War and Freedom
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Concerning
the Bush foreign policy, I'm not sure that most libertarians – to
say nothing of most Americans – have considered the full extent
of what we are dealing with here. The other night on television
Bush promised war against Iraq, and war-crimes trials for any Iraqi
military leader who follows orders, if Iraq failed to meet a series
of demands. One of them is as follows: Iraq "must stop all illicit
trade outside the oil-for-food program."
Consider
what this means. The US is threatening total war against a country
if it permits its citizens to exercise their natural right to trade
and improve their lot in life. This is not just contrary to free-trade
principles. It is contrary to all standards of human decency. Quite
frankly, a more despotic demand is hard to imagine.
Bush
says there "can be no peace if our security depends on the will
and whims of a ruthless and aggressive dictator." If others take
that statement differently from the way he intended it, they might
be forgiven.
Before
Bush gave his speech, the Bush administration had issued a National
Security Strategy for the United State" – a blueprint for domestic
and global conquest by the US government – in the name of free markets
and free trade. It asserts the right of the US to deliver a preemptive
strike against any country anywhere that gets on Washington's nerves,
and lays out a blueprint for permanent military occupation of the
entire world by the US.
In
the 1990s, when the US was busy looking for war rationales and throwing
itself into every conflict it was fortunate enough to discover or
create, Murray N. Rothbard wrote a satirical piece called: "Invade
the World."
He
wrote: "We must face the fact that there is not a single country
in the world that measures up to the lofty moral and social standards
that are the hallmark of the U.S.A…. There is not a single country
in the world which, like the US, reeks of democracy and 'human rights,'
and is free of crime and murder and hate thoughts and undemocratic
deeds. Very few other countries are as Politically Correct as the
US, or have the wit to impose a massively statist program in the
name of 'freedom,' 'free trade,' 'multiculturalism,' and 'expanding
democracy.' And so, since no other countries shape up to US standards
in a world of Sole Superpower they must be severely chastised by
the US, I make a Modest Proposal for the only possible consistent
and coherent foreign policy: the US must, very soon, Invade the
Entire World!"
It
would seem that the Bush administration received a copy of this
article and used it as a working model for its own foreign policy.
Just as Rothbard suggested, the invade-the-world strategy is taking
place in the name of freedom. It is therefore incumbent on those
of us who love free markets and free trade to speak out, not only
against the despotic ambitions of this document itself, but also
on behalf of the real meaning of economic freedom. We must fight
our way through the thicket of rhetoric, political grandstanding,
and moral hypocrisy to preserve some sense of the meaning of freedom
itself.
This
is not usually a problem when a president of the Democratic Party
is in control. Given their constituents and rhetorical apparatus,
the Democrats will not usually promote global empire while singing
the praises of free markets, entrepreneurship, private property,
and low taxes. What we get instead, as we did under Carter and Clinton,
is talk of welfare rights, the urgency of redistribution, public
education, labor rights, and the like.
And
there is a certain honesty to this approach, for big government
abroad and big government at home are a suitable match. There is
no strict line of political demarcation between a government that
minds its business at home or abroad. Internationally expansionistic
states are not usually humble at home, and, as a matter of history,
international and national socialist states have tended to be expansionist
beyond their borders insofar as they have had the resources to do
so. All this stands to reason.
What
is more troubling, and far more difficult to unravel, is the situation
we currently face, in which a regime knows and embraces a partisan
language of economic liberty while promoting the opposite. Though
the Republicans have been generally derided as the Stupid Party,
in fact this approach of doublespeak is far shrewder than the approach
of the other party. When Republicans promote big government as liberty,
it is intimidating to the opposition, which finds itself robbed
of its only opposition tactic, even as it is rhetorically compelling
to those generally disposed to support the ideals of freedom.
