.

Battling
for the soul of the American republic
By Ahmad Faruqui
04/30/03: (Asia Times) As the battle for Baghdad comes to a close in
Iraq, a battle for the soul of the American republic has begun in
Washington. This is a battle of ideas being waged by people with an
imperial concept of American power, or "flag conservatives",
with a diverse coalition of other groups. The flag conservatives have
taken the view that America needs to fight a long war of self defense
until the last one of the cold-blooded killers of September 11 has
been hunted down and killed and until all regimes in the "axis of
evil" - Iraq, Iran and North Korea - have been changed.
The opposing coalition does not support such an imperial expression of
power. The opposing coalition counters that an imperial war will erase
the very freedoms domestically that the US seeks to project
internationally. This coalition spans the ideological spectrum, and
includes conservatives such as Pat Buchanan, libertarians such as Ted
Galen Carpenter of the Cato Institute and Jacob Hornberger of the
Future of Freedom Foundation, mainstream democrats and the various
groups who were active in the no-war movement.
This battle will intensify in the runup to the 2004 presidential
election. The first shots have already been fired by some of those who
are seeking the Democratic Party's presidential nomination. For
example, Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts began to call for regime
change in Washington while the war was under way, drawing considerable
flak from the proponents of war. Similarly, Governor Howard Dean of
Vermont made the anti-war issue a primary topic of his speech at the
recent Democratic Party convention in Sacramento, and came in for
sharp rebukes from the other side.
The "flag conservatives" are exultant since their
long-standing objective of gaining mastery of the Middle East appears
within reach. As discussed later in this article, Defense Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz first articulated this viewpoint shortly after the
first Gulf war in 1991. Facilitated by the tragic terrorist attacks of
September 11, the first campaign of the "war against
terrorism" took place against the ragtag army of the Taliban,
whose strength did not exceed 40,000. The regime in Kabul, which
boasted that it would not be crushed as easily as the Palestinians in
the West Bank and Gaza, collapsed within two months.
The second campaign, which became the second Gulf War, took place
against the woefully underfed, under-equipped and demoralized army of
Saddam Hussein, whose famed Republican Guard simply became a mirage in
the Iraqi desert once hostilities commenced. The Ba'ath regime in
Baghdad, which had boasted that it was far stronger than the Taliban
and would turn Iraq into a graveyard of the invading armies, collapsed
within a month.
While temporarily restrained by global public opinion, the war machine
being directed by the flag conservatives threatens to branch out
toward the east and the west from Iraq, with campaigns directed at
effecting regime change in Damascus and Teheran. In the
not-too-distant future, campaigns may be directed at effecting regime
change in Riyadh and Cairo. There are even rumblings of change in
Islamabad, since Pakistan is the only Muslim country with nuclear
weapons and ballistic missiles, and it is widely alleged to be
supporting terrorism in India.
Anyone who doubts this grim forecast need only consult the
"National Security Strategy of the United States of
America", published last November by the White House. It commits
the US to supporting "moderate and modern government, especially
in the Muslim world, to ensure that the conditions and ideologies that
promote terrorism do not find fertile ground in any nation".
Having both the intent and the capability to make war, the Bush
administration has sent a clear message to Muslim governments
throughout the world. If they do not comply with US dictates, they
will be forced out of power, and their leaders either killed or
captured without even the pretense of due process.
Richard Perle, a key architect of the drive to topple Saddam, has
declared that the war will not stop with Iraq, "We shall continue
to fight against countries who harbor and develop weapons of mass
destruction." He ruled out any United Nations role in the new
war, since the Security Council "was created to manage classic
crises such as Germany invading France with divisions of Panzer tanks.
This institution is incapable of dealing with the toughest problems of
our time such as ... terrorism or proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction".
