end of the
Cold War, terrorism replaced communism as the
justification for expansion. Terrorism was real, but its
threat was magnified to the point of hysteria,
permitting excessive military action abroad and the
curtailment of civil liberties at home.
The idea of
American exceptionalism persisted as the first President
Bush declared, extending Henry Luce’s prediction, that
the nation was about to embark on a “new American
Century.” Though the Soviet Union was gone, the policy
of military intervention abroad did not end. The elder
Bush invaded Panama and then went to war against Iraq.
The terrible
attacks of September 11 gave a new impetus to the idea
that the United States was uniquely responsible for the
security of the world, defending us all against
terrorism as it once did against communism. President
George W. Bush carried the idea of American
exceptionalism to its limits by putting forth in his
national-security strategy the principles of unilateral
war.
This was a
repudiation of the United Nations charter, which is
based on the idea that security is a collective matter,
and that war could only be justified in self-defense. We
might note that the Bush doctrine also violates the
principles laid out at Nuremberg, when Nazi leaders were
convicted and hanged for aggressive war, preventive war,
far from self-defense.
Bush’s
national-security strategy and its bold statement that
the United States is uniquely responsible for peace and
democracy in the world has been shocking to many
Americans.
But it is not
really a dramatic departure from the historical practice
of the United States, which for a long time has acted as
an aggressor, bombing and invading other countries
(Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Grenada, Panama, Iraq) and
insisting on maintaining nuclear and non-nuclear
supremacy. Unilateral military action, under the guise
of prevention, is a familiar part of American foreign
policy.
Sometimes bombings
and invasions have been cloaked as international action
by bringing in the United Nations, as in Korea, or NATO,
as in Serbia, but basically our wars have been American
enterprises. It was Bill Clinton’s secretary of state,
Madeleine Albright, who said at one point, “If possible
we will act in the world multilaterally, but if
necessary, we will act unilaterally.” Henry Kissinger,
hearing this, responded with his customary solemnity
that this principle “should not be universalized.”
Exceptionalism was never clearer.
Some liberals in
this country, opposed to Bush, nevertheless are closer
to his principles on foreign affairs than they want to
acknowledge. It is clear that 9/11 had a powerful
psychological effect on everybody in America, and for
certain liberal intellectuals a kind of hysterical
reaction has distorted their ability to think clearly
about our nation’s role in the world.
In a recent issue
of the liberal magazine The American Prospect, the
editors write, “Today Islamist terrorists with global
reach pose the greatest immediate threat to our lives
and liberties. . . . When facing a substantial,
immediate, and provable threat, the United States has
both the right and the obligation to strike preemptively
and, if need be, unilaterally against terrorists or
states that support them.”
Preemptively and,
if need be, unilaterally; and against “states that
support” terrorists, not just terrorists themselves.
Those are large steps in the direction of the Bush
doctrine, though the editors do qualify their support
for preemption by adding that the threat must be
“substantial, immediate, and provable.” But when
intellectuals endorse abstract principles, even with
qualifications, they need to keep in mind that the
principles will be applied by the people who run the
U.S. government. This is all the more important to keep
in mind when the abstract principle is about the use of
violence by the state—in fact, about preemptively
initiating the use of violence.
There may be an
acceptable case for initiating military action in the
face of an immediate threat, but only if the action is
limited and focused directly on the threatening
party—just as we might accept the squelching of someone
falsely shouting “fire” in a crowded theater if that
really were the situation and not some guy distributing
anti-war leaflets on the street. But accepting action
not just against “terrorists” (can we identify them as
we do the person shouting “fire”?) but against “states
that support them” invites unfocused and indiscriminate
violence, as in Afghanistan, where our government killed
at least 3,000 civilians in a claimed pursuit of
terrorists.
It seems that the
idea of American exceptionalism is pervasive across the
political spectrum.
The idea is not
challenged because the history of American expansion in
the world is not a history that is taught very much in
our educational system. A couple of years ago Bush
addressed the Philippine National Assembly and said,
“America is proud of its part in the great story of the
Filipino people. Together our soldiers liberated the
Philippines from colonial rule.” The president
apparently never learned the story of the bloody
conquest of the Philippines.
