Misguided
Mission
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
It's
clear that the president's brain is occupied by the neoconservatives
who surround him. It's clear from their writings and policy statements
that the neoconservatives believe the United States can become the
dominant power on Earth.
This
is a bad judgment that is dangerous and could become lethal. This
is why thoughtful people believe it is imperative to defeat George
Bush in the 2004 elections. This wrongheaded policy, cooked up by
academics and journalists, is not one that will merely embarrass
the United States. It is a wrongheaded policy that could have dire
consequences for the American people.
This
wrongheaded idea that the United States can now dominate the planet
rests on a number of fallacies. Let's look at them.
Fallacy
No. 1 is the belief that the rest of the world will acquiesce to
American dominance. Russia, China and India, not to mention the
Islamic World, are not about to go quietly into the sunset. All
three have large populations, large amounts of natural resources,
and nuclear teeth. Their nuclear teeth mean that the U.S. attempts
to bully them will always fall short of being effective.
Fallacy
No. 2 is the false belief that the United States is as strong as
it was in 1945. The truth is we are much weaker. The great manufacturing
capacity that became the "arsenal of democracy" has been
eroded almost beyond recognition. Our agricultural base has been
eroded. Iron ore and oil supplies have been seriously depleted.
We are in fact dependent on imports not only for energy supplies
but for manufactured goods, strategic minerals, parts for our own
strategic weapons systems, and increasingly for food. We are running
high federal deficits, high trade deficits and high current account
deficits. The value of the dollar is eroding rapidly.
Fallacy
No. 3 is the false belief that our military is undefeatable. This
falsehood has been fed by the fact that since Vietnam, we have used
our high-tech forces to attack small, poor, defenseless countries
such as Grenada, Panama, Serbia, Afghanistan and Iraq. But even
Afghanistan and Iraq, both dilapidated and lacking all modern military
technology, have put a great strain on America's military forces.
We do not yet have full control of either country.
Our
strength is not in our ground forces but in our high-tech air power
and the ability to coordinate the two. One breakthrough in air-defense
technology could seriously weaken us, and you can be sure both Russia
and China are working assiduously to make that breakthrough. Before
you dismiss Russia, you should remember that we are now dependent
on Russian spacecraft to reach the space station and that Russia,
not us, has the world's largest mobile intercontinental ballistic
missile force.
If
we are so strong, why has the president tread so carefully in his
dealings with North Korea? Why not bully them as he did Iraq? Why
not issue ultimatums? For the simple reason that we would pay a
very high price in American casualties if we got into a war with
North Korea. Don't forget, it is their civilian sector that is poor.
They have put most of their resources into their military.
In
1945, the United States was the strongest and richest country on
Earth. In 2003, we are one of, if not the, most indebted countries
on Earth. Foreign holders of that debt could wreck our economy simply
by deciding to dump their holdings on the market. Domestically we
are a divided people with a decadent culture, if you can even call
it a culture.
Far
from entering a period of dominance, we are entering a period of
great danger. Most empires have lasted about 250 years, and we are
approaching that number. What we need are not empty heads controlled
by pseudo-intellectual ideologues but the smartest, wisest leaders
we can find. Our future depends on it.
December
15, 2003
Charley
Reese has been a journalist for 49 years, reporting on everything
from sports to politics. From 196971, he worked as a campaign
staffer for gubernatorial, senatorial and congressional races in
several states. He was an editor, assistant to the publisher, and
columnist for the Orlando Sentinel from 1971 to 2001. He
now writes a syndicated column which is carried on LewRockwell.com.
Reese served two years active duty in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner.
©
2003 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Charley
Reese Archives
|