Today, the global military presence of the US encompasses more than
1,000 bases in nearly 100 countries. This number includes "ghost
bases" which are not staffed with US personnel but are important
repositories of military hardware and supplies that can be tapped on a
moment's notice. These bases, like the forts of imperial Rome, are a
perceptible indicator of Washington's ability to force a regime change
when it chooses and where it chooses. Some have argued that the bases
are primarily intended to convey a political message to countries in
their neighborhood and to cultivate "relationships" with the
host countries. Sometimes, the existence of the bases is kept a secret
from the population of the host country.
The flag conservatives have sold the long war to the American people
as a necessary war of self defense. Vice President Dick Cheney has
said that the world before September 11 looks different than the world
after September 11, "especially in terms of how we think about
national security and what's needed to defend America. Every
significant threat to our country requires the most careful,
deliberate and decisive response by America and our allies."
Roger Morris, who was on the staff of the National Security Council
under presidents Richard Nixon and Lyndon Johnson, notes that
President George W Bush waged war on Iraq by asserting that Iraq posed
a clear and present danger to peace. Morris says that war was waged,
even though the danger was neither clear to Iraq's Arab neighbors nor
to the rest of the world; nor was it present in a one- to five- year
time frame. By unilaterally attacking Iraq, the president "erased
long-recognized limits on the right of any nation to attack
another".
Furthermore, the president's writ went unchallenged on Capitol Hill,
which was as Morris said, "another sign that any internal
democratic restraint on the president's war-making was a dead
letter". Morris noted that the terrorist attacks of September 11
transformed the president's image from being the butt of satire to
that of a commanding leader in the mold of Winston Churchill: "Mr
Bush took on his own reconstruction with earnest determination, even
gusto, finding his yet undefined political destiny in an expansively
defined war of terror."
Norman Mailer, one of America's leading men of letters, says that the
war has gratified the need of the flag conservatives to avenge
September 11. He argues that it is of no consequence that Iraq was not
the culprit for September 11, and Bush proved that he would not let
the lack of evidence get in the way of implementing his grand vision:
September 11 was evil; Saddam is evil; all evil is connected. Ergo,
Iraq. Bush has also promised the American people a bonus from the war,
which will begin to accrue once democracy and free markets permeate
the Arab world.
The casus belli
American scholars such as Yale's Paul Kennedy and Harvard's Joseph Nye
have argued that this long war, based on "hard" military
power, is not going to serve the vital interests of the US. So why is
it being waged? At least four reasons suggest themselves.
First, after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, a
special interest group in this country found itself marooned from
reality. Its raison d'etre had disappeared. President Dwight D
Eisenhower was the first man to suggest the existence of this special
interest group, and he dubbed it the military-industrial complex.
Being a former military man, he knew better than most the tenacity of
this complex. As the Cold War came to a close with the fall of the
Berlin Wall, members of this complex were seriously concerned that any
"peace dividend" would drive them out of business. The
"evil empire" of the Soviet Union had provided an eminent
rationale for continued US military spending, and a new enemy had to
be found quickly. After a process of trial and error, this enemy
appeared in the face of militant Islam.
Second, the state of Israel was gripped with insecurity flowing
from its 30-year occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. It retreated
from Lebanon and now faced an increasingly belligerent second intifada
in the Occupied Territories that had begun to intrude into Israel.
Israel turned to its patrons in Washington for assistance, using the
ethnic ties of its leaders to the leaders of the neoconservative
movement in the Republican Party. In the views of Mailer, Bush regards
the protection of Israel as obligatory for strategic reasons having to
do with his re-election in 2004, but also because of tactical military
reasons. Israel's Mossad has the finest intelligence service in the
Middle East at a time when there was a paucity of Arab spies in its
American counterpart. Mailer argues that by threatening to go to war
against any Arab country that poses a threat to Israel, the president
can also satisfy the more serious polemical needs of a great many
neoconservatives in his administration who believe "Islam will
yet be Hitler redux to Israel".
