The great
medievalist scholar Harry Austryn Wolfson, with whom I had the privilege of studying
in the Spring of 1952 and again in the Spring of 1953, explained to us one day
that in medieval manuscripts there were three sorts of commentary -- short,
medium, and long. The short commentary
was no more than a footnote or gloss on a word or passage. The medium commentary might fill a column
alongside the text. The long commentary would
fill both columns and the top and bottom of the page, so that one would have to
hunt to find the original text being commented on. Today, I shall offer a very long commentary on a very
little piece of text. In fact. this entire
post will be a commentary on one word.
The word in
question is contained in an interview that Hillary Clinton recently gave to
Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic. That interview garnered a good deal of attention
because in it Clinton clearly criticized Obama's management of America's Syrian
policy from a right-wing hawkish perspective, thereupon generating a considerable
blather among the chattering classes.
But I shall leave that subject to them.
My eye was caught by a single word.
Here is the relevant segment of the interview. I wonder whether you will be able to guess
which word brought me up short.
"JG: You go
out of your way in Hard Choices to praise Robert Ford, who recently quit as
U.S. ambassador to Syria, as an excellent diplomat. Ford quit in protest and
has recently written strongly about what he sees as the inadequacies of Obama
administration policy. Do you agree with Ford that we are at fault for not
doing enough to build up a credible Syrian opposition when we could have?
HRC: I’m the one
who convinced the administration to send an ambassador to Syria. You know, this
is why I called the chapter on Syria “A Wicked Problem.” I can’t sit here today
and say that if we had done what I recommended, and what Robert Ford
recommended, that we’d be in a demonstrably different place.
JG: That’s the president’s argument, that we wouldn’t be in a different
place.
HRC: Well, I did believe, which is why I advocated this, that if we were to
carefully vet, train, and equip early on a core group of the developing Free
Syrian Army, we would, number one, have some better insight into what was going
on on the ground. Two, we would have been helped in standing up a credible
political opposition, which would prove to be very difficult, because there was
this constant struggle between what was largely an exile group outside of Syria
trying to claim to be the political opposition, and the people on the ground,
primarily those doing the fighting and dying, who rejected that, and we were
never able to bridge that, despite a lot of efforts that Robert and others
made."
The word that brought me up short is the sixteenth in the second Clinton
quote: "carefully." If we were to carefully vet, train, and equip early on a core group of the
developing Free Syrian Army etc etc.
This one word encapsulates everything that is wrong with the approach to
foreign policy that has dominated the American government's foreign policy
decisions, under Republican and Democratic Presidents alike, for several generations,
and arguably has shaped the foreign policy decisions of the European Powers as
well for the past century.
What are we to make of Clinton's statement?
We might construe her simply as saying that if we had carelessly vetted, trained, and equipped
those folks, things would have gone badly, and I am sure that seems a quite
reasonable observation. After all, when
lives and money are at stake, it is probably better to act carefully than
carelessly. But Clinton, by using the
word "carefully," is implying a great deal more.
First of all, she is trying to demonstrate that she is a very serious
person, someone who can be relied upon to act carefully. But there is much more implied by the use of
the word. To say that we should act carefully expresses the idea that in Syria
we were presented with a problem to
which we sought a solution, a problem
that, because it was complicated and fraught with great perils, required us to
be very careful to find and then
carry out the correct solution.
Everything that is wrong with the foreign policy of Bill Clinton, George W.
Bush, Barack Obama, and -- should she be elected -- Hillary Clinton is
encapsulated in the unexamined supposition that in our foreign affairs we face problems that have solutions which, if we are just sufficiently careful, we can find and then implement.
Now, there have in fact been a number of situations in which America has
faced a problem, the solution of which it has found and implemented. The decision by Franklin Delano Roosevelt to
commission the making of the first atomic bomb in the Manhattan Project posed
just such a problem, the solution to which was devised over several years by
some of the world's greatest physicists and engineers. It was basically an engineering problem of
enormous complexity and difficulty, requiring no new fundamental scientific
discoveries but the solution of a great many subtle and tricky problems of
applied science. Exactly the same is
true of John F. Kennedy's decision to
commission the creation of a rocket capable of landing men on the moon and
bringing them back to earth. This really
was rocket science, as the saying
goes, and it was carried out brilliantly by the NASA physicists and engineers,
and by the men recruited to serve as astronauts.
