This
essay is a chapter from Murray Rothbard's For
A New Liberty.
"Isolationism,"
Left and Right
"Isolationism"
was coined as a smear term to apply to opponents of American entry
into World War II. Since the word was often applied through guilt-by-association
to mean pro-Nazi, "isolationist" took on a "right wing" as well
as a generally negative flavor. If not actively pro-Nazi, "isolationists"
were at the very least narrow-minded ignoramuses ignorant of the
world around them, in contrast to the sophisticated, worldly,
caring "internationalists" who favored American crusading
around the globe. In the last decade, of course, antiwar forces
have been considered "leftists," and interventionists from Lyndon
Johnson to Jimmy Carter and their followers have constantly tried
to pin the "isolationist" or at least "neoisolationist" label
on today's left wing.
Left or right?
During World War I, opponents of the war were bitterly attacked,
just as now, as "leftists," even though they included in their
ranks libertarians and advocates of laissez-faire capitalism.
In fact, the major center of opposition to the American war with
Spain and the American war to crush the Philippine rebellion at
the turn of the century was laissez-faire liberals, men like the
sociologist and economist William Graham Sumner, and the Boston
merchant Edward Atkinson, who founded the "Anti-Imperialist League."
Furthermore, Atkinson and Sumner were squarely in the great tradition
of the classical English liberals of the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries, and in particular such laissez-faire "extremists" as
Richard Cobden and John Bright of the "Manchester School." Cobden
and Bright took the lead in vigorously opposing every British
war and foreign political intervention of their era and for his
pains Cobden was known not as an "isolationist" but as the "International
Man."1
Until the smear campaign of the late 1930s, opponents of war were
considered the true "internationalists," men who opposed the aggrandizement
of the nation-state and favored peace, free trade, free migration
and peaceful cultural exchanges among peoples of all nations.
Foreign intervention is "international" only in the sense that
war is international: coercion, whether the threat of force or
the outright movement of troops, will always cross frontiers between
one nation and another.
"Isolationism"
has a right-wing sound; "neutralism" and "peaceful coexistence"
sound leftish. But their essence is the same: opposition to war
and political intervention between countries. This has been the
position of antiwar forces for two centuries, whether they were
the classical liberals of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
the "leftists" of World War I and the Cold War, or the "rightists"
of World War II. In very few cases have these anti-interventionists
favored literal "isolation": what they have generally favored
is political nonintervention in the affairs of other countries,
coupled with economic and cultural internationalism in the sense
of peaceful freedom of trade, investment, and interchange between
the citizens of all countries. And this is the essence of the
libertarian position as well.
Limiting
Government
Libertarians
favor the abolition of all States everywhere, and the provision
of legitimate functions now supplied poorly by governments (police,
courts, etc.) by means of the free market. Libertarians favor
liberty as a natural human right, and advocate it not only for
Americans but for all peoples. In a purely libertarian world,
therefore, there would be no "foreign policy" because there would
be no States, no governments with a monopoly of coercion over
particular territorial areas. But since we live in a world of
nation-states, and since this system is hardly likely to disappear
in the near future, what is the attitude of libertarians toward
foreign policy in the current State-ridden world?
Pending the
dissolution of States, libertarians desire to limit, to
whittle down, the area of government power in all directions and
as much as possible. We have already demonstrated how this principle
of "de-statizing" might work in various important "domestic" problems,
where the goal is to push back the role of government and to allow
the voluntary and spontaneous energies of free persons full scope
through peaceful interaction, notably in the free-market economy.
In foreign affairs, the goal is the same: to keep government from
interfering in the affairs of other governments or other countries.
Political "isolationism" and peaceful coexistence refraining
from acting upon other countries is, then, the libertarian
counterpart to agitating for laissez-faire policies at home. The
idea is to shackle government from acting abroad just as we try
to shackle government at home. Isolationism or peaceful coexistence
is the foreign policy counterpart of severely limiting government
at home.
Specifically,
the entire land area of the world is now parcelled out among various
States, and each land area is ruled by a central government with
monopoly of violence over that area. In relations between States,
then, the libertarian goal is to keep each of these States from
extending their violence to other countries, so that each State's
tyranny is at least confined to its own bailiwick. For the libertarian
is interested in reducing as much as possible the area of State
aggression against all private individuals. The only way to do
this, in international affairs, is for the people of each country
to pressure their own State to confine its activities to the area
it monopolizes and not to attack other States or aggress against
their subjects. In short, the objective of the libertarian is
to confine any existing State to as small a degree of invasion
of person and property as possible. And this means the total avoidance
of war. The people under each State should pressure "their" respective
States not to attack one another, or, if a conflict should break
out, to withdraw from it as quickly as physically possible.
Let us assume
for the moment, a world with two hypothetical countries: Graustark
and Belgravia. Each is ruled by its own State. What happens if
the government of Graustark invades the territory of Belgravia?
From the libertarian point of view two evils immediately occur.
First, the Graustark Army begins to slaughter innocent Belgravian
civilians, persons who are not implicated in whatever crimes the
Belgravian government might have committed. War, then, is mass
murder, and this massive invasion of the right to life, of self-ownership,
of numbers of people is not only a crime but, for the libertarian,
the ultimate crime. Second, since all governments obtain their
revenue from the thievery of coercive taxation, any mobilization
and launching of troops inevitably involve an increase in tax-coercion
in Graustark. For both reasons because inter-State wars
inevitably involve both mass murder and an increase in tax-coercion,
the libertarian opposes war. Period.
It was not
always thus. During the Middle Ages, the scope of wars was far
more limited. Before the rise of modern weapons, armaments were
so limited that governments could and often did
strictly confine their violence to the armies of
the rival governments. It is true that tax-coercion increased,
but at least there was no mass murder of the innocents. Not only
was firepower low enough to confine violence to the armies of
the contending sides, but in the premodern era there was no central
nation-state that spoke inevitably in the name of all inhabitants
of a given land area. If one set of kings or barons fought another,
it was not felt that everyone in the area must be a dedicated
partisan. Moreover, instead of mass conscript armies enslaved
to their respective rulers, armies were small bands of hired mercenaries.
Often, a favorite sport for the populace was to observe a battle
from the safety of the town ramparts, and war was regarded as
something of a sporting match. But with the rise of the centralizing
State and of modern weapons of mass destruction, the slaughter
of civilians, as well as conscript armies, have become a vital
part of inter-State warfare.
Suppose that
despite possible libertarian opposition, war has broken out. Clearly,
the libertarian position should be that, so long as the war continues,
the scope of assault upon innocent civilians must be diminished
as much as possible. Old-fashioned international law had two excellent
devices to accomplish this goal: the "laws of war," and the "laws
of neutrality" or "neutrals' rights." The laws of neutrality were
designed to keep any war confined to the warring States themselves,
without attacks upon nonwarring States and, particularly, aggression
against the peoples of other nations. Hence the importance of
such ancient and now almost forgotten American principles as "freedom
of the seas" or severe limitations upon the rights of warring
States to blockade neutral trade with the enemy country. In short,
the libertarian tries to induce neutral States to remain
neutral in any inter-State conflict, and to induce the warring
States to observe fully the rights of neutral citizens. The "laws
of war," for their part, were designed to limit as much as possible
the invasion by warring States of the rights of civilians in their
respective countries. As the British jurist F. J. P. Veale put
it:
The fundamental
principle of this code was that hostilities between civilized
peoples must be limited to the armed forces actually engaged….
It drew a distinction between combatants and non-combatants
by laying down that the sole business of the combatants is to
fight each other and, consequently, that non-combatants must
be excluded from the scope of military operations.2
In the modified
form of prohibiting the bombardment of all cities not in the front
line, this rule held in Western European wars in recent centuries
until Britain launched the strategic bombing of civilians in World
War II. Now, of course, the entire concept is scarcely remembered,
since the very nature of modern nuclear warfare rests upon the
annihilation of civilians.
To return
to our hypothetical Graustark and Belgravia, suppose that Graustark
has invaded Belgravia, and that a third government, Walldavia,
now leaps into the war in order to defend Belgravia against "Graustarkian
aggression." Is this action justifiable? Here, indeed, is the
germ of the pernicious twentieth-century theory of "collective
security" the idea that when one government "aggresses"
against another, it is the moral obligation of the other governments
of the world to band together to defend the "victimized" State.