And last year,
when the Mexican ambassador to the UN said something
undiplomatic about how the United States has been
treating Mexico as its “backyard” he was immediately
reprimanded by then–Secretary of State Colin Powell.
Powell, denying the accusation, said, “We have too much
of a history that we have gone through together.” (Had
he not learned about the Mexican War or the military
forays into Mexico?) The ambassador was soon removed
from his post.
The major
newspapers, television news shows, and radio talk shows
appear not to know history, or prefer to forget it.
There was an outpouring of praise for Bush’s second
inaugural speech in the press, including the so-called
liberal press (The Washington Post, The New
York Times). The editorial writers eagerly embraced
Bush’s words about spreading liberty in the world, as if
they were ignorant of the history of such claims, as if
the past two years’ worth of news from Iraq were
meaningless.
Only a couple of
days before Bush uttered those words about spreading
liberty in the world, The New York Times
published a photo of a crouching, bleeding Iraqi girl.
She was screaming. Her parents, taking her somewhere in
their car, had just been shot to death by nervous
American soldiers.
One of the
consequences of American exceptionalism is that the U.S.
government considers itself exempt from legal and moral
standards accepted by other nations in the world. There
is a long list of such self-exemptions: the refusal to
sign the Kyoto Treaty regulating the pollution of the
environment, the refusal to strengthen the convention on
biological weapons. The United States has failed to join
the hundred-plus nations that have agreed to ban land
mines, in spite of the appalling statistics about
amputations performed on children mutilated by those
mines. It refuses to ban the use of napalm and cluster
bombs. It insists that it must not be subject, as are
other countries, to the jurisdiction of the
International Criminal Court.
What is the answer
to the insistence on American exceptionalism? Those of
us in the United States and in the world who do not
accept it must declare forcibly that the ethical norms
concerning peace and human rights should be observed. It
should be understood that the children of Iraq, of
China, and of Africa, children everywhere in the world,
have the same right to life as American children.
These are
fundamental moral principles. If our government doesn’t
uphold them, the citizenry must. At certain times in
recent history, imperial powers—the British in India and
East Africa, the Belgians in the Congo, the French in
Algeria, the Dutch and French in Southeast Asia, the
Portuguese in Angola—have reluctantly surrendered their
possessions and swallowed their pride when they were
forced to by massive resistance.
Fortunately, there
are people all over the world who believe that human
beings everywhere deserve the same rights to life and
liberty. On February 15, 2003, on the eve of the
invasion of Iraq, more than ten million people in more
than 60 countries around the world demonstrated against
that war.
There is a growing
refusal to accept U.S. domination and the idea of
American exceptionalism. Recently, when the State
Department issued its annual report listing countries
guilty of torture and other human-rights abuses, there
were indignant responses from around the world
commenting on the absence of the United States from that
list. A Turkish newspaper said, “There’s not even
mention of the incidents in Abu Ghraib prison, no
mention of Guantánamo.” A newspaper in Sydney pointed
out that the United States sends suspects—people who
have not been tried or found guilty of anything—to
prisons in Morocco, Egypt, Libya, and Uzbekistan,
countries that the State Department itself says use
torture.
Here in the United
States, despite the media’s failure to report it, there
is a growing resistance to the war in Iraq.
Public-opinion polls show that at least half the
citizenry no longer believe in the war. Perhaps most
significant is that among the armed forces, and families
of those in the armed forces, there is more and more
opposition to it.
After the horrors
of the first World War, Albert Einstein said, “Wars will
stop when men refuse to fight.” We are now seeing the
refusal of soldiers to fight, the refusal of families to
let their loved ones go to war, the insistence of the
parents of high-school kids that recruiters stay away
from their schools. These incidents, occurring more and
more frequently, may finally, as happened in the case of
Vietnam, make it impossible for the government to
continue the war, and it will come to an end.
The true heroes of
our history are those Americans who refused to accept
that we have a special claim to morality and the right
to exert our force on the rest of the world. I think of
William Lloyd Garrison, the abolitionist. On the
masthead of his antislavery newspaper, The Liberator,
were the words, “My country is the world. My countrymen
are mankind.”
<
Howard Zinn,
the author of A People's History of the United
States, is a historian and playwright. His essay
is adapted from a lecture he gave for MIT's Special
Program for Urban and Regional Studies.
Copyright Boston Review
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