Third, US dependence on imported oil, especially from the
Middle East, has continued to grow as Americans, having few incentives
to invest in energy efficiency, continue to buy increasingly larger
and heavier sports utility vehicles typified by the Hummer, a civilian
variant of the army's Humvee. The US accounts for a quarter of the
world's oil consumption, and is forced to import more than half of its
requirements. Much of this comes from the Persian Gulf, and this
dependency is likely to grow over time as domestic production dries
up. The surest way for the US to sustain its overwhelming dependence
on oil is to control 67 percent of the world's proven oil reserves
that lie in the Gulf.
Fourth, and most importantly, a small group of people began to
argue for the virtual American takeover of the globe within a year
after the collapse of the Soviet Union. As mentioned in the beginning
of this article, the leading exponent of this position was Wolfowitz,
at the time a little-known defense under-secretary for policy
reporting to Cheney, then defense secretary. Wolfowitz drafted a
document that envisioned the US as "a Colossus astride the world,
imposing its will and keeping world peace through military and
economic power". Not in so many words, he called for the
establishment of Pax Americana. The proposal drew so much criticism
that it was withdrawn hastily and repudiated by then-president George
H W Bush. The document was re-issued in the fall of 2000 during the
presidential election campaign. It laid out in plain English a game
plan and script for the Americanization of the globe under an
ambitious rubric, the Project for a New American Century (PNAC). PNAC,
which described US armed forces abroad as "the cavalry on the new
American frontier", became US foreign policy after September 11.
En masse regime change in the Middle East
Norman Podhoretz, the godfather of the neoconservatives, has called
for en masse regime change in the Middle East. Podhoretz's list of the
"axis of evil" goes beyond the three countries cited by Bush
in his January 2002 State of the Union speech, and includes Egypt,
Lebanon, Libya, the Palestinian Authority, Saudi Arabia and Syria. He
wants the US to unilaterally overthrow these regimes in the Arab world
and replace them with democracies cast in the mold of US presidents
Thomas Jefferson and Woodrow Wilson.
But what the neoconservatives seek is not just a political
transformation of the Middle East. Their end game is to bring about
"the long-overdue internal reform and modernization of
Islam". These ideologues are fundamentally confrontational in
nature. They recognize that American military intervention in the
Middle East will provoke terrorist attacks on Americans, both at home
and abroad. They welcome such attacks, as they would provide the US
with the pretext for even stronger military intervention.
Neoconservatives believe that the US will emerge triumphant in the
end, provided that it shows the will to fight the war against militant
Islam to a successful conclusion, and provided too, that it has
"the stomach to impose a new political culture on the defeated
parties". All of these policies suggest that the neoconservatives
believe they have liberated the US from the constraints of history in
a post-September 11 world.
Contrarians in the true sense of the word, the neoconservatives pride
themselves on being politically incorrect. Rich Lowry, editor of
National Review, provides a particularly horrific example on the
magazine's web site. He argues that if terrorists from Muslim
countries detonate a "dirty bomb" in the US, the US should
launch a nuclear attack on Mecca, Saudi Arabia. Lowry justifies this
outrageous proposal by portraying it as a deterrent to terrorist
attacks, believing that Muslim militants would not want to risk the
destruction of their holiest shrine.
Professor Elliot Cohen is the most influential neoconservative in
academe. From his perch at Johns Hopkins, Cohen refers to the war
against terrorism by a chilling name: World War IV (citing the Cold
War as the third world war). His viewpoint is diametrically opposed to
that of the distinguished historian of war, Sir Michael Howard, who
has cautioned that the fight against terrorism is not even a war, let
alone a world war. Cohen claims that America is on the good side in
this war, just like it has been in all prior world wars, and the enemy
is militant Islam, not some abstract concept of "terrorism".
Cohen argues that the US should throw its weight behind pro-Western
and anticlerical forces in the Muslim world, beginning with the
overthrow of the theocratic state in Iran and its replacement by a
"moderate or secular" government. After September 11 he was
one of the first neoconservatives to call for an attack on Iraq, even
though there was no credible evidence linking Iraq with the attacks on
the US or al-Qaeda.
