March 26, 2007
Interventions Without End?
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
"Whatever happens in Iraq, retreat from the world
is not an option," wrote Financial Times
columnist Philip Stephens last weekend.
Why not? Because a world map highlighting those
regions where the West's vital resources are located
would exactly overlap a map highlighting those regions
where state power is crumbling,
disease and poverty are pandemic and violence rules.
"The implication of this is obvious," says
Stephens.
"We can proudly declare ourselves isolationists,
resolve to eschew 'imperialist adventures,' decry
liberal interventionists such as Britain's Tony Blair
and damn the
neoconservatives around U.S. President George W. Bush.
But, one way or another, the West cannot avoid getting
involved. On this, moral impulse and hard-headed
interests are as one."
We are fated to intervene forever. "The reality of
interdependence of a world shrunk by globalization
cannot be wished away." [
The west cannot hide from the disordered world beyond]
Put me down as not so sure. For if America is
defeated in Iraq, as we were in
Southeast Asia, who will ever again intervene in the
Middle East?
As Stephens writes, Europe's "eternal role"
seems to be that of the "concerned bystander" to
disasters anywhere. And, revisiting the 20th century,
the United States did not declare war on the Kaiser's
ally Turkey in 1917, despite the
Armenian massacres. Nor did we did confront Stalin
over genocide in the Ukraine. FDR recognized Stalin's
regime as it perpetrated that holocaust. Nor did we
intervene to halt Mao's slaughter and starvation of
millions of Chinese.
America looked on during Pol Pot's genocide. Clinton
stood aside in Rwanda. No one is calling for the 82nd
Airborne to be dropped into Darfur.
No matter, says Stephens, the West cannot abide the
emerging new world disorder. But, again, that begs the
question: Who is going to intervene?
If Iraq and Afghanistan, despite the U.S. investment
in blood and treasure, end in defeats, who does Stephens
think is going to send troops to rescue imperiled
"liberal democratic values"?
In his
second inaugural, President Bush declared that
America's national goal is now to "support the growth
of democratic movements and institutions in every nation
and culture, with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in
our world."
Are Americans still willing to support that utopian
mission with blood and billions of dollars?
In a Gallup poll this year that posed the question,
"Should the United States try to change a
dictatorship to a democracy when it can, or should the
United States stay out of other countries' affairs?"—
by near five to one Americans said, "Stay out."
Fifteen percent said "yes" to the Bush
commitment. Sixty-nine percent said to stay out of the
internal affairs of other countries.
Columnist
David Broder cites a Penn, Schoen poll conducted
Jan. 30 to Feb. 4. By 58 percent to 36 percent,
respondents said, "It is a dangerous illusion to
believe America is superior to other nations; we should
not be attempting to reshape other nations in light of
our values."
"By an even greater proportion -- almost three to
one," adds Broder, "they say the main goal of
American foreign policy should be to protect the
security of the United States and its allies, rather
than the promotion of freedom and democracy."
By 70 percent to 27 percent, Americans agreed,
"Sometimes it's better to leave a dictator in charge of
a hostile country, if he is contained, rather than risk
chaos that we can't control if he is brought down."
By 58 percent to 38 percent, American agreed with the
statement that "if negotiating with countries that
support terrorism like Iran and Syria will help protect
our security interests, the U.S. should consider
negotiating with them."
"Practicality trumps idealism at every turn,"
writes Broder.
"Idealism"? That is true only if one buys the
proposition that refusing to talk to enemies and
fighting unnecessary wars is idealism rather than folly.
FDR and Truman talked to Stalin, Ike invited the Butcher
of Budapest to Camp David, Nixon went to Beijing to talk
to Mao, Reagan accepted Gorbachev's invitation to
Reykjavik during the Soviet war in Afghanistan. Were all
these men devoid of idealism?
Stephens believes the successors to Bush and Blair
will find they have no option but to intervene to
prevent the new world disorder.
Perhaps. But given the rage and revulsion Americans
feel at having been stampeded into Iraq and pinioned in
Baghdad, unable to stop the bleeding but unwilling to
walk away in defeat, the American appetite for
intervention has probably been sated for a long, long
time.
U.S. global hegemony is history. Like every nation,
America must now choose -- between what is vital and
worth fighting for, and what may be "idealistic,"
but is not worth a war.
Not long ago, America produced 96 percent of all she
consumed and was the most self-sufficient republic in
history. With statesmanship and sacrifice, we can become
so again. With leaders like we once had, we can chuck
the empire. For what good has it done us?
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.