Empire or Freedom?
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
The 9/11 attacks
brought to the surface a dilemma that everyone, especially libertarians,
must now confront: whether to choose a pro-empire, pro-intervention
foreign policy or a free society.
No one can
deny that we now live in a country in which the president, on his
own initiative, has the omnipotent power to send the nation into
war against any country on earth, especially given that the war
on terror extends all over the globe. The president and the military
have the power to take any suspected terrorist foreigner
or American into custody and torture, abuse, and execute
him without due process of law and trial by jury. The president
and the NSA have the power to wiretap telephones and monitor emails
without a judicially issued warrant. The president, the CIA, and
the military have the power to send missiles into cars and drop
bombs into buildings anywhere in the world, including right here
in the United States, in their attempt to win the war on terror.
Indeed, the president may now ignore any constitutional or legislative
restraints on his power as a wartime commander in chief.
How can such
powers be reconciled with the principles of a free society, especially
from a libertarian standpoint?
If a government
has the power to arbitrarily take anyone into custody and torture
and kill him, how can the citizenry in that society truly be considered
free? Even if there is freedom of religion, freedom of the press,
freedom of assembly, the freedom to vote, and even the freedom to
own guns, all such freedoms are relegated to secondary importance
when the government has the power to arrest, torture, and execute
anyone it wants.
As Winston
Churchill put it,
The power
of the Executive to cast a man into prison without formulating
any charge known to the law, and particularly to deny him the
judgment of his peers, is in the highest degree odious and is
the foundation of all totalitarian government whether Nazi or
Communist.
Recall the
movie Braveheart,
which depicted a period in English history when the English king
and his minions possessed and exercised the right to rape a newlywed
bride on her wedding night. Can anyone imagine the womans
husband exclaiming, as his wife was carted away, At least
we can peacefully protest the kings actions without being
thrown into jail and at least we have sound money? (In fact,
even the right of habeas corpus would be ineffective in such a case
because the judge at the habeas corpus hearing would hold that under
the law officials had the right to rape the bride and, therefore,
he would deny habeas corpus relief. Thus, the core problem would
remain that government officials would possess the power
to rape.)
Or imagine
a suspected terrorist being stretched on the rack or subjected to
waterboarding, screaming, I have the right to criticize the
government under principles of freedom of speech (or even,
I have the right to call my lawyer!). His torturers
would respond, Well of course you do. But we have rights
too including the right to arrest, torture, abuse, and kill
you without judicial interference. Thus, again, the problem
lies in the fact that government possesses the power to arbitrarily
arrest and torture people.
The realities
exposed by 9/11
Thats
what 9/11 accomplished. It exposed the horrible reality of what
an imperial, interventionist foreign policy has brought to our nation
and the American people. We not only live in a nation whose government
has troops in more than 100 foreign countries, that is occupying
Afghanistan and Iraq, that is threatening new wars against Iran
and North Korea, and that claims the authority to drop bombs on
any country on earth. We also live in a country in which omnipotent
power over the citizenry by the president, the CIA, and the military
is part and parcel of that foreign policy.
After all,
despite the manifest evidence of kidnapping, torture, and murder
of prisoners and detainees at the hands of CIA agents, how many
CIA agents have been brought to account by either the Justice Department
or the Congress? (None.) How many have been arrested and charged
for such crimes? (None.) How many have been indicted? (None.) The
only potential criminal prosecution of CIA agents is coming from
foreign countries, such as Italy and Germany, where prosecutors
are seeking criminal indictments against CIA agents for kidnapping
and conspiring to torture in those countries. When it comes to the
CIA, unfortunately all too many people get scared, turn away, and
remain silent. Thats what omnipotent government tends to do
to people.
How can a nation
whose government has an untold number of secret agents, operating
with secret budgets, following secret orders, and wielding the authority
to kidnap, torture, and murder with impunity even remotely be reconciled
with the principles of a free society, especially from a libertarian
standpoint?
Some may think
that there really isnt any cause for concern because most
of the suspected terrorists that U.S. officials are incarcerating,
torturing, and killing are foreigners, not Americans. After all,
theyve arrested, incarcerated, and denied the right to counsel,
due process, and jury trials to only two Americans Yaser
Hamdi and José Padilla. Whats the big deal?
For one thing,
freedom is not defined by the extent to which a wrongful power is
being exercised by government but rather by whether the wrongful
power is possessed and able to be exercised.
Second, U.S.
officials reserve the power to subject all Americans to the same
treatment to which all other suspected terrorists have been subjected.
Third, to think
that the exercise of such power will be limited to only
one or two Americans reflects naïveté in the extreme. The fact is
that the feds could have easily treated Hamdi and Padilla to the
same abuse and torture accorded to suspects at Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib,
Bagram, or the CIAs secret overseas torture facilities. Or
they could have transported them to Syria, Egypt, Jordan, or any
other friendly brutal regime for torture, as they did to an innocent
Canadian citizen falsely accused of being a terrorist. It was only
political considerations that inhibited U.S. officials from subjecting
American terror suspects to the full panoply of mistreatment to
which they have subjected foreign terror suspects. But let there
be one or two more major terrorist attacks in the United States,
and all bets are off: Americans will inevitably witness the full
power of Leviathan unleashed. And if that day comes, all too many
Americans will realize that the time for protest was long before
it became too dangerous to protest.