Here
is one example of what I mean. The Bush document says: "The concept
of 'free trade' arose as a moral principle even before it became
a pillar of economics. If you can make something that others value,
you should be able to sell it to them. If others make something
that you value, you should be able to buy it. This is real freedom,
the freedom for a person, or a nation, to make a living."
Now,
it is hard to disagree with that. In fact, it might be seen as a
summary of the libertarian economic credo. And yet, the United States
imposes trade sanctions on half the countries of the world, and
the sanctions against Iraq in particular have resulted in mass human
suffering. The very administration that preaches the libertarian
line on trade has imposed high tariffs on steel and timber, and
pushed massive agricultural subsidies that blatantly violate all
international trade treaties to which the US has become party. What
we have here are actions that are the very opposite of the rhetoric,
and yet the rhetoric plays the role of distracting people from what
is really going on.
There
are many other examples. The document preaches fiscal prudence,
from an administration that has expanded government spending more
dramatically and on more fronts than even LBJ. It preaches free
markets but endorses the internationalization of US labor and environmental
controls. It rails against centralized economic planning, but embraces
global efforts to cut "greenhouse gasses," even going so far as
to brag of spending the largest sum ever spent to stop alleged climate
change. The document calls for free enterprise but also a 50 percent
increase in foreign aid slated for development assistance. It decries
World Bank subsidies of the past but calls for the World Bank to
spend more on public schools and promises a 20 percent increase
in the money contributed by the US toward that end.
In
sum, we have here something worse than a wolf in sheep's clothing.
We have a wolf that has also learned to b-a-a-a.
Even
aside from partisan considerations, the permanent governing regime
always needs an ideological rationale for maintaining control over
the population and a continuing supply of resources to feed all
the pressure groups that live off the taxpayer.
Even
apart from elections, which change the flavor of government control
but not its underlying reality, this permanent regime, which we
can call the state, always seeks to expand.
For
all the partisan bickering in Washington, all groups are pleased
to cooperate in the overall mission of insuring the health of the
state, and the best way is what they call bipartisanship: each votes
the other’s priorities in exchange for having its own met. Thus
does the welfare-warfare state thrive.
It
is no surprise that today the great rationale of the proposed expansion
of the state is the fight against terrorism, which doesn’t only
mean stopping those who seek to harm US citizens on American soil
but encompasses some sort of blueprint for complete global domination.
The war on terrorism is not just about stopping real threats, if
it involves that at all. It is about securing the authority of the
US government against anything and everything that might threaten
its interests. That threat could be swarthy teams of violent criminals
hailing from far-flung parts of the world. But also, from the point
of view of the state, the threat also comes from any political activist
or even intellectual apparatus that does not unquestioningly yield
to the power of the state.
This
is most clear in an offhanded comment the document has on Colombia.
It reads: "In Colombia, we recognize the link between terrorist
and extremist groups that challenge the security of the state
and drug trafficking activities that help finance the operations
of such groups." Thus we see here that the mere production of goods
that people want to buy, combined with a political stance the US
opposes, can get you branded a terrorist. If this is true in Colombia,
where the document promises that the US government will provide
"basic security to the Colombian people," it is far more true right
here at home.
The
Bush document lays out a variety of criteria for distinguishing
good states from the bad states that the US now swears it can destroy
on a whim. The document decries any state that tramples on what
it calls the "nonnegotiable demands of human dignity," among which
are the rule of law, limits on the absolute power of the state,
free speech, freedom of worship, equal justice, respect for women,
religious and ethnic tolerance, and respect for private property.
It
is not an objectionable list, though only the hopelessly naïve
could possibly believe that the US has any intention of sticking
by this list. US allies in the Near East and North Africa stand
in constant violation of these principles. For that matter, the
United States itself has a less than stellar record in defense of
private property – after all this is a country that takes up to
40 percent of your income. And you may notice that while the US
decries those who have no limit on the absolute power of the state,
there is no call for what the American colonists favored: a strictly
limited state power.
