Time To Exit
The Empire
Game
By Patrick
J. Buchanan
25/07/08 "WND"
-- - - As
any military
historian
will
testify,
among the
most
difficult of
maneuvers is
the
strategic
retreat.
Napoleon's
retreat from
Moscow,
Lee's
retreat to
Appomattox
and
MacArthur's
retreat from
the Yalu
come to
mind. The
British
Empire
abandoned
India in
1947 – and a
Muslim-Hindu
bloodbath
ensued.
France's
departure
from
Indochina
was
ignominious,
and her
abandonment
of hundreds
of thousands
of faithful
Algerians to
the FALN
disgraceful.
Few American
can forget
the
humiliation
of Saigon
'75, or the
boat people,
or the
Cambodian
holocaust.
Strategic
retreats
that turn
into routs
are often
the result
of what Lord
Salisbury
called "the
commonest
error in
politics ...
sticking to
the carcass
of dead
policies."
From 1989 to
1991, with
the collapse
of the
Soviet
Empire and
breakup of
the USSR,
America had
an
opportunity
to lay down
its global
burden and
become again
what Jeane
Kirkpatrick
called "a
normal
country in a
normal
time."
We let the
opportunity
pass by,
opting
instead to
use our
wealth and
power to
convert the
world to
democratic
capitalism.
And we have
reaped the
reward of
all the
other
empires that
went before:
a sinking
currency,
relative
decline,
universal
enmity, a
series of
what Rudyard
Kipling
called "the
savage wars
of peace."
Yet,
opportunity
has come
anew for
America to
shed its
imperial
burden and
become again
the republic
of our
fathers.
The chairman
of Chiang
Kai-shek's
Kuomintang
Party has
just been
hosted for
six days by
Beijing.
Commercial
flights have
begun
between
Taipei and
the
mainland. Is
not the time
ripe for
America to
declare our
job done,
that the
relationship
between
China and
Taiwan is no
longer a
vital
interest of
the United
States?
Prime
Minister
Nouri al-Maliki's
government
wants a
status of
forces
agreement
with a
timetable
for full
withdrawal
of U.S.
troops. Is
it not time
to say yes,
to declare
that full
withdrawal
is our goal
as well,
that the
United
States seeks
no permanent
bases in
Iraq?
On July 4,
Reuters, in
a story
headlined
"Poland
rejects U.S.
missile
offer,"
reported
from Warsaw:
"Poland
spurned as
insufficient
on Friday a
U.S. offer
to boost its
air defenses
in return
for basing
anti-missile
interceptors
on its soil.
...
"'We have
not reached
a
satisfactory
result on
the issue of
increasing
the level of
Polish
security,'
Prime
Minister
Donald Tusk
told a news
conference
after
studying the
latest U.S.
proposal."
Tusk is
demanding
that America
"provide
billions of
dollars
worth of
U.S.
investment
to upgrade
Polish air
defenses in
return for
hosting 10
two-stage
missile
interceptors,"
said
Reuters.
Reflect if
you will on
what is
going on
here.
By bringing
Poland into
NATO, we
agreed to
defend her
against the
world's
largest
nation,
Russia, with
thousands of
nuclear
weapons.
Now, the
Polish
regime is
refusing us
permission
to site 10
anti-missile
missiles on
Polish soil,
unless we
pay Poland
billions for
the
privilege.
Has Uncle
Sam gone
senile?
No. Tusk has
Sam figured
out. The old
boy is so
desperate to
continue in
his Cold War
role as
world's
Defender of
Democracy he
will even
pay the
Europeans –
to defend
Europe.
Why not tell
Tusk that if
he wants an
air defense
system, he
can buy it;
that we
Americans
are no
longer
willing to
pay Poland
for the
privilege of
defending
Poland; that
the
anti-missile
missile deal
is off. And
use
cancellation
of the
missile
shield to
repair
relations
with a far
larger and
more
important
power,
Vladimir
Putin's
Russia.
Consider,
too, the
opening
South Korea
is giving us
to end our
60-year
commitment
to defend
her against
the North.
For weeks,
Seoul hosted
anti-American
protests
against a
trade deal
that allows
U.S. beef
into South
Korea.
Koreans say
they fear
mad-cow
disease.
Yet, when a
new deal was
cut to limit
imports to
U.S. beef
from cattle
less than 30
months old,
that too was
rejected by
the
protesters.
Behind the
demonstrations
lies a
sentiment of
anti-Americanism.
In 2002, a
Pew Research
Center
survey of 42
nations
found 44
percent of
South
Koreans,
second
highest
number of
any country,
holding an
unfavorable
view of the
United
States. A
Korean
survey put
the figure
at 53
percent,
with 80
percent of
youth
holding a
negative
view. By 39
percent to
35 percent,
South
Koreans saw
the United
States as a
greater
threat than
North Korea.
Can someone
explain why
we keep
30,000
troops on
the DMZ of a
nation whose
people do
not even
like us?
The raison
d'etre for
NATO was the
Red Army on
the Elbe. It
disappeared
two decades
ago. The
Chinese army
left North
Korea 50
years ago.
Yet NATO
endures and
the U.S.
Army stands
on the DMZ.
Why?
Because, if
all U.S.
troops were
brought home
from Europe
and Korea,
10,000 rice
bowls would
be broken.
They are the
rice bowls
of
politicians,
diplomats,
generals,
journalists
and think
tanks who
would all
have to find
another line
of work.
And that is
why the
Empire will
endure until
disaster
befalls it,
as it did
all the
others.
Pat Buchanan
was twice a
candidate
for the
Republican
presidential
nomination
and the
Reform
Party's
candidate in
2000. He is
also a
founder and
editor of
The American
Conservative.
Now a
political
analyst for
MSNBC and a
syndicated
columnist,
he served
three
presidents
in the White
House, was a
founding
panelist of
three
national TV
shows, and
is the
author of
seven books.