A few months prior to the invasion of Iraq, the neoconservatives
launched a bipartisan Committee for the Liberation of Iraq with much
fanfare. One of its prominent members is the 81-year old George
Schultz, a fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford. Schultz
served as secretary of state in the Ronald Reagan administration and
treasury secretary in the Richard Nixon administration. Several key
members of the Bush administration have worked for him - including
Cheney, Paul O'Neill (the former treasury secretary) and Rumsfeld -
while Secretary of State Colin Powell worked at the National Security
Council when Schultz was secretary of state. Schultz began to call
Saddam a menace to peace for months prior to the war, and forecasted
that the US would attack Iraq by the end of January. His words
confirmed the suspicion of many that the Bush administration merely
wanted to use UN Resolution 1441 as a cover to attack Iraq.
For Bush, overthrowing Saddam served a political, ideological and
personal agenda. Politically, Saddam was the best available substitute
for the unlocatable Osama bin Laden - and even if the US could not
find Saddam, it could at least depose him and say, "Saddam can no
longer threaten us with his weapons of mass destruction."
Ideologically, this long war and the doctrine of preemption express
the militarism, unilateralism and fear of international institutions
that characterize much of the Republican power base in the American
south and the mountain states.
Conventional wisdom had argued that a US attack on Saddam would fuel
popular uprising against other Arab governments. But the
neoconservatives turned this argument on its head. Regime change in
Baghdad could stimulate regime change elsewhere in the region, and
that would be all for the good. Victor Davis Hanson, professor of
classics at California State University, Fresno and an advisor to Bush
noted, "Baghdad for the Bush administration was never the end. It
was the beginning. And that's why it's such a controversial move
because it threatens every idea of stability, every idea of normality,
every idea of who's friendly and who's not in the entire post-war
world. It's the most revolutionary event, I think, in our times. At
least, it rivals the change in the map in eastern Europe."
The original imperialists
As we begin the 21st century, are we witnessing a re-enactment of the
20th century? The ideas of World War I British imperialists such as
Mark Sykes and Leo Amery bear an uncanny resemblance to those of
today's American neoconservatives. As Yale historian Paul Kennedy puts
it, they "wanted to diminish French, Russian and German influence
in the region. They sought secure access to Middle East oil, and to
sites for staging posts and air bases. They also believed that British
genius could reconcile Arab and Jewish interests in Palestine. All
this turned out to be a romantic delusion".
Baghdad experienced its first "liberation" in 1917. The
liberator was Lieutenant-General Sir Stanley Maude. The Mesopotamian
provinces of Baghdad and Basra were the first to be liberated by the
British from the Ottoman Empire. Palestine was next, followed by Syria
and Lebanon. In a few years, the Arabs were rioting in Palestine and
rebelling in Iraq.
An uprising of more than 100,000 armed tribesmen against the British
occupation swept through Iraq in the summer of 1920. Air Commodore
Arthur Harris, reacting to the Palestinian revolt, declared, "The
only thing the Arab understands is the heavy hand, and sooner or later
it will have to be applied." The Royal Air Force was brought into
action, and thwarted the rebellion by killing nearly 9,000 Iraqis. But
there was great concern in Westminster, since the operation had cost
more than the entire British-funded Arab uprising against the Ottoman
Empire in 1917-18. Then-secretary of state for war and air Winston
Churchill suggested the use of chemical weapons against
"recalcitrant Arabs as an experiment". Specifically, he
suggested the use of poisoned gas against uncivilized tribes "to
spread a lively terror".
All of this came at a bad time. The economy of the British Empire was
collapsing and the Crown's time, energy and resources were needed to
revive it. An exasperated Churchill told His Majesty's government that
it was spending millions for the privilege of sitting atop a volcano.
Lamenting on the British experience in Palestine, the "last
lion" was to write, "At first, the steps were wide and
shallow, covered with a carpet, but in the end the very stones
crumbled under their feet."
Much has changed during the past century. A former colony across the
Atlantic has eclipsed Great Britain, and is the new home to an empire
on which the sun never sets. The armies of the new empire have invaded
Baghdad, with the armies of the old empire in tow in Basra, bearing
this time the gift of democracy.