In
fact, a new doctrine has developed in Washington that says, in the
words of this document, "weak states…can pose as great a danger
to our national interests as strong states." And with all the foreign
aid, military assistance, multilateral lending support, and military
mandates that the US is imposing around the world, you can be sure
that America is doing everything possible to prevent the formation
of weak states around the world. It is quite a transition from the
18th century, when we went about creating a state that
was deliberately weak, while warning against foreign entanglements,
to the current situation in which a strong state at home goes on
an imperial rampage to create subservient copies of itself around
the world.
September
11 represented a horrible loss of life and property, but it also
represented what many in the United States government considered
to be a new lease on life. The name Osama Bin Laden having long
left the public eye, even though he was blamed for the attacks and
remains at large, the government is using the event as an excuse
to trample on rights and liberties and vastly expand itself.
In
every event, even the most calamitous, there are certain people
and institutions that end up benefiting, so let us think about what
institution has benefited the most from the events. What institution
has accumulated more power and money and public respect? The answer
is obvious: it is the state itself. One might think that this would
be a problem for the Bush doctrine.
After
all, if some other major institution, such as a church or company,
uses a disaster it is responsible for, to claim that it should be
given more money and power, we suspect its motives and certainly
do not grant automatic deference.
Why
are so many willing to do this with the state? In part it comes
down to the magic plural pronoun: "we." In page after page, the
Bush administration document uses this word to imply that the interests
of the state are identical to the interests of the American people.
It follows that whatever the government decides to do, whatever
it deems to be in the public interest, must be the right thing.
If you disagree, then you are opposing the public interest and you
might just be a threat to public order itself. At the very least,
the burden of proof is on you to explain why you might oppose the
idea of a permanent wartime economy.
There
is a revealing passage about half-way through the Bush administration’s
manifesto. It reads as follows: "It has taken almost a decade for
us to comprehend the true nature of this new threat." What happened
ten years ago? The Cold War had vanished because of the sudden and
unexpected dissolution of the Soviet Union, and so too the main
ideological rationale for the build up the biggest, richest, most
powerful state apparatus the world had ever seen. The history of
the last ten years can be read as a struggle between citizens to
regain control of their lives and property against an immense governmental
structure that seemed to lack a believable reason for its existence.
Then
came September 11, 2001. The document describes this event as has
become customary: a hinge of history that forced the United States
to rethink its place in the world and the meaning of freedom itself.
It is not described as what it was: a wholly preventable hijacking
by Saudi nationals trained in the US and motivated by revenge at
US foreign policy.
Had
the pilots of the planes been armed, as they would have had federal
regulations not prevented it, the hijackers would have been dealt
with long before they could have wrecked the buildings.
Before
this happened, the post-Cold War welfare-warfare state had many
rationales to justify its continuation. Clinton attempted to merge
a British-style paternalism with a US-style focus on international
human rights. The great threat at home and abroad that had to be
defeated was abstract and ideological: concerns like unfairness
and injustice. This did not gain many converts, especially since
it meant converting the US armed forces into a glorified corps of
international social workers. There were a series of invasions and
operations to stop alleged ethnic cleansing, to impose democracy,
to end warlordism, and the like. There were the inevitable worries
about China becoming too big for its britches.
None
of these served as a replacement for the communist menace as a viable
excuse for the permanent war economy. The military-industrial elites
that live off the war threat were very worried about their long-term
status, especially because internal polling continued to reveal
a systematic and growing loss in confidence in government as an
institution. Panic over the pace of private-sector technological
development further worked to alarm the government, which still
populated its office with IBM Selectrics as Windows 98 was being
shipped to customers. As Social Security became a laughing stock,
and Clinton's Monica problem did the same for the chief executive,
US foreign policy came to be subject to withering critiques by a
diverse group of intellectuals from the left and right.
To
the government, September 11 meant an end to all of this. It held
out the hope that something could be seen as a scarier threat to
the public than government itself. It worked to transform public
opinion about the government itself, from a menace to a savior.
