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Imperial musings in Washington
Chris Toensing
The Daily Star, 7/26/03
On a sweltering Washington sidewalk on July 17, a handful of protesters
berated the stream of bespectacled wonks entering the “stink tank”
known as the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) famous worldwide as
the home of former Pentagon official Richard Perle and former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich. In the air-conditioned comfort inside, the lusty
strains of Rule Britannia welcomed a capacity crowd to AEI’s version of
a summertime idyll. We were assembled to hear two vaunted thinkers of the
new, new world order debate the proposition that America is, and should
be, an empire.
As recently as two years ago, describing the United States as an empire
defined one as a Marxist. No longer. British imperial historian Niall
Ferguson and neoconservative guru Robert Kagan did not debate the
proposition so much as quibble over the meaning of words. Both promoted an
image of the US as a benevolent superpower with one discernible interest
to render the world safe for democracy and free enterprise. This
interest, the debaters agreed, was noble, even altruistic.
But despite its virtue, posited Ferguson, the United States was an “empire
in denial.” Because Americans stubbornly refused to acknowledge their
global dominion, the US did not act as an imperium should. It dispatched
Marines to troubled tropical climes on the false premise that, once they
disciplined the unruly natives, they would be home in time to carve the
Thanksgiving turkey. The US practiced “Wal-Mart” expansionism,
consistently spending a fraction of what was required to pacify conquered
countries. Finally, it relied too heavily on military coercion, failing to
secure the collaboration of vassal states that made empires last.
In the era of suitcase-sized nukes and Osama bin Laden, such a “colossus
with attention-deficit disorder” was a danger to itself and others. The
US should come to terms with its supremacy, and rule the world more
responsibly.
Not exactly, Kagan rejoined. The US was not a fumbling empire in denial,
in fact not an empire at all, but merely the most successful “global
hegemon” in history. After Ferguson’s Oxonian verbal rigor, Kagan’s
reasoning seemed flaccid. The US, he asserted, could not be an empire
because it had no stated imperial design. (Didn’t Britain also acquire
its domain “in a fit of absentmindedness?”) Americans had neither an
imperial hymn like Rule Britannia nor an imperial poet like Rudyard
Kipling. Contrary to popular belief, the US became less imperialistic in
the late 19th and 20th centuries an implicit admission that “Manifest
Destiny” was a doctrine of empire building. The ideology of American
dominion subsided as American power grew. That, Kagan insisted, was the
source of everyone’s confusion.
Much to the audience’s enjoyment, Kagan and Ferguson sparred further
over terminology. “You don’t call another country the ‘evil empire’
if you don’t secretly believe that you are the ‘good empire,’”
said Ferguson impishly.
For now in Washington such debates are merely “great fun,” in the
words of one departing spectator. But the intellectual jousting betrayed a
growing, mostly unspoken consensus in the capital: American imperium is no
longer a normative question, much less an empirical one. The answers now
seem clear: Why fight wars to safeguard America’s sole superpower status
in the future? Because that is the proper order of things. Why launch a
crusade to “democratize” the authoritarian Arab world? Because we can.
This consensus belies what Kagan called the “myth of (America’s)
Edenic innocence,” to which some on the left, and the traditional right,
cling. The US has long been an empire afraid to speak its name. As
Ferguson noted, the steady transfer of funds and foreign-policy functions
to the Pentagon is a classic sign of a republic losing its republican
identity. What is left is for Americans, who like to consider themselves
anti-colonial pioneers, to learn to love empire. First, the word must lose
its pejorative connotations.
A cultural historian might argue that the very occurrence of the AEI
event, together with the volumes about empire filling American bookstores,
demonstrates that this process is well under way. Ostensibly neutral in
the debate, AEI seemed to tip its hand by concluding the proceedings with
music from The Empire Strikes Back. And in fact the speakers’ dispute
over the term “imperial” reached its denouement when they concurred
that Lenin and British historian John Hobson had ruined a perfectly good
concept by attaching the suffix “ism” to it.
Nor did the hosts’ open minds embrace substantive dissent. Shortly
before the debate began, AEI staff summoned police to expel two presumed
infiltrators from the ranks of the protesters outside. Defending the
action, an AEI spokeswoman told the Washington Post that the protesters
were responsible for an overflowed toilet in the “stink tank” suite.
As the blue-uniformed centurion removed one protester from the room, she
appealed to the crowd to protect her free speech from this pre-emptive
strike. No one said a word.
Chris Toensing is editor of Middle East Report in Washington. He wrote
this commentary for THE DAILY STAR
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hungry for peace |
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| The Israeli
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(Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03). |
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| The Israeli
apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers in
the West Bank (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03). |
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