Today
Iraq, Tomorrow the World
by
Laurence
M. Vance
by Laurence M. Vance
"We
don’t seek empires. We’re not imperialistic." ~ Donald Rumsfeld (2003)
"If
we want Iraq to avoid becoming a Somalia on steroids, we’d better
get used to U.S. troops being deployed there for years, possibly
decades, to come. If that raises hackles about American imperialism,
so be it. We’re going to be called an empire whatever we do. We
might as well be a successful empire." ~ Max Boot (2003)
"We’re
an empire now." ~ a
senior adviser to President Bush (2004)
The number
in Germany is 69,395. The number in Japan is 35,307. The number
in Korea is 32,744. The number in Italy is 12,258. The number in
the United Kingdom is 11,093.
I am not speaking
of the number of car accidents last year in Germany, Japan, Korea,
Italy, or the United Kingdom. And neither am I speaking of the number
of poisonings, suicides, or armed robberies in any of these countries.
No, I am speaking
of something far more lethal: the continued presence of U.S. troops.
According to
the latest edition of the "Active
Duty Military Personnel Strengths by Regional Area and by Country,"
published by the Defense Department’s Directorate for Information
Operations and Reports (DIOR), the U.S. has troops in 142 countries.
This is up from the figure of 136 countries that the government
was reporting the
last time I addressed the subject of the number of countries
under the shadow of the U.S. Global Empire. Additions to the list
are Armenia, Republic of the Congo, Gabon, Iran, Malawi, Moldova,
Slovak Republic, and Sudan. Subtractions are Eritrea and North Korea.
Only 49 countries to go and the United States will have hegemony
over the whole world. But it is worse than it appears. Counting
the U.S. troops in territories, the officially reported number of
countries or territories that the United States has troops in is
now 155. It is not without cause that the twentieth century’s greatest
proponent of liberty, and the greatest opponent of the state, Murray
Rothbard (19261995), said that "empirically, taking
the twentieth century as a whole, the single most warlike, most
interventionist, most imperialist government has been the United
States."
This foreign
troop presence is, of course, directly opposite the foreign policy
of the Founding Fathers:
- George Washington:
"The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations
is, in extending our commercial relations to have with them as
little political connection as possible."
- Thomas Jefferson:
"Peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations
– entangling alliances with none."
- John Quincy
Adams: "America . . . goes not abroad seeking monsters to
destroy."
In his Farewell
Address, George Washington also warned against "permanent
alliances with any portion of the foreign world." Could he
have ever imagined the commitment of the United States to be the
world’s policeman?
Since the Spanish-American
War of 1898, the foreign policy of the United States has been
one of interventionism, which is always followed by its stepchildren
belligerency, bellicosity, and jingoism. When televangelist Pat
Robertson recently said that the United States government should
"take out" the president of Venezuela, Hugo
Chavez, he had a history of CIA assassinations
and assassination
schemes to go by. This certainly doesn’t excuse his remarks,
but it is important to note that U.S. intervention abroad has not
always been masked under the noble purposes of humanitarian relief
or making the world safe for democracy.
Because we
live in an imperfect world of nation-states that is not likely to
change anytime in the near future, the question of U.S. foreign
policy cannot be ignored. Many libertarians make the mistake of
expending all of their energies in an attempt to downsize the state
by freeing the market and society from government interference while
forgetting that "war," in the immortal words of Randolph
Bourne (18861918), "is
the health of the state." Libertarians who disparage the
welfare state while turning a blind eye to the warfare state are
terribly inconsistent.
So, as Rothbard
again said, since "libertarians desire to limit, to
whittle down, the area of government power in all directions and
as much as possible," the goal in foreign affairs should be
the same as that in domestic affairs: "To keep government from
interfering in the affairs of other governments or other countries."
We should "shackle government from acting abroad just as we
try to shackle government at home."
The state’s
coercive arm of foreign intervention is the military. U.S. troops
don’t "defend our freedoms." As the Future
of Freedom Foundation’s Jacob
Hornberger has so courageously pointed out, U.S. troops
serve not
as a defender of our freedoms but instead simply as a loyal and
obedient personal army of the president, ready and prepared to
serve him and obey his commands. It is an army that stands ready
to obey the president’s orders to deploy to any country in the
world for any reason he deems fit and attack, kill, and maim any
"terrorist" who dares to resist the U.S. invasion of
his own country. It is also an army that stands ready to obey
the president’s orders to take into custody any American whom
the commander in chief deems a "terrorist" and to punish
him accordingly.