There are
several fatal flaws in this concept of collective security against
"aggression." One is that when Walldavia, or any other States,
leap into the fray they are themselves expanding and compounding
the extent of the aggression, because they are (1) unjustly slaughtering
masses of Graustarkian civilians, and (2) increasing tax-coercion
over Walldavian citizens. Furthermore, (3) in this age when States
and subjects are closely identifiable, Walldavia is thereby leaving
Walldavian civilians open to retaliation by Graustarkian bombers
or missiles. Thus, entry into the war by the Walldavian government
puts into jeopardy the very lives and properties of Walldavian
citizens which the government is supposed to be protecting.
Finally, (4) conscription-enslavement of Walldavian citizens will
usually intensify.
If this kind
of "collective security" should really be applied on a worldwide
scale, with all the "Walldavias" rushing into every local conflict
and escalating them, every local skirmish would soon be raised
into a global conflagration.
There is
another crucial flaw in the collective security concept. The idea
of entering a war in order to stop "aggression" is clearly an
analogy from aggression by one individual upon another.
Smith is seen to be beating up Jones aggressing against
him. Nearby police then rush to the defense of the victim Jones;
they are using "police action" to stop aggression. It was in pursuit
of this myth, for example, that President Truman persisted in
referring to American entry into the Korean war as a "police action,"
a collective UN effort to repel "aggression."
But "aggression"
only makes sense on the individual Smith-Jones level, as does
the very term "police action." These terms make no sense whatever
on an inter-State level. First, we have seen that governments
entering a war thereby become aggressors themselves against innocent
civilians; indeed, become mass murderers. The correct analogy
to individual action would be: Smith beats up Jones, the police
rush in to help Jones, and in the course of trying to apprehend
Smith, the police bomb a city block and murder thousands of people,
or spray machine-gun fire into an innocent crowd. This
is a far more accurate analogy, for that is what a warring government
does, and in the twentieth century it does so on a monumental
scale. But any police agency that behaves this way itself
becomes a criminal aggressor, often far more so than the original
Smith who began the affair.
But there
is yet another fatal flaw in the analogy with individual aggression.
When Smith beats up Jones or steals his property we can identify
Smith as an aggressor upon the personal or property right of his
victim. But when the Graustarkian State invades the territory
of the Belgravian State, it is impermissible to refer to "aggression"
in an analogous way. For the libertarian, no government has a
just claim to any property or "sovereignty" right in a given territorial
area. The Belgravian State's claim to its territory is therefore
totally different from Mr. Jones' claim to his property (although
the latter might also, on investigation, turn out to be the illegitimate
result of theft). No State has any legitimate property; all of
its territory is the result of some kind of aggression and violent
conquest. Hence the Graustarkian State's invasion is necessarily
a battle between two sets of thieves and aggressors: the only
problem is that innocent civilians on both sides are being trampled
upon.
Aside from
this general caveat on governments, the so-called "aggressor"
State often has a quite plausible claim on its "victim"; plausible,
that is, within the context of the nation-state system. Suppose
that Graustark has crossed the Belgravian border because Belgravia
had, a century earlier, invaded Graustark and seized its northeastern
provinces. The inhabitants of these provinces are culturally,
ethnically, and linguistically Graustarkian. Graustark now invades
in order to be reunited at last with its fellow Graustarkians.
In this situation, by the way, the libertarian, while condemning
both governments for making war and killing civilians, would have
to side with Graustark as having the more just, or the less unjust,
claim. Let us put it this way: In the unlikely event that the
two countries could return to premodern warfare, with (a) weapons
limited so that no civilians were injured in their persons or
property; (b) volunteer rather than conscript armies; and also
(c) financing by voluntary methods instead of taxation; the libertarian
could then, given our context, side unreservedly with Graustark.
Of all the
recent wars, none has come closer though not completely
so to satisfying these three criteria for a "just war"
than the Indian war of late 1971 for the liberation of Bangla
Desh. The government of Pakistan had been created as a last terrible
legacy of Imperial Britain to the Indian subcontinent. In particular,
the nation of Pakistan consisted of imperial rule by the Punjabis
of West Pakistan over the more numerous and productive Bengalis
of East Pakistan (and also over the Pathans of the North-West
Frontier). The Bengalis had long been yearning for independence
from their imperial oppressors; in early 1971, parliament was
suspended as a result of Bengali victory in the elections; from
then on, Punjabi troops systematically slaughtered the civilian
Bengal population. Indian entry into the conflict aided the popular
Bengali resistance forces of the Mukhti Bahini. While taxes and
conscription were, of course, involved, the Indian armies did
not use their weapons against Bengali civilians; on the contrary,
here was a genuine revolutionary war of the Bengali public against
a Punjabi occupying State. Only Punjabi soldiers were on the receiving
end of Indian bullets.
This example
points up another characteristic of warfare: that revolutionary
guerrilla war can be far more consistent with libertarian
principles than any inter-State war. By the very nature of their
activities, guerrillas defend the civilian population against
the depredations of a State; hence, guerrillas, inhabiting as
they do the same country as the enemy State, cannot use
nuclear or other weapons of mass destruction. Further: since guerrillas
rely for victory on the support and aid of the civilian population,
they must, as a basic part of their strategy, spare civilians
from harm and pinpoint their activities solely against the State
apparatus and its armed forces. Hence, guerrilla war returns us
to the ancient and honorable virtue of pinpointing the enemy and
sparing innocent civilians. And guerrillas, as part of their quest
for enthusiastic civilian support, often refrain from conscription
and taxation and rely on voluntary support for men and materiel.
The libertarian
qualities of guerrilla warfare reside only on the revolutionary
side; for the counterrevolutionary forces of the State, it is
quite a different story. While the State cannot go to the length
of "nuking" its own subjects, it does, of necessity, rely primarily
on campaigns of mass terror: killing, terrorizing, and rounding
up the mass of civilians. Since guerrillas, to be successful,
must be supported by the bulk of the population, the State, in
order to wage its war, must concentrate on destroying that population,
or must herd masses of civilians into concentration camps in order
to separate them from their guerrilla allies. This tactic was
used by the Spanish general, "Butcher" Weyler, against the Cuban
rebels in the 1890s, was continued by the American troops in the
Philippines, and by the British in the Boer War, and continues
to be used down to the recent ill-fated "strategic hamlet" policy
in South Vietnam.
The libertarian
foreign policy, then, is not a pacifist policy. We do not
hold, as do the pacifists, that no individual has the right to
use violence in defending himself against violent attack. What
we do hold is that no one has the right to conscript, tax,
or murder others, or to use violence against others in order to
defend himself. Since all States exist and have their being in
aggression against their subjects and in the acquiring of their
present territory, and since inter-State wars slaughter innocent
civilians, such wars are always unjust although some may
be more unjust than others. Guerrilla warfare against States at
least has the potential for meeting libertarian requirements by
pinpointing the guerrilla's battle against State officials and
armies, and by their use of voluntary methods to staff and finance
their struggle.
American
Foreign Policy
We have seen
that libertarians have as their prime responsibility the focussing
on the invasions and aggressions of their own State. The
libertarians of Graustark must center their attentions on attempting
to limit and whittle down the Graustark State, the Walldavian
libertarians must try to check the Walldavian State, and so on.
In foreign affairs, the libertarians of every country must press
their government to refrain from war and foreign intervention,
and to withdraw from any war in which they may be engaged. If
for no other reason, then, libertarians in the United States must
center their critical attention on the imperial and warlike activities
of their own government.
But there
are still other reasons for libertarians here to focus upon the
invasions and foreign interventions of the United States. For
empirically, taking the twentieth century as a whole, the single
most warlike, most interventionist, most imperialist government
has been the United States. Such a statement is bound to shock
Americans, subject as we have been for decades to intense propaganda
by the Establishment on the invariable saintliness, peaceful intentions,
and devotion to justice of the American government in foreign
affairs.
The expansionist
impulse of the American State began to take increasing hold in
the late nineteenth century, leaping boldly overseas with America's
war against Spain, dominating Cuba, grabbing Puerto Rico and the
Philippines, and brutally suppressing a Filipino rebellion for
independence. The imperial expansion of the United States reached
full flower in World War I, when President Woodrow Wilson's leap
into the fray prolonged the war and the mass slaughter, and unwittingly
bred the grisly devastation that led directly to the Bolshevik
triumph in Russia and the Nazi victory in Germany. It was Wilson's
particular genius to supply a pietistic and moralistic cloak for
a new American policy of worldwide intervention and domination,
a policy of trying to mould every country in the American image,
suppressing radical or Marxist regimes on the one hand and old-fashioned
monarchist governments on the other. It was Woodrow Wilson who
was to fix the broad features of American foreign policy for the
rest of this century. Almost every succeeding President has considered
himself a Wilsonian and followed his policies. It was no accident
that both Herbert Hoover and Franklin D. Roosevelt so long
thought of as polar opposites played important roles in
America's first global crusade of World War I, and that both men
harked back to their experience in World War I intervention and
planning as the guideposts for their future foreign and domestic
policies. And it was one of Richard Nixon's first acts as President
to place Woodrow Wilson's picture upon his desk.
