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Number 129Jan/Feb 2014$8.

95

Talks to Maurice R.
Jacob Heilbrunn
Greenberg About China & America
Exposes the
Robert D. Blackwill
Smear Against Henry Kissinger
www.nationalinterest.org

by John J.
Mearsheimer
Number 129 . January/February 2014

The Realist

5 Maurice Greenberg on China & America


As Beijing rises and Washington drifts, the former aig chairman discusses the future of both
countries. While Chinas new president Xi Jinping is paving the way for meaningful reform,
America must put its financial house in order.

Articles

9 America Unhinged by John J. Mearsheimer


Washingtons commitment to global domination since the Cold War ended has had immense
costs and brought few benefits. It must learn to distinguish between peripheral and vital strategic
interestsand accept that it is far safer than its elites think.

31 Inglorious Revolutions by David A. Bell


The notion that revolutions are often quickly successful is chimerical. They are usually bloody
and protracted affairs. It is Western hubris to expect them to usher in stable, representative
democracies overnight.

39 In Defense of Kissinger by Robert D. Blackwill


Princeton historian Gary Bass offers a tendentious and misleading account of Richard Nixon and
Henry Kissingers approach toward the violent 1971 South Asia crisis in The Blood Telegram. The
actual record shows that they got it right.

Images Shutterstock: pages 7, 10, 15, 16, 19, 22, 25, 28, 30, 34, 37, 52, 55, 57, 69, 74, 77, 83, 86;
Wikimedia Commons: pages 41, 45, 62, 90, 91, 93
51 Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy by David V. Gioe
The debate so far over massive leaks of classified information has focused on the balance between
liberty and secrecy. But the real cost will be seen in coming decades, in the form of a reduced
ability to recruit human-intelligence sources.

60 Chinas Near-Seas Challenges by Andrew S. Erickson


Beijings present focus on developing potent capabilities to resolve disputes favorably in its
maritime periphery threatens stability and important international norms in a critical area of the
global commons.

Reviews & Essays

67 The Myth of Americas Triumph by Michael Lind


Josef Joffes ode to America is as bogus as claims that the country is in terminal decline. His
affection for America misleads him into becoming its cheerleader at a moment when Washingtons
reputation around the world is steadily eroding.

79 Western Civs Life Coach by David Rieff


Beware Arthur Hermans survey of Western thought, which begins in bombast and ends in
triviality. He downplays its Christian heritage and misrepresents Plato and Aristotle.

87 The Odd Couple by Robert W. Merry


In the annals of American history, few stories of personal fellowship are as poignant and affecting
as the friendship between Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft, which culminated in
enmity. America saw the gop rupture based on atmospherics, brazenly inaccurate accusations,
ideological fervor and personal whims writ large.
Published by
The Center for the National Interest

Maurice R. Greenberg Chairman


Henry A. Kissinger Honorary Chairman
James Schlesinger Chairman, Advisory Council

Jacob Heilbrunn Editor Dimitri K. Simes Publisher & CEO


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Alexa McMahon Associate Managing Editor
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Political Editor
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Robert W. Merry
Patrick J. Buchanan
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Aram Bakshian Jr. Leslie H. Gelb
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Gary Hart
Christian Caryl
Zalmay Khalilzad
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Kishore Mahbubani
Amitai Etzioni
John J. Mearsheimer
Nikolas K. Gvosdev
Bruce Hoffman Richard Plepler
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The Realist
Maurice Greenberg JH: What do you think specifically has
changed and why?
on China & America MG: We had some principles we stood
for and believed in, and we were respected
The National Interests editor Jacob around the world for those principles.
Heilbrunn recently spoke with Maurice R. Enemy and friend alike may not like us,
Greenberg, the former chairman and ceo of but they respected us and what we believed
aig, chairman and ceo of starr Insurance in. I dont sense that anymore. I think weve
Holdings, Inc., and chairman of the Center backed away from being a world leader, for
for the National Interest. What follows is a whatever reason.
lightly edited version of their conversation.
JH: Do you think its a loss of confidence
Jacob Heilbrunn: If you look at your and willpower or an actual diminution of
career and life as a businessmanas American strength?
a soldier who fought in Normandy and
helped liberate Dachau concentration MG: I think we have the strength potential
campit does exemplify America at to do whatever we want as a country. One
its peak. Weve had this whole era with of our strengths has been the diversity of
America as a superpower. When you look our population. The immigrants that came
back, do you feel that America today has to this country were Eastern Europeans.
absorbed the lessons that we learned in And they had a different work ethic. Theyd
World War II and afterward, or have we never go on welfare; my God, theyd rather
peaked as a superpower? slit their throats than do that. We have
a different population today, and weve
Maurice R. Greenberg: Well, weve become entitlement-bound. And its not
changed. Theres no question about that. considered improper to get entitlements,
When I came back from World War II, for whatever reason. They dont feel
along with ten million other Americans, I any degradation in their own self, as an
had to finish high school. I didnt want to go individual. Thats a change. Is it going to go
to college. I could have gone to West Point. back and change again?
But I didnt want to stay in the military. I
was nineteen years old when I came back. JH: Its interesting that England is doing
I stayed in the reserves because I needed relatively well economically now, even
the money, and I was going to school. So though its leaders pushed through some
when the Korean War broke out, right after pretty severe austerity cuts. The pound has
I finished law school, I was recalled, and I strengthened against the dollar.
spent over a year in Korea. But Americas
changed, theres no question about it. MG: They did. Theyre doing their best to

The Realist January/February 2014 5


encourage financial institutions to settle in of land, he should be able to do that and
London. Because where do you go? Wall keep the money himself. China must build
Street is under great pressure by regulation. a larger and more efficient agriculture than
Hong Kong has limitations. Singapore is it currently has. The leadership needs to
a little out of the way. So London, which make more funds available to small- and
had been at the top of the heap, is trying to medium-sized businesses, and Ive been
regain the crown. arguing with the Chinese about that for
years. If youre going to become a consumer
JH: What was your impression of the new market, youve got to let these small
Chinese leadership when you were there companies grow. Theyre starved for capital
recently? and need to be able to borrow from the
banks, and the banks have been lending
MG: Im a member of the advisory all their money to these state-owned
board to the Tsinghua University School enterprises. I think theres a movement to
of Economics and Management, and find some way to make funds available to
Xi Jinping, the Chinese president, small- and medium-sized companies. Then
recently spent an hour meeting with the they grow, hire people, become consumers.
members. He came across as very focused, Theres change coming, but it wont be
determined, confident. The Third Plenum rapid change.
showed that he has further consolidated
his power. It is a precondition for JH: Has there been something thats
getting meaningful reform through the surprised you the most in seeing China
bureaucracy. There is agreement that reform from 1975 through today?
in many areas, particularly on the economic
side, is necessary and desirable. It wont MG: A number of things. There were
happen overnight. The leadership may no cars when I first went to China. You
desire change, but there is a certain time wouldnt see any tall buildings; we
frame over which it will occur. constructed the first, the tallest building
I think Li Keqiang, the premier, is in Shanghai. We built a hotel, office and
fighting for more openness in the market. apartment complex called the Shanghai
On the Standing Committee I dont think Center. It was the tallest building in
all are going to go along with that. The Shanghai when it opened in 1992. It is
Shanghai free-trade zone is a test. Change now about number eighty in height. Thats
will come slowly; they cant do it any other happened all over China. Theyve done
way. There are a number of ghost cities more in a brief period of time in the course
where they move people into and must of history than many nations have ever
create jobs for themits not easy to do. done.
I think one of the things theyre wrestling
with is that if a farmer wants to sell a plot JH: So youre bullish on China?

6 The National Interest The Realist


MG: I am. Im bullish looking at it How are we going to escape that? What
from Chinese eyes. Its not going to be a are we going to do with that money? Are
Jeffersonian democracy; its a long ways we going to burn it? Its on the books.
away. The distrust between our two Its borrowed. And so clearly we have a
countries is very concerning. Unless we problem here. And, you know, you cant
learn how to trust each other, we have a live beyond your means; theres nothing
difficult period ahead. I dont mean magic about that. You must pick priorities,
tomorrow or the next day, but in the next and the number of priorities. Certainly
decade or so. If China makes the switch, the protection of our nation is a priority.
ultimately, not all at once but over a period You cant become just a weak power;
of time, to become a consumer-based you do that, and youve got all other
rather than an export-based economyin kinds of problems that emerge almost
principle, itll always be exportsbut if immediately. Theres always somebody
consumerism grows, their gdp will grow who wants to knock the king of the hill
dramatically. Theyll become the largest off of the hill. And we have a lot of people
economy in the world. Theyll radiate more climbing up on different sides of us. And
influence around the world. Certainly, we dont do people any good by making
theyre exploring that in the South China them dependent upon government. Im
Sea, along with Japan, the islands with not saying you dont take care of those
Japan. And so were going to be tested. who are truly in needyes, we have that
How are we going to respond to these tests? obligationbut you dont encourage
Whats in our best national interests?
Whats in the interests of the world
more broadly?

JH: When it comes to the financial


world that we constructedyou
were talking about the debt being
a problem in Americaliberals
like Paul Krugman say, Its no big
deal, or inflation is down, money
is cheap, borrow it while you can for
nothing, worry about the debt later
on. Why are they wrong?

MG: First of all, were printing


money every month. The endgame
is going to be a burst of inflation.
Theres no question about that.

The Realist January/February 2014 7


everybody to become dependent on the Lets get realcoming from a certain
government. family doesnt stop people from getting
jobs in America, and Washingtons K Street
JH: How much of that risk-taking lobbying firms are full of former officials
entrepreneurial culture do we still retain and former members of Congress. Political
today? donors and supporters become ambassadors
and take other key government positions.
MG: I think its around. It depends on Why stop U.S. companies from hiring
the industry. It depends on many things, capable and well-connected people by
including people who are not bitten by applying a standard we dont use at home?
this dependency bug. But the laws have
made it more difficult as well. Eliot Spitzer JH: Do you see another financial bubble
destroyedessentially destroyedaig, for because the Federal Reserve is in overdrive?
nothing to do with the law. He decided
that he was going to run for governor, and MG: Theres no way out. I dont see any
he was going to take down individuals to way out. What we have to do really is
help his career. And the press played along make it easier for business to grow and
with that. And so theres been tremendous to prosper. We have the highest corporate
change. Why would any company thats tax rate in the world. Now, how does that
public remain in New York State? Were help the country? If you want to avoid
hampering ourselves. Weve lost a compass the consequences of what weve done,
that made us great. youve got to counterbalance that by some
intelligent action on how to get business
JH: You wrote about Jamie Dimon and JP going rapidly to pay the taxes that are
Morgan in the Wall Street Journal as another needednot at the highest tax rate, but
example. a more moderate tax rate to create jobs
and income. You cant do it by saying,
MG: Yes. The government is also Well, were going to get rid of debt by
investigating JP Morgan and other taxing everybody more. Thats proven to
American companies for hiring relatives of be wrongjust look at Europe. But how
government officials in China and other do you get into the minds of those who are
countries. That only makes sense if they socialists by nature? Thats what we have;
are not qualified or not doing their jobs. we are now approaching a socialist society. n

