Teaching Evil. (Books).
Menashi, Steven
ROBERT D. KAPLAN. Warrior Politics: Why Leadership Demands a Pagan
Ethos. RANDOM HOUSE. 224 PAGES. $22.95
IN THE FIRST phase of the war on terror outside Afghanistan, the
United States dispatched some 660 military personnel to the southern
Philippines. The last time Americans battled Islamist terror in the
Philippines was after the Spanish-American War, when Gen. John Pershing
commanded U.S. colonial forces in the islands. American anti-terrorism
tactics have evolved considerably, it seems, over the past century. In
his time, Pershing didn't need to bother with reconnaissance
operations. His forces captured some of the militants, executed them
with bullets dipped in pig fat, and wrapped their bodies in pigskin
before burial -- a devastating contamination according to Muslim law.
"You'll never see Paradise," one U.S. officer reportedly
told the terrorists, dashing their hopes of martyrdom. Pershing's
approach is probably no longer in the army's counterterrorism repertoire, but the result was that guerrilla violence ended -- and
failed to resurface even after Pershing left the Philippines to command
U.S. troops in World War I.
The American response to Islamic extremism has not always been so
harsh -- or as effective. As fundamentalist violence surged in Iran in
1978, threatening to topple the shah's pro-American government,
President Jimmy Carter was less than decisive. He voiced support for the
shah, but pressured him not to crack down on revolutionary forces -- out
of concern for the human rights of Islamist radicals. Carter may have
satisfied his own peculiar moral sensibilities, but the result was the
destruction of an American ally in the Middle East and the advent of a
state patron of terrorism so vicious as to constitute one-third of the
axis of evil in the modern world. "One cannot ask of an ally that
it commit suicide in the name of human rights," Michael Ledeen
remarked at the time.
ROBERT D. KAPLAN'S Warrior Politics: Why Leadership Demands a
Pagan Ethos is an impassioned plea for less Jimmy Carter -- and more
John Pershing -- in U.S. foreign policy. Kaplan believes there are
important lessons to be learned from thinkers of pre-Christian antiquity
-- Thucydides, Livy, Cicero, Seneca, Sun Tzu -- and their modern
disciples, such as von Clausewitz, Machiavelli, and Thomas Hobbes. The
advice could not come at a more opportune moment, as the country finds
itself amidst a global war against terrorism -- a war led by a president
whose own favored political philosopher (Jesus Christ) is decidedly
unpagan.
Kaplan has actually served as an informal advisor to the current
administration. Well before September 11, President Bush read one of
Kaplan's earlier works, Eastward to Tartary (Random House, 2000),
and was impressed enough to invite the author to the White House to talk
global strategy. Kaplan and Bush may have had an interesting discussion,
but judging from the opening chapter of Warrior Politics, Kaplan had few
original insights to share. In his new book, Kaplan raises the old
canard about globalization exacerbating income disparity (in fact,
average wages in the developing world increased threefold relative to
U.S. wages from 1960 to 1992), and he believes the resulting inequality
will augment political unrest. He also relates what was conventional
wisdom even before September 11: Not traditional warfare, but terrorism
and cybercrime will be the principal threats in the Information Age.
Additionally, writes Kaplan, "populist movements" animated
"by religious and sectarian beliefs" will be a source of ins
tability -- especially as new technologies become widely available.
Kaplan even suggests that "natural disasters like floods and
earthquakes" may occur again in the future. His predictions
aren't especially revelatory; it's all stuff we have heard
before -- but, of course, that's precisely the point. "There
is no 'modern' world," writes Kaplan, "only a
continuation of the 'ancient': a world that, despite its
technologies, the best Chinese, Greek, and Roman philosophers might have
been able to cope with." The world's future challenges will be
the same as its past challenges -- only on a new playing field --
because human nature remains the same. In the fifth century BC, the
Greek historian Thucydides observed that human behavior is guided by
such impulses as fear, self-interest, and honor. And so it is today.
Thus, Kaplan argues, effective leadership requires an
historian's sensibility. Churchill, who both made and wrote
history, is Kaplan's exemplar; his awareness of the perennial
problems of human history enabled him to recognize and manage those
problems. Churchill foresaw the threat posed by Hitler, Kaplan recalls,
while his countrymen still believed Germany could be neutralized through
appeasement. Today, as sundry elites fret over the possible U.S.
intervention in Iraq, it is instructive to remember that similar elites
recoiled with moral revulsion at the idea of deposing Adolf Hitler, who
was the democratically elected leader of Germany. And, for that matter,
to recall that Roman politicians derided Fabius Maximus's
(ultimately successful) war of attrition against Hannibal. "It is
better that a wise enemy should fear you than that foolish friends
should praise," said the self-assured Fabius.