In the name
of "national self-determination" and "collective security" against
aggression, the American government has consistently pursued a
goal and a policy of world domination and of the forcible suppression
of any rebellion against the status quo anywhere in the world.
In the name of combatting "aggression" everywhere of being
the world's "policeman" it has itself become a great and
continuing aggressor.
Anyone who
balks at such a description of American policy should simply consider
what the typical American reaction is to any domestic or
foreign crisis anywhere on the globe, even at some remote site
that cannot by any stretch of the imagination be considered a
direct or even indirect threat to the lives and security of the
American people. The military dictator of "Bumblestan" is in danger;
perhaps his subjects are tired of being exploited by him and his
colleagues. The United States then becomes gravely concerned;
articles by journalists friendly to the State Department or the
Pentagon spread the alarm about what might happen to the "stability"
of Bumblestan and its surrounding area if the dictator should
be toppled. For it so happens that he is a "pro-American" or "pro-Western"
dictator: that is, he is one of "ours" instead of "theirs." Millions
or even billions of dollars' worth of military and economic aid
are then rushed by the United States to prop up the Bumblestani
field marshal. If "our" dictator is saved, then a sigh of relief
is heaved, and congratulations are passed around at the saving
of "our" State. The continuing or intensified oppression of the
American taxpayer and of the Bumblestanian citizens are, of course,
not considered in the equation. Or if it should happen that the
Bumblestani dictator may fall, hysteria might hit the American
press and officialdom for the moment. But then, after a while,
the American people seem to be able to live their lives after
"losing" Bumblestan about as well as before perhaps even
better, if it means a few billion less in foreign aid extracted
from them to prop up the Bumblestani State.
If it is
understood and expected, then, that the United States will try
to impose its will on every crisis everywhere in the world, then
this is clear indication that America is the great interventionary
and imperial power. The one place where the United States does
not now attempt to work its will is the Soviet Union and the Communist
countries but, of course, it has tried to do so in the
past. Woodrow Wilson, along with Britain and France, tried for
several years to crush bolshevism in the cradle, with American
and Allied troops being sent to Russia to aid the Czarist ("White")
forces in trying to defeat the Reds. After World War II, the United
States tried its best to oust the Soviets from Eastern Europe,
and succeeded in pushing them out of Azerbaijan in northwestern
Iran. It also helped the British to crush a Communist regime in
Greece. The United States tried its best to maintain Chiang Kai-shek's
dictatorial rule in China, flying many of Chiang's troops northward
to occupy Manchuria as the Russians pulled out after World War
II; and it continues to prevent the Chinese from occupying their
offshore islands, Quemoy and Matsu. After virtually installing
the dictator Batista in Cuba, the United States tried desperately
to oust the Communist Castro regime, by actions ranging from the
CIA-engineered Bay of Pigs invasion to CIA-Mafia attempts to assassinate
Castro.
Of all America's
recent wars, certainly the most traumatic for Americans and their
attitude toward foreign policy was the Vietnam war. America's
imperial war in Vietnam was, indeed, a microcosm of what has been
tragically wrong with American foreign policy in this century.
American intervention in Vietnam did not begin, as most people
believe, with Kennedy or Eisenhower or even Truman. It began no
later than the date when the American government, under Franklin
Roosevelt, on November 26, 1941, delivered a sharp and insulting
ultimatum to Japan to get its armed forces out of China and Indochina,
from what would later be Vietnam. This U.S. ultimatum set the
stage inevitably for Pearl Harbor. Engaged in a war in the Pacific
to oust Japan from the Asian continent, the United States and
its OSS (predecessor to the CIA) favored and aided Ho Chi Minh's
Communist-run national resistance movement against the Japanese.
After World War II, the Communist Viet Minh was in charge of all
northern Vietnam. But then France, previously the imperial ruler
of Vietnam, betrayed its agreement with Ho and massacred Viet
Minh forces. In this double cross, France was aided by Britain
and the United States.
When the
French lost to the reconstituted Viet Minh guerrilla movement
under Ho, the United States endorsed the Geneva agreement of 1954,
under which Vietnam was to be quickly reunited as one nation.
For it was generally recognized that the postwar occupation divisions
of the country into North and South were purely arbitrary and
merely for military convenience. But, having by trickery managed
to oust the Viet Minh from the southern half of Vietnam, the United
States proceeded to break the Geneva agreement and to replace
the French and their puppet Emperor Bao Dai by its own clients,
Ngo Dinh Diem and his family, who were installed in dictatorial
rule over South Vietnam. When Diem became an embarrassment, the
CIA engineered a coup to assassinate Diem and replace him with
another dictatorial regime. To suppress the Viet Cong, the Communist-led
national independence movement in the South, the United States
rained devastation on South and North Vietnam alike bombing
and murdering a million Vietnamese and dragging half a million
American soldiers into the quagmires and jungles of Vietnam.
Throughout
the tragic Vietnamese conflict, the United States maintained the
fiction that it was a war of "aggression" by the Communist North
Vietnamese State against a friendly and "pro-Western" (whatever
that term may mean) South Vietnamese State which had called for
our aid. Actually, the war was really a doomed but lengthy attempt
by an imperial United States to suppress the wishes of the great
bulk of the Vietnamese population and to maintain unpopular client
dictators in the southern half of the country, by virtual genocide
if necessary.
Americans
are not accustomed to applying the term "imperialism" to the actions
of the U.S. government, but the word is a particularly apt one.
In its broadest sense, imperialism may be defined as aggression
by State A against the people of country B, followed by the subsequent
coercive maintenance of such foreign rule. In our example above,
the permanent rule by the Graustark State over formerly northeastern
Belgravia would be an example of such imperialism. But imperialism
does not have to take the form of direct rule over the foreign
population. In the twentieth century, the indirect form of "neoimperialism"
has increasingly replaced the old-fashioned direct kind; it is
more subtle and less visible but no less effective a form of imperialism.
In this situation, the imperial State rules the foreign population
through its effective control over native client-rulers. This
version of modern Western imperialism has been trenchantly defined
by the libertarian historian Leonard Liggio:
The imperialist
power of the Western countries… imposed on the world's peoples
a double or reinforced system of exploitation imperialism
by which the power of the Western governments maintains
the local ruling class in exchange for the opportunity to superimpose
Western exploitation upon existing exploitation by local states.3
This view
of America as a long-time imperial world power has taken hold
among historians in recent years as the result of compelling and
scholarly work by a distinguished group of New Left revisionist
historians inspired by Professor William Appleman Williams. But
this was also the view of conservative as well as classical liberal
"isolationists" during World War II and in the early days of the
Cold War.4
Isolationist
Criticisms
The last
anti-interventionist and anti-imperialist thrust of the old conservative
and classical liberal isolationists came during the Korean War.
Conservative George Morgenstern, chief editorial writer of the
Chicago Tribune and author of the first revisionist book
on Pearl Harbor, published an article in the right-wing Washington
weekly Human Events, which detailed the grisly imperialist
record of the United States government from the Spanish-American
War down to Korea. Morgenstern noted that the "exalted nonsense"
by which President McKinley had justified the war against Spain
was "familiar to anyone who later attended the evangelical rationalizations
of Wilson for intervening in the European war, of Roosevelt promising
the millennium,…of Eisenhower treasuring the 'crusade in Europe'
that somehow went sour, or of Truman, Stevenson, Paul Douglas
or the New York Times preaching the holy war in
Korea."5
In a widely
noted speech at the height of the American defeat in North Korea
at the hands of the Chinese in late 1950, conservative isolationist
Joseph P. Kennedy called for U.S. withdrawal from Korea. Kennedy
proclaimed that "I naturally opposed Communism but I said if portions
of Europe or Asia wish to go Communistic or even have Communism
thrust upon them, we cannot stop it." The result of the Cold War,
the Truman Doctrine, and the Marshall Plan, Kennedy charged, was
disaster a failure to purchase friends and a threat of
land war in Europe or Asia. Kennedy warned that:
…half of
this world will never submit to dictation by the other half….