The fundamental error, the besetting sin, of our entire foreign policy
establishment is the tendency to view the management of America's relations
with the rest of the world as a series of problems
whose solutions can be found if we
just proceed knowledgeably, intelligently, and carefully.
The wisest words I know on this subject were written by Michael Oakeshott,
the brilliant, eccentric British conservative philosopher. I know it puzzles and irks some of you when I
refer kindly to Oakeshott, since politically speaking, he is not what some
German Jews would refer to as unsere Leute,
but I recognize brilliance when I see it, wherever on the political spectrum it
lurks. Had I the power to command you in
the way that a Professor commands his students, I would require you all to read
two selections by Oakeshott from his book Rationalism
in Politics: The title essay and an
even more important, but rather less hilariously funny piece, "Rational
Conduct." But, alas, those who live
by the tweet must die by the tweet, so I can only copy out laboriously two
brief series of selections from these seminal essays and hope that the most serious
among you will seek out Oakeshott's book.
Here first a taste of Oakeshott's penetrating
characterization of "the
Rationalist."
"[T]he mind of the Rationalist ... impresses us as, at
best, a finely-tempered neutral instrument, as a well-trained rather than as an
educated mind. Intellectually, his
ambition is not so much to share the experience of the race as to be
demonstrably a self-made man. ... With an almost poetic fancy, he strives to
live each day as if it were his first, and he believes that to form a habit is
to fail. ... The conduct of affairs, for the Rationalist, is a matter of solving
problems. ... in this activity the character which the Rationalist claims for himself is the character of the
engineer, whose mind (it is supposed) is controlled throughout by the appropriate technique and whose first
step is to dismiss from his attention everything not directly related to his
specific intentions. ... Thus, political life is resolved into a succession of
crises, each to be surmounted by the application of 'reason.' "
And now, for a little light relief, a passage from
"Rational Conduct" in which Oakeshott turns his attention to the
rigors of designing clothing.
"[T]he expression 'rational dress' was applied, in
particular times, to an extraordinary garment affected by girls on bicycles,
and to be observed in the illustrations of Punch
of the period. Bloomers were asserted to
be the 'rational dress' for girl cyclists. ... The 'rationality' sought by
these Victorian designers was ... an eternal and universal quality; something rescued from the world of mere
opinion and set in a world of certainty.
They might make mistakes; and if they were not mistakes of mechanics or
anatomy (which would be unlikely), they would be the mistakes of a mind not
firmly enough insulated from preconception, a mind not yet free. Indeed, they did make a mistake; impeded by
prejudice, their minds paused at bloomers instead of running on to 'shorts' --
clearly so much more complete a solution to their problem."
And so on. There is
simply more worth quoting than even my clumsy fingers can manage.
The comic and yet deeply tragic apotheosis of this deeply
confused form of rationality is nation building, the bizarre fantasy
that America can step into a millennia-old religious, economic, social,
political and historical maelstrom and by an act of will, intelligence, and
expertise carefully impose its
conception of order -- the notion
that a committee of foreign policy "experts" who cannot even speak,
read, or write the languages of the
people in the region are well-suited to decide to how deploy America's enormous
military and economic power for ends they have defined with barely the
slightest idea of their significance for the people whose lives they are
overturning.
All of this, I am afraid, flashed through my mind when I
read Hillary Clinton's use of the word "carefully" in the interview
with Jeffery Goldberg.
I will be honest.
There was a time when I thought Barack Obama knew some of what I have just
written. Perhaps he did. Perhaps he still does. But that knowledge does not manifest itself
in the decisions he makes about foreign policy.
Who knows? Perhaps no
one occupying that constitutional office could act on such knowledge. He would not be impeached or assassinated. It would be worse. He simply would not be understood.
I showed this post to a buddy of mine who said "Precisely. Exhibit A: Woodrow Wilson at Versailles."
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