8 The National Interest The Realist


America Unhinged
By John J. Mearsheimer

S
ince early 2011, political develop- sure the right person is in charge in Cairo
ments in Egypt and Syria have re- and Damascus.
peatedly captured the attention of Packaged together, such beliefs create a
the American foreign-policy elite. The powerful mandate for continuous American
Obama administration has tried to guide involvement in the politics of these two
the turbulent political situation in post- troubled countries.
Mubarak Egypt and become increasingly Anyone paying even cursory attention to
engaged in Syrias bloody civil war. The U.S. foreign policy in recent decades will
United States is already helping arm some recognize that Washingtons response to
of the forces fighting against the Assad re- Egypt and Syria is part of a much bigger
gime, and President Obama came close to story. The story is this: Americas national-
attacking Syria following its use of chemi- security elites act on the assumption that
cal weapons in August 2013. Washington every nook and cranny of the globe is of
is now directly involved in the effort to great strategic significance and that there
locate and destroy Syrias chemical-weapons are threats to U.S. interests everywhere. Not
stockpiles. surprisingly, they live in a constant state
These responses reflect three widespread of fear. This fearful outlook is reflected in
beliefs about Egypt and Syria. The first the comments of the chairman of the Joint
is that the two states are of great strategic Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey,
importance to the United States. There before Congress in February 2012: I cant
is a deep-seated fear that if the Obama impress upon you that in my personal
administration does not fix the problems military judgment, formed over thirty-eight
plaguing those countries, serious damage years, we are living in the most dangerous
will be done to vital American interests. time in my lifetime, right now. In February
The second one is that there are compelling 2013, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
moral reasons for U.S. involvement in stated that Americans live in very complex
Syria, mainly because of large-scale civilian and dangerous times, and the following
deaths. And the third is that the United month Senator James Inhofe said, I dont
States possesses the capability to affect remember a time in my life where the world
Egyptian and Syrian politics in significant has been more dangerous and the threats
and positive ways, in large part by making more diverse.
These are not anomalous views. A 2009
John J. Mearsheimer is the R. Wendell Harrison survey done by the Pew Research Center
Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science for the People and the Press found that
at the University of Chicago. He is on the Advisory 69 percent of the Council on Foreign
Council of The National Interest. Relations members believed the world

America Unhinged January/February 2014 9


was more dangerous thanor at least as and treasure. Nor is there a compelling
dangerous asit was during the Cold moral case for intervening in either country.
War. In short, the elite consensus is that Equally important, the United States
Egypt and Syria are not the only countries has little ability to rectify the problems in
Washington has to worry about, although Egypt and Syria. If anything, intervention
they are among the most pressing problems is likely to make a bad situation worse.
Consider Americas dismal
record in Afghanistan, Iraq and
Libya. Moreover, it does not
matter much who is in charge
in Cairo or Damascus. The
United States has a rich history of
working with leaders of all types,
including Communists, fascists,
military dictators and traditional
monarchs. For all the talk about
the need to topple Syrias Bashar
al-Assad because he is a ruthless
tyrant, Washington was able to
live with himand his equally
ruthless fatherfor more than
forty years.
Interfering in countries like
Egypt and Syria and turning the
world into one big battlefield has
significant costs for the United
States. The strategic costs are
at the moment. This grim situation actually not great precisely because the
means the United States has a lot of social United States is such an extraordinarily
engineering to carry out, leaving it no secure country. It can pursue foolish
choice but to pursue an interventionist policies and still remain the most powerful
foreign policy. In other words, it must state on the planet. (This is not to deny
pursue a policy of global domination if it that Americas interventionist policies are
hopes to make the world safe for America. the main cause of its terrorism problem.
This perspective is influential, Nevertheless, terrorism is a minor threat,
widespreadand wrong. Contrary to the which is why Washington is free to
conventional wisdom, the United States is a continue pursuing the policies that helped
remarkably secure country. No great power cause the problem in the first place.)
in world history comes close to enjoying the The pursuit of global domination,
security it does today. Whats more, Egypt however, has other costs that are far
and Syria are not vital strategic interests. more daunting. The economic costs are
What happens in those countries is of little hugeespecially the warsand there
importance for American security. This is are significant human costs as well. After
not to say they are irrelevant but rather that all, thousands of Americans have died in
Washingtons real interests there are not Afghanistan and Iraq, and many more have
great enough to justify expending blood suffered egregious injuries that will haunt

10 The National Interest America Unhinged


them for the rest of their lives. Probably to think the United States could sit out
the most serious cost of Washingtons World War II, but they made a serious case
interventionist policies is the growth of for staying on the sidelines, one that many
a national-security state that threatens to Americans found compelling. At the heart
undermine the liberal-democratic values of the isolationists worldview is a simple
that lie at the heart of the American geographical fact: the American homeland
political system. is separated from Asia and Europe by two
Given these significant costs, and given giant moats. No great power can mount an
that the United States has no vital interests amphibious operation across the Atlantic or
at stake in Egypt and Syria, let alone the Pacific Oceans, and thus no outside power,
capacity for fixing the problems afflicting whether it was Nazi Germany or Imperial
those countries, it should adopt a hands- Japan, could directly threaten the survival of
off policy toward them. American leaders the United States.
would do well to honor the principle of If the case for isolationism was powerful
self-determination when dealing with before Pearl Harbor, it is even more
Cairo and Damascus, and with many other compelling today. For starters, the United
countries around the world as well. States has thousands of nuclear weapons,
which are the ultimate deterrent and go

T he United States is an exceptionally


secure great power, contrary to the fol-
derol one frequently hears emanating from
a long way toward guaranteeing a states
survival. No adversary is going to invade
America and threaten its survival, because
Americas national-security community. A that opponent would almost certainly
good way to illustrate this point is to reflect end up getting vaporized. In essence, two
on isolationism, a grand strategy with a rich giant oceans and thousands of nuclear
but controversial history. weapons today shield the United States.
Isolationism rests on the assumption Moreover, it faces no serious threats in its
that no region of the world outside own neighborhood, as it remains a regional
of the Western Hemisphere is of vital hegemon in the Western Hemisphere.
strategic importance to the United States. Finally, the United States faces no great-
Isolationists do not argue that America has power rival of any real consequence. In
no interests in the wider world, just that fact, most strategists I know believe it has
they are not important enough to justify been operating in a unipolar world since the
deploying military force to defend them. Cold War ended, which is another way of
They are fully in favor of engaging with saying America is the only great power on
the rest of the world economically as well the planet; it has no peers. Others believe
as diplomatically, but they view all foreign China and Russia are legitimate great
wars as unnecessary. powers and the world is multipolar. Even
I am not an isolationist, but the logic so, those two great powers are especially
underpinning this grand strategy is not weak when compared to the mighty United
easy to dismiss. Quite the contrary, as States. In addition, they have hardly any
President Franklin Roosevelt discovered power-projection capability, which means
in the early 1940s, when he had great they cannot seriously threaten the American
difficulty countering the isolationists. It homeland.
is commonplace today to dismiss those All of this is to say that the United States,
isolationists as fools or even crackpots. But which is the most secure great power in
that would be a mistake. They were wrong world history, has been safer over the past

America Unhinged January/February 2014 11


Americas national-security elites act on the assumption that every
nook and cranny of the globe is of great strategic significance
and that there are threats to U.S. interests everywhere.

twenty-five years than at any other time in weapon. 1 Political turmoil in a nuclear-
its history. General Dempseys assertion that armed state could in theory allow terrorists
the present marks the most dangerous era in to grab a loose nuclear weapon, but the
his lifetime is completely wrong. The world United States already has detailed plans to
was far more perilous during the Cold War, deal with that highly unlikely contingency.
which witnessed the various Berlin crises, Terrorists might also try toacquire fissile
the Cuban missile crisis and the 1973 Yom material and build their own bomb. But
Kippur War. And it is hard to fathom how that scenario is extremely unlikely as well:
Senator Inhofe, who was born one year there are significant obstacles to getting
after Hitler came to power, could think enough material and even bigger obstacles
todays world is more dangerous than the to building a bomb and then delivering
first decade of his life. it. More generally, virtually every country
Am I overlooking the obvious threat has a profound interest in making sure no
that strikes fear into the hearts of so many terrorist group acquires a nuclear weapon,
Americans, which is terrorism? Not at all. because they cannot be sure they will not
Sure, the United States has a terrorism be the target of a nuclear attack, either
problem. But it is a minor threat. There is by the terrorists or another country the
no question we fell victim to a spectacular terrorists strike. Nuclear terrorism, in short,
attack on September 11, but it did not is not a serious threat. And to the extent
cripple the United States in any meaningful that we should worry about it, the main
way and another attack of that magnitude remedy is to encourage and help other
is highly unlikely in the foreseeable future. states to place nuclear materials in highly
Indeed, there has not been a single instance secure custody.
over the past twelve years of a terrorist
organization exploding a primitive bomb
on American soil, much less striking a
major blow. Terrorismmost of it arising
C ontrary to what isolationists think,
there are three regions of the world
Europe, Northeast Asia and the Persian
from domestic groupswas a much bigger Gulfthat are indeed of vital strategic im-
problem in the United States during the portance to the United States. Of course,
1970s than it has been since the Twin Europe and Northeast Asia are important
Towers were toppled. because the worlds other great powers are
What about the possibility that a terrorist located in those regions, and they are the
group might obtain a nuclear weapon? Such only states that might acquire the capability
an occurrence would be a game changer, to threaten the United States in a serious
but the chances of that happening are way.
virtually nil. No nuclear-armed state is
going to supply terrorists with a nuclear 1 Keir A. Lieber and Daryl G. Press, Why States
weapon because it would have no control Wont Give Nuclear Weapons to Terrorists,
over how the recipients might use that International Security 38, no. 1 (2013).

12 The National Interest America Unhinged


One might counter that they still cannot Eastern states that do not have much oil are
attack across the Atlantic or Pacific Oceans of little strategic significance to the United
and reach the shores of the United States. States. They include Egypt and Syria, as well
True, but if a distant great power were to as Israel, Jordan, Lebanon and Yemen. Thus,
dominate Asia or Europe the way America it makes little sense for Americans to worry
dominates the Western Hemisphere, it much about what is happening in Egypt
would then be free to roam around the and Syria, much less countenance military
globe and form alliances with countries intervention in those countries. In short,
in the Western Hemisphere that have an what happens in Cairo and Damascus has
adversarial relationship with the United little effect on American security.
States. In that circumstance, the stopping It is apparent from the discourse in the
power of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans American foreign-policy establishment,
would be far less effective. Thus, American as well as the Obama administrations
policy makers have a deep-seated interest behavior, that my views about the strategic
in preventing another great power from importance of Egypt and Syria are at
achieving regional hegemony in Asia or odds with mainstream thinking. So let
Europe. us consider in more detail how those two
The Persian Gulf is strategically countries might affect U.S. security.
important because it produces roughly
30 percent of the worlds oil, and it holds
about 55 percent of the worlds crude-oil
reserves. If the flow of oil from that region
E gypt and Syria are weak countries by
any meaningful measure of power.
Both have small and feeble economies, and
were stopped or even severely curtailed hardly any oil or other natural resources
for a substantial period of time, it would that might make them rich like Kuwait or
have a devastating effect on the world Saudi Arabia.
economy. Therefore, the United States Furthermore, neither Egypt nor Syria
has good reason to ensure that oil flows has ever had a formidable military, even
freely out of the Gulf, which in practice when the Soviet Union provided them with
means preventing any single country from sophisticated military equipment during the
controlling all of that critical resource. Most Cold War. Neither was a serious threat to
oil-producing states will keep pumping and its neighbors, especially Israel. Remember
selling their oil as long as they are free to do that Israel fought major wars against Egypt
so, because they depend on the revenues. in 1948, 1956, 1967 and 1973, and the
It is in Americas interest to keep them that Israel Defense Forces (idf ) clobbered the
way, which means there can be no regional Egyptian army in each instance. Syria
hegemon in the Gulf, as well as Asia and fought against the idf in 1948, 1967 and
Europe. 1973, and it too suffered humiliating
To be clear, only the oil-producing states defeats at the hands of the Israelis.
of the Persian Gulf are of marked strategic Egypt and Israel made peace after the
importance to the United States, not every 1973 war, but Israel and Syria remain
country in the broader Middle East. In enemies. Nevertheless, every time there
particular, Washington should be concerned has been a possibility the two sides might
about the fate of Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, become embroiled in a warduring the
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, 2006 war in Lebanon, for examplethe
because it wants to make sure their oil flows Syrians have gone to great lengths to avoid
uninterrupted into world markets. Middle a fight. The Syrians fully understand they

