NO END OF A LESSON -- UNLEARNED
So we should ask: what have we learned about ourselves, our adversaries and the process in which we have engaged?
The short answer appears to be
"very little."
As both a historian and a former policy planner for the American government, I will very briefly here (as I have mentioned in a previous essay, I am in the final stages of a book to be called A Warring People, on these issues), illustrate what I mean by "very little."
I
begin with us, the American people.
There is overwhelming historical evidence that war is popular with
us. Politicians from our earliest days
as a republic, indeed even before when we were British colonies, could nearly
always count on gaining popularity by demonstrating our valor. Few successful politicians were
pacifists.
Even
supposed pacifists found reasons to engage in the use of force. Take the man most often cited as a peacemaker
or at least a peaceseeker, Woodrow Wilson.
He promised to "keep us out of war," by which he meant keeping
us out of big, expensive European war. Before becoming president, however, he
approved the American conquest of Cuba and the Philippines and described
himself as an imperialist; then, as president, he occupied Haiti, sent the
Marines into the Dominican Republic and ordered the Cavalry into Mexico. In 1918, he also put American troops into
Russia. Not only sending soldiers: his administration carried
out naval blockades, economic sanctions, covert operations -- one of which,
allegedly, involved an assassination attempt on a foreign leader -- and furnished
large-scale arms supplies to insurgents in on-going wars.
The
purpose, and explanation, of our wars varied. I
think most of us would agree that our Revolution, the First World War and the
Second World War were completely justified. Probably Korea was also. The
United States had no choice on the Civil war or, perhaps, on the War of
1812. Many,
particularly those against the Native Americans would today be classified as war
crimes. It is the middle range that seem
to me to be the most important to understand.
I see them like this.
Some
military ventures were really misadventures in the sense that they were based
on misunderstandings or deliberate misinformation. I think that most students of history would
put the Spanish-American, Vietnamese, Iraqi and a few other conflicts in this
category. Our government lied to us --
the Spaniards did not blow up the Maine; the Gulf of Tonkin was not a dastardly
attack on our innocent ships and Iraq was not about to attack us with a nuclear
weapon, which it did not have.
But
we citizens listened uncritically. We
did not demand the facts. It is hard to
avoid the charge that we were either complicit, lazy or ignorant. We did not hold our government to account.
Several war and other forms of intervention were for supposed local or regional requirements of the Cold War. We knowingly told one another that the "domino theory" was reality: so a hint of Communist subversion or even criticism of us sent us racing off to protect almost any form of political association that pretended to be on our side. And we believed or feared that even countries that had little or no connections with one another would topple at the touch -- or even before their neighbors appeared to be in trouble. Therefore, regardless of their domestic political style, monarchy, dictatorship. democracy., it mattered not, they had to be protected. Our protection often included threats of invasion, actual intervention, paramilitary operations, subversion and/or bribery, justified by our proclaimed intent to keep them free. Or at least free from Soviet control. Included among them were Guatemala, Nicaragua, Brazil, Chile, Italy, Greece, Syria, Lebanon, Iran, Indonesia, Vietnam and various African countries.
Few,
if any, were to establish the basis of peace or even to bring
about ceasefires. Those tasks we usually
left to the United Nations or regional associations.
The
costs have been high. Just counting
recent interventions, they have cost us well over a hundred thousand casualties
and some multiple of that in wounded; they have cost "the
others" -- both our enemies and our
friends -- large multiples of those numbers.
The monetary cost is perhaps beyond counting both to them and to us. Figures range upward from $10 trillion.
I
will briefly focus on five aspects of this transformation:
Second, outside intervention has usually
weakened moderate or conservative forces or tendencies within each movement. Those espousing the most extreme positions
are less likely to be suborned or defeated
than the moderates. Thus
particularly in a protracted hostilities, are more likely to take charge than
their rivals. We have seen this tendency
in each of the guerrilla wars in which we got involved; for the situation
today, look at the insurgent movements in Syria and Iraq. (For my analysis of the philosophy and
strategy of the Muslim extremists, see my essay "Sayyid Qutub's
Fundamentalism and Abu Bakr Naji's Jihadism"
on my website, www.williampolk.com/.)
What
is true of the movements is even more evident in the effects on civic
institutions and practices within an embattled society. In times of acute national danger, the
"center" does not hold. Centrists get caught between the insurgents and the
regimes. Insurgents have to destroy their relationship
to society and government if they are to
"win." Thus, in Vietnam for example, doctors and
teachers, who interfaced between government and the general population were
prime targets for the Vietminh in the 1950s.