To be sure, this step was wholly unwarranted. It was the government
that banned guns on planes, the government that ran airport security,
the government that antagonized the hijackers, the government that
created and sustained what became al-Qaeda, the government that
received the advance warnings and did nothing, and the government
that had promised and failed in every way to deliver security. September
11 was a spectacular government failure.
In
order to distract us from this conclusion, the government has created
the illusion that the greatest threat we face is somewhere out there,
and we must trust the government to tell us from day to day what
that threat is. Among them is what has come to be known as the rogue
state.
The
document includes a fascinating definition of what constitutes
a rogue state.
- A rogue
state, it says, brutalizes its own people and squanders its
national resources for the personal gain of its rulers. Check.
- It displays
no regard for international law, threatens its neighbors, and
callously violates international treaties to which it is party.
Check.
- It is
determined to acquire weapons of mass destruction, along with
other advanced military technology. Check.
- It sponsors
terrorism around the globe. Given that Osama and his men were
once on the CIA payroll, and given what most of the Arab world
believes about the US role in the Middle East, we have to say,
check.
- Finally,
the document says, almost in anticipation of this manner of
critique, a rogue state hates the United States and everything
for which it stands.
And
in this last sentence we find the real definition: a rogue state
is a state that our state hates and visa versa. We are back to the
age-old problem of which true libertarians are all too aware: the
state itself is the greatest source of conflict ever known to man.
The
right response to September 11 would have been for government's
entire security apparatus to be dismantled, and to allow the airlines
and other firms to provide their own security. But, of course, it
had all the earmarks of a crisis, and history shows that crises
are great opportunities for the state. The voices of clarity on
this issue have been overwhelmed by those who have belligerently
asserted that the government must do something, anything, in retaliation
for 9-11.
Most
tragically, the need for war was asserted by people who called themselves
libertarians, people who otherwise claimed to understand the nature
of government. The slogan of one famous organization used to be
"free markets, limited government, and peace." After the war on
Afghanistan, the word peace had to go, and, inevitably, limited
government and free markets were taken down too.
Without
naming the guilty here, let me just say that only four institutions
– to my knowledge – were willing to take a principled stand after
9-11: the Independent Institute, the Foundation for the Future of
Freedom, the Center for Libertarian Studies, and the Mises Institute
– four of the least well-connected among the hundreds of free-market
organizations in this country. Once having signed up for the war
on terrorism, mainstream libertarian organizations find themselves
in an intellectual bind, fearing to criticize the foundations of
the policy and enjoying the newfound access to power that the initial
endorsement of the war gave them.
And
yet, we should not be surprised at the failure of the mainstream
libertarian movement to provide a voice of sanity in these times.
For too long, they have seen the problem of government power not
as a moral or principled concern but as something to be worked out
among policy elites, among which they have wanted to include themselves.
They have promoted the view that the means of achieving our ends
is through joining the governing elites in their salons of DC, and
impressing power holders with your intellectual agility. What could
possibly beat cocktails with DeLay, Greenspan, and von Rumsfeld.
The
moral courage that motivated the American colonists, Cobden and
Bright, the war resistors, the tax protestors, the anti-New Deal
writers, the anti-communist and anti-Nazi intellectuals – none of
this experience has informed the dominant libertarian strategy of
our age, so, of course, the libertarians have been largely and tragically
co-opted.
There
is a further intellectual problem at work among the mainstream of
libertarians, and it is captured in the chart that purports to summarize
all political ideology according to one's opinion concerning the
balance of civil and economic liberty. Nowhere on the chart is there
anything about foreign policy or war – the murder end of the state.
Quite frankly, libertarians just haven't cared that much about the
issue, even though war is the health of the state.
After
a lifetime of activism in libertarian circles, Murray Rothbard came
to observe that most people in the libertarian movement have no
real interest in the issue, even though it can be said that war
is by far the gravest threat to liberty mankind has ever known.
