The Limits of Power: the end of American Exceptionalism.
Coffey, John W.
Andrew J. Bacevich, The Limits of Power: The End of American
Exceptionalism (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2008), 206 pp., $24.00.
Andrew Bacevich's latest book unleashes a philippic against
American foreign policy. Had the author criticized the hubris and
sanctimony animating America's penchant for global social
engineering, his message would offer a healthy antidote to the blunders
of the last eight years. (1) This splenetic book ranges much farther
afield than that, however. Bacevich diagnoses a terminally ill patient,
the American republic, proffering a prescription that promises a
beguiling cure and omitting the inconvenience of historical
context--namely, that the world is round, that it contains other actors
whose actions affect us, and that the United States cannot retreat from
its turmoil and struggles. Let us examine his diagnosis of the patient.
According to Bacevich, since the 1960s Americans' pursuit of
freedom has produced an orgy of material self-indulgence and individual
autonomy at home and a quest for empire abroad to satisfy our appetites.
This behavior has resulted in an eclipse of citizenship, unsustainable
debt, an overextended military, an imperial presidency, and
constitutional degradation. Hence the paradox of our time: "While
the defense of American freedom seems to demand that U.S. troops fight
in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, the exercise of that freedom at
home undermines the nation's capacity to fight. A grand bazaar
provides an inadequate basis upon which to erect a vast empire."
(2) The "unnecessary," "counterproductive,"
"unsustainable" Iraq war manifests the intersection of our
multiple crises.
Since the Founding, American acquisitiveness has fueled an
inexorable, ruthless expansionism. The United States never liberated
others, absent a threat to its own security or economic interests. Thus,
the Civil War only 'incidentally' freed the slaves. World War
II only 'incidentally' saved European Jews. Bacevich appears
to believe that Jefferson's "empire for liberty" has been
a malign force in modern history. He concedes that America's
pragmatic, opportunistic foreign policy has not differed from that of
all states and that it did enable the emergence of a great power; yet he
labels "pernicious" a strategic tradition that from the start
(italics mine) squandered national wealth and power.
Bacevich could never be accused of understatement. He claims that
the national mobilizations of World War II and the Cold War left the
traditional republic of checks and balances deader than a doornail. To
describe the regime today as a republic would be "like calling
Adolf Hitler a dictator or the weapon dropped on Hiroshima a bomb."
(3) Instead of providing "enlightened governance," our
dysfunctional political system "poses a clear and present danger to
those it is meant to serve." (4) Plenty of blame exists to spread
across the political spectrum. Bacevich harbors special rancor for the
post-World War II bipartisan consensus supporting the baleful
"ideology of national security" that destroyed the "Old
Republic:" 1) the abiding theme of history is freedom to which all
men aspire; 2) the United States embodies freedom; 3) America has a
providential mission to ensure freedom's triumph; 4) for the
American way of life to endure, freedom must prevail everywhere.
Both parties and all so-called Washington "Wise Men"
since 1945 have subscribed to this "reductive and insipid
ideology." The path to postwar perdition was inevitable. This
"meretricious conception of security" gave birth to the Bush
Doctrine, culminating in the Iraq "shipwreck." So, down with
all "Wise Men," for starters! Presidents would do better, the
author disdainfully asserts, to pick advisers by lottery. " ...
presidents would be better served if they relied on the common sense of
randomly chosen citizens rather than consulting sophisticated
insiders." (5)
Having followed him this far, the reader will be unsurprised by
Bacevich's summary indictment of the war on terror as an abject
failure and his contention that the Afghan/Iraq wars demonstrate the
hopeless disrepair of all our institutions, the illusoriness of our
military capability, and the bankruptcy of an American way of life
dependent on oil wars. We don't need a bigger army. We need a
smaller, i.e., non-imperial, foreign policy.
It's difficult knowing where to begin in appraising this
vituperative screed. Bacevich seems to view the American republic as
fatally flawed from the start, but he never provides his standard of
judgment. At one point, he sardonically dismisses a "mythical Old
Republic," so it seems doubtful America ever enjoyed
"enlightened governance." If Jefferson's "empire for
liberty" has been a baneful force in history, would the author have
preferred the Anti-Federalist (utopian) small, agrarian republic? Does
Bacevich think the world would be better off had North America been
parceled into British, French, Spanish, and Russian fiefdoms? What would
the world have looked like, if the "empire for liberty" had
not existed to defeat the totalitarian threats of the twentieth century?