What business is it of ours to support French colonial policy
in Indo-China or to achieve Mr. Syngman Rhee's concepts of democracy
in Korea? Shall we now send the Marines into the mountains of
Tibet to keep the Dalai Lama on his throne?
Economically,
Kennedy added, we have been burdening ourselves with unnecessary
debts as a consequence of Cold War policy. If we continue to weaken
our economy "with lavish spending either on foreign nations or
in foreign wars, we run the danger of precipitating another 1932
and of destroying the very system which we are trying to save.
Kennedy concluded
that the only rational alternative for America is to scrap the
Cold War foreign policy altogether: "to get out of Korea" and
out of Berlin and Europe. The United States could not possibly
contain Russian armies if they chose to march through Europe,
and if Europe should then turn Communist, Communism "may break
of itself as a unified force…. The more people that it will have
to govern, the more necessary it becomes for those who govern
to justify themselves to those being governed. The more peoples
that are under its yoke, the greater are the possibilities of
revolt." And here, at a time when cold warriors were forecasting
a world Communist monolith as an eternal fact of life, Joseph
Kennedy cited Marshall Tito as pointing the way for the eventual
breakup of the Communist world: thus, "Mao in China is not likely
to take his orders from Stalin…."
Kennedy realized
that "this policy will, of course, be criticized as appeasement.
[But]… is it appeasement to withdraw from unwise commitments….
If it is wise in our interest not to make commitments that endanger
our security, and this is appeasement, then I am for appeasement."
Kennedy concluded that "the suggestions I make [would] conserve
American lives for American ends, not waste them in the freezing
hills of Korea or on the battlescarred plains of Western Germany."6
One of the
most trenchant and forceful attacks on American foreign policy
to emerge from the Korean War was leveled by the veteran classical
liberal journalist, Garet Garrett. Garrett began his pamphlet,
The Rise of Empire (1952), by declaring, "We have crossed
the boundary that lies between Republic and Empire." Explicitly
linking this thesis with his notable pamphlet of the 1930s, The
Revolution Was, which had denounced the advent of executive
and statist tyranny within the republican form under the New Deal,
Garrett once more saw a "revolution within the form" of the old
constitutional republic. Garrett, for example, called Truman's
intervention in Korea without a declaration of war a "usurpation"
of congressional power.
In his pamphlet,
Garrett adumbrated the criteria, the hallmarks for the existence
of Empire. The first is the dominance of the executive power,
a dominance reflected in the President's unauthorized intervention
in Korea. The second is the subordination of domestic to foreign
policy; the third, the "ascendancy of the military mind"; the
fourth, a "system of satellite nations"; and the fifth, "a complex
of vaunting and fear," a vaunting of unlimited national might
combined with a continuing fear, fear of the enemy, of the "barbarian,"
and of the unreliability of the satellite allies. Garrett found
each one of these criteria to apply fully to the United States.
Having discovered
that the United States had developed all the hallmarks of empire,
Garrett added that the United States, like previous empires, feels
itself to be "a prisoner of history." For beyond fear lies "collective
security," and the playing of the supposedly destined American
role upon the world stage. Garrett concluded:
It is our
turn.
Our turn
to do what?
Our turn
to assume the responsibilities of moral leadership in the world,
Our turn
to maintain a balance of power against the forces of evil everywhere
in Europe and Asia and Africa, in the Atlantic and in
the Pacific, by air and by sea evil in this case being
the Russian barbarian.
Our turn
to keep the peace of the world.
Our turn
to save civilization.
Our turn
to serve mankind.
But this
is the language of Empire. The Roman Empire never doubted that
it was the defender of civilization. Its good intentions were
peace, law and order. The Spanish Empire added salvation. The
British Empire added the noble myth of the white man's burden.
We have added freedom and democracy. Yet the more that may be
added to it the more it is the same language still. A language
of power.7
War
As the Health of the State
Many libertarians
are uncomfortable with foreign policy matters and prefer to spend
their energies either on fundamental questions of libertarian
theory or on such "domestic" concerns as the free market or privatizing
postal service or garbage disposal. Yet an attack on war or a
warlike foreign policy is of crucial importance to libertarians.
There are two important reasons. One has become a cliché, but
is all too true nevertheless: the overriding importance of preventing
a nuclear holocaust. To all the long-standing reasons, moral and
economic, against an interventionist foreign policy has now been
added the imminent, ever-present threat of world destruction.
If the world should be destroyed, all the other problems and all
the other isms socialism, capitalism, liberalism, or libertarianism
would be of no importance whatsoever. Hence the prime importance
of a peaceful foreign policy and of ending the nuclear threat.
The other
reason is that, apart from the nuclear menace, war, in the words
of the libertarian Randolph Bourne, "is the health of the State."
War has always been the occasion of a great and usually
permanent acceleration and intensification of State power
over society. War is the great excuse for mobilizing all the energies
and resources of the nation, in the name of patriotic rhetoric,
under the aegis and dictation of the State apparatus. It is in
war that the State really comes into its own: swelling in power,
in number, in pride, in absolute dominion over the economy and
the society. Society becomes a herd, seeking to kill its alleged
enemies, rooting out and suppressing all dissent from the official
war effort, happily betraying truth for the supposed public interest.
Society becomes an armed camp, with the values and the morals
as the libertarian Albert Jay Nock once phrased it
of an "army on the march."
It is particularly
ironic that war always enables the State to rally the energies
of its citizens under the slogan of helping it to defend the country
against some bestial outside menace. For the root myth that enables
the State to wax fat off war is the canard that war is a defense
by the State of its subjects. The facts, however,
are precisely the reverse. For if war is the health of the State,
it is also its greatest danger. A State can only "die" by defeat
in war or by revolution. In war, therefore, the State frantically
mobilizes its subjects to fight for it against another
State, under the pretext that it is fighting to defend
them.8
In the history
of the United States, war has generally been the main occasion
for the often permanent intensification of the power of the State
over society. In the War of 1812 against Great Britain, as we
have indicated above, the modern inflationary fractional-reserve
banking system first came into being on a large scale, as did
protective tariffs, internal federal taxation, and a standing
army and navy. And a direct consequence of the wartime inflation
was the reestablishment of a central bank, the Second Bank of
the United States. Virtually all of these statist policies and
institutions continued permanently after the war was over. The
Civil War and its virtual one-party system led to the permanent
establishment of a neomercantilist policy of Big Government and
the subsidizing of various big business interests through protective
tariffs, huge land grants and other subsidies to railroads, federal
excise taxation, and a federally controlled banking system. It
also brought the first imposition of federal conscription and
an income tax, setting dangerous precedents for the future. World
War I brought the decisive and fateful turn from a relatively
free and laissez-faire economy to the present system of corporate
state monopoly at home and permanent global intervention abroad.
The collectivist economic mobilization during the war, headed
by War Industries Board Chairman Bernard Baruch, fulfilled the
emerging dream of big business leaders and progressive intellectuals
for a cartelized and monopolized economy planned by the federal
government in cozy collaboration with big business leadership.
And it was precisely this wartime collectivism that nurtured and
developed a nationwide labor movement that would eagerly take
its place as junior partner in the new corporate State economy.
This temporary collectivism, furthermore, served as a permanent
beacon and model for big business leaders and corporatist politicians
as the kind of permanent peacetime economy that they would like
to impose on the United States. As food czar, Secretary of Commerce,
and later as President, Herbert C. Hoover helped bring this continuing
monopolized statist economy into being, and the vision was fulfilled
in a recrudescence of wartime agencies and even wartime personnel
by Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal.9World
War I also brought a permanent Wilsonian global intervention abroad,
the fastening of the newly imposed Federal Reserve System and
a permanent income tax on society, high federal budgets, massive
conscription, and intimate connections between economic boom,
war contracts, and loans to Western nations.
World War
II was the culmination and fulfillment of all these trends: Franklin
D. Roosevelt finally fastened upon American life the heady promise
of the Wilsonian domestic and foreign program: permanent partnership
of Big Government, big business, and big unions; a continuing
and ever-expanding military-industrial complex; conscription;
continuing and accelerating inflation; and an endless and costly
role as counterrevolutionary "policeman" for the entire world.
The Roosevelt-Truman-Eisenhower-Kennedy-Johnson-Nixon-Ford-Carter
world (and there is little substantive difference among any of
these administrations) is "corporate liberalism," the corporate
State fulfilled.