America Unhinged January/February 2014 13


could not hold their own against the idf. noting that the canal was closed from 1967
Of course, the recent turmoil and conflict to 1975 and the international economy
in Egypt and Syria have weakened those experienced no serious damage.
two countries further. Indeed, Israel is The threat of preventing the U.S.
now so confident of its military superiority Navy from reaching the Persian Gulf by
over its Arab neighbors that it is actually shutting the canal is an empty one, because
reducing its conventional forces. American ships can reach the Gulf through
Most importantly for the issue at hand, the Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea. It
neither the Egyptian nor the Syrian might be more convenient for the United
military is a serious threat to the American States to send some ships bound for the
homeland or even to U.S. forces stationed Gulf through the canal, but it is hardly
in the Persian Gulf. And there is no reason essential for projecting power into that
to think that situation will change in the region.
foreseeable future. Given that Egypt and
Syria have little economic or military
power and hardly any oil, advocates of
global domination rely on a variety of other
O ne can discern four arguments in the
public discourse about why Syria
might be a vital American interest. Some
claims to make the case that they are core maintain that toppling Assad is important
American interests. because it would deliver a staggering blow
One argument is that the United States to Hezbollah and especially Iran, since they
should care greatly about Egypt because are both staunch supporters of the Assad
it controls the Suez Canal. Roughly 8 regime. Saudi Arabias King Abdullah put
percent of global seaborne trade and 4.5 the point succinctly in the summer of 2011:
percent of world oil supplies travel through Nothing would weaken Iran more than
that passageway. Moreover, the U.S. Navy losing Syria. A few months later, Tom Do-
uses the canal to move ships from the nilon, President Obamas national-security
Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf. adviser, explained that the end of the Assad
Thus, if Egypt were to close the canal, it regime would constitute Irans greatest set-
would damage the international economy back in the region yeta strategic blow
and complicate American efforts to project that will further shift the balance of power
power into the strategically important Gulf. in the region against Iran.
This is unpersuasive. If Egypt closed the This deep concern about Iran is
Suez Canal, it would not seriously hurt motivated by the belief that its influence
the international economy. Ships would be in the Middle East has grown significantly
rerouted, mainly around the southern tip of and that it is bent on achieving regional
Africa, and oil from the Middle East would hegemony. Its pursuit of nuclear weapons,
be distributed to the recipient countries so the argument goes, is part of Tehrans
in different ways. Furthermore, Egypt drive to dominate the Middle East.
would pay a significant economic price if Terrorism is the basis of a second
it shut down the canal, which is its third- a r g u m e n t f o r t re a t i n g Sy r i a a s a
largest source of revenue and is sometimes fundamental strategic interest. The claim
referred to as an economic lifeline. Not is not only that Syria supports terrorist
only would Cairo lose the money generated organizations like Hezbollah, but also that
by that passageway, but it would also risk Al Qaeda and other groups hostile to the
economic and political retaliation by the United States now operate in Syria. Thus,
countries hurt by the closing. It is worth as two hawkish commentators writing

14 The National Interest America Unhinged


in the New York Times put it, the United This matter is deemed especially important
States could intervene in Syria and create because the fact that Obama did not punish
a bulwark against extremist groups like Al Syria for crossing his red line makes his
Qaeda, which are present and are seeking threat to attack Iran if it moves to acquire
safe havens in ungoverned corners of Syria. nuclear weapons look hollow.
Toppling Assad would also seriously weaken None of these arguments are convincing.
Hezbollah, which is heavily dependent on There is no question that Americas
Syria as well as Iran for its survival. disastrous war in Iraq strengthened Irans
Another line of argument is that the position in the Middle East, mainly by
United States must be intensely involved in bringing a Shia-dominated government to
Syria because of the danger that its raging power in Baghdad. But Iran is nowhere
civil war will spill over into neighboring close to having the capability to become
countries, thus causing a wider conflict a hegemon in the Gulf. It does not have
that will threaten American interests in formidable conventional forces, and nobody
the region. The longer the war, the Wall worries much about it conquering any of
Street Journal argues, the graver the risks to its neighbors, especially because the United
Americas allies. States would intervene to stop it.
Finally, there is the claim that Syria Nor is it clear that Tehran is pursuing
matters greatly because Americas credibility nuclear weapons. The consensus opinion
is at stake. Specifically, President Obama in the American intelligence community
said in August 2012 that Syria would be is that it is not. But even if that judgment
crossing a red line if it used chemical proves wrong and Iran acquires a
weapons against the rebels. The implication nuclear arsenal, it could not use that
was that the United States would respond capability to dominate the Persian Gulf.
with military force if that happened. Nuclear weapons provide states with
According to the White House, Assad little offensive capability and thus are ill
used chemical weapons on August 21, suited for spreading Irans influence
2013, and killed 1,429 civilians. This tragic in its neighborhood. Furthermore, both
event, so the argument goes, was not only Israel and the United States have nuclear
a clear violation of a fundamental norm, weapons and would never tolerate Iran
but it also put U.S. credibility on the line. achieving regional hegemony. Nor would

America Unhinged January/February 2014 15


Saudi Arabia or any other Arab state, September 11. It gave Washington valuable
which means Iran would face a formidable intelligence about Al Qaedainformation
balancing coalition if it tried to rule the that helped stymie attacks on American
Gulf. targets in Bahrain and Canadaand it was
Finally, no matter how powerful one deeply involved in the Bush administrations
thinks Iran is today, losing in Syria is not program of extraordinary rendition.
going to diminish its economic or military According to the New Yorkers Jane Mayer, it
power in any meaningful way, although it was one of the most common destinations
will curtail its regional influence somewhat. for rendered suspects.
But that outcome has two possible By backing the campaign against Assad,
consequences for the United States, neither the Obama administration has helped turn
of which is good. One is that Tehran is Syria into a haven for terrorist groups. In
likely to go to great fact, groups that loathe
lengths to keep Assad the United States
in power, complicating dominate the armed
Washingtons efforts opposition to Assad.
to depose the Syrian M o r e o v e r, m a n y
leader. However, if Iran Western governments
does lose in Syria and now worry because
thinks it is Americas t h e i r c i t i z e n s a re
next target for regime flocking to Syria and
change, its incentive joining the rebels.
to acquire a nuclear The apprehension is
deterrent will increase. that they will become
Thus, toppling Assad is radicalized and return
likely to make Iranian home as full-blown
nuclear weapons more, terrorists. Intervening
not less, likely. in Syria will just make
The claim that the the terrorism problem
United States should there worse, unless, of
treat Syria as a core course, Washington
strategic interest helps Assad defeat
because it is a hotbed the rebels and return
for terrorism also to the status quo
suffers from a number of flaws. For one ante. That is unlikely to happen, however,
thing, terrorism is not a serious enough because Obama is committed to arming the
threat to justify intervening in Syria, rebels.
especially with military force. Moreover, But backing the rebels certainly does not
intervening in countries like Syria is solve the terrorism problem, as the most
precisely what helps trigger the terrorism powerful groups are comprised of jihadists
problem. Remember that the United States who hate America. Furthermore, if the
faced no terrorism problem from Syria United States gets more deeply involved
before the Obama administration threw its in the conflict, the actors supporting
weight behind the effort to oust Assad from AssadHezbollah, Iran and Russiaare
power. Indeed, Syria helped the United likely to up the ante themselves, increasing
States deal with its terrorism problem after the prospect the war will drag on for the

16 The National Interest America Unhinged


Egypt and Syria are not vital strategic interests. What happens
in those countries is of little importance for American security.

foreseeable future. And the longer the civil countries. In other words, further American
war lasts, the stronger the jihadists will intervention would probably help spread
become within the opposition forces. the fire, not contain it.
If nothing else, one might argue that In theory, the United States could solve
removing Assad from power would deliver this contagion problem by invading and
a devastating blow to Hezbollah, which is occupying Syria, much the way it did in
supported by Syria as well as Iran. The first Iraq between 2003 and 2011. Thankfully,
problem with this claim is that the United there is zero chance that will happen.
States is not a mortal enemy of Hezbollah Thus, the best strategy for the Obama
and not in its crosshairs. Washington administration is to pursue a diplomatic
should not give it any incentive to target the solution.
United States. Furthermore, even if the flow But even if diplomacy fails and the war
of Iranian and Syrian arms to Hezbollah spreads beyond Syrias borders, it would
were cut off, it would remain a powerful not undermine American security in any
force in Lebanon and the broader region, meaningful way, as it would not lead to a
as it has deep roots and enjoys substantial single country dominating the Gulf and its
support among important segments of oil. Besides, every oil-producing country
Lebanese society. Moreover, the flow of has powerful incentives to sell its oil and
arms from Iran and Syria to Hezbollah generate revenue, whether it is embroiled in
would eventually start up again, because no a conflict or not.
matter who rules in Damascus, it is in their Lastly, there is the argument that
interest to support Hezbollah. That militant American credibility is on the line in Syria
organization directly threatens Israels and thus the United States must remain
northern border, which provides Syria deeply involved in that countrys politics.
with the only leverage it has for getting the To be sure, credibility would not even
Golan Heights back from Israel. be an issue if President Obama had not
What about the claim that the United foolishly drawn a red line over Syrian use
States should intervene in Syrias civil war of chemical weapons. One might counter
to prevent it from becoming a regional that the president had no choice but to rule
conflict? Its worth noting that the Obama the use of chemical weapons out of bounds,
administration helped precipitate this because they are especially heinous weapons
problem by attempting to remove Assad and there is a powerful norm against using
and failing, which helped exacerbate them.
the ongoing civil war. Furthermore, These counterarguments are not
if America gets more involved in the compelling. Despite all the hyperbole
conflict, Hezbollah, Iran and Russia are surrounding chemical weapons, they are
likely to increase their support for Assad, not weapons of mass destruction. They are
which would increase the prospect that certainly not in the same category as nuclear
the war would spill over into neighboring weapons. Israel, after all, has been willing

America Unhinged January/February 2014 17


to live with Syrian chemical weapons for Irans troops, which allowed Iraqi chemical
many years, while it has been adamant that weapons to be effectively dumped on
it will not tolerate Iranian or Syrian nuclear them. And when Saddam gassed Iraqi
weapons. Kurds at Halabja in March 1988, the U.S.
Also, consider the history of civilian government refrained from blaming him,
casualties over the course of Syrias civil war. just as it had throughout the war whenever
As noted above, the United States estimates Iraq used chemical weapons, which it did a
that 1,429 civilians were killed in the August number of times.
21 gas attacks, which is a considerably There is actually a good chance the
higher number than the estimates of Britain, Obama administration will take the
France and Doctors Without Borders, all credibility problem off the table with
of which put the death toll under four diplomacy. It appears that the Russians and
hundred. Regardless of the exact number, the Americansworking through the un
bombs and bullets killed roughly forty may succeed in destroying Syrias stockpile
thousand Syrian noncombatants before of chemical weapons. If that happens,
the recent gassing, yet those many civilian Obama should declare victory and then stay
deaths did not prompt the White House to out of Syrian politics. But if that effort fails
intervene in Syria. and Assad keeps some chemical weapons,
Is the crucial difference that chemical the president will once again be urged
weapons cause a particularly gruesome to consider using military force against
death when compared to bombs and Syria to uphold American credibility. In
bullets? This contention dovetails with the that event, the United States should not
White Houses campaign to purvey pictures attack Syria; indeed, the smart policy would
of Syrians dying or dead from chemical be for Obama to ignore the fact that he
weapons. There is no meaningful difference, drew a line in the sand and move toward
however, between killing people with a noninterventionist policy toward Syria.
bombs and bullets versus gas. This approach makes sense for a variety of
Regarding the norm against using reasons.
chemical weapons, it surely is not a First, the credibility problem is greatly
powerful one. After all, no country, save for overrated. As Daryl G. Press notes in his
France and the United States, was willing important book, Calculating Credibility,
to go to war against Syria this past summer when a country backs down in a crisis,
when it used gas against the rebels. And it is its credibility in subsequent crises is not
hard to argue it is a powerful norm for most reduced. A countrys credibility, at least
Americans, who want no part of a military during crises, he writes, is driven not
strike on Syria. by its past behavior but rather by power
And while Obama may think the norm and interests. 2 Thus, the fact that
is formidable, remember that in 1988, America suffered a humiliating defeat in
when Iran appeared to be on the verge of the Vietnam War did not lead Moscow to
defeating Iraq in their long and bloody war, think that the U.S. commitment to defend
the Reagan administration came to the aid Western Europe was not credible.
of Saddam Hussein and helped his military So even if the United States fails to
use chemical weaponsincluding the lethal
nerve agent, sarinto stymie the Iranians 2 Daryl G. Press, Calculating Credibility: How
on the battlefield. Washington provided Leaders Assess Military Threats (Ithaca, ny: Cornell
Iraq with information on the location of University Press, 2005).

