A Hunger for America? Really?
by
Charles H. Featherstone
by Charles H. Featherstone
DIGG THIS
Moises Naim
is an idiot.
Being the editor
of deliriously misnamed Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace’s (sic) flagship publication,
Foreign Policy, we expect
Moises Naim to be an idiot.
In fact, we expect him to be well nigh an exalted grand poobah of
idiots, a knave among knaves, the peddler of interventionist nonsense
so thick and syrupy it sticks to just about everything around it
and makes walking, or even motion of any kind, impossible. As one
of an intellectual (sic) cabal of chief justifiers of U.S.
intervention, an aspiring world manager who sees himself as senior
advisor to actual world managers, we expect nothing less but well-crafted
and impressive idiocy from the likes of Moises Naim.
In a Wednesday
piece in the Washington Post, "A Hunger for America,"
Moises Naim does not disappoint. He displays his idiocy, proudly
and unashamedly, for all to see.
The world
wants America back.
For the next
several years, world politics will be reshaped by a strong yearning
for American leadership. This trend will be as unexpected as it
is inevitable: unexpected given the powerful anti-American sentiments
around the globe, and inevitable given the vacuums that only the
United States can fill.
This renewed
international appetite for U.S. leadership will not merely result
from the election of a new president, though having a new occupant
in the White House will certainly help. Almost a decade of U.S.
disengagement and distraction have allowed international and regional
problems to swell. Often, the only nation that has the will and
means to act effectively is the United States.
Oh my. It takes
the breath away. "The world wants America back. ... a strong
yearning for American leadership." These are heady and mind-altering
words. They make one dizzy like the kind of smoke one might breathe
in an opium den in Guangzhou or the sweet fumes one might inhale
from a paper sack while crouching behind a 7-11 in Rancho Cucamonga,
California.
I have not
been paying as close attention as perhaps I should to the news these
last few months, what with my seminary studies, so I may have missed
something. This yearning that Naim has apparently so carefully detected
and diagnosed, how exactly has it expressed itself? Did the favelas
of Sao Paulo, the slums and shantytowns of Mumbai, the impoverished
farms of rural China, the villages and refugee camps of Africa and
the Middle East, the salons and suburbs of Paris, Geneva and Rome
and the trading floors of Frankfurt and London, did they somehow
erupt with a deep and abiding love for the United States of America?
A burning desire for boots on the ground? Did the poor and wretched
of the world lock arms and march, chanting "U-S-A! U-S-A!"
and demanding "Intervention Now!" and proclaiming "No
Washington! No Justice!" Was Washington, D.C., recently proclaimed
the world’s qibla,
and did all right-thinking, God-fearing and faithful world citizens
prostrate themselves and send their prayers of supplication to the
wise men – high priests and prophets like Naim – of the U.S. capital
who are ready to lay hands upon the world and cleanse it of its
lepers and turn its water into wine?
No? Not even
the littlest bit? I didn’t think so. I wouldn’t have missed such
a momentous event. It must be Naim sitting there amidst the rubbish
with the glaze-eyed look, clutching the paper bag and the tube of
model airplane glue.
Naim’s assertions
are, of course, self-serving twaddle. Foreign Policy is high-end
pornography for American interventionists and practitioners of empire,
akin to Anne-Marie Villefranche’s bawdy stories of Paris in the
1920s. Naim works at one of the premier international foreign policy
think tanks in Washington, and he edits one of the world’s premier
policy publications. He hopes to benefit from the yearning he supposedly
sees in the world because his institute will hopefully get a say
in just how the United States government responds to that yearning.
Especially after the Bush Regime abandons town.
Whether a Democrat
is elected president or not (and this must be Naim’s fondest hope
– I’m betting Joe Biden is his man), Naim and those like
him will advise anyway. They will fill the air with words and in-boxes
with papers in hopes that someone will listen. Why The Washington
Post considers this kind of thing serious politics, while calls
for non-intervention are somehow not serious, is beyond
me. It is one of the things I have never, and probably will never,
understand.
At any rate,
it’s not enough for the United States to simply act, according to
Naim. It has to act properly, thoughtfully, carefully, forcefully,
according to the processes of the "international community,"
in concert with others and considering the needs and wants of other
governments. But Naim clearly believes the United States needs to
lead the world as the world’s de facto government:
Of course,
the America that the world wants back is not the one that preemptively
invades potential enemies, bullies allies or disdains international
law. The demand is for an America that rallies other nations prone
to sitting on the fence while international crises are boiling
out of control; for a superpower that comes up with innovative
initiatives to tackle the great challenges of the day, such as
climate change, nuclear proliferation and violent Islamist fundamentalism.
The demand is for an America that enforces the rules that facilitate
international commerce and works effectively to stabilize an accident-prone
global economy. Naturally, the world also wants a superpower willing
to foot the bill with a largess that no other nation can match.
Naturally.
And as if to sugarcoat his idiocy, to drench it with a rich powdered
sugar and butter frosting, Naim immediately follows this laundry
list of ideal future U.S. leadership priorities with "These
are not just naive expectations." But of course they are. Nothing
could be more naïve than claiming the world is clamoring for
U.S. leadership, demanding the U.S. lead, but then insisting that
leadership be "just right" all the time! The truth that
all interventionists should learn (and some do, but many, especially
denizens of foreign policy institutes, do not) is that you intervene
(or lead) with the United States that you have, not with the United
States you’d like to have. Naim and his ilk would like to be the
"brains" of the United States so that it can intervene
properly, so that it’s leaders can lead most effectively, and they
seem to think that all institutional and cultural problems that
make global leadership (or intervention) ineffective or counterproductive
can be overcome by something resembling effective and enlightened
management. But in wanting exactly this, they have empowered the
likes of the neoconservatives and the muscular nationalists of the
Bush regime. You give a man a stick, he will likely beat people
with it.
Only in Naim’s
world of Washington think-tankery would two simultaneous foreign
wars and threats of several third wars (Iran, Pakistan) as well
as constant interference, lectures and speeches from administration
officials about how other governments and nations ought to behave
and govern themselves be emblematic of "a decade of U.S. disengagement
and distraction." It makes one wonder what exactly Naim’s engagement
would like – a dozen wars? Two dozen? Four-score and seven? How
activist would a U.S. government need to get in order to have Naim’s
heartfelt approval? How much more "global leadership"
would I, as an American, be forced to pay for, leadership that right
now provides me – and most other Americans – no clear benefits?
When did the world’s problems suddenly become ours, and only ours,
to solve anyway?
I wish there
was a way to put the policy institutes out of business. I sometimes
fantasize about burning them all down and sending their inmates
to work picking lettuce or harvesting almonds in California, a kind-of
Maoist re-education. But the think tanks are very well-endowed,
they have become a kind-of fourth branch of our semi-constitutional
government, and as long as men and women are paid outlandish salaries
to concoct justifications and methods of intervention hither and
yon, the giant budget of the United States government and the country’s
sprawling and well-endowed armed forces will forever remain an attractive
nuisance for those aspiring to global do-goodery and world control.
A Ron Paul victory in November 2008 would go some way to putting
these people out of business for at least a while, but I’m nowhere
near as confident about that prospect as some others at this web
site are.
Only national
bankruptcy will put the likes of Moises Naim out of business. I
hate to hope for this, but it’s coming nonetheless. By being such
a wide-eyed interventionist, by demanding such an expansive and
never-ending job for the United States government and the people
it taxes, Moises Naim is making sure of that.
January
5, 2008
Charles
H. Featherstone [send
him mail] is a seminarian and freelance editor
living in Chicago. Visit his
blog.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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