It is particularly
ironic that conservatives, at least in rhetoric supporters of
a free-market economy, should be so complacent and even admiring
of our vast military-industrial complex. There is no greater single
distortion of the free market in present-day America. The bulk
of our scientists and engineers has been diverted from basic research
for civilian ends, from increasing productivity and the standard
of living of consumers, into wasteful, inefficient, and nonproductive
military and space boondoggles. These boondoggles are every bit
as wasteful but infinitely more destructive than the vast pyramid
building of the Pharaohs. It is no accident that Lord Keynes's
economics have proved to be the economics par excellence of the
corporate liberal State. For Keynesian economists place equal
approval upon all forms of government spending, whether on pyramids,
missiles, or steel plants; by definition all of these expenditures
swell the gross national product, regardless of how wasteful they
may be. It is only recently that many liberals have begun to awaken
to the evils of the waste, inflation, and militarism that Keynesian
corporate liberalism has brought to America.
As the scope
of government spending military and civilian alike
has widened, science and industry have been skewed more and more
into unproductive goals and highly inefficient processes. The
goal of satisfying consumers as efficiently as possible has been
increasingly replaced by the currying of favors by government
contractors, often in the form of highly wasteful "cost-plus"
contracts. Politics, in field after field, has replaced economics
in guiding the activities of industry. Furthermore, as entire
industries and regions of the country have come to depend upon
government and military contracts, a huge vested interest has
been created in continuing the programs, heedless of whether they
retain even the most threadbare excuse of military necessity.
Our economic prosperity has been made to depend on continuing
the narcotic of unproductive and antiproductive government spending.10
One of the
most perceptive and prophetic critics of America's entry into
World War II was the classical liberal writer John T. Flynn. In
his As We Go Marching, written in the midst of the war
he had tried so hard to forestall, Flynn charged that the New
Deal, culminating in its wartime embodiment, had finally established
the corporate State that important elements of big business had
been seeking since the turn of the twentieth century. "The general
idea," Flynn wrote, was "to reorder the society by making it a
planned and coerced economy instead of a free one, in which business
would be brought together into great guilds or an immense corporative
structure, combining the elements of self rule and government
supervision with a national economic policing system to enforce
these decrees…. This, after all, is not so very far from what
business had been talking about…."11
The New Deal
had first attempted to create such a new society in the National
Recovery Administration and the Agricultural Adjustment Administration,
mighty engines of "regimentation" hailed by labor and business
alike. Now the advent of World War II had reestablished this collectivist
program "an economy supported by great streams of debt
under complete control, with nearly all the planning agencies
functioning with almost totalitarian power under a vast bureaucracy."
After the war, Flynn prophesied, the New Deal would attempt to
expand this system permanently into international affairs. He
wisely predicted that the great emphasis of vast governmental
spending after the war would continue to be military, since this
is the one form of government spending to which conservatives
would never object, and which workers would also welcome for its
creation of jobs. "Thus militarism is the one great glamorous
public-works project upon which a variety of elements in the community
can be brought into agreement."12
Flynn predicted
that America's postwar policy would be "internationalist" in the
sense of being imperialist. Imperialism "is, of course, international…
in the sense that war is international," and it will follow from
the policy of militarism. "We will do what other countries have
done; we will keep alive the fears of our people of the aggressive
ambitions of other countries and we will ourselves embark upon
imperialistic enterprises of our own." Imperialism will ensure
for the United States the existence of perpetual "enemies," of
waging what Charles A. Beard was later to call "perpetual war
for perpetual peace." For, Flynn pointed out, "we have managed
to acquire bases all over the world…. There is no part of the
world where trouble can break out where… we cannot claim that
our interests are menaced. Thus menaced there must remain when
the war is over a continuing argument in the hands of the imperialists
for a vast naval establishment and a huge army ready to attack
anywhere or to resist an attack from all the enemies we shall
be obliged to have."13
One of the
most moving portrayals of the change in American life wrought
by World War II was written by John Dos Passos, a lifelong radical
and individualist who was pushed from "extreme left" to "extreme
right" by the march of the New Deal. Dos Passos expressed his
bitterness in his postwar novel, The
Grand Design:
At home
we organized bloodbanks and civilian defense and imitated the
rest of the world by setting up concentration camps (only we
called them relocation centers) and stuffing into them
American
citizens of Japanese ancestry… without benefit of habeas corpus…
The President
of the United States talked the sincere democrat and so did
the members of Congress. In the Administration there were devout
believers in civil liberty. "Now we're busy fighting a war;
we'll deploy all four freedoms later on," they said….
War is
a time of Caesars….
And the
American people were supposed to say thank you for the century
of the Common Man turned over for relocation behind barbed wire
so help him God.
We learned.
There are things we learned to do
but we
have not learned, in spite of the Constitution and the Declaration
of Independence and the great debates at Richmond and Philadelphia
how to
put power over the lives of men into the hands of one man
and to
make him use it wisely.14
Soviet
Foreign Policy
In a previous
chapter, we have already dealt with the problem of national defense,
abstracting from the question of whether the Russians are really
hell-bent upon a military attack upon the United States. Since
World War II, American military and foreign policy, at least rhetorically,
has been based upon the assumption of a looming threat of Russian
attack an assumption that has managed to gain public approval
for global American intervention and for scores of billions in
military expenditures. But how realistic, how well grounded, is
this assumption?
First, there
is no doubt that the Soviets, along with all other Marxist-Leninists,
would like to replace all existing social systems by Communist
regimes. But such a sentiment, of course, scarcely implies any
sort of realistic threat of attack just as an ill wish
in private life can hardly be grounds for realistic expectation
of imminent aggression. On the contrary, Marxism-Leninism itself
believes that a victory of communism is inevitable not
on the wings of outside force, but rather from accumulating tensions
and "contradictions" within each society. So Marxism-Leninism
considers internal revolution (or, in the current "Eurocommunist"
version, democratic change) for installing communism to be inevitable.
At the same time, it holds any coercive external imposition of
communism to be at best suspect, and at worst disruptive and counterproductive
of genuine organic social change. Any idea of "exporting" communism
to other countries on the backs of the Soviet military is totally
contradictory to Marxist-Leninist theory.
We are not
saying, of course, that Soviet leaders will never do anything
contrary to Marxist-Leninist theory. But to the extent that they
act as ordinary rulers of a strong Russian nation-state, the case
for an imminent Soviet threat to the United States is gravely
weakened. For the sole alleged basis of such a threat, as conjured
up by our cold warriors, is the Soviet Union's alleged devotion
to Marxist-Leninist theory and to its ultimate goal of world Communist
triumph. If the Soviet rulers were simply to act as Russian dictators
consulting only their own nation-state interests, then the entire
basis for treating the Soviets as a uniquely diabolic source of
imminent military assault crumbles to the ground.
When the
Bolsheviks took power in Russia in 1917, they had given little
thought to a future Soviet foreign policy, for they were convinced
that Communist revolution would soon follow in the advanced industrial
countries of Western Europe. When such hopes were dashed after
the end of World War I, Lenin and his fellow Bolsheviks adopted
the theory of "peaceful coexistence" as the basic foreign policy
for a Communist State. The idea was this: as the first successful
Communist movement, Soviet Russia would serve as a beacon for
and supporter of other Communist parties throughout the world.
But the Soviet State qua State would devote itself
to peaceful relations with all other countries, and would not
attempt to export communism through inter-State warfare. The idea
here was not just to follow Marxist-Leninist theory, but was the
highly practical course of holding the survival of the existing
Communist State as the foremost goal of foreign policy: that is,
never to endanger the Soviet State by courting inter-State warfare.
Other countries would be expected to become Communist by their
own internal-processes.
Thus, fortuitously,
from a mixture of theoretical and practical grounds of their own,
the Soviets arrived early at what libertarians consider to be
the only proper and principled foreign policy. As time went on,
furthermore, this policy was reinforced by a "conservatism" that
comes upon all movements after they have acquired and retained
power for any length of time, in which the interests of keeping
power over one's nation-state begins to take more and more precedence
over the initial ideal of world revolution. This increasing conservatism
under Stalin and his successors strengthened and reinforced the
nonaggressive, "peaceful coexistence" policy.
The Bolsheviks,
indeed, began their success story by being literally the only
political party in Russia to clamor, from the beginning of World
War I, for an immediate Russian pullout from the war. Indeed,
they went further and courted enormous unpopularity among the
public by calling for the defeat of "their own" government ("revolutionary
defeatism"). When Russia began to suffer enormous losses, accompanied
by massive military desertions from the front, and the war became
extremely unpopular, the Bolsheviks, guided by Lenin, continued
to be the only party to call for an immediate end to the war
the other parties still vowing to fight the Germans to the end.