18 The National Interest America Unhinged


enforce the norm against the use of problem Obama created when he unwisely
chemical weapons in Syria, there is no good drew a red line over Syrian use of chemical
reason to think the leadership in Tehran will weapons.
conclude Washington is not serious about In sum, no vital American interests are
preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear at stake in either Egypt or Syria. Thus,
weapons. After all, American policy makers there is no compelling strategic rationale
have gone to enormous lengths over the for intervening in their politics. Indeed, it
past decade to make clear that a nuclear appears that intervention does more harm
Iran is unacceptable. than good to Americas security interests.
Second, the White House has no viable
strategy for removing Assad from power
or for eliminating his chemical weapons
with force. Actually, it is unclear how
O ne might concede this point, but
argue instead that moral consider-
ations demand deep American involvement
committed Obama is to unseating the in Egypt and Syriaand other countries as
Syrian leader, given that jihadists dominate wellto eliminate their ruling autocrats.
the opposition. Moreover, the president The underlying logic is that these strong-
is unwilling to punish the Assad regime men deny their people basic human rights
with sustained and large-scale strikes for and are likely to kill innocent civilians. The
fear of getting dragged into the conflict. ultimate goal, unsurprisingly, is to promote
What this means, in essence, is that even if democracy in those countries, not only for
one believes some damage will be done to human-rights reasons, but also because
Americas credibility by walking away from democratic regimes are likely to be friendly
Syria, it is better to pay that small price to America.
rather than engage in
fruitless if not dangerous
military strikes.
Third, if the United
St a t e s u s e s m i l i t a r y
force against Syria
and gets even more
deeply enmeshed in
that country, it would
reduce the likelihood
Washington would use
force against Iran. It
is clear from the recent
debate about striking
Syria that the American
public is tired of war.
B u t i f t h e Un i t e d
States did jump into the fight, even with This line of thinking is not convincing;
airpower alone, it would surely make the in fact, it is dangerous. The United States
American people even more reluctant to should not be the worlds policeman, in
begin another war against Iran. For all part because it should respect the principle
these reasons, American leaders should pay of self-determination and allow countries
little attention to the so-called credibility to decide their own political fate. For good

America Unhinged January/February 2014 19


The United States, which is the most secure great
power in world history, has been safer over the past
twenty-five years than at any other time in its history.

reason, almost every American recoils at large numbers of civilian casualties.


the idea of another country interfering That is especially true in cases like Syria,
in their political life; they should realize where there are sharp ethnic and religious
other peoples feel the same way about U.S. differences, and where the fighting often
interference in their domestic affairs. What takes place in urban areas, increasing the
is sauce for the goose should be sauce for prospects of collateral damage.
the gander. Regardless, what is happening in Syria
Furthermore, the United States would be is not genocide or anything close to the
deeply involved in the politics of countries systematic murdering of a particular
all across the globe if it pursued this group. Proponents of intervention are
ambitious policy. After all, there will never fond of portraying Assad as a modern-
be a shortage of nondemocratic regimes to day version of Hitler and arguing this is
reform, and sometimes there will be the the Wests Munich moment, implying
temptation to use the sword to achieve that he will engage in mass murder if not
end. Moreover, the United States has an dealt with immediately. This is hyperbole
abysmal track record when it comes to social of the worst kind. Assad is certainly a
engineering of this sort. Remember that the ruthless dictator, but he has done nothing
Bush Doctrine, which crashed and burned that would put him in the same class as
in Iraq, was supposed to facilitate the spread Hitler, who murdered more than twenty
of democracy across the Middle East. Thus, million civilians in the course of a ruthless
if Washington pursues a policy of toppling campaign of territorial expansion, and
authoritarian regimes and promoting would have murdered many millions
democracy, there will be no end to our more had he won World War II. As noted,
crusading but few successes along the way. roughly forty thousand civilians have died
Another moral argument says the United in the Syrian civil war, and the rebels have
States should intervene in the Syrian civil killed many of the victims.
war because it is a humanitarian disaster. Finally, Assads use of chemical weapons
Many thousands of civilians have died, hardly justifies intervention on moral
and the Assad regime has gone so far as grounds. Those weapons are responsible
to murder people with poison gas. It is for a small percentage of the civilian deaths
deeply regrettable that civilians are dying in Syria. Moreover, the claim that killing
in Syria, but intervention still makes little people with gas is more gruesome and
sense. There is no compelling rationale for horrible than killing them with shrapnel is
entering the war and no viable strategy for unpersuasive.
ending it. If anything, American entry into Not only is there no moral rationale for
the conflict is likely to prolong the war and intervention, but the United States also has
increase the suffering. no strategy for ending the war. Even when
Syria is in the midst of a brutal civil Obama was threatening to bomb Syria
war, and such conflicts invariably involve this past summer, he emphasized that the

20 The National Interest America Unhinged


strikes would be limitedunbelievably pressure to resign from the Egyptian
small, according to Secretary of State John military and a large slice of the public. The
Kerryand not designed either to topple Obama administration, which was never
Assad or end the civil war. This restricted- enthusiastic about a Morsi presidency,
bombing strategy is certainly at odds with stepped into this messy situation and
the claim that Assad is a contemporary facilitated his overthrow. He was replaced
version of Hitler who must be dealt with by General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, a
immediately. Of course, the United States strongman in the Mubarak tradition.
is now involved in negotiations that aim to In taking this step, the United
get rid of Assads chemical weapons, but not States was helping foster a coup against
him. In fact, if they succeed, his prospects a democratically elected leader who was
for staying in power will increase. More not a threat to the United States. The new
important for the point at hand, those Egyptian government then turned against
negotiations are not aimed at terminating the Brotherhood, killing over a thousand
the conflict. people and putting Morsi in jail. The
Obama administration lamely tried to

I t is widely believed in the American na-


tional-security establishment that Wash-
ington has the capacity to fix the problems
prevent this bloody crackdown but failed.
Moreover, it has cut only a small portion
of the $1.5 billion in aid the United States
that plague countries like Egypt and Syria gives Egypt each year, even though U.S.
and that the key to success is to turn those law mandates that most foreign aid be cut
countries into democracies. to any country whose duly elected head of
This is certainly not true in Syria. The government is deposed by military coup or
United States has no viable strategy for decree.
ending the conflict there, much less turning The end result of meddling in Egypts
Syria into a democracy. Indeed, it seems politics over the past three years is that the
clear that the Obama administration made United States is even more widely despised
a fundamental mistake when it opted to try in that country than it was before (which
to remove Assad. Washington should have is saying something). The Brotherhood
stayed out of Syrias business and let the and its allies loathe America for helping
Syrian people determine their own political to overthrow Morsi and then standing
fate, whatever the result. by while their members were murdered.
The same logic applies to Egypt, whose The military and many civilians dislike
politics the Obama administration has the United States for having supported the
been trying to micromanage since protests Brotherhood when it was in power. On
against then president Hosni Mubarak top of all that, the Obama administration
broke out in January 2011. As the protests ended up helping remove one autocrat only
gained momentum, the United States to replace him with another, and in the
stepped in and helped oust him from process helped overthrow a legitimately
power. Obama then welcomed Egypts elected leader.
move toward democracy and supported its Perhaps Obama mishandled the situation
newly elected government, even though the in Egypt and should have employed a
Muslim Brotherhood dominated it. different strategy. Yet it is hard to see what
After a mere one year in office, President Washington could have done differently
Mohamed Morsi, who was a member of in Egypt (or Syria) that would have
the Brotherhood, came under tremendous produced a happy ending.

America Unhinged January/February 2014 21


is actually not surprising, as doing large-
scale social engineering in any society is
an enormously complicated and difficult
task. And the circumstances the United
States faces when it intervenes abroad are
especially daunting. After all, it invariably
intervenes in countries about which it
knows little and where its presence is likely
to generate resentment sooner rather than
later. Furthermore, those places are usually
riven with factions and are either in the
midst of conflict or likely to be in turmoil
once the government is toppled.
Should the United States just accept
this grim reality and do its best to make
things work in places like Egypt and Syria?
No. These countries are of little strategic
importance to the United States, and it
matters little who is in charge in Cairo or
Damascus. But even if the fate of those
countries did have serious consequences
for American securitywhich is true of the
To take this a step further, what major oil-producing states in the Gulfit
happened in those two countries is part still would not matter much who governed
of a bigger picture that is filled with failed them.
attempts at social engineering in the Arab The United States has a long history
and Islamic world. Just look at Americas of working with political leaders of all
track record since September 11. The kinds. In fact, it worked closely with two
United States has intervened with force and of the greatest mass murderers of modern
overthrown regimes in Afghanistan, Iraq times: Joseph Stalin during World War II
and Libya. In each case, American policy and Mao Zedong during the latter part of
makers thought they could help create a the Cold War. Furthermore, Washington
stable democracy that would be friendly to does not always get along well with elected
the United States. They failed in all three leaders, which is why the United States
cases. Serious instability is the order of the has an extensive record of overthrowing
day in each of those countries, and although democratic leaders it does not trust:
the reigning governments in Baghdad, Mohammed Mossadegh in Iran (1953),
Kabul and Tripoli are not overtly hostile to Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala (1954) and
the United States, they are hardly friendly Salvador Allende in Chile (1973), just to
and cooperative. name a few.
So, if you look at Americas performance These were all wrongheaded moves,
over the past twelve years in Afghanistan, however, because Washington could have
Egypt, Iraq, Libya and Syria, it is batting worked with those elected leaders, just as
0 for 5. Washington seems to have an it has worked with autocrats of all stripes.
uncanny ability to take a bad situation There is no doubt leaders sometimes come
and make it worse. This abysmal record to power filled with revolutionary zeal and

22 The National Interest America Unhinged


If you look at Americas performance over the past twelve years in
Afghanistan, Egypt, Iraq, Libya and Syria, it is batting 0 for 5.

hostility toward the United States. But that country, which is what allows it to behave
fervor wears off once those leaders confront foolishly without jeopardizing its security.
the realities of exercising power inside and The unipolar moment, coupled with
outside of their countries borders. Plus, Americas geographical location and nuclear
the United States is enormously powerful, arsenal, creates a permissive environment
and almost always has substantial leverage for irresponsible behavior, which its leaders
in its dealings with other countries. Ceteris have been quick to exploit. The one notable
paribus, it is best for a foreign leader to get strategic cost of these interventionist
along with Uncle Sam; purposely picking policies is the terrorism problem. But that
a fight rarely makes sense. None of this is threat is not of great significance, which is
to deny that Americas interests sometimes why the United States is able to pursue the
clash with those of other countries. But that same policies that help cause this problem
does not mean the leadership on either side in the first place.
is responsible for the rivalry in those cases. Unlike the strategic costs, the economic
In sum, the best approach for the United costs of global dominance have been
States is not to intervene in other countries enormous. For starters, the United
to help influence what kind of political States has had to maintain a huge and
system they have or who governs them. sophisticated military with bases all over
The smart strategy is to let other peoples the world so that it can intervene anywhere
decide their own political fate, and then on the planet. Not surprisingly, its defense
use carrots and sticks to foster relations that budget dwarfs that of any other country; in
serve Americas interests. 2012, for example, the United States spent
more on defense ($682 billion) than the

W hat makes Americas penchant for


intervening in places like Egypt and
Syria so disturbing is not just that it makes
next ten countries combined ($652 billion).
That enormous defense budget accounts
for roughly 20 percent of U.S. government
little strategic sense or that the United spending, which is almost as much as it
States invariably fails to achieve its goals. spends on Social Security and about the
The costs are also enormous, especially the same amount it spends on Medicare and
economic and human costs, as well as the Medicaid put together. And then there are
damage it does to the countrys liberal-dem- the various wars America has fought since
ocratic institutions. 2001, which will probably end up costing a
The strategic costs of pursuing global staggering $46 trillion.
dominance are actually not substantial. As The enormous amount of money
foolish as it is for Washington to intervene spent on defense since September 11 has
in the politics of countries like Egypt and contributed significantly to Americas huge
Syria, the mess it makes does not diminish national debt, which is now well over $16
American security in any meaningful way. trillion. That debt has been a major drag
The United States is a remarkably safe on the American economy and promises