Kaplan explains that "a Churchillian foreign policy," by
which he means an effective one, recognizes "how the struggles of
today are strikingly similar to those of antiquity." To drive the
point home, Kaplan draws frequent parallels between ancient and modern
conflicts. He compares Hannibal to Hitler, and Franklin Roosevelt to the
Roman emperor Tiberius. He likens the shifting alliances between Athens
and Sparta during the Peloponnesian War to the uneasy relations among
France, Russia, Germany, and Britain before World War I. The Athenians
failed to conquer Syracuse, Kaplan writes, "because -- as with our
Vietnam policy in the early 1960s -- unwise leaders tried to conquer too
much, too far away." The historical analogies are initially
interesting, but become tiresome and forced. Still, we get the point:
While the human problems have remained constant, our moral outlook has
not. "The postindustrial West seeks to deny the persistence of
conflict," says Kaplan, but history doesn't end so much as
repeat itself. "The concern of the Republican Right with
'values' and that of liberals with 'humanitarian
intervention' may be less a sign of a higher morality following the
defeat of communism than of the luxury afforded by domestic peace and
prosperity." The world continues to be a brutal place. And if we
are to survive within it, we must act brutally and sometimes support
brutal regimes. To the extent that prevailing Judeo-Christian ethics
obscures this understanding of the world, it is an exercise in
self-denial. Kaplan proposes that we cease our dissimulations and
scuttle all the values rhetoric, which smacks of a perilous naivete:
"With their incessant harping on values, today's Republicans
and Democrats alike often sound less like Renaissance pragmatists than
like medieval churchmen, dividing the world sanctimoniously between good
and evil."
KAPLAN AIMS to depart from such moral orders, and to stake out a
new -- or, rather, an old -- way of judging the world. Kaplan's
"pagan ethos," which he claims was shared by Machiavelli,
Churchill, Sun Tzu, and Thucydides alike, is "a morality of results
rather than of good intentions."
In one Churchillian moment that Kaplan does not discuss, the
British, having decoded Nazi military communications, discovered German
plans to bomb the city of Coventry. But Churchill took no action to warn
or protect Coventry's citizens: If the Germans were to realize that
Britain had cracked their code, Churchill reasoned, they would surely
change it, seriously impeding the British war effort -- and costing even
more lives in the long run. President Bush faced a similar dilemma
September 11, when he ordered the military to shoot down United Flight
93 to prevent further terrorist attacks. (As it turned out, they
didn't do so.) Opponents of the president's decision might
insist that "the ends do not justify the means." But even that
maxim, which is now so cliched a part of our moral vocabulary, appears
foolish in the face of real-world events.
And so do many American good intentions. "According to the
State Department manual for consular officers," the New York Times
reported September 27, "participating in the planning or execution
of terrorist acts would bar a foreigner from getting a visa, but
'mere membership' in a recognized terrorist group would not
automatically disqualify a person from entering the United States. Nor
would 'advocacy of terrorism.'" Justice Department
guidelines prohibit the FBI from so much as purchasing a militant
organization's newsletter to monitor it for threats of terrorist
activity. The civil libertarian impulse that drives such policies is of
course salutary, but civil liberties mean little when the state is
unable to protect them. At some point one is faced with a choice not
between liberty and order, but "between liberty with order and
anarchy without either," as Justice Robert Jackson once observed.
The Bill of Rights shouldn't be made into a suicide pact.
Kaplan embraces this realist worldview. He takes his bearings from
the worldly realities of political power rather than by abstract ideals
of rights or justice, adopting as his motto a line from Hobbes's
Leviathan: "Before the names of Just and Unjust can have place,
there must be some coercive power." Surely, people who have
actually lived under anarchy -- threatened by marauding warlords,
terrorists, and the like -- were scarcely consoled by the notion that
they possessed "human rights." "Human rights," if
they can be said to exist at all in a state of anarchy, are utterly
useless there. What's needed is a way to enforce them.
"Projecting power comes first," says Kaplan, "values come
second." A good leader would never allow "petty scruples"
to compromise regnant authority.
At one point, Kaplan concludes that "human rights are
ultimately and most assuredly promoted by the preservation of American
power" -- which is a curious assertion for him to make, since, if
Kaplan had his druthers, American power would divorce itself from a
special concern for human rights. He wants U.S. foreign policy to seek
stability alone. Liberalizing the world is not only impracticable,
according to Kaplan, but often dangerous: "It is political freedom
itself that has often unleashed the violence that liberal societies
abhor." Kaplan thinks authoritarian rule often provides a needed
antidote to ethnic and religious strife, whereas democratic rule might
be too ineffectual or beholden to factional interests (he applauds
military coups d'etat in Uganda and Pakistan for restoring civil
order).
As might be expected, Kaplan sanctions brutal tactics for
maintaining order. He praises King Hussein for imposing martial law on
Jordan in 1957 because the democratically elected government was
"becoming increasingly radical"; Hussein's bloody
crackdowns on Palestinians in 1970 and the 1980s were also admirable
because they "saved his kingdom," despotic though it may have
been. Similarly, the United States should not press for human rights in
Tunisia, Morocco, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, China, or virtually anywhere.