When the Bolsheviks took power, Lenin, over the hysterical opposition
of even the majority of the Bolshevik central committee itself,
insisted on concluding the "appeasement" peace of Brest-Litovsk
in March 1918. Here, Lenin succeeded in taking Russia out of the
war, even at the price of granting to the victorious German army
all the parts of the Russian empire which it then occupied (including
White Russia and the Ukraine). Thus, Lenin and the Bolsheviks
began their reign by being not simply a peace party, but virtually
a "peace-at-any-price" party.
After World
War I and Germany's defeat, the new Polish State attacked Russia
and succeeded in grabbing for itself a large chunk of White Russia
and the Ukraine. Taking advantage of the turmoil and of the civil
war within Russia at the end of the war, various other national
groups Finland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania decided
to break away from the pre-World War I Russian empire and declare
national independence. Now, while Leninism pays lip service to
national self-determination, to Soviet rulers, from the very beginning,
it was clear that the boundaries of the old Russian State were
supposed to remain intact. The Red Army reconquered the Ukraine,
not only from the Whites, but also from the Ukrainian nationalists,
and from the indigenously Ukrainian anarchist army of Nestor Makhno
as well. For the rest, it was clear that Russia, like Germany
in the 1920s and 1930s, was a "revisionist" country vis-à-vis
the postwar settlement at Versailles. That is, the lodestar of
both Russian and German foreign policy was to recapture their
pre-World War I borders what they both considered the "true"
borders of their respective States. It should be noted that every
political party or tendency in Russia and Germany, whether ruling
the State or in opposition, agreed with this aim of full restoration
of national territory.
But, it should
be emphasized, while Germany under Hitler took strong measures
to recapture the lost lands, the cautious and conservative Soviet
rulers did absolutely nothing. Only after the Stalin-Hitler pact
and the German conquest of Poland did the Soviets, now facing
no danger in doing so, recapture their lost territories. Specifically,
the Russians repossessed Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania as well
as the old Russian lands of White Russia and the Ukraine that
had been eastern Poland. And they were able to do so without a
fight. The old pre-World War I Russia had now been restored with
the exception of Finland. But Finland was prepared to fight. Here
the Russians demanded not the reincorporation of Finland as a
whole, but only of parts of the Karelian Isthmus which were ethnically
Russian. When the Finns refused this demand, the "Winter War"
(1939–1940) between Russia and Finland ensued, which ended with
the Finns conceding only Russian Karelia.15
On June 22,
1941, Germany, triumphant over everyone but England in the West,
launched a sudden, massive, and unprovoked assault on Soviet Russia,
an act of aggression aided and abetted by the other pro-German
States in Eastern Europe: Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Slovakia,
and Finland. This German and allied invasion of Russia soon became
one of the pivotal facts in the history of Europe since that date.
So unprepared was Stalin for the assault, so trusting was he in
the rationality of the German-Russian accord for peace in Eastern
Europe, that he had allowed the Russian army to fall into disrepair.
So unwarlike was Stalin, in fact, that Germany was almost able
to conquer Russia in the face of enormous odds. Since Germany
otherwise would have been able to retain control of Europe indefinitely,
it was Hitler who was led by the siren call of anti-Communist
ideology to throw away a rational and prudent course and launch
what was to be the beginning of his ultimate defeat.
The mythology
of the cold warriors often concedes that the Soviets were not
internationally aggressive until World War II indeed,
they are compelled to assert this point, since most cold warriors
heartily approve the World War II alliance of the United States
with Russia against Germany. It was during and immediately after
the war, they assert, that Russia became expansionist and drove
its way into Eastern Europe.
What this
charge overlooks is the central fact of the German and associated
assault upon Russia in June 1941. There is no doubt that Germany
and her allies launched this war. Hence, in order to defeat the
invaders, it was obviously necessary for the Russians to roll
back the invading armies and conquer Germany and the other warring
countries of Eastern Europe. It is easier to make a case for the
United States being expansionist for conquering and occupying
Italy and part of Germany than it is for Russia's actions
after all, the United States was never directly attacked by the
Germans.
During World
War II, the United States, Britain, and Russia, the three major
Allies, had agreed on joint three-power military occupation of
all the conquered territories. The United States was the first
to break the agreement during the war by allowing Russia no role
whatever in the military occupation of Italy. Despite this serious
breach of agreement, Stalin displayed his consistent preference
for the conservative interests of the Russian nation-state over
cleaving to revolutionary ideology by repeatedly betraying indigenous
Communist movements. In order to preserve peaceful relations between
Russia and the West, Stalin consistently tried to hold back the
success of various Communist movements. He was successful in France
and Italy, where Communist partisan groups might easily have seized
power in the wake of the German military retreat; but Stalin ordered
them not to do so, and instead persuaded them to join coalition
regimes headed by anti-Communist parties. In both countries, the
Communists were soon ousted from the coalition. In Greece, where
the Communist partisans almost did seize power, Stalin
irretrievably weakened them by abandoning them and urging them
to turn over power to newly invading British troops.
In other
countries, particularly ones where Communist partisan groups were
strong, the Communists flatly refused Stalin's requests. In Yugoslavia,
the victorious Tito refused Stalin's demand that Tito subordinate
himself to the anti-Communist Mihailovich in a governing coalition;
Mao refused a similar Stalin demand that he subordinate himself
to Chiang Kai-shek. There is no doubt that these rejections were
the beginning of the later extraordinarily important schisms within
the world Communist movement.
Russia, therefore,
governed Eastern Europe as military occupier after winning a war
launched against her. Russia's initial goal was not to communize
Eastern Europe on the backs of the Soviet army. Her goal was to
gain assurances that Eastern Europe would not be the broad highway
for an assault on Russia, as it had been three times in half a
century the last time in a war in which over twenty million
Russians had been slaughtered. In short, Russia wanted countries
on her border which would not be anti-Communist in a military
sense, and which would not be used as a springboard for another
invasion. Political conditions in Eastern Europe were such that
only in more modernized Finland did non-Communist politicians
exist whom Russia could trust to pursue a peaceful line in foreign
affairs. And in Finland, this situation was the work of one far-seeing
statesman, the agrarian leader Julio Paasikivi. It was because
Finland, then and since, has firmly followed the "Paasikivi line"
that Russia was willing to pull its troops out of Finland and
not to insist on the communization of that country even
though it had fought two wars with Finland in the previous six
years.
Even in the
other Eastern European countries, Russia clung to coalition governments
for several years after the war and only fully communized them
in 1948 after three years of unrelenting American Cold
War pressure to try to oust Russia from these countries. In other
areas, Russia readily pulled its troops out of Austria and out
of Azerbaijan.
The cold
warriors find it difficult to explain Russian actions in Finland.
If Russia is always hell-bent to impose Communist rule wherever
it can, why the "soft line" on Finland? The only plausible explanation
is that its motivation is security for the Russian nation-state
against attack, with the success of world communism playing a
very minor role in its scale of priorities.
In fact,
the cold warriors have never been able either to explain or absorb
the fact of deep schisms in the world Communist movement. For
if all Communists are governed by a common ideology, then every
Communist everywhere should be part of one unified monolith, and
one which, given the early success of the Bolsheviks, would make
them subordinates or "agents" of Moscow. If Communists are mainly
motivated by their bond of Marxism-Leninism, how come the deep
China-Russia split, in which Russia, for example, keeps one million
troops at the ready on the China-Russia frontier? How come the
enmity between the Yugoslav and Albanian Communist States? How
come the actual military conflict between the Cambodian and Vietnamese
Communists? The answer, of course, is that once a revolutionary
movement seizes State power, it begins very quickly to take on
the attributes of a ruling class with a class interest in retaining
State power. The world revolution begins to pale, in their outlook,
to insignificance. And since State elites can and do have conflicting
interests in power and wealth, it is not surprising that inter-Communist
conflicts have become endemic.
Since their
victory over German and associated military aggression in World
War II, the Soviets have continued to be conservative in their
military policy. Their only use of troops has been to defend
their territory in the Communist bloc, rather than to extend it
further. Thus, when Hungary threatened to leave the Soviet bloc
in 1956, or Czechoslovakia in 1968, the Soviets intervened with
troops reprehensibly, to be sure, but still acting in a
conservative and defensive rather than expansionist manner. (The
Soviets apparently gave considerable thought to invading Yugoslavia
when Tito took it out of the Soviet bloc, but were deterred by
the formidable qualities for guerrilla fighting of the Yugoslav
army.) In no case has Russia used troops to extend its bloc or
to conquer more territories.