And,
as the leaders of governments against whom the insurgents are fighting become
more desperate, they suppress those of their perceived rivals or critics they
can reach. By default, these people are civilians who are active in the political parties, the
media and the judiciary . And, as their
hold on power erodes and "victory" becomes less likely, regimes also seek to create for themselves safe havens
by stealing money and sending it abroad.
Thus, the institutions of government are weakened and the range of
enemies widens. We have witnessed these
two aspects of "corruption" -- both political and economic -- in a
number of countries. Recent examples are
Vietnam and Afghanistan.
Third, our institutional memory of programs,
events and trends is shallow. I suggest
that it usually is no longer than a decade.
Thus, we repeat policies even when the record clearly shows that they
did not work when previously tried. And we address each challenge as though it
is unprecedented. We forget the American folk saying that when
you find yourself in a hole, the best course of action is to stop digging. it
isn't only that our government (and the thousands of "experts," tacticians
and strategists it hires) do not "remember" but also that they have at hand only one
convenient tool -- the shovel. What did
we learn from Vietnam? Get a bigger,
sharper shovel.
Thus,
for example, at the end of the Second World War, despite many of us being of German
or Italian or Japanese cultural background, we were markedly deficient in
people who could help implement our policies in those countries. We literally threw away the language and
culture of grandparents. A few years later, when I began to study
Arabic, there were said to be only five Americans not of Arab origin who knew
the language. Beyond language, grasp of
the broader range of culture petered off to near zero. Today, after the expenditure of significant government subsidies to
universities (in the National Defense Education Act) to teach "strategic"
languages, the situation should be better.
But, while we now know much
more, I doubt that we understand other
peoples much better.
The
effects of relations among many of the peoples of Asia and Africa and some of
the Latin Americans have created new political and social configurations and
imbalances within and among them. With European and American help the governments with which we deal have acquired
more effective tools of repression. They
can usually defeat the challenges of traditional groups. But, not always. Where they do not acquire legitimacy in the
eyes of significant groups -- "nations" -- states risk debilitating,
long-term struggles. These struggles
are, in part, the result of the long years of imperial rule and colonial
settlement. Since Roman times, foreign
rulers have sought to cut expenses by governing through local proxies. Thus, the British turned over to the Copts
the unpopular task of colleting Egyptian taxes and to the Assyrians the
assignment of controlling the Iraqi
Sunnis. The echo of these years is what
we observe in much of the "Third World" today. Ethnic, religious and economic jealousies
abound and the wounds of imperialism and colonialism have rarely completely
healed. We may not be sensitive to
them, but to natives they may remain painful.
Americans may be the "new boys on the block," but these
memories have often been transferred to us.
It
is a challenge that we seem less and less able to meet.
Take
Iraq as an example. As a corollary of our hostility to Saddam Husain,
we essentially turned Iraq over to his enemies, the Iraqi Shia Muslim. (I deal
with this in my Understanding Iraq, New
York: HarperCollins, 2005, 171 ff.) There was some justification for this
policy. The Shia community has long been
Iraq's majority and because they were Saddam's enemies, some "experts" naively thought they
would become our friends. But immediately two negative aspects of our
policy became evident: non-specialists: first, the Shiis took vengeance on the Sunni
Muslim community and so threw the country into a vicious civil war . What we called pacification amounted to
ethnic cleansing. And, second, the Shia Iraqi leaders (the marjiaah) made common cause with coreligionist Iranians
with whom we were nearly at war all during the second Bush administration. Had war with Iran eventuated, our troops in
Iraq would have been more hostages than occupiers. At several points, we had
the opportunity to form a more coherent, moral and safer policy. I don't see evidence that our government or
our occupation civil and military authorities even grasped the problem; certainly they did not find ways to work toward
a solution. Whatever else may be said
about it, our policy was dysfunctional.
So
what to do?
The first is to be realistic: there is no switch we can flip to change our
capacities. To look for quick and easy
solutions is part of the problem, not part of the solution.
And
as a people we are woefully ignorant about other peoples and countries. Polls indicate that few Americans even know
the locations of other nations. The saying
that God created war to teach American geography is sacrilegious. If this was God's purpose, He failed.
And beyond geography, concerning other people's politics, cultures and traditions, there is a nearly
blank page. Isn't it time we picked up the
attempt made by such men as Sumner Wells
(with his An Intelligent
American's Guide to the Peace and his American
Foreign Policy Library), Robert Hutchins, James Conant and others (with the
General Education programs in colleges and universities) and various other
failed efforts to make us a part of humanity?
Our
biggest challenge therefore comes down to us:
unless or until we find a better system of teaching, of becoming aware
that we need to learn and a desire to acquire the tools of citizenship, we
cannot hope to move toward a safer, more enriching future.
We
had better get started.
William
R. Polk
Orwell on Nationalism: http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/o/orwell/george/lion_and_the_unicorn/part1.html
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