There are many reasons for this oversight, among which is that we
all tend to take the path of least resistance, and it is far easier
to analyze a telecommunications bill than to denounce the CIA and
the war power.
But,
as Mises argued, if we hate socialism, we must also hate war. "Military
Socialism is the Socialism of a state in which all institutions
are designed for the prosecution of war," he wrote. "The military
state, that is the state of the fighting man in which everything
is subordinated to war purposes, cannot admit private ownership
in the means of production. Standing preparedness for war is impossible
if aims other than war influence the life of individuals.... The
military state is a state of bandits. It prefers to live on booty
and tribute." Mises is right: if we libertarians tolerate war, we
tolerate tyranny.
But
if the libertarians have shown a lack of courage stemming from intellectual
failure, the American conservatives have been far worse. From the
pages of the Wall Street Journal to National Review,
there is one thing we can count on: bone-chilling calls for international
bloodshed at the hands of the US state. It was bad enough during
the Cold War, when American conservatives cheered on the warfare
state – the emergence of a totalitarian bureaucracy within our shores
– as a supposedly temporary measure to fight a particular enemy.
But
nowadays, American conservatives have come to define themselves
as the people least wary of using nuclear weapons and the most ready
to cheer the death of innocents. The moral hypocrisy of these people
– who think nothing of running an article calling for an end to
abortion next to a piece defending the deaths of hundreds of thousands
of foreigners, unborn and born – takes one's breath away.
We
have dealt here with three groups – the Bush administration, the
libertarian mainstream, and American conservatives that use
the language of liberty to promote or defend its opposite. What
about those of us who remain, those whose commitment to the free
society is implacable, even in these times? I know this. There are
more of us than the media take account of. The Bush document includes
a passage that strikes me as true: "no people on earth yearn to
be oppressed, aspire to servitude, or eagerly await the midnight
knock of the secret police." I would only add that this includes
the American people.
Beneath
all the hoopla of this past September 11, beneath the sickening
displays of celebration for the government and the complete absence
of commentary on most victims of 9-11, who, after all, were engaged
in the peaceful, civilizing business of commerce, I did detect growing
public frustration with the direction the warfare state is going.
Apart from all the bombs, billions, and baloney, the only thing
the federal government seems to have done to protect us from terrorism
is make our airports even more inconvenient, and institute a perfectly
ridiculous color-coded chart to tell us just how close the next
terrorist threat allegedly is.
We
are far from the time when a majority of public opinion will come
to understand the real nature of the threat we face, and the real
ideological foundations of the struggle in which our epoch has plunged
us. But just as the partisans of the welfare-warfare state say that
their reign must last the duration of our lifetimes, let us all
commit to making sure that the resistance lasts just as long. Even
if we do not achieve victory in our lifetimes, we might slow down
the advance of tyranny and therefore have done good. If we do not
even manage that, we can know that we have done the right thing,
the moral thing, the courageous thing.
But
is final victory really so unthinkable? In the 18th century,
had the opponents of British imperial rule given up in 1750, there
would have been no 1776. Had the anti-communists in Russia thrown
in the towel in 1950, when Soviet rule seemed implacably secure,
there would have been no 1989. Neither will we be intimidated and
neither will we despair, because we are fighting the biggest of
all big lies, the idea that the state is a means of security and
salvation. In addition, we have on our side the greatest forces
for good in human history: the ideas of liberty and the demand for
freedom. From these principles, we will not be moved.
In
the meantime, Bush threatens war. For my part, I favor the proposal
of the Iraqi vice president that Bush and Saddam have a private
duel. Choose your weapons, fellas, and leave the rest of us out
of it.
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send
him mail], president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, and editor of LewRockwell.com,
delivered this talk at the Freedom Summit in Phoenix, Arizona, on
October 12, 2002.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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