Professor
Stephen F. Cohen, director of the program in Russian Studies at
Princeton, has recently delineated the nature of Soviet conservatism
in foreign affairs:
That a
system born in revolution and still professing revolutionary
ideas should have become one of the most conservative in the
world may seem preposterous. But all those factors variously
said to be most important in Soviet politics have contributed
to this conservatism: the bureaucratic tradition of Russian
government before the revolution; the subsequent bureaucratization
of Soviet life, which proliferated conservative norms and created
an entrenched class of zealous defenders of bureaucratic privilege;
the geriatric nature of the present-day elite; and even the
official ideology, whose thrust turned many years ago from the
creation of a new social order to extolling the existing one…
In other
words, the main thrust of Soviet conservatism today is to preserve
what it already has at home and abroad, not to jeopardize it.
A conservative government is, of course, capable of dangerous
militaristic actions, as we saw in Czechoslovakia… but these
are acts of imperial protectionism, a kind of defensive militarism,
not a revolutionary or aggrandizing one. It is certainly true
that for most Soviet leaders, as presumably for most American
leaders, detente is not an altruistic endeavor but the pursuit
of national interests. In one sense, this is sad. But it is
probably also true that mutual self-interest provides a more
durable basis for detente than lofty, and finally empty, altruism.16
Similarly,
as impeccable an anti-Soviet source as former CIA Director William
Colby finds the overwhelming concern of the Soviets to be the
defensive goal of avoiding another catastrophic invasion of their
territory. As Colby testified before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee:
You will
find a concern, even a paranoia, over their [the Soviets'] own
security. You will find the determination that they shall never
again be invaded and put through the kinds of turmoil that they
have been under and many different invasions… I think that they…
want to overprotect themselves to make certain that that does
not happen…17
Even the
Chinese, for all their bluster, have pursued a conservative and
pacific foreign policy. Not only have they failed to invade Taiwan,
recognized internationally as part of China, but they have even
allowed the small offshore islands of Quemoy and Matsu to remain
in Chiang Kai-shek's hands. No moves have been made against the
British and Portuguese-occupied enclaves of Hong Kong and Macao.
And China even took the unusual step of declaring a unilateral
cease-fire and withdrawal of forces to its border after having
triumphed easily over Indian arms in their escalated border war.18
Avoiding
A Priori History
There is
still one thesis common to Americans and even to some libertarians
that may prevent them from absorbing the analysis of this chapter:
the myth propounded by Woodrow Wilson that democracies must inevitably
be peace-loving while dictatorships are inevitably warlike. This
thesis was of course highly convenient for covering Wilson's own
culpability for dragging America into a needless and monstrous
war. But apart from that, there is simply no evidence for this
assumption. Many dictatorships have turned inward, cautiously
confining themselves to preying on their own people: examples
range from premodern Japan to Communist Albania to innumerable
dictatorships in the Third World today. Uganda's Idi Amin, perhaps
the most brutal and repressive dictator in today's world, shows
no signs whatever of jeopardizing his regime by invading neighboring
countries. On the other hand, such an indubitable democracy as
Great Britain spread its coercive imperialism across the globe
during the nineteenth and earlier centuries.
The theoretical
reason why focussing on democracy or dictatorship misses the point
is that States all States rule their
population and decide whether or not to make war. And all
States, whether formally a democracy or dictatorship or some other
brand of rule, are run by a ruling elite. Whether or not these
elites, in any particular case, will make war upon another State
is a function of a complex interweaving web of causes, including
temperament of the rulers, the strength of their enemies, the
inducements for war, public opinion. While public opinion has
to be gauged in either case, the only real difference between
a democracy and a dictatorship on making war is that in the former
more propaganda must be beamed at one's subjects to engineer
their approval. Intensive propaganda is necessary in any case
as we can see by the zealous opinion-moulding behavior
of all modern warring States. But the democratic State must work
harder and faster. And also the democratic State must be more
hypocritical in using rhetoric designed to appeal to the values
of the masses: justice, freedom, national interest, patriotism,
world peace, etc. So in democratic States, the art of propagandizing
their subjects must be a bit more sophisticated and refined. But
this, as we have seen, is true of all governmental decisions,
not just war or peace. For all governments but especially
democratic governments must work hard at persuading their
subjects that all of their deeds of oppression are really
in their subjects' best interests.
What we have
said about democracy and dictatorship applies equally to the lack
of correlation between degrees of internal freedom in a country
and its external aggressiveness. Some States have proved themselves
perfectly capable of allowing a considerable degree of freedom
internally while making aggressive war abroad; other States have
shown themselves capable of totalitarian rule internally while
pursuing a pacific foreign policy. The examples of Uganda, Albania,
China, Great Britain, etc., apply equally well in this comparison.
In short,
libertarians and other Americans must guard against a priori
history: in this case, against the assumption that, in any conflict,
the State which is more democratic or allows more internal freedom
is necessarily or even presumptively the victim of aggression
by the more dictatorial or totalitarian State. There is simply
no historical evidence whatever for such a presumption. In deciding
on relative rights and wrongs, on relative degrees of aggression
in any dispute in foreign affairs, there is no substitute for
a detailed empirical, historical investigation of the dispute
itself. It should occasion no great surprise, then, if such an
investigation concludes that a democratic and relatively far freer
United States has been more aggressive and imperialistic in foreign
affairs than a relatively totalitarian Russia or China. Conversely,
hailing a State for being less aggressive in foreign affairs in
no way implies that the observer is in any way sympathetic to
that State's internal record. It is vital indeed, it is
literally a life-and-death matter that Americans be able
to look as coolly and clear-sightedly, as free from myth at their
government's record in foreign affairs as they are increasingly
able to do in domestic politics. For war and a phony "external
threat" have long been the chief means by which the State wins
back the loyalty of its subjects. As we have seen, war and militarism
were the gravediggers of classical liberalism; we must not allow
the State to get away with this ruse ever again.19
A Foreign
Policy Program
To conclude
our discussion, the primary plank of a libertarian foreign policy
program for America must be to call upon the United States to
abandon its policy of global interventionism: to withdraw immediately
and completely, militarily and politically, from Asia, Europe,
Latin America, the Middle East, from everywhere. The cry
among American libertarians should be for the United States to
withdraw now, in every way that involves the U.S. government.
The United States should dismantle its bases, withdraw its troops,
stop its incessant political meddling, and abolish the CIA. It
should also end all foreign aid which is simply a device
to coerce the American taxpayer into subsidizing American exports
and favored foreign States, all in the name of "helping the starving
peoples of the world." In short, the United States government
should withdraw totally to within its own boundaries and maintain
a policy of strict political "isolation" or neutrality everywhere.
The spirit
of this ultra-"isolationist," libertarian foreign policy was expressed
during the 1930s by retired Marine Corps Major General Smedley
D. Butler. In the fall of 1936, General Butler proposed a now-forgotten
constitutional amendment, an amendment which would delight libertarian
hearts if it were once again to be taken seriously. Here is Butler's
proposed constitutional amendment in its entirety:
1. The removal
of members of the land armed forces from within the continental
limits of the United States and the Panama Canal Zone for any
cause whatsoever is hereby prohibited.
2. The vessels
of the United States Navy, or of the other branches of the armed
service, are hereby prohibited from steaming, for any reason whatsoever
except on an errand of mercy, more than five hundred miles from
our coast.
3. Aircraft
of the Army, Navy and Marine Corps is hereby prohibited from flying,
for any reason whatsoever, more than seven hundred and fifty miles
beyond the coast of the United States.20
Disarmament
Strict isolationism
and neutrality, then, is the first plank of a libertarian foreign
policy, in addition to recognizing the chief responsibility of
the American State for the Cold War and for its entry into all
the other conflicts of this century. Given isolation, however,
what sort of arms policy should the United States pursue? Many
of the original isolationists also advocated a policy of "arming
to the teeth"; but such a program, in a nuclear age, continues
the grave risk of global holocaust, a mightily armed State, and
the enormous waste and distortions that unproductive government
spending imposes on the economy.
Even from
a purely military point of view, the United States and the Soviet
Union have the power to annihilate each other many times over;
and the United States could easily preserve all of its nuclear
retaliatory power by scrapping every armament except Polaris submarines
which are invulnerable and armed with nuclear missiles with multi-targeted
warheads. Bur for the libertarian, or indeed for anyone worried
about massive nuclear destruction of human life, even disarming
down to Polaris submarines is hardly a satisfactory settlement.
