For the Arrogance of Power
America Now Pays
a Terrible Price
By Jonathan Power
13 September 2001
LONDON - The American nation appears not
only immensely distressed and angry about the bombings
but surprised too. It cannot
understand why anyone should be moved by such hatred against
it and, inured from the rest of us by the isolationism
of most of its political representatives and its media, it
has
little idea of the currents swirling against it.
An event
of this magnitude was not only unimagined, it was unimaginable.
Yet long before George Bush became president
with his forceful in-your-face, take-it-or-leave-it attitude
to the world outside on issues as diverse as global warming
and anti-missile defences, America has been turning in
on
itself, to the point of self-destructiveness.
William Pfaff,
the astute American commentator, wrote recently that "America
is a dangerous nation while remaining a righteous one" and
America's pre-eminent foreign policy observer, George Kennan,
ambassador to the Soviet Union during
Stalin's time, wrote quite a few years ago, "I do not
think that the United States civilization of these last 40-50
years is a successful civilization. I think this country
is destined to succumb to failures which cannot be other
than tragic and enormous in their scope." And later
added that for Americans "to see ourselves as the centre
of political enlightenment and teachers to a great part of
the rest of the world [is] unthought-through, vainglorious
and undesirable.".
It would be misunderstanding human
nature to believe that most Americans want to hear such
thoughts played back to
them on their day of grief, victims of an evil deed that
compares with the worst of the blood-stained twentieth
century. Yet they have to know that action produces reaction
and not
for nothing is anti-American resentment on the increase
all over the world, not least in Europe where there is some
astonishment
at the way the new American administration has ploughed
ahead with its self-interested agenda as if no one else has
a legitimate
opinion or could perhaps view the same situation in a different
light.
Foreign observers do not miss the reports that
come out of Pentagon think tanks of America's need to use
this
special
moment after the defeat of European communism and the break
up of the Soviet Union to make sure that America is militarily
superior the world over, and that no one, not even its
closest allies, should be in a position to tell it what to
do.
The
U.S. began the new millennium as the most heavily militarised
nation on earth. It is the U.S., which poses the military
threat to others. At the outbreak of the Second World War
the U.S. army was only 174,000 men. Today it has 1.4 million
in its "standing army" and a ready reserve and
National Guard numbering 2.5 million. Despite the end of
the Cold War, under President Bill Clinton the U.S. made
only a paltry effort to wind down the nuclear arsenals of
the superpowers, and instead provocatively insisted on expanding
Nato close to Russia's borders. The Bush administration with
its declared ambition to abandon the Anti-Ballistic Missile
Treaty, solemnly signed by Richard Nixon and Leonid Brezhnev,
seems unconcerned that this will set in motion events that
will unwind hard won international norms on ending nuclear
testing and on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons,
even hinting that it will understand if China has to increase
its nuclear forces or test new nuclear weapons.
I have talked
to a range of ordinary Europeans in the last 24 hours and
they all say, in the face of the earnest shoulder-to-shoulder
rhetoric of their leaders, that America has got itself
into this hole by its own disregard for what others think.
The
first law of holes, of course, is to stop digging - which,
of course, is what Washington should firmly have told Israel
six presidents ago when it started its foolish and counterproductive
policy of building settlements on what everyone knew was
Palestinian land. Amazingly, the policy continues with
apparent understanding from the Bush administration. While
Arab governments
ring their hands, and young Palestinians fight one of the
best trained armies in the world with stones, there are
the inevitable few attached to the Palestinian cause who
are
moved towards serious violence - the suicide bombers and,
we don't know yet, although it is the most likely explanation,
the destroyers of the World Trade Centre.
In every political
movement - whether it be the Palestinians or the globalisation
protestors in Genoa there are fringe
elements that advocate violence. This does not mean the
mainstream of that movement is wrong. It might or might not
be. But,
right or wrong, there will always be powerful elements
of truth contained within it, or the passions and purpose
would
never be ignited. To meet it eye for eye and tooth for
tooth, as Gandhi once said, is to make everybody blind. America
right now is a repository of exhausted ideas, like dead
stars.
The arrogance of power has produced its inevitable reaction.
America is threatened not by nuclear tipped missiles from
unknown rogue nations, but by small groups of angry men
who, although prisoners of their zealotry, know well enough
that
much of the world whilst not agreeing with them understands
their frustration. To deal with this effectively requires
a new way of looking at the world.
George Kennan, the late Senator William Fulbright, Willam
Pfaff and others have been arguing what this might be for
a long time. On this sad and tragic day one wishes their
pens could become mightier than America's sword.
Copyright © 2001
by Jonathan Power
Jonathan Power is
a columnist and TFF associate. The author can be reached
by phone +44 7785 351172 and e-mail: JonatPower@aol.com.
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