Imperial Barbarians
By David Moberg
"That's not the way we do things
in America," George Bush told an Arab world seething with anger about the
photos of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib. As usual, he was lying.
The abusers were indeed Americans,
apparently guided broadly by Bush administration directives. The pictures
may have been new and shocking in their details, but the practices, unfortunately,
have a lengthy American pedigree, from Vietnam through the work of School
of the Americas graduates in Latin America. Even some Bush supporters acknowledged
that it is indeed the way things are done in America, but dismissed the
prisoner abuse as "no different than what happens at the Skull and Bones
initiation" (Rush Limbaugh) or identified it with those who are "more outraged
by the outrage than we are by the treatment" (Oklahoma Republican Sen.
James Inhofe).
But with his denial Bush was not
simply trying to distance himself and the country from political damage
at home, in Iraq and throughout the world. He was reasserting the powerful
and dangerous collective self-delusion that America is a uniquely privileged
nation, set apart from history and embodying a divine mission. This deep-rooted
sense of American exceptionalism that goes back to the Puritans underlies
the justifications for the creation of a new, benign American empire. But
Iraq already is showing the cracks in the empire's foundation.
Politically, Bush must pretend that
the abuses are the work of a few bad apples. The real problem is the rotten
apple-barrel of American policy. Evidence mounts that American intelligence
and military operatives mistreated, or tortured, prisoners not only in
Abu Ghraib but in scattered sites under varied jurisdictions, from Guantanamo
to Iraq to Afghanistan. As Seymour Hersh reported in the May 24 New Yorker,
many of the abuses grew out of a "special access program" in Afghanistan
set up at the instigation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to pursue
"high value targets" of the war on terror that was then exported to Iraq
as the war began going badly. The program rules, a former intelligence
official told Hersh, were simple: "Grab whom you must. Do what you want."
Bush did not directly authorize female
soldiers to hold naked Iraqi prisoners on a leash, but he set the context
for such abuse of power by framing America's post-9/11 foreign policy as
a battle of good versus evil and by refusing to allow international treaties
or the United Nations to constrain U.S. actions. Bush was not the first
American president to launch preemptive war. Reagan, after all, invaded
Grenada. But Bush, armed with his national security doctrine, has gone
further than any other in claiming an American right to attack preemptively
and unilaterally any challenge to its power and to define American-style
capitalism as the only acceptable model for nations everywhere. Using military
force to pursue empire, however, America proves no exception to imperial
patterns: power over others leads to abuse, especially as resistance to
occupation grows.
Over the protests of liberals and
conservatives who supported an internationalist foreign policy to thwart
communism, critics on the left have for decades disparagingly described
the United States as imperialist. But with the collapse of the Soviet bloc
and especially since 9/11, some analysts--principally neo-conservatives
but also varied liberals and traditional conservatives--began to argue that
America is an imperial power by virtue of its military, economic and technological
superiority. So, some argued, it should consciously act like an empire,
guaranteeing order and protecting human rights, especially since the United
Nations lacks power to function as an embryonic world government (thanks,
partly, to U.S. policy).
In a twist on the traditional leftist
claim that humanity faced a choice of socialism or barbarism, author David
Rieff claimed in a 1999 World Policy Journal essay that "our choice at
the millennium seems to boil down to imperialism or barbarism." Apologists
contend that America as an empire will once again be an exception, a disinterested
force for freedom and human rights, ruling as much by "soft power"--the
appeal of its culture--as by force. But political scientist James Chace
argues that this messianic vision of American empire is rooted in a dangerous
and impossible quest for absolute security that is linked to the vision
of America as a unique "empire of liberty," as Thomas Jefferson put it.
Europeans rationalized their empires
as civilizing missions. Today the utopian rhetoric of American exceptionalism
masks the primary intent of the United States to create, not actual colonies,
but a global market subservient to transnational capital. Even in the late
19th Century, as historian William Appleman Williams has written, the United
States denounced European colonialism as a ploy to open closed colonial
markets to American goods. Americans' messianic sense of their country
as a "city on a hill" embodies both a hope for something better and a claim
that America already is "number one" in all regards, even when it clearly
is not--or when it garners dubious firsts. The United States, for example,
is a world leader in economic inequality and percentage of its citizens
in prisons.
American messianic utopianism also
ignores history, a particularly treacherous pitfall in western Asia. Columbia
University professor Rashid Khalidi explains in his new book Resurrecting
Empire that Britain and other European powers shaped the Middle East that
exists today--drawing arbitrary boundaries in Iraq, undermining Arab movements
that sought to develop European-style parliamentary democracy, and supporting
undemocratic regimes (like the Saudis with their ties to fundamentalist
Wahhabism, one root of Islamist terrorist ideology). Arab enthusiasm for
the United States as an alternative to colonial powers was dashed as the
United States began to indirectly share the imperial rule of the region,
such as helping overthrow the elected Iranian government of Mohammed Mossadegh
when it tried to nationalize oil production in the '50s or increasingly
favoring the most conservative Israeli policies over Palestinian interests.
As a result, U.S. policies have ultimately, though not intentionally, nurtured
the emergence of the Islamist terrorists that threaten the world. Now,
with its occupation of Iraq, Khalidi writes, "the United States is wittingly
or unwittingly stepping into the boots of earlier imperial powers," something
that "cannot possibly be 'done right.' "
Once again imperial dictates provoke
rebellion. Any goodwill won by ousting Saddam has disappeared as the United
States has become more occupier, less liberator. That is the first crack
in the imperial edifice. American popular opinion is turning against the
war: it bears no resemblance to the fanciful promises, brings growing casualties,
corrupts American soldiers and politicians, and costs more than $50 billion
a year at the same time that health care, education and other needs of
average Americans are being shortchanged. Throughout the world, the United
States is losing moral stature and political support, making it harder
to achieve legitimate goals, such as international cooperation against
terrorists like Osama bin Laden or for multinational humanitarian campaigns.
The costs of the new imperialism
ultimately are likely to prove too high for both dominated countries and
for average Americans. Although some Bush strategists share the Leo Straussian
view that leaders must lie to mobilize popular support, they are discovering
that lies often backfire. The contradictions between America's utopian
image and the reality of empire will eventually become unsustainable. The
United States, its power unrivaled, faces the prospect that its imperialism
will become barbarism, not its alternative.
David Moberg, a senior editor
of In These Times, has been on the staff of the magazine since it
began publishing. Before joining In These Times, he completed his
work for a Ph.D. in anthropology at the University of Chicago and worked
for Newsweek. Recently he has received fellowships from the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Nation Institute for research
on the new global economy.
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