America Unhinged January/February 2014 23


to be so for a long time to come. There rate in the U.S. military increased by 80
are also major opportunity costs associated percent from 2002 to 2009, while the
with all the money spent pursuing global civilian rate increased only 15 percent.
dominance. Some of the hundreds of And in 2009, veterans of Iraq were twice
billions of dollars wasted on preparing for as likely to be unemployed as the typical
and fighting unnecessary wars could have American. On top of all that, returning
been spent instead on education, public war veterans are roughly four times more
health and transportation infrastructure, likely to face family-related problems like
just to name a few areas on the home front divorce, domestic violence and child abuse
where additional resources would have than those who stayed out of harms way.
made the United States a more prosperous In short, the small segment of U.S. society
and livable country. that has fought in these recent wars has paid
Then there are the human costs of a huge price for its service, while the vast
these imperial policies, and here the majority of Americans have stayed out of
main concern is the casualties from the uniform and paid no price at all.
Afghanistan and Iraq wars. Unlike the Proponents of the Iraq War like to
economic costs, which affect virtually every claim that these human costs are deeply
American, the human costs are borne by a regrettable, but that it is a price that the
narrow slice of American society. Because United States had to pay in the wake of
the United States has an all-volunteer force, September 11. But Iraq was an unnecessary
only about 0.5 percent of the population war: Saddam did not have weapons of mass
serves in the military. Contrast that figure destruction, and even if he did, he could
with World War II, where more than 12 have been contained, just as the United
percent of the population was in uniform. States contained the Soviet Union during
That means the overwhelming majority of the Cold War.3 It was necessary to topple
Americans who have been eligible to fight the Taliban in the fall of 2001. But once
in Afghanistan and Iraq have never put on a that goal was achievedwhich happened
uniform, much less served in combat. quickly and with few American deathsthe
The fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq United States should have left Afghanistan
has exacted a huge price from the U.S. and stayed out. Instead, both the Bush and
militaryespecially the army and the Obama administrations upped the ante in
Marines. More than 6,700 soldiers have Afghanistan, in what soon became another
been killed so far in those two conflicts, and unnecessary war.
over fifty thousand have been wounded in Second, both of these wars are lost causes.
action, about 22 percent with traumatic The Iraq that the U.S. military left behind
brain injuries. Furthermore, as always after a decade of occupation is teetering
happens in war, many of the combatants on the brink of civil war, and anger at the
are psychological casualties, as they return United States runs deep among its people as
home with post-traumatic stress disorder well as its leaders. In Afghanistan, a corrupt
(ptsd) or depression. The Department and incompetent leader has consistently
of Veterans Affairs reported in the fall of undermined American efforts to pacify and
2012 that more than 247,000 veterans of stabilize that country. There is little doubt
the Afghanistan and Iraq wars have been
diagnosed with ptsd. Many of those 3John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt, An
soldiers have served multiple combat tours. Unnecessary War, Foreign Policy, January-February
It is hardly surprising that the suicide 2003.

24 The National Interest America Unhinged


that when U.S. troops
finally leave, there will be
fighting across Afghanistan
and the Taliban will emerge
as the most power ful
force in the land. The
herculean efforts of the
American military in both
Afghanistan and Iraq have
been in vain.
The final reason to
think these wars were not
worth fighting is that most
Americans felt that way.
Consider Iraq. According
to polling by abc News
and the Washington Post,
By February 2004, just
short of a year after it started, 50 percent the signers of the Declaration of Indepen-
of Americans said the war was not worth dence would be disappointed in how the
fighting; it reached a majority that June and United States has turned out. The number
stayed there, with just three exceptions, in was 42 percent in 2001.
52 abc/Post polls across the ensuing nine One harmful consequence of Americas
years. When the fighting in Iraq was at interventionist foreign policy is that
its worst in April 2007, 66 percent said it creates numerous situations where
the war was not worth fighting. Likewise, presidents and their lieutenants have a
in December 2009, as Obama ordered his powerful incentive to lie, or at least distort
troop surge into Afghanistan, a Pew poll the truth, when talking to the public. This
found that only 32 percent of Americans is due in part to the fact that the United
supported this decision. Moreover, only 56 States is an unusually secure country
percent of the public thought the initial and thus it is difficult to get Americans
decision to invade Afghanistan in 2001 had to support unnecessary wars. This is why
been correct. the Bush administration had to wage a
deception campaign in the run-up to the

P erhaps the greatest cost of a strategy


that calls for intervening in countries
like Egypt and Syria is the damage it does
2003 Iraq War. It also accounts for why
U.S. policy makers frequently equate
adversaries like Assad and Saddam with
to the political fabric of American society. Hitler, even though there is no basis for
In particular, individual rights and the rule doing so.
of law will not fare well in a country that Lying is driven in some cases by
maintains a large and powerful military and the governments need to hide illegal or
is addicted to fighting wars. It is unsurpris- constitutionally suspect activities from
ing, given the United States has been at war its citizenry. For example, James Clapper,
for two out of every three years since the the director of national intelligence, was
Cold War ended, that a recent Gallup poll asked in congressional testimony on March
found that 71 percent of Americans think 12, 2013: Does the nsa collect any type

America Unhinged January/February 2014 25


of data at all on millions or hundreds of executive will become especially powerful
millions of Americans? He answered, at the expense of the legislative and judicial
No. It quickly became apparent that he branches of government. Traditional checks
was lying, which he admitted when he and balances will matter little, resulting in
wrote to Congress several months later: an imperial presidency.
My response was clearly erroneousfor An unchecked executive, however, does
which I apologize. Later, he said that he not simply accumulate great power. It also
responded to that question in the least engages in behavior that involves breaking
untruthful manner possible. Although the law or operating in secrecy, largely
lying to Congress is a felony, Clapper to avoid public scrutiny and judicial or
has not been charged and remains in his congressional review. In this regard, the
position today. checks and balances built into the U.S.
One could easily point to other system encourage executives to act in
cases where policy makersincluding secret, because that may be the only way to
Pre s i d e n t Ob a m a h a ve b e e n l e s s get things done quickly. Leaders do not act
than honest with the American people. this way because they are evil, but because
Pervasive obfuscating and lying, however, they believe the countrys security demands
inevitably creates a poisonous culture of it. In the tradeoff between security and
dishonesty, which can gravely damage any civil liberties, they almost always come
body politic, but especially a democracy. down on the side of security. After all,
Not only does lying make it difficult for a countrys highest goal has to be its
citizens to make informed choices when survival, because if it does not continue
they vote on candidates and issues, but it cannot pursue its other goals. Given
it also undermines the policy-making the exaggerated fear of foreign threats that
process, because government officials permeates the American national-security
cannot trust each other, and that greatly establishment, it is unsurprising that
increases the transaction costs of doing Presidents Bush and Obama have pursued
business. Furthermore, the rule of law is policies that endanger liberal democracy at
undermined in a world where distorting home.
the truth is commonplace. There has to be This tendency toward law breaking
a substantial amount of honesty and trust and the violation of individual rights
in public life for any legal system to work explains in part why the executive has a
effectively. Finally, if lying is pervasive in a deep affection for secrecy. Both the Bush
democracy, it might alienate the public to and Obama administrations engaged in
the point where it loses faith in democratic illegal or at least questionable surveillance
government. of American citizens, which they wanted
Another consequence of Americas policy to hide from the public, Congress and the
of global dominance is that the government judiciary. This is one reason Obama has
inevitably violates the individual rights seemed so determined to severely punish
that are at the core of a liberal society Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning and
and tramples the rule of law as well. The Edward Snowden, and more generally why
taproot of the problem is that a democracy he has gone to war against reporters and
constantly preparing for and fighting wars, whistle-blowers with unprecedented fervor.
as well as extolling the virtues of using The president boasts that he leads the
force, will eventually transform itself into most transparent administration in history.
a national-security state. Specifically, the If true, it is because of the reporters and

26 The National Interest America Unhinged


A democracy constantly preparing for and fighting
wars, as well as extolling the virtues of using force, will
eventually transform itself into a national-security state.

whistle-blowers, not Obama, who is deeply comment that the governments authority
committed to government secrecy. to collect information on law-abiding
American citizens is essentially limitless.

L et us consider in more detail how the


national-security state threatens Amer-
icas liberal political order. Three stories are
The government oftentimes gets a
warrant from a secret court known as the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court,
in order, the first of which involves the or the fisa court. But there are significant
right to privacy as it relates to the Fourth transparency and credibility problems with
Amendments warrant requirements. Gener- this process. First, this court is a virtual
ally speaking, the government cannot gather rubber stamp for the government and
information on American citizens without its intelligence agencies. Since 1979, the
a warrant or other judicial authorization. fisa court has received about thirty-four
Normally, there must be probable cause to thousand requests to conduct electronic
think an individual is engaging in illegal surveillance within the United States. It has
activity before obtaining a search warrant. denied the governments request in only
Thus, even in cases where the government eleven of those cases. Second, it is virtually
thinks someone is dangerous or behaving impossible to challenge fisa court rulings,
unlawfully, it typically cannot act without not only because they are secret, but also
judicial approval. because there is no party to the proceedings
T h e re i s n o q u e s t i o n t h e Bu s h besides the government. Third, as the
administration was engaged in warrantless recent declassification of certain fisa court
surveillance of American citizens from opinions reveals, the government often pays
shortly after September 11 until January little heed to the courts warnings unless
2007. But that is not the end of the forced to do so.
story. We now know, thanks to Edward The Obama administration, not
Snowden, that the governmentmainly surprisingly, initially claimed that the
the nsaalso searches and stores vast nsas spying played a key role in thwarting
amounts of emails and text-based messages. fifty-four terrorist plots against the United
While limited by law to international States, implying it violated the Fourth
communications for foreign intelligence Amendment for good reason. This was a lie,
purposes, the nsa nevertheless collected the however. General Keith Alexander, the nsa
communications of American citizens that director, eventually admitted to Congress
were entirely domestic. The government that he could claim only one success, and
also regularly collects telephone records that involved catching a Somali immigrant
of millions of Americans, and keeps track and three cohorts living in San Diego who
of telephony metadata that includes had sent $8,500 to a terrorist group in
the phone numbers of parties to a call, Somalia.
its duration, location and time. It is hard The second story concerns due process,
to disagree with Senator Ron Wydens which lies at the very core of Americas

America Unhinged January/February 2014 27


constitutional protections and is the them to Guantnamo, where they would
backbone of what is considered the rule be subjected to indefinite detention. So
of law. It is no exaggeration to say the instead, Obama apparently decided to
traditional notion of due process has assassinate suspected enemy combatants,
become laughable as it applies to so-called virtually anywhere they are found. While it
enemy combatants in the war on terror. may be easier to kill them rather than hold
When the United States began sweeping them forever and be criticized for adding to
up suspected terrorists in Afghanistan and the mess at Guantnamo, the ramifications
elsewhere after September 11, the Bush of this new policy may be even more
administration created a legal black hole at poisonous.
Guantnamo Bay, and strongly resisted the Drones, of course, play a central role in
detainees efforts to obtain due process. this assassination strategy. Obama has a
Notwithstanding President Obamas
efforts to close Guantnamo, it remains
open and continues to be a due-
process quagmire. For example, of the
164 individuals still imprisoned at
Guantnamo, eighty-four were cleared for
release in 2009 but remain imprisoned.
There are another forty-six prisoners the
government cannot prosecute because
of insufficient evidence, but it refuses to
release them because they are considered
to be security threats to the United States.
This arbitrary and unprecedented policy of
indefinite detention is a blatant violation
of traditional American notions of due
process.
Worse yet, the Bush administration
devised the infamous policy of
extraordinary rendition, where high-value
prisoners were sent to countries with
terrible human-rights records to be tortured
and interrogated. And it appears that the
cia itself tortured prisoners at its so-called
black sites in Europe, as well as at Bagram
Air Base in Afghanistan and Abu Ghraib kill list known as the disposition matrix,
in Iraq. This behavior clearly violates and there is a meeting every Tuesday in
American and international law, which both the White Houseit is called Terror
forbid torture. Tuesdaywhere the next round of victims
This disgraceful situation brings us is selected. The extent to which the Obama
to the third story. Because it has been administration has bought into this strategy
impossible for the Obama administration is reflected in the increased frequency of
either to prosecute or release the drone strikes since November 2002, when
detainees, it appears to have little interest they first began. Micah Zenko wrote in
in capturing new prisoners and bringing the Financial Times in May 2013 that