The tactics of liberation have changed as the empires have changed
places, but the objectives remain the same. Iraq remains the linchpin
to the Middle East, and whoever controls Baghdad will control the
Middle East. As the French say, "Plus a change, plus c'est la
m'me chose [the more things change, the more they stay the
same]."
The neo-imperialists
In the same year that Baghdad fell to the imperial British army,
Vladimir Lenin published a trenchant piece, "Imperialism, the
Highest Stage of Capitalism." In it, Lenin wrote, "I trust
that this pamphlet will help the reader to understand the fundamental
economic question, that of the economic essence of imperialism. For
unless this is studied, it will be impossible to understand and
appraise modern war and modern politics."
This year, as Baghdad is liberated for a second time, Niall Ferguson,
an economist and historian at New York University and Oxford, has
published a book with a very different message. Noting that the
British Empire was the chief promoter of progressive thought around
the globe for much of the 19th and 20th centuries, Ferguson suggests
that the world would do well to get itself another essentially
"good" empire to maintain order. The good empire he's
talking about is exactly what the flag conservatives want to establish
in the US.
Ferguson believes that the US should sustain networks of trade, aid,
investment and defense that will mimic the British world order. Rogue
states will be curbed, failed nations healed and brushfire wars
smothered - by aid and investment where possible, by arms where
necessary.
It will, of course, be an imperialism that dare not speak its name.
Some of the imperialists in progressive non-governmental organizations
will even believe that they are anti-imperialist. And the logos under
which they operate will be derived from the UN or the International
Monetary Fund rather than from the US. But the underlying networks of
cooperation that sustain this new imperialism are likely to link the
US with such "Anglosphere" nations as Britain and Australia
and perhaps, in due course, India and South Africa, which share a
similar heritage.
In a widely quoted speech that he gave recently at the University of
California, Los Angeles, former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
director James Woolsey addressed Arab leaders directly, "We want
you [to be] nervous. We want you to realize now, for the fourth time
in a hundred years, this country and its allies are on the march and
that we are on the side of those whom you - the Mubaraks, the Saudi
Royal family - most fear: We're on the side of your own people."
Woolsey noted proudly that the US was engaged in fighting World War
IV.
The import of his remarks will not be lost on Muslim and Arab leaders.
A fundamental change has occurred in the tactics of implementing
regime change. What was formerly accomplished through covert
"black" operations is now being accomplished through overt
military operations. In the near future, regime change may be expanded
to include not just those unelected despots with access to weapons of
mass destruction, but any rulers who stand in the way of the
neoconservative agenda of global domination.
In words that echo the logic that was used for striking Baghdad,
well-known Islamaphobe Daniel Pipes issued a report in the year 2000
that warned that Damascus was developing weapons of mass destruction
and encouraged swift preemption by the US. Pipes co-chaired the task
force that produced this report with Ziad Abdelnour, an investment
banker who since 1997 has led an organization called the United States
Committee for a Free Lebanon. "If there is to be decisive action,
it will have to be sooner rather than later," warned the
document, which was signed by a task force of 31 members, including
several people who now hold senior foreign policy positions in the
Bush administration.
Some experienced Washington journalists have spent time with the
neoconservatives and come back to report that growing Islamic
militancy in the Arab world is precisely what these people want. It
justifies the US extending the conflict to other nations until the
entire region is transformed. In a sense, this parallels the beliefs
of the growing number of evangelical Christians who see chaos in the
Middle East as a prelude to the coming rapture. It's hard to say which
idea is more dangerous.
Will they succeed?
It is important to note that while the recent US victories in
Afghanistan and Iraq were apparently achieved at low cost, the real
cost was considerably higher. Firstly, they were achieved at low human
cost to the US, but considerably higher human cost to the Afghans and
Iraqis, a fact that has led to rising anti-Americanism throughout the
globe. Secondly, they were achieved at considerable economic cost to
the American taxpayer, even though the enemies were primitive Third
World nations. In the recent war on Saddam's regime, part or all of
the eight of the 10 infantry divisions of the army were either tied
down by the war or were standing by to go to the war zone. Five of the
12 aircraft carriers were actively engaged in operations. All this
military muscle had to be used to subdue a regime that spent about
$1.4 billion a year on defense, compared with the $400 billion a year
spent by the US.