To say that
U.S. troops "defend our freedoms" is to say that my freedom
to write this article right now that is critical of the U.S. government’s
foreign policy is a direct result of the recent U.S. invasions of
Afghanistan and Iraq. That may sound ridiculous, but it is no more
ridiculous than saying that U.S. troops "defend our freedoms"
when what they actually do is bomb, invade, and occupy other countries.
"Well,"
I can hear the retort, "if it wasn’t for U.S. troops halting
the German menace we would all be speaking German right now."
I suppose this is the same Germany that couldn’t cross the English
Channel and invade Great Britain. And how does that justify keeping
69,395 U.S. troops on German soil over sixty years later?
There is, therefore,
one element of foreign policy that I would like to touch on: the
role of the U.S. military in foreign affairs. It should be quite
obvious from my writings on the U.S. empire ("The
U.S. Global Empire," "The
Bases of Empire," "Guarding
the Empire," and "What’s
Wrong with the U.S. Global Empire") that I don’t agree
with Max Boot’s
statement that "on the whole, U.S. imperialism has been
the greatest force for good in the world during the past century."
That being said, the subject to be addressed is what should be done
with the U.S. military in order to dissolve the U.S. empire and
return to the nonintervention policy of the Founders.
Today Iraq,
tomorrow the world.
The first thing
that needs to be done is to get out of Iraq before the blood of
one more American is shed on Iraqi soil. I have elsewhere
shown that it is a simple matter to withdraw from Iraq in not
only a safe, reasonable, and timely manner, but also in a just manner.
That was back on August 8, when the number of wasted American lives
was "only" 1,827. Three hundred more American soldiers
have died since then. And for what? Three hundred more sets of American
parents have suffered the loss of a child. And for what? Six hundred
more sets of grandparents have suffered the loss of a grandchild.
And for what? Many hundreds more brothers and sisters have lost
a brother, or in some cases, a sister. And for what? Untold numbers
of friends and acquaintances have lost the same. And for what?
It is the warmongers
who are anti-American, not us "anti-war weenies." We never
considered the shedding of the blood of even one American to be
"worth" whatever it is that U.S. troops are now dying
for. As I have elsewhere
said: "Bringing democracy to Iraq and ridding the country
of Saddam Hussein is not worth the life of one American. What kind
of government they have and who is to be their ‘leader’ is the business
of the Iraqi people, not the United States."
We should withdraw
our forces, not because the war is going badly, not because too
many American troops are dying, and not because the war is costing
too much. We should withdraw our troops because the war was a monstrous
wrong from the very beginning.
Withdraw from
Iraq today, and withdraw from the rest of the world tomorrow.
After the withdrawal
of U.S. troops from Iraq, the rest of the world should be put on
notice: you’re next. Instead of listening to the BRAC
Commission recommendations about which bases to close in the
United States, Congress should close all foreign bases first. Instead
of reading documents like Defense
Planning Guidance or Rebuilding
America’s Defenses, Congress should have read Murray
Rothbard:
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.
This is certainly
a policy that could be implemented. How many countries in the world
do the countries of Italy, Argentina, and Iceland have troops and
bases in? How about Switzerland, Mongolia, and Lithuania? Are any
of these countries in danger of being attacked because they don’t
have an empire of troops of bases? There is absolutely no reason
why the United States has to have an empire of troops and bases
that encircles the world that it presently has.
This policy
is one of political isolation. It doesn’t mean that the United States
should refuse to participate in the Olympics, refuse to issue visas,
refuse to trade, refuse to extradite criminals, refuse to allow
travel abroad, or refuse to allow immigration. It is a policy, not
of isolationism, but of non-interventionism.
It is also
the policy of the Founding Fathers, like Thomas Jefferson:
- No one nation
has a right to sit in judgment over another.
- We wish
not to meddle with the internal affairs of any country, nor with
the general affairs of Europe.
- I am for
free commerce with all nations, political connection with none,
and little or no diplomatic establishment.
- We have
produced proofs, from the most enlightened and approved writers
on the subject, that a neutral nation must, in all things relating
to the war, observe an exact impartiality towards the parties.
