Let
Bush Be Gracchus
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
Jr.
Divisions
within the Bush administration are starting to remind us of the
movie "Gladiator."
As in the movie, the New York Times reports that two camps
are emerging within the Bush administration. There are those around
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and his assistant Paul Wolfowitz,
who want a more war-like policy. They want to overthrow Saddam Hussein
and otherwise reignite Cold War/Clintonian belligerency.
Absurdly,
the NYT identifies this position as "ideologically conservative."
How can a policy originated and carried out by Woodrow Wilson, Franklin
Roosevelt, and Lyndon Johnson be so described? All these people
favored big government at home and abroad. Last I checked, moreover,
the Times attacked foreign-policy isolationism as intolerably
right wing. Maybe it’s asking too much to expect philosophical consistency
from a newspaper. But in that case, it should stop playing let’s
pretend.
On
the other side, meanwhile, stands Secretary of State Colin Powell
and his colleagues, who are urging a relaxation of sanctions against
Iraq and an outright repeal of most other sanctions. They are free
traders, cautious about miliary intervention, and generally aware
that the world has changed since the Cold War and so should US foreign
policy. The US, they believe, needs to work toward fostering peace
rather than settling scores.
What
we need, this camp believes, is more of what George W. Bush calls
"humility" in our dealings with the world. Powell wants
discussions with North Korea, and trade with China and Russia. He
wants no new wars, and seeks to foster peace with any country open
to us. In other words, he wants to repudiate the legacy of Clintonian
foreign policy, which was imperial in every respect.
George
Bush’s closest adviser, Condolezza Rice, has yet to take sides.
Who
will win this battle? What are the stakes?
Consider
the movie version. In Rome, like the US today, there were two broad
political camps: those who love the empire and want to see it expanded
(portrayed by Commodus loyalists like Senator Falco), and those
who want to restore the republic (like Senator Gracchus and General
Maximus).
Commodus
is a dictator who hopes to abolish all institutional restraints,
starting with the Senate. He knows best the needs of his people,
he claims, and the Senate is obstructionist. He pretends to want
to be a patriot, but with his incessant spending, taxing (in a scene
edited out), conniving, self-worshiping ceremonialism, and gladiatorial
games, he is merely distracting the people while he rips them off.
Commodus’s
goal is the consolidation of personal power, an impulse portrayed
in the film as a pathology. He kills those who stand in his way.
He is fighting not only against fiscal sanity and the republican
form of government. He is battling the heart and soul of Rome itself,
which at this stage is a mere imitation of its republican self.
The
center of the opposition is Senator Gracchus, a born politician,
not particularly principled but loyal to his calling as an aristocrat,
and sympathetic to tradition (like Bush?). Noticing that the gladiator
and former general Maximus is extremely popular with the crowds,
and sure that Commodus is growing more despotic by the day, he seeks
his help in tossing out Commodus.
But
the Senator has one worry: if Maximus is the victor in this struggle,
will he announce himself as the new dictator? Maximus assures him
that he will return power to the Senate to restore the republic,
and then return to his farm, in imitation of the republican hero,
Cincinnatus.
General
Maximus and Senator Gracchus wait for that crucial moment when Commodus’s
enemies outnumber his friends. As Myles
Kantor points out, it is at this point, having lost a majority
of popular support, that a government can no longer carry on a policy
of imperial exploitation and despotism. The ruler loses credibility.
In the film, Commodus’s own Praetorian Guard refuses to save him
during a fight in the Colosseum. The government falls.
The
crucial question today is whether the weight of public opinion supports
the despotic imperialism of Rumsfeld (Commodus) or the humane caution
of Powell (Gracchus and/or Maximus). Actually, this is clearer than
ever. Foreign policy played virtually no part in the election. Worried
about impending recession and tending to domestic issues, the public
has no taste for Rumsfeldian international maneuvers. Powell, meanwhile,
is an enormously popular figure, which is the main source of his
influence.
A
senior administration official told the New York Times: "At
some point the president is going to have to decide what foreign
policy he wants, because he is not going to get consistent options
on many issues." But everything we know about Bush so far suggests
that his heart is with Powell and those who want peace more than
war. The trouble is that the war party has undue influence in Washington,
as always.
Powell,
a capable man, can fend for himself in these battles. But for the
decisive victory against those who would prop up big government
through imperial adventures, he needs Bush to weigh in right now.
A
final note on the film itself. Rarely has the movie that won the
Oscar for Best Picture dealt so well with the subject of politics.
Most strikingly, "Gladiator" contains no discernable political
correctness, a major reason for its charm. "Titanic,"
the 1999 winner, was laced with left-wing assaults on aristocracy,
family, chastity, and capitalism (it blamed the latter for the greed
that allegedly sank the boat). "American
Beauty," last year’s victor, attempted to expose the suburbs
as a cesspool of psycho-sexual pathology.
But
in "Gladiator," there are no sermons about diversity,
no attacks on bourgeois values, and no casual Marxist claptrap.
Instead, the film shows us the extent to which the ancient world
is very much like our own in its underlying reality. The issues
are the same always and everywhere: freedom from, or slavery under,
government. Above all, it shows us how a regime, even one that use
welfare and warfare to lull the public into indifference, can lose
power.
March
29, 2001
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr., is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He also edits a daily
news site, LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
Lew
Rockwell Archives
|