World peace would continue to rest on a shaky "balance of terror,"
a balance that could always be upset by accident or by the actions
of madmen in power. No; for anyone to become secure from the nuclear
menace it is vital to achieve worldwide nuclear disarmament, a
disarmament toward which the SALT agreement of 1972 and the SALT
II negotiations are only a very hesitant beginning.
Since it
is in the interest of all people, and even of all State rulers,
not to be annihilated in a nuclear holocaust, this mutual
self-interest provides a firm, rational basis for agreeing upon
and carrying out a policy of joint and worldwide "general and
complete disarmament" of nuclear and other modern weapons of mass
destruction. Such joint disarmament has been feasible ever since
the Soviet Union accepted Western proposals to this effect on
May 10, 1955 an acceptance which only gained a total and
panicky Western abandonment of their own proposals!21
The American
version has long held that while we have wanted disarmament plus
inspection, the Soviets persist in wanting only disarmament without
inspection. The actual picture is very different: since May 1955,
the Soviet Union has favored any and all disarmament and unlimited
inspection of whatever has been disarmed; whereas the Americans
have advocated unlimited inspection but accompanied by little
or no disarmament! This was the burden of President Eisenhower's
spectacular but basically dishonest "open skies" proposal, which
replaced the disarmament proposals we quickly withdrew after the
Soviet acceptance of May 1955. Even now that open skies have been
essentially achieved through American and Russian space satellites,
the 1972 controversial SALT agreement involves no actual disarmament,
only limitations on further nuclear expansion. Furthermore, since
American strategic might throughout the world rests on nuclear
and air power, there is good reason to believe in Soviet sincerity
in any agreement to liquidate nuclear missiles or offensive bombers.
Not only
should there be joint disarmament of nuclear weapons, but also
of all weapons capable of being fired massively across national
borders; in particular bombers. It is precisely such weapons of
mass destruction as the missile and the bomber which can never
be pinpoint-targeted to avoid their use against innocent civilians.
In addition, the total abandonment of missiles and bombers would
enforce upon every government, especially including the
American, a policy of isolation and neutrality. Only if governments
are deprived of weapons of offensive warfare will they be forced
to pursue a policy of isolation and peace. Surely, in view of
the black record of all governments, including the American, it
would be folly to leave these harbingers of mass murder and destruction
in their hands, and to trust them never to employ those monstrous
weapons. If it is illegitimate for government ever to employ such
weapons, why should they be allowed to remain, fully loaded, in
their none-too-clean hands?
The contrast
between the conservative and the libertarian positions on war
and American foreign policy was starkly expressed in an interchange
between William F. Buckley, Jr., and the libertarian Ronald Hamowy
in the early days of the contemporary libertarian movement. Scorning
the libertarian critique of conservative foreign policy postures,
Buckley wrote: "There is room in any society for those whose only
concern is for tablet-keeping; but let them realize that it is
only because of the conservatives' disposition to sacrifice in
order to withstand the [Soviet] enemy, that they are able to enjoy
their monasticism, and pursue their busy little seminars on whether
or not to demunicipalize the garbage collectors." To which Hamowy
trenchantly replied:
It might
appear ungrateful of me, but I must decline to thank Mr. Buckley
for saving my life. It is, further, my belief that if his viewpoint
prevails and that if he persists in his unsolicited aid the
result will almost certainly be my death (and that of tens of
millions of others) in nuclear war or my imminent imprisonment
as an "un-American"….
I hold
strongly to my personal liberty and it is precisely because
of this that I insist that no one has the right to force his
decisions on another. Mr. Buckley chooses to be dead rather
than Red. So do I. But I insist that all men be allowed to make
that decision for themselves. A nuclear holocaust will make
it for them.22
To
which we might add that anyone who wishes is entitled to make
the personal decision of "better dead than Red" or "give me liberty
or give me death." What he is not entitled to do is to
make these decisions for others, as the prowar policy of
conservatism would do. What conservatives are really saying is:
"Better them dead than Red," and "give me liberty or give
them death" which are the battle cries not of noble
heroes but of mass murderers.
In
one sense alone is Mr. Buckley correct: in the nuclear age it
is more important to worry about war and foreign policy
than about demunicipalizing garbage disposal, as important as
the latter may be. But if we do so, we come ineluctably to the
reverse of the Buckleyite conclusion. We come to the view that
since modern air and missile weapons cannot be pinpoint-targeted
to avoid harming civilians, their very existence must be condemned.
And nuclear and air disarmament becomes a great and overriding
good to be pursued for its own sake, more avidly even than the
demunicipalization of garbage.
4
For "New Left" revisionists, see, in addition to Williams himself,
the work of Gabriel Kolko Lloyd Gardner, Stephen E. Ambrose,
N. Gordon Levin, Jr., Walter LaFeber, Robert F. Smith, Barton
Bernstein, and Ronald Radosh. Coming to similar conclusions
from far different revisionist traditions were Charles A. Beard
and Harry Elmer Barnes, the libertarian James J. Martin, and
classical liberals John T. Flynn and Garet Garrett.
Ronald
Radosh, in his Prophets
on the Right: Profiles of Conservative Critics of American Globalism
(New York: Simon & Schuster 1975) has appreciatively
portrayed the conservative isolationist opposition to American
intervention in World War II. In numerous articles and in his
Not
to the Swift: The Old Isolationists in the Cold War Era
(Lewisburg, Pa.: Bucknell University Press, 1978), Justus D.
Doenecke has carefully and sympathetically analyzed the sentiment
of World War II isolationists in confronting the early Cold
War. A call for a common anti-interventionist and anti-imperialist
movement by Left and Right can be found in Carl Oglesby and
Richard Shaull, Containment
and Change (New York: Macmillan, 1967). For an annotated
bibliography of the writings of isolationists, see Doenecke,
The
Literature of Isolationism (Colorado Springs, Colo.:
Ralph Myles, 1972).
5
George Morgenstern, "The Past Marches On," Human Events
(April 22, 1953). The revisionist work on Pearl Harbor
was Morgenstern, Pearl
Harbor: Story of a Secret War (New York: Devin-Adair
1947). For more on the conservative isolationists and
their critique of the Cold War, see Murray N. Rothbard, "The
Foreign Policy of the Old Right," Journal of Libertarian
Studies (Winter 1978).
6
Joseph P. Kennedy, "Present Policy is Politically and Morally
Bankrupt," Vital Speeches (January 1, 1951), pp.
170–73.
7
Garet Garrett, The
People's Pottage (Caldwell, Idaho: Caxton Printers,
1953), pp. 158–59, 129–174. For more expressions of conservative
or classical liberal anti-imperialist critiques of the Cold
War, see Doenecke, Not to the Swift, p. 79.
9
Numerous revisionist historians have recently developed this
interpretation of twentieth-century American history. In particular,
see the works of, among others, Gabriel Kolko, James Weinstein,
Robert Wiebe, Robert D. Cuff, William E. Leuchtenburg, Ellis
D. Hawley, Melvin I. Urofsky, Joan Hoff Wilson, Ronald Radosh,
Jerry Israel, David Eakins, and Paul Conkin again, as
in foreign policy revisionism, under the inspiration of William
Appleman Williams. A series of essays using this approach may
be found in Ronald Radosh and Murray N. Rothbard, eds., A
New History of Leviathan (New York: Dutton, 1972).
10 On
the economic distortions imposed by the military-industrial
policies, see Seymour Melman, ed., The War Economy of the
United States (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1971).
12
Ibid., pp. 198, 201, 207.
13
Ibid., pp. 212–13, 225–26.
15
For an illuminating view of the Russo-Finnish conflict, see
Max Jakobson, The Diplomacy of the Winter War (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1961).
16
Stephen F. Cohen, "Why Detente Can Work," Inquiry (December
19, 1977), pp. 14–15.
17
Quoted in Richard J. Barnet, "The Present Danger: American Security
and the U.S.-Soviet Military Balance," Libertarian Review
(November 1977), p. 12.
18
See Neville Maxwell, India's
China War (New York: Pantheon Books, 1970). Neither
is China's reconquest and suppression of national rebellion
in Tibet a valid point against our thesis. For Chiang Kai-shek
as well as all other Chinese have for many generations considered
Tibet as part of Greater China, and China was here acting in
the same conservative nation-state manner as we have seen guiding
the Soviets.
19
For a critique of recent attempts by cold warriors to revive
the bogey of a Soviet military threat, see Barnet, The Present
Danger.