No judgment,
no meddling, no political connection, and no partiality. What is
wrong with the wisdom of Jefferson?
Today Iraq,
tomorrow the world and then what?
Once American
troops are withdrawn from garrisoning
the planet, they should be prevented from doing so again. One
way to do this would be to adopt the Amendment for Peace, proposed
by U.S. Marine Corps Major General Smedley
Butler (1881 1940):
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.
This amendment
is a great starting point. Obviously, the Panama Canal Zone statement
is now irrelevant. And whether the government could be trusted to
not use "an errand of mercy" as a covert operation is
now very debatable.
Major Butler
believed that his amendment "would be absolute guarantee to
the women of America that their loved ones never would be sent overseas
to be needlessly shot down in European or Asiatic or African wars
that are no concern of our people."
He also reasoned
that because of "our geographical position, it is all but impossible
for any foreign power to muster, transport and land sufficient troops
on our shores for a successful invasion." In this Butler was
echoing Jefferson, who recognized that geography was one of the
great advantages of the United States:
The insulated
state in which nature has placed the American continent should
so far avail it that no spark of war kindled in the other quarters
of the globe should be wafted across the wide oceans which separate
us from them.
At such a
distance from Europe and with such an ocean between us, we hope
to meddle little in its quarrels or combinations. Its peace and
its commerce are what we shall court.
But even without
the advantage of geography, a policy of non-intervention is sufficient,
as Congressman Ron Paul
(R-TX) has pointed
out: "Countries like Switzerland and Sweden who promote
neutrality and non-intervention have benefited for the most part
by remaining secure and free of war over the centuries."
What, then,
would become of our military if a strict non-interventionist policy
of peace and neutrality were adopted? For starters, perhaps the
Department of Defense could then actually do something to "defend
our freedoms" like guard our borders and patrol our coasts.
The military could be scaled back considerably (along with what
Robert Higgs has estimated to be its $840
billion budget), with militias picking up the slack, as William
Lind has recently pointed out here
and here.
Some say that
Jefferson’s ideals are not practical in a post-9/11 world. To them
I offer the wisdom of Representative Paul, who has described a foreign
policy for peace in these words:
Our troops
would be brought home, systematically but soon.
The mission
for our Coast Guard would change if our foreign policy became
non-interventionist. They, too, would come home, protect our coast,
and stop being the enforcers of bureaucratic laws that either
should not exist or should be a state function.
All foreign
aid would be discontinued.
A foreign
policy of freedom and peace would prompt us to give ample notice
before permanently withdrawing from international organizations
that have entangled us for over a half a century. US membership
in world government was hardly what the founders envisioned when
writing the Constitution.
The principle
of Marque and Reprisal would be revived and specific problems
such as terrorist threats would be dealt with on a contract basis
incorporating private resources to more accurately target our
enemies and reduce the chances of needless and endless war.
The Logan
Act would be repealed, thus allowing maximum freedom of our citizens
to volunteer to support their war of choice. This would help diminish
the enthusiasm for wars the proponents have used to justify our
world policies and diminish the perceived need for a military
draft.
If we followed
a constitutional policy of non-intervention, we would never have
to entertain the aggressive notion of preemptive war based on
speculation of what a country might do at some future date. Political
pressure by other countries to alter our foreign policy for their
benefit would never be a consideration. Commercial interests and
our citizens investing overseas could not expect our armies to
follow them and protect their profits.
A
non-interventionist foreign policy would not condone subsidies
to our corporations through programs like the Export/Import Bank
and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation.
A non-interventionist
foreign policy would go a long way toward preventing 9/11 type
attacks. The Department of Homeland Security would be unnecessary,
and the military, along with less bureaucracy in our intelligence-gathering
agencies, could instead provide the security the new department
is supposed to provide. A renewed respect for gun ownership and
responsibility for defending one's property would provide additional
protection against potential terrorists.
Today Iraq,
tomorrow the world. The sooner we adopt this policy the better.
How many more U.S. soldiers have to needlessly die in Iraq before
Americans realize this?
December
5, 2005
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
is a freelance writer and an adjunct instructor in accounting and
economics at Pensacola Junior College in Pensacola, FL. He is also
the director of the Francis
Wayland Institute. His new book is Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
Laurence
M. Vance Archives
|