In 1783 the
treaty ending hostilities between Great Britain and its rebellious
colonies along the eastern seaboard of North America was signed
in Paris. For their part the English proclaimed that, "His
Britannic Majesty acknowledges the said United States, viz., New
Hampshire, Massachusetts Bay, Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
..." there followed the rest of the thirteen colonies
"to be free sovereign and independent states,"
with the British Crown relinquishing all claims to "the same
and every part thereof."
Amazingly,
a collection of artisans, merchants, and mostly farmers had defied
one of the great military machines of Europe, and the greatest
empire, and won. It was a triumph that gladdened the hearts of
lovers of liberty and republican government the world over.
Today, this
United States, now definitively in the singular, is itself the
world's greatest military machine and sole imperial power. How
did this happen? In The
Civilian and the Military:
A History of the American Antimilitarist Tradition,[1]
Arthur A. Ekirch traces this portentous transformation to 1972
(counting his preface).
Murray Rothbard
called Ekirch's work "brilliant," and praised it as
"an example of a revisionist outlook on all three great wars
of the twentieth century." Robert Higgs, in his foreword
to the Independent Institute's edition of Ekirch's The
Decline of American Liberalism, provides a summary of
the life and productive academic career of Arthur Ekirch. He notes
that Ekirch registered as a conscientious objector in the Second
World War but was nonetheless sentenced to work without pay as
a logger and later in a school for the mentally retarded, experiences
that did not endear the American state to the feisty scholar.
Militarism
can be defined as the permeation of civil society by military
institutions, influences, and values.
As Ekirch
sketches it, the Anglo-American heritage of explicit antimilitarism
began to be formed in 17th-century England, especially with the
Levellers and resistance to a standing army.
This tradition
continued among the British settlers of what became the United
States. It is evident in the attitudes of the leaders of the American
Revolution. James Madison, for instance, stated:
Of all
the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be
dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of every
other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts
and taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments
for bringing the many under the domination of the few.
The connection
between antimilitarism and nonintervention in the affairs of foreign
nations what its crafty opponents have succeeded in labeling
"isolationism" was often marked among the rebellious
colonials. Ekirch points out that "an important argument
for independence had been that it would free the American people
from involvement in the wars of Europe and from the necessity
of helping to support a British army." The radical republican
position was put boldly by Jefferson: "I am for free commerce
with all nations; political connection with none; and little or
no diplomatic establishment."
But during
their presidencies, Jefferson and especially Madison reneged on
their noninterventionist and antiwar position. The war hawks in
their party clamored for confrontation with England, hoping to
acquire Canada. Though this proved impossible, Madison's War of
1812 was considered a success. A military spirit was awakened,
shown in the popular adulation of war heroes and military displays
at Fourth of July parades.
As war with
Mexico drew near, Daniel Webster criticized the maneuvers of President
James Polk. His words were to be the key to America's future wars,
from the provisioning of Fort Sumter on: "What is the value
of this constitutional provision [granting Congress the sole power
to declare war] if the President on his own authority may make
such military movements as must bring on war?" Easy victory
over Mexico, however, further fueled the military spirit.
If the Jeffersonians
can be accused of surrendering their principles, what are we to
say of some of the celebrated antistatists of the 19th and early
20th centuries? Henry David Thoreau, whose conscience rebelled
at the US war against Mexico, became an enthusiast for the "just
war" against the slave states. He revered John Brown, referring
to him as a Christ upon the cross when Brown tried to raise a
servile rebellion among the millions of slaves of the South, a
move "credited" with helping start the Civil War. That
awful bloodletting cost 620,000 lives.
Charles Sumner,
famous classical liberal and free trader, wrote in his 1845 work,
The
True Grandeur of Nations, "Can there be in our age
any peace that is not honorable, any war that is not dishonorable?"
But he also found an honorable war in the attack on the South.
Later, Benjamin
Tucker, individualist anarchist, was a cheerleader for the
Entente's
war with Germany. For his part, the anarchist Peter
Kropotkin urged Russia on to war with the Central
Powers in 1914. Poor Kropotkin was bewildered by the way it
turned out, a Bolshevik tyranny worse than anything ever experienced
before. The war itself cost many millions of lives, the worst
bloodbath in European history to that time.
The point
is that these individualists were no Bastiats
or Herbert
Spencers. None could resist the pull of a just war.
None understood the insight of Randolph
Bourne whom Ekirch calls one of the few who "stood
firm" in the first crusade against Germany that "war
is the health of the state."
During the
Civil War the United States "was placed under what, for all
practical purposes, amounted to a military dictatorship."
Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus, shut down newspapers
critical of his policies, and held thousands as political prisoners.
His conscription law led to draft riots, particularly in New York
City, but a precedent had been set.
Union veterans
formed the Grand Army of the Republic, demanding pensions and
preference in government jobs. The US Army continued to justify
its jobs by its taxpayer-funded backing of the railroad barons
in the West and the campaigns to exterminate the Plains Indians.
Military training and "education" proliferated in schools
and colleges.
In the 1880s
and '90s, navalism surged ahead, with industries, steel above
all, promoting their own vested interests. The tradition of a
navy solely for the coastal defense of the country as old
as the republic was abandoned.
