Is
Government Organic or Artificial?
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
The lessons
of Iraq pose challenges for our understanding of the state. Consider
the gap that separates the Bush administration’s original theory
with the reality on the ground today. The idea was that the Iraqi
government would be "decapitated," and that once Saddam
and his few henchmen were crushed, the country could breathe free
and get on with the business of building a great society.
He surely believed
it, otherwise he and his team would have put something in place
for what followed the overthrow, and otherwise he would not have
held his victory dance in full flight gear after the invasion. No,
he had a model in his mind of an oppressive dictator who ruled all
mercilessly and by force alone. Bush figured that he could use more
force than Saddam and that would be the end of it.
But now look!
The country of Iraq is in civil war. Sunnis long for the days of
Saddam. Shiites long for total power, and, as the majority, they
figure that they might just get it, and use it against their historic
enemies. The Christians and Jews have largely fled the country.
And the tit-for-tat killing grows ever more gruesome. The US military
is killing too: largely out of fear and in the belief that it is
all in self-defense. Not a soldier on the ground wants to be there.
Thus did a
simple theory of the state – kill the king and all will be well
– fail. The Bush administration had the idea that the Iraqi state
was somehow artificially imposed on an otherwise stable society.
The reality is otherwise.
Which raises
the question: just how integral is the state to society? Is it the
case that we can expect every society that loses its state to fall
into chaos such as Iraq is doing today?
Before we go
there, let us first distinguish the state from society. The state
is the only entity that is permitted to maintain a legal monopoly
on the use of aggressive force. It therefore operates according
to its own law. If you steal or kill, you get in trouble. The state
steals and kills as part of its operating procedure, and there is
no higher law to keep it in check. The same goes for its monopoly
on "justice." I am not permitted to chase down and punish a person
who broke into my house, but rather the state presumes the prerogative
of administering justice and allows no competition.
On the face
of it, the role of the state – the legal monopolist on the use of
aggressive force against person and property – is absurdly implausible.
There is no obvious reason why any society should put up with it.
Ah, but then ideology comes into play. We are told that the state
serves high religious, philosophical, economic, or social-scientific
ends. I won't bother listing them because doing so would take up
the rest of the article.
The point is
that the state is unstable without an ideology to back it up, and
convince people that it is necessary. But ideology is not all it
needs. It must also put together a matrix of interest-group privilege,
as a means of placating the opposition. The state can kill some
of its enemies but it can't ever kill all (as the US is discovering
in Iraq). What it must do is co-opt them into a variety of arrangements
– usually financial – that reap mutual benefit. In this sense, the
state is pushed into the role of a capitalist of sorts. It seeks
out trades as a means of making people less hostile and, the state
hopes, garnering friends and defenders as far and wide as possible.
For more on
this, see the State of the Union address.
So on one hand,
the state is always in a unique position as the sole entity that
can legally steal, beat, and hang. On the other hand, it must also
cultivate other talents in order to win over the population, lest
it be overthrown. If it fails to do so, it will fall, maybe not
immediately but eventually. For examples, you can see the history
of the Soviet Union or the current history of the US in Iraq. These
are two states that were unable to maintain a sufficiently sophisticated
matrix of ideological support combined with a matrix of interest-group
payoffs that are necessary to survive.
Saddam, on
the other hand, was very careful to cultivate both necessary pillars
of state stability. Yes, he killed enemies, but his preferred method
was to buy them off in some way. He had all important religious
leaders on the payroll, and helped religious minorities when they
needed it. He was generous with public works and maintained the
semblance of law and order. He walked a thin line, avoiding religious
extremism while not going overboard in Western-style liberalism
to risk his rule. He also cultivated an Iraqi-style nationalism
to cover the ideological angle.
The Saddam
state, then, was not an organic part of society but it had managed
to weave itself carefully into the political, cultural, and economic
fabric of the nation – as a means of survival. This is what the
Bush administration had overlooked. Once Saddam was gone, the glue
that held together the factions and groups was gone. The result
is what you see today.
Let us return,
then, to our original question. Is it the case that any overthrow
of the state risks turning society into a current-day Iraq? The
answer is no. You see, the Bush administration's fateful error was
not in overthrowing Saddam (I'm leaving aside the issue of imperialism
here: the law of nations allows no state the right to overthrow
foreign despots). Rather, the fateful error of the Bush administration
was in attempting to create a new state.
This
is what cannot be done, and the very possibility of a new central
state is precisely what has set off the bloodshed. It is not the
case that the groups in Iraq cannot get along. What they cannot
do is get along under a central state ruled by some other group.
This is the basis of the bloodshed.
So what should
happen? The US should abandon Baghdad. It should, in effect, allow
the country to "fall apart" in the same way that Gorbachev let his
empire dissolve. Iraq would split into many states, some of them
noncontiguous. Governing units of all shapes and sizes would appear.
The main reason for the ghastly killing – fear of the rule by one
group over another – would vanish. Here is the highest hope for
peace in Iraq.
So
long as the US insists that Iraq be a single nation under one government,
it will inspire chaos and killing. Bush was wrong, but in a way
that is usually not understood. His mistake was not in overthrowing
the state but in hoping to create and control a new one.
January
25, 2007
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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