28 The National Interest America Unhinged


there have been approximately 425 non- world think hypocrites of the first order run
battlefield targeted killings (more than 95 American foreign policy.
per cent by drones). Roughly 50 took place
during Mr. Bushs tenure, and 375 (and
counting) under Mr. Obamas.
This assassination strategy leaves
T he U.S. commitment to global domi-
nation since the Cold War ended has
had huge costs and brought few benefits.
hardly any room for due process. Indeed, That is especially true in the years since
the cia is authorized to kill young males September 11. Nevertheless, there has been
who are not known to be terrorists, but remarkably little change in how the foreign-
are merely exhibiting suspicious behavior, policy establishment thinks about Americas
whatever that might be. It is also difficult role in the world. From neoconservatives on
to identify targets clearly from a platform the right to liberal imperialists on the left,
thousands of feet above the ground. Not there has been no meaningful diminish-
surprisingly, there are numerous cases ment in their commitment to intervening
where drones have hit innocent civilians. in countries all across the globe.
It is difficult to get firm numbers, but it The American public, however, has
seems clear that at least 1015 percent of become less enthusiastic about acting as
the victims have been civilians. Finally, the worlds policeman, especially when it
Obama has used drones to purposely kill means using military force and possibly
an American citizen in Yemen when there getting involved in more wars. But this
was no evidence he was an imminent threat disconnect between the foreign-policy
to the United States. This unprecedented elites and the citizenry had not hindered
act raises fundamental questions about the pursuit of global domination in any
due process, and shows how dangerous an meaningful way until this past summer,
interventionist foreign policy is for core when President Obama threatened to bomb
civil liberties. Syria. It quickly became apparent that a
A comment by former cia director large majority of Americans were strongly
Michael Hayden in 2012 captures just how opposed to using military force there.
misguided Obamas assassination strategy is: Indeed, the opposition was so apparent
Right now, there isnt a government on the that Obama seemed unlikely to get
planet that agrees with our legal rationale congressional backing for an attack, even
for these operations, except for Afghanistan though he promised it would be limited
and maybe Israel. and the United States would not be drawn
What makes these policies even more into another war. It was, as columnist Peggy
alarming is that the national-security elites Noonan put it, a fight between the country
who execute and support them fervently and Washington, between the broad
believe in American exceptionalism. They American public and Washingtons central
are convinced that the United States is governing assumptions.
morally superior to every other country In effect, the public is saying it is fed
on earth. It is, so the story goes, the light up with Americas interventionist policies
of the world, a shining city on a hill. and it is time to focus greater attention on
Americans stand tall and see further than fixing problems at home. According to a
other peoples, as Madeleine Albright put poll done for the Wall Street Journal and
it. These elites obviously do not look in nbc News in September 2013, 74 percent
the mirror. But, if they did, they would of Americans believe their country is doing
understand why people all around the too much in other countries, and it is time

America Unhinged January/February 2014 29


to do less around the world and focus more outspokenness to the limit.
on problems here at home. Hopefully, the None of this is to say the United States
backlash over Syria is a harbinger of things should become isolationist or ignore its
to come, and the public will increasingly position in the global balance of power. On
put limits on the elites penchant for the contrary, it should make sure it remains
pursuing imperial missions. the most powerful country on the planet,
Another encouraging sign is that there which means making sure a rising China
was hardly any enthusiasm in the U.S. does not dominate Asia the way the United

military for attacking Syria. Hopefully, States dominates the Western Hemisphere.
the senior leadership and the rank and It should also use force when core strategic
file finally recognize they have been asked interests are threatened. But Washington
to fight losing wars that matter little for should stop intervening in the politics of
the security of the United States and that countries like Egypt and Syria and more
most of their fellow citizens consider not generally abandon its interventionist
worth fighting. There are sound reasons strategy of global domination, which has led
to limit how much criticism military to unending trouble. We might then begin
commanders can direct at civilian leaders to restore the tarnished liberal-democratic
and their policies. At the present moment, principles that once made America truly
however, the generals should push their exceptional and widely admired. n

30 The National Interest America Unhinged


Inglorious Revolutions
By David A. Bell

T
wo and a half years after it began, military victory. But the comparison
the revolution was widely consid- illuminates a different point. Historically,
ered a quagmire, even a disaster. very few revolutions have been quick
Rebels had made disappointingly little successes. They have been messy, bloody,
headway against the forces of the hated long, drawn-out affairs. Victory has very
tyrant. The capital and the countrys sec- rarely come without numerous setbacks,
ond major city remained under his control. and, unfortunately, without abuses
Foreign powers had provided sympathy, but carried out by all sides. It has generally
very little real aid. And despite promising taken many years, even decades, for the
to respect human rights, rebel forces were real gains, if any, to become apparent. Yet
committing widespread abuses, including today, international public opinion and
murder, torture and destruction of prop- international institutions usually fail to
erty. In short, the bright hopes of an earlier recognize this historical reality. There is an
spring were fading fast. expectation that revolutions, where they
This may sound like a description of occur, must lead within a very short period
Syria today, but it also describes quite well to the establishment of stable democracy
the situation of another country: the young and a full panoply of human rights, or they
United States in the winter of 17771778. will be viewed as failures.
George Washington had taken refuge in C o n s i d e r, f o r i n s t a n c e , t h e
the miserable winter encampment of Valley disappointments that followed the Arab
Forge. Philadelphia (then the capital) and Spring and the resulting worldwide hand-
New York were both in British hands. wringing. Thomas Friedman, that great
France had not yet agreed to help the new barometer of elite American conventional
republic militarily. And in areas under rebel wisdom, wrote in May 2011 about the
control, loyalists were being persecutedfar young Arabs who had begun to rise up
more than most American school textbooks peacefully to gain the dignity, justice
admit. and self-rule that Bin Laden claimed
There is little reason to think that could be obtained only by murderous
conditions in Syria will turn around the violence. Less than two years later, he was
way they did in the United States between lamenting that the term Arab Spring
1778 and 1781, when the American has to be retired, and comparing events
revolutionaries managed to eke out a in the region to the seventeenth centurys
massively destructive Thirty Years War, in
David A. Bell is the Sidney and Ruth Lapidus which areas of Central Europe lost up to
Professor in the Era of North Atlantic Revolutions a third of their populations. Many other
at Princeton University. commentators throughout the world now

Inglorious Revolutions January/February 2014 31


write off the Arab Spring as a disaster and historian Steve Pincus has written that
failure, pure and simple. But arguably, not far from being aristocratic, peaceful, and
the least of the problems bedeviling the consensual, the Glorious Revolution was
Arab revolutionaries of the last two and a popular, violent, and extremely divisive.
half years has been the absurdly inflated
expectations they have had to live up to.
Put simply, they have been asked to achieve
the sort of rapid and complete success that
W hy do most observers today seem
so oblivious to the historical record
of revolutions? What are the consequences
hardly any predecessors, including in the of this obliviousness? And what might it
West, ever managed. The same has been actually take, in the way of concerted in-
true of the color revolutions of the past ternational action, to help revolutions like
decade in the former Soviet Union, which the one in Egypt take place in a way that
commentators like Melinda Haring and accords better with observers ideal script?
Michael Cecire, in a recent Foreign Policy In addressing the first of these questions,
article, have been quick to label terribly one place to start is with a rather odd
disappointing. development: current expectations about
But think for a moment about the revolutions in fact represent something of
point that some other major revolutions a return to a very old understanding of
had reached two years or so after they such events. Up until the mid-eighteenth
began. Two years after the first shots of the century, the word revolution meant
American Revolution, Washington had not little more than political upheaval.
even gotten to Valley Forge, and victory Revolutions were held to be sudden,
looked very far off indeed. Two years after unpredictable and largely uncontrollable.
the beginning of the French Revolution, a History books told the story of countries
huge and dangerous conflict was opening violent changes of dynasty almost as if they
up between the countrys political factions, were a series of earthquakes. Revolutions
and that summer King Louis XVI severely were things that happened to people, not
exacerbated it by trying to flee France things that people themselves were seen
and join an enemy invasion force. Many as capable of consciously directing. A
more years of chaos and bloodshed would typical usage can be seen in the title of
follow. Two years after the beginning of a pamphlet by the seventeenth-century
the Latin American revolutions against English radical Anthony Ascham: A
Spain, the First Venezuelan Republic had Discourse: Wherein is Examined, what is
already collapsed, with Spain reestablishing Particularly Lawful During the Confusions
its authority. In each of these cases, the and Revolutions of Government. Samuel
revolutionaries themselves also failed, Johnsons dictionary gave revolution as
often quite spectacularly, to behave a synonym for vicissitude. Tellingly, at
in a manner that modern human-rights the beginning of what we now call the
activists would have condoned. Even the American Revolution, very few people
Wests paradigmatic example of a good actually described what was taking place as
revolution, Britains Glorious Revolution a revolution. The word does not appear
of 1688, was only bloodless and quick in the Declaration of Independence, or
if one equates Britain with England, and in Thomas Paines great 1776 pamphlet
fails to consider the extended series of Common Sense (except in reference to 1688
destructive wars that convulsed Ireland in Britain). In 1777, John Adams could
and Scotland for decades thereafter. The write to his son John Quincy about the late

32 The National Interest Inglorious Revolutions


Historically, very few revolutions have been quick successes.
They have been messy, bloody, long, drawn-out affairs.

Revolution in our Government, implying exist, and would have made little sense
that the event was already finished and in to people, referring as it does to people
the past. or actions that actively drive revolutions
These ideas began to change in the forward. But in September 1790, the
late eighteenth century, with significant radical deputy Bertrand Barre referred to
consequences for the events that would the demolition of the Bastille as a truly
continue to convulse the Atlantic world revolutionary act, and soon his colleague
for half a century. In America, by 1779 it Georges Danton was describing himself
was becoming clear that the political and as a steadfast revolutionary. In 1792,
social transformations set in motion by Maximilien Robespierre renamed the
the War of Independence had yet to run executive committee of Pariss municipal
their course. In that year, Richard Henry government the General Revolutionary
Lee wrote to Thomas Jefferson about the Council, making it the first political
progress of our glorious revolution, and institution in history to bear such a title.
Jefferson himself finally began to use the Bakers colleague Dan Edelstein has
word in reference to American events. By added a further fascinating wrinkle to the
1780, John Adams was writing to his wife story, noting that by 17921793, the
Abigail about the whole course of this revolution seemed to be taking on a life
mighty revolution, treating it as something of its own, becoming, in the eyes of its
still taking place. Yet even then, he did advocates, a quasi-mythic force and a
not present it as a process he himself had source of political legitimacy. After armed
a hand in directing, but as a great natural crowds stormed the royal palace in 1792
upheaval sweeping him along. and overthrew Louis XVI, there were
It was in France where the most decisive calls to put the king on trial. The radical
conceptual transformation took place. Louis-Antoine Saint-Just, however, insisted
As the countrys old regime began to that the people had already delivered a
crumble in 1789, observers immediately verdict through their revolutionary action.
started to refer to what was going on as Any procedure that might exonerate the
a revolution in the traditional fashion. king therefore amounted to putting the
Then, within a matter of months, they Revolution itself on trial, in the words of
began speaking of it less as a sudden and his patron, Robespierre. A year later, with
cataclysmic event than as an ongoing process. France at war with much of Europe, Saint-
Soon they went even further, presenting Just made a remarkable speech demanding
the revolution as something that could be that the ruling National Convention
controlled and directed. Stanfords Keith formally suspend the new constitution
Baker, who has written luminously on this it had just approved, and declare the
shift, characterizes it as one from revolution government revolutionary until the end of
as fact to revolution as act. Before this hostilities. He insisted on a full overhaul of
moment, the word revolutionary did not the governments personnel and procedures,