George Magnus, chief economist at UBS Warburg, estimates that the
continuation of the ongoing war could see defense spending rise from 4
percent of GDP to as much as 9 percent in the coming years. This
development will not impress the financial markets, since it comes on
the heels of the largest budget and trade deficits in US history and
continuing high rates of unemployment. David Hale of Hale Advisors, an
economics consultancy, commented, "It is unclear if America is
truly prepared to accept an imperial role on a sustained basis."
Despite the September 11 attacks, the sustained threat to the US from
terrorism is less obvious than the threat from the USSR. David Landes,
a Harvard economic historian, found that even in Great Britain - where
attachment to empire ran deep - economic necessity meant that the
rapid liquidation of imperial liabilities in India and the Middle East
after World War II met with little opposition. "Once the
potential cost becomes apparent, the willingness of the American
public to pay for their country's new security strategy will be tested
to the limit."
Speaking of the neoconservative desire for changing the Arab world,
Paul Kennedy reminds Americans of the failed British experience and
questions whether the US fare any better. And lest anyone say that
America is not Britain, he cites America's poor track record of trying
to transform the societies of Central America, Cuba and the
Philippines. "We took over the latter two territories more than a
century ago, yet Cuba's history has been a shambles and the
Philippines is now receiving fresh cohorts of US military advisers.
Why do we think we will do better in Syria or Iraq or Saudi
Arabia?"
In the wake of the easy Iraqi conquest, the American generals who led
the war have touted their campaign as one of the most successful in
military history. For example, Marine Lieutenant-General Earl Hailston
declared from his headquarters in Bahrain, "We fought like we'd
never fought before," citing the campaign highlighted the
military's lethal technological advantage and the ability of US forces
to conduct operations seamlessly across the military branches that
historically had been riven with age-old rivalries. Such statements
lend credence to the desire of the flag conservatives to have the
American military serve as the cavalry along America's frontiers.
Historian and political analyst Francis Fukuyama has noted that the US
conquest of Iraq is likely to mark the zenith of its perceived
strength, both in a military and political sense. He advises the US to
exploit this moment of strength not by thinking of moving against
Syria, Iran or North Korea, but by contracting its empire. He goes so
far as to suggest the US withdraw all of its military forces from
Saudi Arabia, where their presence has been exploited by bin Laden to
pursue his campaign of terrorism. In a similar vein, Seyom Brown of
Brandeis University, Massachusetts, argues that the world's only
superpower needs to restrain itself. He comments, "Rather than
loosening the constraints against the resort to war, we ought to be
retightening them."
Even a nation as uniquely powerful as the US cannot remake the
political systems at the heart of the Islamic world. Last December,
the Financial Times editorialized that "dropping a big enough
stone in the Iraqi pool would not unleash a wave of democracy in the
region." It is likely that the Muslim world will view a string of
US military attacks on Muslim countries as the aggression of an
oil-thirsty superpower on the Muslim world, not a march to liberate
people from tyranny. And, were democracy to arrive miraculously in the
Arab countries, it will result in the election of openly anti-American
leaders.
Robert Baer, a former field officer of the CIA in the Middle East,
notes that bin Laden would be elected in a landslide in Saudi Arabia
if a free and fair election were held there tomorrow.
Policy makers in Washington, including those with an open mind in the
administration and the Congress, should seriously consider the dangers
in pursuing a hubris-laden Middle Eastern policy that has strategic
myopia written all over it.
Ahmad Faruqui, PhD, an economist and defense analyst based
San Francisco, writes frequently on the Middle East and South Asia. He
is the author of Rethinking the National Security of Pakistan.
©2003 Asia Times Online
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