What, by the way, does Bacevich think the Civil War and World War II
were about? If the United States, like all great powers, only fights for
its vital interests, why is Bacevich in high dudgeon that politics
ain't bean bag, and foreign policy ain't missionary work?
Bacevich's litany of denunciation, unburdened with sustained
analysis or historical context, covers the map and is replete with
non-sequiturs, post-hoc fallacies, and reductionism. He finds, for
instance, a causal connection between the Strategic Air Command (SAC)
and the National Organization for Women (NOW)! "SAC helped make
possible the feminine mystique and much else besides." (6) The
"malignant" Reagan legacy of SDI's spurious promise of a
technical solution to global military supremacy ignores the existence of
an aggressive Soviet Empire and the moral case for shifting deterrence
from mutual assured destruction to defense. Reagan set the stage for our
Persian Gulf imperium to control oil, and Bacevich almost takes grim
satisfaction that we now confront jihadists Reagan once supported. The
author neglects to mention that the Afghan intervention hastened the
demise of the Soviet Empire. Bacevich fails to recognize that foreign
policy always entails trade-offs and that blow-back sometimes happens.
No better illustration of this exists than the Allied cooperation with
Stalin in World War II, although it eventuated in Soviet domination of
East Europe for half a century. Churchill grasped the choice at the
moment, as he explained to his private secretary, Jock Colville: "I
have only one purpose, the destruction of Hitler, and my life is much
simplified thereby. If Hitler invaded Hell, I would make at least a
favourable reference to the Devil in the House of Commons." (7)
Bacevich does not elucidate what his "non-imperial"
foreign policy means, so the reader must draw inferences. He regards
Reinhold Niebuhr as "the most clear-eyed of American prophets"
and thinks C. Wright Mills correctly analyzed America with his theory of
a "power elite," but he condemns the way Washington's
"insipid" "Wise Men" have drowned out
"principled dissenters" like paleoconservatives, libertarians,
pacifists, and neo-agrarians. Who are these unsung strategists? The
anti-Semite Pat Buchanan who believes World War II was a mistake? Ron
Paul? Reverend Jeremiah Wright? Washington "Wise Men"
haven't a clue about "sound strategy," but
Bacevich's assessment of Iraq violates a cardinal maxim of sound
strategy--start with where we go from here, not where we wish we were or
should have been. This is not the place for a discussion of Iraq, but
several distinguished scholars propose how to make the best of the hand
we've been dealt in the current issue of Foreign Affairs. (8) They
are "wise men," however.
What, then, is the cure for the terminally ill patient? All our
institutions are broken, elections don't matter (much), and
citizens are besotted with self-gratification. Bacevich's facile
remedy is: 'Patient, heal thyself!' "The onus of
responsibility," he declares, "falls squarely on
citizens." (9) But how will sick souls recognize that they are
sick, much less heal themselves with a painful regimen of
self-sacrifice? If who controls political office is irrelevant and all
institutions are dysfunctional, what difference does it make? Of one
thing we can be certain. The complex domestic and international problems
facing us will not be solved by playing the lottery, or consulting the
telephone book. These problems call for "wise men," skilled
Washington insiders who know how to work the levers of power to find
allies and build coalitions through compromise and politicking to
accomplish things. (10) Andrew Bacevich's message is: 'A pox
on all your houses.' Don't call him for help.
Notes
(1.) For a paradigmatic expression of this overweening hubris and
sanctimony, see Condoleezza Rice, "American Realism for a New
World," Foreign Affairs, vol. 87 (July/August, 2008), pp. 2-26.
Rice has the temerity to assert that "our uniquely American
realism" requires an international order reflecting our values to
safeguard our national interest.
(2.) Bacevich, The Limits of Power, p. 11.
(3.) Ibid., p. 67.
(4.) Ibid., p. 72.
(5.) Ibid., p.123.
(6.) Ibid., p. 27.
(7.) Winston S. Churchill, The Second World War, vol. 3, The Grand
Alliance (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1950), p. 370.
(8.) See Stephen Biddle, Michael E. O'Hanlon, and Kenneth M.
Pollack, "How to Leave a Stable Iraq: Building on Progress,"
Foreign Affairs, vol. 87 (September/October, 2008), pp. 40-58.
(9.) Bacevich, The Limits of Power, p. 13.
(10.) See Norman J. Ornstein, "Defending the Insiders: Change
in Washington? Not Without Them," Washington Post, (September 5,
2008), A19.