Vanishing
American Footprint
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Hate
Speech Makes a Comeback
With his order
to effect the execution of Osama bin Laden by Navy SEALs, 40 miles
from Islamabad, without asking permission of the government, Barack
Obama made a bold and courageous decision.
Its success,
and the accolades he has received, have given him a credibility
as commander in chief that he never had before.
The law professor,
it turns out, is a gunslinger.
Should the
president now decide on a major withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan
in July, or side with his generals and make a token pullout, either
way, the country will accept his decision.
Yet, as one
looks to the Maghreb and Middle East, to the Gulf and Pakistan,
events of this historic year point to an inexorable retreat of American
power and the American presence.
Consider Pakistan.
Today, that nation is red-faced that its military and intelligence
services lied or did not know Osama was living in a mansion a mile
from their West Point. And Pakistan is humiliated that U.S. commandos
flew in by chopper at night, killed Osama in his compound, and made
off with his body, computers and cell phones.
Relations are
close to the breaking point. Mobs are burning American flags. Angry
congressmen are talking of cutting off aid to Pakistan for disloyalty
and duplicity in hiding bin Laden. Pakistanis are enraged Americans
would trample on their sovereignty like that.
Even before
Sunday's killing of Osama, Pakistan's prime minister had reportedly
told Hamid Karzai in Kabul to let the Americans leave on schedule
in 2014, and let Pakistan and China help him cut his deal with the
Taliban. In the long run, this is likely to happen.
U.S. and NATO
forces leave, the Taliban returns, and Pakistan moves into the orbit
of China, which has far more cash – $3 trillion in foreign currency
reserves – and more of a long-term interest in South Asia than a
busted United States on the far side of the world.
The "Great
Game" will go on in Afghanistan, but without Western players – only
Iran, Russia, China, Pakistan and India.
In the other
two critical Islamic nations in the region, Turkey and Egypt, we
see a similar unraveling of ties to Washington.
Turkey has
been going its own way since she refused George W. Bush permission
to use Turkish bases to invade Iraq.
Ankara has
become less secular and more Islamic, and begun to highlight her
identity as a Middle Eastern nation. She has repaired relations
with neighbors America regards as rogue states: Iran and Syria.
And she has become the champion of the Gaza Palestinians.
Since Hosni
Mubarak's fall, Egypt has pursued a similar course. Cairo has allowed
Iranian warships to transit Suez and is about to re-establish ties
to Tehran. She has brokered an agreement uniting Hamas and the Palestinian
Authority, and is about to reopen the border crossing between Egypt
and Gaza. Israeli anger and American alarm are politely ignored.
Though their
population, like Pakistan's, is anti-American, neither Turkey nor
Egypt is openly hostile. Yet both pursue policies that clash with
U.S. policy. And this new distance from Washington is being met
with the approval of Turks and Egyptians. For the one thing all
of the uprisings of the Arab Spring have had in common is a desire
of these peoples to be rid of American hegemony.
Indeed, taking
inventory after four months of Arab revolts, it is difficult not
to declare America a net loser.
Our ally of
30 years, Mubarak, was overthrown. The new government is moving
away from us. Our ally in Tunisia was ousted.
Our unpopular
and ruthless ally in Yemen is still fighting for survival. The brutality
shown by our friend, Bahrain's King Khalifa, against peaceful Shiite
demonstrators probably means eventual loss of basing rights for
the U.S. Fifth Fleet.
We are to begin
pulling troops out of Afghanistan this summer and complete the withdrawal
in 2014. We are down from 170,000 troops in Iraq to 50,000. All
are to be gone by year's end.
Americans have
had their fill of nation-building. We cannot afford any more decade-long
wars where the benefits to the American people have to be endlessly
explained.
Why is America's
footprint shrinking in that part of the world?
First, Americans
have never been less popular there, and one demand of every revolution
is for a new government, independent of the United States, that
will defend the national sovereignty.
Second,
we are broke. We can no longer afford the bases. We can no longer
afford the wars. We can no longer afford the aid.
Third, the
true vital interest of the United States in this part of the world
is that these Islamic countries not become base camps of terror,
especially nuclear terror, targeted against the United States.
That end is
surely better served by packing and departing than by staying and
fighting.
May
7, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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