There were
critics of the new militarism, E.L. Godkin of The Nation
and William Graham Sumner, whose essay, The
Conquest of the United States by Spain (1898), against
the war on the Philippines has inspired anti-imperialists ever
since. (His great essay is now available
online.)
But the few
critics could not prevail against the powerful cabal of Admiral
Alfred Thayer Mahan, Henry Cabot Lodge, and Theodore Roosevelt,
which represented a turning point on the road to empire.
Mahan was
not much of a naval commander (his ships tended to collide), but
he was a superb propagandist for navalism. His work on The
Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 16601783 was
seized upon by navalists in Germany, Japan, France, and elsewhere.
It fueled the arms race that led to the First World War, proving
to be no great blessing to mankind.
In the Senate,
Lodge pushed for war with Spain and the takeover of the Philippines,
later for war with Germany, and following that war, for a vindictive
peace treaty that would keep the Germans down for the foreseeable
future. Throughout, Lodge pressed for a navy second to none, demanded
by America's new empire. The Navy League, funded by big business,
helped the cause along.
Heaven only
knows what Theodore Roosevelt is doing on that endlessly reproduced
iconic monument on Mount Rushmore, right alongside Jefferson.
Roosevelt despised Jefferson as a weakling, and Jefferson would
have despised him as a warmonger. The great historian Charles
Beard wrote truly of "Teddy" that he was probably
the only major figure in American history "who thought that
war in itself was a good thing."
Included
in the cabal was Elihu Root, secretary of war and then of state
under TR, who advocated "the creation of a military spirit
among the youth of the country."
The acquisition
of the Philippines cast the United States into the arena of contending
imperialisms in the Far East, including especially Japan's. Antiwar
congressmen exposed the links between the drive for a great ocean-going
navy and the munitions industry, to no avail.
Ekirch is
perhaps too lenient on Woodrow Wilson. Already, Wilson's note
to Germany following the sinking of the Lusitania, in which
he reiterated the US position, that Germany would be held to a
"strict accountability" for the deaths of any Americans
at sea from U-boats, even when traveling on armed belligerent
merchant ships carrying military munitions through war zones,
set the United States on a collision course for war. Here Walter
Karp's The
Politics of War presents a more reliable account.
During the
war, the Espionage and Sedition Acts were used to curb dissent.
The Creel Committee on Public Information propagandized for war
to a hitherto unprecedented extent. The mass media incited public
opinion against the demonized enemy as would become standard to
our own day.
Historical
revisionism flourished as the archives of major powers were opened
up, forced by the Bolsheviks' unlocking of the Russian archives.
True accounts of the machinations by which the European powers
and then the United States entered the war led to the brief flourishing
of antiwar sentiment after 1918.
In 1933 Franklin
Roosevelt was sworn in as president. This genial master of deception
was not only a fanatic for naval expansion but also harbored grandiose
plans for reordering the world. The geopolitical situation of
the 1930s in Europe and the Far East gave Roosevelt ample opportunity
for overseas meddling. The formally opposition party in 1940 nominated
for president Wendell Willkie, as much of an interventionist as
FDR. The greatest antiwar movement in history, the America
First Committee, boasted 800,000 members, but it quickly folded
when Roosevelt got the war he wanted, at Pearl Harbor.
In the Second
World War America embraced militarism wholeheartedly. It has never
looked back.
The worst
violation of civil liberties was the rounding up and imprisonment
of some 80,000 Japanese citizens and 40,000 resident Japanese
aliens (not eligible for citizenship because born in Japan). Emblematic
of the hysteria generated by this most just of just wars, the
US Supreme Court upheld their incarceration. Renowned liberals
Hugo Black, Felix Frankfurter, and William Douglas joined the
majority. California Attorney-General Earl Warren was a passionate
advocate for incarceration.
Following
the war, "the atmosphere of perpetual crisis and war hysteria"
engendered by Washington never let up. Harry Truman initiated
what Ekirch rightly calls "the aggressive American foreign
policy of the Cold War." Dozens of entangling alliances were
formed, committing the nation to defending the existing international
order against any who would challenge it. A new enemy intent on
world-conquest was conjured up in the form of the Soviet Union
and international communism. This conflict included two "hot
wars" and entailed vast, continuing military budgets, now
to pay for ever-more deadly nuclear weapons as well. It lasted
over 40 years and cost civil society trillions of dollars.
As Ekirch
presciently foresaw, even a peaceful resolution of the Cold War
was not "sufficient to release the American people from the
power of the Pentagon and its corporate allies." Incursions
of the armed forces occurred in Yugoslavia, the Philippines, Somalia,
and elsewhere.
Now the United
States is involved in wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan,
soon perhaps also in Iran.
Today there
is no conscription, which caused too many problems for the militarists
in the Vietnam years. But the American empire bestrides the globe.
The United States has over 700 military bases overseas, plus some
dozen naval task forces patrolling the oceans, with a multitude
of space satellites feeding information to the forces below. Every
year its "defense" (i.e., military) budget is nearly
equal to those of all other countries combined. Does anyone doubt
that for America there are more wars, many more wars, in the offing?
As the great
social scientist Joseph
Schumpeter wrote of the military in imperialist states, "Created
by the wars that required it, the machine now created the wars
it required."
Notes
[1]
Ralph Myles, Colorado Springs, 1972.