Inglorious Revolutions January/February 2014 33


arguing that the laws are revolutionary; whose role was to govern a republic, and
those who execute them are not. And he revolutionary government, whose role
added the following, remarkable sentence: was to found the republic. In the latter, he
Those who make revolutions, those who argued, the state needed far greater leeway,
wish to do good, must sleep only in the both to protect its citizens and to ensure
tomb. that institutions would be given a durable
This new understanding of revolutions form. The Revolution, he thundered,
partly reflected the simple fact that the is the war of liberty against its enemies.
French Revolution was indeed a very Several of Robespierres allies openly urged
different sort of event from its predecessors. him to become a dictator, a title still then
Instead of its principal political changes associated with the ancient Roman military
coming to an end quickly, culminating office of the name, and which they viewed
in a document such as a declaration of favorably. In theory, the dictatorship would
independence, a process of explosive end once the republic had been durably
radicalism continued to build, leading to founded, and the revolution completed, but
the deadly Reign of Terror of 17931794. given the vastness of the radicals ambitions,
But the new ways of thinking themselves it was not clear when this goal would be
provided a spur to radicalization, by giving reached. Revolution was becoming not
just a process, but also a utopian
one that might extend into the
future, indefinitely.
This new concept of revolution
as what G. W. F. Hegel would
call a world-historical event
helped to justify the French
revolutionaries most outlandish
projects. These included a new
calendar, which started with the
birth of the French Republic; the
attempt to replace Christianity
either with state-sponsored
atheism or Robespierres deistic
Cult of the Supreme Being;
plans for universal education and
charity; and, dangerously, the
transformation of a war against
other European powers into
the political actors of the day a way to a crusade for universal human liberation.
see revolutions as exceptional historical Robespierre and his allies went so far as
moments in which ordinary practices and to characterize revolutions as millennial
principles could be suspended. The leading projects that could literally change human
figure of the Terror, Robespierre, developed nature. The French people seem to be
an entire political theory on this basis. In about two thousand years ahead of the rest
a legislative report he wrote in the winter of the human race, he mused in the spring
of 17931794, he distinguished between of 1794. One is tempted to regard them as
ordinary constitutional government, a separate species.

34 The National Interest Inglorious Revolutions


I t is hard to exaggerate the hold that
this French model of revolution exerted
over imaginations throughout the world
Chinese Cultural Revolution and the
Cambodian holocaust, the myth of a
redemptive, world-transforming revolution
in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. lost its allure, as one moment of dreadful
In country after country, generations of disillusionment followed another. By the
would-be revolutionaries plotted to take late twentieth century, when the self-
power and instigate upheavals of similar proclaimed revolutionary regimes of the
or even greater ambition. Starting in the Soviet bloc began to crumble, the dissidents
mid-nineteenth century, the model was po- who stepped into the breach generally
tently combined with socialist visions of refused the label of revolution altogether.
history as a story of class struggle, but the As the Polish Solidarity leader Jacek Kuron
idea of revolution itself as an ongoing, con- informed French readers in a remarkable
sciously directed process remained much newspaper column in the summer
the same. In Russia, China, Southeast Asia, of 1989as the Poles were ousting the
Latin America and the Middle East, self- Communists and the French were marking
proclaimed revolutionary regimes took the bicentennial of 1789the age of
power with goals of nothing less than trans- revolution was over, and a good thing too.
forming human beings into something new Germans self-consciously refer to the events
and better. In Terrorism and Communism, of 19891990 not as a revolution, but as
written at the height of the Russian Civil die Wendethe change.
War, Leon Trotsky (a great admirer of the In some cases, the exhaustion that has
French Revolutionary Terror) expressed sen- followed upon bloody utopian experiments
timents very close to those of Saint-Just and has itself created the conditions under
Robespierre: which moderate democratic regimes
could eventually take root. In France, for
We were never concerned with . . . prattle instance, the events of 1789 marked the
about the sacredness of human life. We were start of nearly nine decades of astonishing
revolutionaries in opposition, and have re- political turmoil. Monarchies, republics
mained revolutionaries in power. To make the and empires succeeded each other so
individual sacred we must destroy the social rapidly that, according to one popular
order which crucifies him. And this problem joke, libraries began storing copies of the
can only be solved by blood and iron. constitution in the periodicals section.
But finally, after the fall of Napoleon III
Mao Zedong, who repeatedly spoke of revo- during the Franco-Prussian War, and
lution as a long and arduous road, called its one final outburst of radical utopianism
ultimate goal the changing of society and in the doomed Paris Commune of 1871,
the establishment of a new sort of human a relatively stable, moderate republic was
freedom (he also famously remarked that a established, and it lasted until the Nazi
revolution is not a dinner party). occupation of 1940. Franois Furet,
Of course, in country after country these one of twentieth-century Frances great
later revolutions produced even greater historians, labeled the entire long period
chaos and bloodshed than in France. In from the late eighteenth century to the late
Russia and China and Southeast Asia, nineteenth as the French Revolution. In
the number of victims stretched into the his view, it only came safely into port
millions. And finally, after the Russian with the Third Republic in the 1870s. But
Civil War, Stalins terror, the Gulag, the it is hard to argue that the turmoil and

Inglorious Revolutions January/February 2014 35


It is unreasonable, even rather absurd, to expect
revolutions to usher in stable representative democracies
that respect human rights virtually overnight.

bloodshed was necessary to achieve this tensions of representing different and higher
relatively limited goal. And, of course, in forms of human society. At the heart of
many other countriesRussia and China, these earlier ideological pretensions was the
most obviouslysimilarly long periods of idea that the means to these higher forms
revolutionary disruption have so far failed was a French-style revolution.
to produce similarly benign outcomes. Of course, even where free-market
democracy has become the preferred model,

T his long process of disillusionment


helps explain why, today, revolutions
are expected to be so quick and neat. If rev-
reality has often failed quite dismally to
comply. Back at the time when Fukuyama
wrote, nearly all observers woefully
olutionary movements no longer come bear- underestimated the sheer difficulty of
ing utopian hopes of redemption, then there instituting such systems in countries
is less need for them to extend indefinitely plagued by poverty and ethnic and religious
into the future. And indeed, most of the rev- differences, and lacking experience in the
olutions that have taken place since 1990, rule of law or the toleration of opposition.
such as the color revolutions in the Soviet The goal of a revolution may be entirely
bloc and the revolutions of the Arab Spring, clear: for example, to transform your
have aimed at relatively modest goals, in country into something resembling Finland.
comparison with their French or Russian or But how can that goal be reached?
Chinese predecessors: representative democ- This is a question that continues
racy, stability, the rule of law, human rights. to bedevil political scientists. But the
The great exceptions to this rule, of course, experience of Europe, first after the end
are the Islamists, who hope to impose their of World War II, and then after the
vision of godly order on human societies. collapse of Communism, suggests at least
The Iranian Revolution was in this sense one absolutely crucial condition: a proper
the last of the great line of utopian revolu- structure of incentives for the population
tions that began in the eighteenth century. in question. After the defeat of 1945, as
Francis Fukuyama has been widely mocked recent historical work has stressed, the
for his 1989 National Interest article The population of West Germany did not
End of History? and his prediction that magically lose all attraction to Nazism. But
free-market democracy would become uni- the West Germans knew the victorious
versal throughout the world. But with the Allies would not tolerate any serious
exception of the Islamic world, free-market attempts to revive Hitlers regime. And at
democracy has indeed overwhelmingly be- the same time, they quickly learned that
come the preferred political model in most moves toward democracy would reap
countries. As Fukuyama himself put it: At them substantial rewards in the form of
the end of history it is not necessary that all Marshall Plan aid and inclusion in the new
societies become successful liberal societies, Western military alliance. Likewise, after
merely that they end their ideological pre- 1989 the people of Poland had relatively

36 The National Interest Inglorious Revolutions


little to draw on in the way of democratic But what incentive did the populations of
tradition. But they understood that free- Georgia or Kyrgyzstan have to respect the
market democracy would bring the massive rule of law and democratic governance?
rewards of closer connections to Western What incentive have the competing groups
Europeculminating in European Union in Egypt had since 2011? Has the United
membershipand the protection of nato. States been offering massive economic
In both these countries, the incentives to aid in return for progress toward free-
build free-market democracy proved more market democracy? Has the European
than sufficient to overcome the natural Union been offering a quick timetable for
tendency of factions within a state to grab membership? The hard, grinding work of
what they can for themselves, and to do institution-building depends on a large
whatever possible to keep their enemies out degree of popular cooperation. But most
of power. In each country, it was generally people in these countries have not seen
recognized that there was far more to gain any great benefit to be obtained from such
from establishing democratic, free-market cooperation, while seeing all too clearly
institutions. the dangers of allowing opponents to seize
In contrast, the populations of countries power, or of not taking advantage of the
with recent revolutions have had far chance for their faction to enrich itself while
weaker incentives to establish these it can.
sorts of institutions. Take Georgia and
Kyrgyzstan, homes of the Rose and
Tulip Revolutions of 2003 and 2005.
Observers like Haring and Cecire have a
M any different factors help popula-
tions to play by the rules, and to
resist temptations to crush traditional en-
simple explanation for why these revolutions emies or to treat the state as little more
failed (their blunt verdict): Quite simply, than an instrument of personal enrichment.
the rule of law never took root. In fact, Ingrained habits of rigid social discipline,
they chide the revolutionaries for making found in such widely different societies
what they call a key mistake: They took as colonial New England and twentieth-
the revolutions themselves as the apogee of century Japan, can serve, given the proper
democracy rather than focusing on the hard, conditions, to dampen forms of behavior
grinding work of institution-building. that damage democratic cooperation. In-

Inglorious Revolutions January/February 2014 37


spiring, charismatic leaders committed to countries decades or even centuries to
such cooperationa Washington or a Man- achieve. We need to recognize that even
delacan play a critical part as well. The the establishment of supposedly limited,
role of eloquently formulated revolutionary nonutopian goals may well require a
principles in inspiring loyalty to democratic revolutionary process that lasts for many
institutions should not be underestimated. years or decades, and that may involve a
But these factors are rarely enough. Incen- good deal of violence, chaos and abuse
tives matter hugely. Furthermore, providing along the way, including abuse by people
a clear incentive structure is arguably just we would like to think of as the good
about the only possible way to jump start guys. In fact, just about the only way to
democratic revolutions and bring them to avoid this kind of process (which itself may
a successful, rapid conclusion, especially in well eventually fail anyway) is to provide
countries that have long traditions of divi- a serious external incentive structure,
sion, corruption and intolerance. involving long-term commitments to large-
In short, it is unreasonable, even rather scale aid and protection. Clearly, the West
absurd, to expect revolutions to usher is in no position to start massive new aid
in stable representative democracies that programs to democratic revolutionaries
respect human rights virtually overnight. across the world. But in that case, we have
It is condescending and cruel to scold no cause to tout our own superiority over
countries for their failure to reproduce, peoples just starting out on the long and
within a span of a year or two, what took difficult road that took us so very long to
France, the United States and many other travel. Quite the contrary.

