The War To Define the Peace
by Steven LaTulippe
by Steven LaTulippe
"She
well knows that by once enlisting under other banners than her
own, were they even the banners of foreign independence; she would
involve herself beyond the power of extrication, in all the wars
of interest and intrigue, of individual avarice, envy, and ambition,
which assume the colors and usurp the standard of freedom. The
fundamental maxims of her policy would insensibly change from
liberty to force...."
~
John Q. Adams
Whenever
political catastrophe strikes, there usually arises a unique moment
in which a battle of ideas ensues. The battle occurs to define the
public’s consciousness for the reasons behind the disaster. It is
at such times that paradigms for the future are created or destroyed.
The outcome of this battle often determines the direction of the
polity far into the future.
One
such moment occurred in the stock market collapse that heralded
the Great Depression. As many libertarians have noted (including
the ex-libertarian and current Fed bubble-boy, Alan Greenspan),
the reasons for that economic catastrophe originated with the Federal
Reserve’s policy of "easy money". The wizards in our central
bank thought, throughout the 20’s, that they had found the magical
formula for perpetual prosperity. Namely, they engaged in a decade-long
policy of interest rate suppression and currency debasement. This
strategy created impressive short-term opulence, but it also gave
rise to numerous speculative bubbles that ultimately deflated…causing
the collapse of the market and the nation’s downward spiral into
depression.
But
the battle of ideas that ensued was won by the forces of statism.
FDR’s socialists succeeded in convincing the American people that
the depression was caused, not by government intervention in the
free market, but rather by the excesses of capitalism and a dearth
of government regulation. This ideological loss by the forces of
liberty carried with it devastating consequences for America which
still haunt us today. Most of the socialist policies that are slowly
eating away at our Republic had their genesis in this ideological
defeat of freedom.
What
had been a golden opportunity to instruct the American people in
the ideals of liberty and limited government became a hideous green
light for statists to begin an exponential growth of government
power.
As
our Iraq adventure begins to rot around the edges, we are again
approaching one of these critical moments in the history of our
Republic.
Neoconservatism
is, in my opinion, ultimately untenable. The idea that America can
exercise "benevolent world hegemony" is nonsense. The
American people will not tolerate perpetual wars of conquest in
the name of reconstructing the Middle East in our image. As the
cost in blood and treasure mounts, America will reach a state of
ideological crisis. We will then arrive at what the liberals call
a "teachable moment".
Al
Gore gave a blistering speech last week which attacked the Bush
administration’s horrendous policies of suppression at home and
militarism abroad. All in all, it was not a bad harangue. He hit
many points with which any libertarian would agree. But it is also
clear that he, and the forces of statism which he represents, are
aware of the situation and intend to make philosophical hay of the
debacle.
It
is not adequate that the American people should come to recognize
the disastrous ideology that is neoconservatism. It is possible
to be right for the wrong reasons. And if the wrong paradigms become
embedded in the consciousness of the American people, the outcome
could be even more devastating than the neoconservative calamity
itself.
First
and foremost, it is critical that the public comes to understand
why this Iraq war was not a disaster.
It
was not a disaster because we failed to obtain the UN’s permission
to attack Iraq. It was not a disaster because we ran roughshod
over the opinions of our allies. It was not a disaster because
we failed to create a significant "coalition" to accompany
us in the invasion.
Rather,
the reasons why this war is a disaster revolve around the ideals
and beliefs which accompanied the creation of our Republic. President
Bush launched a pre-emptive attack without the constitutionally-mandated
declaration of war by Congress. He arrogated to himself the right
to unilaterally plunge America into an armed conflict…which is a
concept that was explicitly denounced by the Founding Fathers.
Furthermore,
his paradigm for launching the war was in diametric opposition to
the beliefs of the creators of our Republic. George Washington (among
many of our Founders) specifically warned the American people against
the dangers of overseas entanglements. John Q. Adams noted that
"America does not go abroad in search of monsters to destroy".
Many of our Founders even opposed the existence of a permanent army
on the argument that such professional militaries are always a danger
to self-government.
The
leftists who now seek to define this failed war’s aftermath are
preaching an entirely different Gospel. In their view, the collapse
of neoconservatism should be analyzed in the paradigm of Wilsonian
internationalism and big-government socialism. Their differences
with Bush are more stylistic and technocratic than moral or constitutional.
Given the choice, most of these leftists would probably prefer a
continuation of Bush’s neoconservative militarism than a return
to Washingtonian "isolationism".
The
left had no problem with invading Haiti in the 1990’s for the purpose
of "nation building". They had no issue with attacking
Serbia to stop a war of ethnic hatred. They have even actively sought
to turn many aspects of our governance over to a variety of unelected
UN bureaucracies.
Al
Gore may denounce the Patriot Act, but he also vehemently supports
the Kyoto treaty, which will regulate even the gases we exhale.
He decries the intrusion of Bush’s paranoid security apparatus into
the daily lives of our citizens, but enthusiastically supported
the planned seizure of our entire health care industry by the federal
government.
The
next year or so will be one of a unique contest of ideas. While
Bush’s ideology of perpetual war is slowly becoming discredited
in the eyes of the public, it is vitally important that libertarians
effectively communicate our paradigms to the American people. If
we fail, Wilsonian internationalism will assert its control over
our future in a much more virulent form than it has in the past.
Neoconservatism
arose in a unique moment in American history when the people were
in shock over 9/11. But it is not stable. In the long run, Wilsonianism
is a far greater danger to our Republic than the ludicrous rantings
of the neocons.
As
this Iraq adventure creaks into its ugly final stages, the elites
from across the political spectrum will unite to ensure that the
American people don’t draw the "wrong" conclusions from
the debacle. It is the task of libertarians to make certain that
they do.
We
libertarians lost the war to stop this war. We must not lose the
war to define the peace.
June
3, 2004
Steven
LaTulippe [send him mail]
is a physician currently practicing in Ohio. He was an officer in
the United States Air Force for 13 years.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
Steven
LaTulippe Archives
|