Some libertarians
may be harking back to what may seem to them to have been the halcyon
days of pre-9/11, when it seemed possible to favor a pro-empire,
pro-intervention foreign policy (euphemistically described as a
strong national defense) while favoring libertarianism
(i.e., limited government) in domestic policy. That wasnt
reality that was just fanciful thinking in a make-believe
world. It was like saying, I favor lightning but Im
firmly against thunder. If one favors a particular government
policy, he embraces the inevitable consequences of that policy,
especially when the policy has been in existence long enough to
produce the results.
The holy-war
theory
Some libertarians
are now subscribing to the theory that some conservatives are promoting
that the core problem facing America is not U.S. foreign
policy but rather Islam itself, which theyre claiming is actually
a bigger threat than communism. Keep in mind that conservatives
used the communist threat to justify the enormous U.S. military
empire and military-industrial complex during the many decades of
the Cold War.
I suspect that
deep down such libertarians know that such a holy-war theory is
without foundation. It might even be a subconscious way to avoid
confronting the critical dilemma with which 9/11 has now confronted
people, especially libertarians whether to give up hope of
a free society by maintaining allegiance to a pro-empire, pro-intervention
foreign policy or to choose a free society by embracing libertarian
principles in both domestic and foreign policy.
After all,
not even President Bush subscribes to the holy-war justification
for the U.S. Empire and its role as an international policeman,
especially in the Middle East. Moreover, a close examination of
the evidence belies the legitimacy of the holy-war theory.
For example,
despite many years of U.S government support for Saddam Hussein,
including delivery of WMDs to him, no Iraqi ever attacked the United
States, even though most people in Iraq are Muslims.
When U.S. officials
turned on Saddam and killed countless Iraqis in the Persian Gulf
intervention, followed by more than a decade of brutal sanctions
that killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children, there were
still no attacks on the United States by Iraqis. Even when U.S.
official Madeleine Albright publicly announced that the deaths of
half a million Iraqi children were worth it, no Iraqis
attacked the United States.
Since President
Bushs invasion and occupation of Iraq, there have been no
Iraqi attacks on the United States.
Its true
that Iraqis are killing American troops in Iraq but there is another
more likely explanation than the holy-war one: Iraqis dont
like foreigners who invade and occupy their country, killing, maiming,
and torturing Iraqi citizens in the process, any more than Americans
would like foreigners attacking and occupying the United States
and killing and maiming Americans in the process.
Moreover, lets
not forget that the U.S. government is a longtime supporter of such
Islamic countries as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Pakistan, Kuwait,
and Bahrain. Would U.S. officials be supporting countries that were
waging a holy war against the United States? Wouldnt people
be protesting that?
Muslims arent
attacking Switzerland or the Swiss people, despite the fact that
the Swiss are predominantly Christian. Isnt it likely that
the reason for these non-attacks is that the Swiss government, unlike
the U.S. government, doesnt meddle in the Middle East or the
rest of the world?
If people of
Muslim faith were really waging a holy war, wouldnt Americans
of Islamic faith be killing Americans of Christian faith and vice
versa right here in the United States? Yet all of us know that if
that were to happen, the killer would immediately be indicted and
convicted for the crime of murder and that a defense of holy
war at trial would be rejected by every court in the land.
There are,
of course, fanatical Islamists, but their numbers are ordinarily
too small to be considered a significant threat to any nation. The
problem is that, as many U.S. intelligence agencies are now pointing
out, U.S. foreign policy, especially the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan
and Iraq, has been a dream come true for the recruiters of such
extremist groups. Any person, regardless of race, color, or religious
creed, whose family is killed, raped, or maimed is likely to be
angry at those who committed such acts.
The fruits
of empire and interventionism
The 9/11 attacks
exposed what has been going on for many decades and continues to
occur at an ever-increasing pace the movement of our nation
away from its founding principles of a republic and in the direction
of empire, militarism, and intervention. Equally important, the
reality is that such federal programs as the war on terror,
the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq, and the impending
attack on Iran, along with the omnipotent powers that the president,
the CIA, the NSA, and the Pentagon now wield against the American
people, are inherent, integral, inescapable parts of that foreign
policy.
Lets
also not forget another essential part of an imperial, militarist,
interventionist foreign policy: out-of-control federal spending,
which in turn brings rising inflation and taxation. How can those
things be reconciled with libertarian economic principles?
Finally, as
U.S. officials often remind us, the war on terror is perpetual,
especially because an interventionist foreign policy guarantees
an infinite supply of terrorists. That means that people who favor
such a foreign policy are, at the same time, surrendering any hope
of ever achieving a free society. The only way to achieve the free
society is through a consistent commitment to libertarian principles,
not only in domestic affairs but also in foreign affairs.
Thus, libertarians
who embrace the U.S. foreign policy that has held our nation in
its grip for so long have one of the most important decisions of
their lives confronting them. By hewing to two contradictory philosophies
one of freedom and one that destroys freedom circumstances
have now placed them in a moral and philosophical quandary. Will
they continue hewing to a pro-empire, pro-intervention foreign policy,
thereby giving up all hope of a free society at home? Or will they
choose to maintain their commitment to libertarianism here in America,
which means rejecting an imperial, interventionist foreign policy?
Or will they simply act as if no choice at all now confronts them?
The stakes
are obviously enormous. As Ludwig von Mises put it,
No one can
find a safe way out for himself if society is sweeping towards
destruction. Therefore everyone, in his own interests, must thrust
himself vigorously into the intellectual battle. None can stand
aside with unconcern; the interests of everyone hang on the result.
August
28, 2007
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2007 Future of Freedom Foundation
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