Such a moralistic policy, says Kaplan, would weaken established regimes
and foster instability. Yet, amidst his general endorsement of
despotism, Kaplan for some reason condemns Chilean dictator Augusto
Pinochet. It's unclear why he does so: Kaplan plainly approves of
military coups, has no special fondness for democracy, and doesn't
mind brutal tactics. And Pinochet even had noble aims: He saved Chile
from communism and eventually surrendered his authority to a democratic
government. But Kaplan som ehow concludes that Pinochet employed
"excessive" violence.
Kaplan cannot explain how he reaches such a judgment, however. He
clearly does not want his argument to endorse any and all regimes;
Kaplan strives to affirm that his "morality of consequence"
is, in fact, "moral, even if it is not Judeo-Christian." But
he has left himself with no ethical ground on which to stand. Kaplan
regards ethics as an essentially private matter. Moral ideals may be
decisive for the personal consciences of private citizens, but they
compromise the hardheadedness policymakers need for an effective foreign
policy. The "separation of private ethics from politics" is
the heart of warrior politics: "for if there is such a thing as
progress in politics, it has been the evolution from religious virtue to
secular self-interest."
With the admission that political thought has progressed to
Kaplan's ideas, it becomes clear that Warrior Politics does not
represent the return to a forgotten "pagan ethos" of classical
antiquity. Kaplan may see himself standing outside the liberal
tradition, reproaching naive humanitarians from the no-nonsense
perspective of the ancient pagans, but he remains within that tradition.
The pagans had their own gods and values that permeated their social
order. Even Thucydides condemns the Athenians for "allowing private
ambitions and private interests ... to lead them into projects unjust
both to themselves and to their allies." Kaplan, in contrast,
adopts the liberal idea that ethics as such should be confined to the
private sphere, and that politics should concern itself with the
satisfaction of self-interest. Humanity's primary interest, says
Kaplan, is stability. He wants to neutralize conflict, to compel people
to live away from each other's throats. He aims no higher than
this: "Philosophy," Kaplan expla ins, "is about the
resolution of forces, and in foreign policy that leads to the search for
order."
Kaplan's philosophy may constitute a sort of political wisdom,
but it's a far cry from the moral understanding of the ancients. If
our politics rests fundamentally on self-interest, then how can one
expect the heroic selflessness Kaplan admires in Churchill and others?
If the ultimate goal is self-preservation, why should anyone risk his
life? The "heroic outlook" Kaplan attributes to the Greeks was
possible precisely because they recognized a purpose higher than
themselves.
KAPLAN DIFFERS from the actual pagan philosophers of antiquity by
arguing that man is not, in fact, a political animal. Rather, heads of
state must maintain political society by force, against the people who
would otherwise revert to their antisocial, violent natures. Any idea of
justice exists only within the imposed order. Because the assertion of
force is primary for Kaplan, he falls victim to a Machiavellian
temptation: to justify power only by reference to itself, for reasons of
state. Nothing exists prior to the state to delimit its behavior. Kaplan
insists, borrowing an idea from Isaiah Berlin, that his Machiavellianism
represents an ethical alternative to Judeo-Christian values. But the
only moral lesson he teaches is that power should be unconstrained by
ethical qualms in achieving its own protection -- which, upon
reflection, turns out not to be a moral lesson at all.
Kaplan learns from Machiavelli that values, "good or
bad," are "useless without arms to back them up." That
may be true, but Kaplan fails to emphasize that we need good values.
Indeed, he insists that we need no values at all. In Kaplan's
world, we should seek power for power's sake.
Kaplan's critique aims at the wrong target. The difficulty
with the Judeo-Christian tradition is not its values, but that it often
lacks prudence in promoting them, In the end, one who declares,
"Let justice be done though the heavens fall," is both pompous
and foolish: pompous because the destruction of the cosmos by his value
system does not persuade him even to question those values, and foolish
because in such a state of generalized anarchy, justice has no effect.
Thus, Kaplan's assessment has particular force with regard to rigid
religious precepts that make no allowance for day-to-day realities. (One
is reminded of an old Nipsy Russell line: "He who turns the other
cheek gets hit with the other fist.") Kaplan cautions us not to be
so sanctimomously naive as to ignore the reality of power politics,
which is good advice. But we also should not be so brazen as to lose
sight of our moral aims. Power that serves only itself is a monstrous
thing.
In truth, the lessons of Warrior Politics are not as alien to our
idealistic democracy as Kaplan wants to suggest.
"Democracies," wrote Victor Davis Hanson in his The Soul of
Battle (Free Press, 1999), "can produce the most murderous armies
from the most unlikely of men." Far out of proportion to their
physical resources, democratic societies have unleashed military
campaigns unparalleled in their lethality and effectiveness. Brute
aggression, it seems, cannot match what arises "when free men march
unabashedly toward the heartland of their enemy in hopes of saving the
doomed, when their vast armies are aimed at salvation and liberation,
not conquest and enslavement." All of which holds out the
possibility that even the righteous may be able to outpagan the pagans.
Steven Menashi is assistant editor of Policy Review.