38 The National Interest Inglorious Revolutions


In Defense of Kissinger
By Robert D. Blackwill

I
n his book Diplomacy, Henry Kiss- moral perfection of itself as a test of its for-
inger concludes that the United States eign policy will achieve neither perfection
faces the challenge of reaching its nor security.3
goals in stages, each of which is an amal- This ever-present fusion of American
gam of American values and geopolitical values and national interests was evident
necessities.1 The recent debates about U.S. in the spring of 1971, as a crisis erupted
military options in Libya and Syria reflect in South Asia during Kissingers tenure
the enduring tension between these inter- as Richard Nixons national-security
twined, at times competing components of adviser. When the British Raj ended
our external relations. No U.S. statesman in 1947, a partition of the subcontinent
can ignore this dilemma, and none will find led to the creation of India and Pakistan
it easy to strike exactly the right balance be- as separate, estranged sovereign states.
tween the two, especially in times of crisis. Pakistan, envisioned as a homeland for
All would seek to simultaneously pursue South Asian Muslims, emerged with an
the promotion of the national interest and unusual bifurcated structure comprising
the protection of human rights. Kissinger, two noncontiguous majority-Muslim areas:
famous for advocating an American for- West Pakistan and East Pakistan. While
eign policy based on the national interest, united by a shared faith, they were divided
has long stressed that values and power are by language, ethnicity and one thousand
properly understood as mutually support- miles of Indian territory.
ing. As he argued in a 1973 speech, since Over the course of a fraught sequence
Americans have always held the view that of events from 1970 to 1972, a party
America stood for something above and advocating East Pakistani autonomy
beyond its material achievements, a pure- won a national parliamentary majority,
ly pragmatic policy would confuse allies and Pakistans two wings split. Amid
and eventually forfeit domestic support. Yet natural disaster (a cyclone of historic
when policy becomes excessively moralistic proportions struck the East on the eve
it may turn quixotic or dangerous, giving of the vote, killing up to half a million
way to ineffectual posturing or adventur- people and devastating fields and livestock),
istic crusades.2 The key to a sustainable
foreign policy, in his view, is the avoidance 1 Henry Kissinger, Diplomacy (New York: Simon &
of either extreme: A country that demands Schuster, 1994), 19.
2 Henry Kissinger, Moral Purposes and Policy

Robert D. Blackwill was deputy national-security Choices, (speech, Washington, dc, October 8,
adviser for strategic planning and U.S. ambassador 1973).
to India in the George W. Bush administration. 3 Diplomacy, 471.

In Defense of Kissinger January/February 2014 39


constitutional crisis, a sweeping crackdown consequences for the United States.
by West Pakistani forces attempting to hold Ironically, in his previous book Freedoms
the East, mass refugee migrations, guerilla Battle, Bass sympathizes with precisely the
conflict and an Indian-Pakistani war, East sort of cautionary impulses that animated
Pakistan achieved independence as the new Kissinger:
state of Bangladesh. By most estimates, the
victims of the Bangladeshi independence Even if a president or prime minister has cred-
struggle, which included communal ible information about atrocities . . . there must
massacres unleashed during the crackdown, still be a cold realpolitik calculation about the
numbered in the hundreds of thousands. costs of intervening. . . . If a humanitarian
In his new book, The Blood Telegram: intervention would lead to a broader interna-
Nixon, Kissinger, and a Forgotten Genocide, tional crisis, or plunge the countryor the
Princeton professor Gary Bass, who has worldinto a massive war, then most cabinets
written previous books on humanitarian will decide that it is just not worth it. . . .
intervention and war-crimes tribunals, Believing in human rights does not make one
portrays the American president and his suicidal.
national-security adviser as the heartless
villains of these events. While Bass makes a In fact, he goes even further, allowing that
cursory acknowledgement of the two mens the point of a balance of powerKiss-
geopolitical accomplishments, he derides ingers principal preoccupation in 1971, as
the thinking that informed their actions throughout his career as a statesmanis a
as the product of a familiar Cold War profound moral goal: it keeps the peace.5
chessboard. His own implicit framework But in The Blood Telegram, he implies that
is a deeply heartfelt and contrary view to Nixon and Kissinger should have realized
Kissingers, one that places human-rights that they could have had it both ways with
concerns at the pinnacle of U.S. foreign no riskachieved their strategic break-
policy, at least in this crisis. through with China, with all of its atten-
But how persuasive is Basss history? dant geopolitical benefits, and concurrently
Instead of producing a definitive account, put human rights in East Pakistan at the
he offers an ahistorical and tendentious top of their policy agenda. If only life were
rendition that, more often than not, lacks that simple: as Kissinger observes, The an-
a broader context. He reduces a complex alyst runs no risk. If his conclusions prove
series of overlapping South Asian upheavals, wrong, he can write another treatise. The
Cold War alliances and diplomatic statesman is permitted only one guess; his
initiatives to a reminder of what the world mistakes are irretrievable.6
can easily look like without any concern Thus, at a time of acute crisis, Kissinger
for the pain of distant strangers. 4 He judged that if Washington had mounted
faults the United States for not taking a an all-out private and public human-
firmer, more public stand on Pakistans
domestic repression while offering only 4 Gary J. Bass, The Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger,
vague assurances that this U.S. pressure and a Forgotten Genocide (New York: Alfred A.
would have brought about an actual Knopf, 2013), xxi.
improvement in conditions. Moreover, he 5 Gary J. Bass, Freedoms Battle: The Origins of

trivializes the possibility that his human Humanitarian Intervention (New York: Alfred A.
rightsdominated policy preferences could Knopf, 2008), 8, 13.
have had profoundly damaging strategic 6 Diplomacy, 27.

40 The National Interest In Defense of Kissinger


rights campaign against
then president Agha
M o h a m m a d Ya h y a
Khan and the Pakistan
government, which was
correctly convinced
that the future of the
state was at stake, such a
campaign would not have
fundamentally altered
Islamabads policy toward
East Pakistan, and the
White Houses China
initiative could well have
collapsed. However, as
will be demonstrated at
length later in this essay, that hardly meant responsibility for a significant complicity
that he ignored the plight of the Bengali in the slaughter of the Bengalis.7 To reach
Hindus. Kissinger, both while in office and his indictment of Nixon and Kissinger,
in his subsequent writings, rejected the Bass pairs a myopic account of the Nixon-
proposition that circumstances inevitably Kissinger opening to China and its long-
force a crude either/or choice between term objectives with a highly selective
national interests and democratic values, rendition of U.S. policy toward the breakup
and during this crisis no other nation except of Pakistan.
India did as much as the United States to
directly address the human-rights tragedy in
East Pakistan.
One wishes that the chasm between
I t is important to stress what Nixon and
Kissinger were trying to accomplish in
U.S.-Chinese relations beginning in the
academic and policy-maker perspectives fall of 1970: no less than a fundamental
might have produced a certain modesty restructuring of the global balance of power
in Basss treatment of these events. and world order in Americas favor. By es-
Unfortunately, it doesnt. Instead The Blood tablishing a strategic understanding with
Telegram offers a strident, almost willfully Beijing based on Chinas genuine worry that
biased attack on the personal motives of the relentless Soviet military buildup in the
policy makers whom Bass condemnsfrom Far East could presage an attack on China,
the comfortable perspective of forty years they hoped to strengthen Americas global
of hindsight and an American victory in position; meet Beijings test that only an
the Cold Warfor falling short of bringing America that was strong in Asia could be
about all desirable goals simultaneously. taken seriously by the Chinese8; incentivize
In Basss theory, Nixon and Kissinger, Moscow to adopt more reasonable policies
motivated by a mixture of racial animus toward the United States, including in Eu-
toward Indians, indifference to human rope and on arms control; bring an honor-
rights and an obsessive focus on Cold
War geopolitics, ignored opportunities to 7The Blood Telegram, 342, xiii, xvi.
save lives, ensured that the United States 8 Henry Kissinger, White House Years (New York:
was allied with the killers and incurred Little, Brown and Company, 1979), 716.

In Defense of Kissinger January/February 2014 41


It is important to stress what Nixon and Kissinger were trying to
accomplish in U.S.-Chinese relations: no less than a fundamental
restructuring of the global balance of power in Americas favor.

able end to the Vietnam War (a conflict in the proper arrangements could be made
which half a million Americans were at war through the good offices of President Yahya
at the time of Nixons inauguration, but Khan.12
which public and elite opinion increasingly As Kissinger stresses, Zhou did not
rejected); and reduce tensions throughout want to risk subordinates thwarting of
Asia. All these crucial objectivesin which our common design by their haggling
success could fairly count as both a strate- over modalities. By keeping technical
gic and a moral achievementrequired a arrangements in the Pakistani channel, he
fundamental reorientation of U.S.-Chinese ensured discretion, high-level consideration,
relations. As Kissinger observes in White and expeditious decisions. 13 Bass,
House Years, The hostility between China ignoring the evident Chinese insistence
and the Soviet Union served our purposes on Pakistan, attacks the White Houses
best if we maintained closer relations with use of Yahya Khan as an intermediary as
each side than they did with each other. evidence of a gratuitous Nixonian affection
The rest could be left to the dynamic of for military strongmen. In addition to the
events.9 strong prc preference for Pakistan and the
Nixon and Kissingers decision in advantages of geographic proximity, another
October 1970 (before the Pakistani explanation is also pertinent: it is difficult
crisis) to reach out to China through the to imagine how it could have been arranged
Pakistanis is casually dismissed by Bass as for Kissinger to visit Beijing secretly from
one of many options and potentially the either Paris (a world capital) or Bucharest (a
worst. He suggests France and, curiously, prime target of Soviet penetration); secrecy
totalitarian Romania as plausible and was an essential requirement since Nixon
more ethical alternatives.10 Yet the United could risk neither premature U.S. domestic
States explored all three, and Beijing euphoria nor a public failure in Beijing.
unambiguously chose Pakistan. The first Nothing regarding this highly sensitive
explicit indication by China that a personal matter leaked from Pakistan, and Yahya
envoy of Nixon would be welcome in Khan discreetly managed the complex
Beijing came in December 1970 by way of
the Pakistani channel, with Chinese premier 9 Ibid., 712.
Zhou Enlai stressing, The United States 10 The Blood Telegram, 103. Romanias human-
knows that Pakistan is a great friend of rights record was arguably worse than Pakistans
China and therefore we attach importance before the East Pakistan crisis.
to the message.11 On April 27, 1971, after 11 Foreign Relations of the United States (frus ),

American replies through both Romania 19691976, vol. XVII, China, 19691972
and Pakistan, Beijing followed up through (Washington: Government Printing Office, 2006),
Islamabad and invited direct discussions 250.
between high-level responsible persons 12 Ibid., 301.

of the two countries, suggesting that 13 White House Years, 715.

42 The National Interest In Defense of Kissinger


arrangements to get Kissinger secretly the Yahya Khan channel was unacceptable
from Islamabad to Beijing, as Zhou had to Washington? What if those within the
suggested. Chinese government who had wished to
The late great Harvard historian Ernest sabotage the possibility of an opening to
May once observed, What a historian the United States had used this U.S. switch
chooses to leave out or minimize is often in channels to delay Kissingers visit? Who
as important and telling as what he decides could have known how long Zhou would
to include.14 One must wonder if Bass be in a sufficiently strong bureaucratic
discounts the clear Chinese preference position to pursue a breakthrough with
for Yahya Khan as the intermediary Washington? (In fact, just two years later,
between Beijing and Washington because he was struggled against by ultraleftists
acknowledging it would undermine one and purged.) Who could have been sure
of his core assertions: that Nixon and that Mao Zedong, always mercurial and
Kissinger could have openly condemned then in exceedingly poor health, would
or even attempted to unseat the Pakistani not reverse course and seek to solve his
president without endangering the opening Soviet problem through rapprochement
to China. In his book, Bass never directly with Moscow? And what conclusions might
confronts a series of major questions: If Beijing have drawn regarding American
he knew that the opening to China would credibility if Nixon and Kissinger, as Bass
have faltered, as Nixon and Kissinger advises, had dramatically changed course
feared, because of U.S. pressure on Yahya and abandoned a longtime ally during the
over the atrocities in East Pakistan, would defining crisis of its independent existence?
he nevertheless have forced a showdown
with Pakistan over the plight of Hindu
Bengalis? Would he have been content
to face an outcome in which the China
A s Nixon and Kissinger had warned,
the crisis in East Pakistan produced
escalating Indian-Pakistani tensions, which
initiative collapsed even as Pakistan rejected culminated in war in December 1971.
American demands as irrelevant? Would India, backed by a freshly signed Indo-So-
the next step have been sanctions against viet friendship treaty with military clauses
Pakistan, or perhaps American support for and an active Soviet supply line, crushed
the Bengali insurgencyand what other Pakistani forces in East Pakistan and recog-
results would these policies have entailed? nized Bangladesh as an independent state.
Statesmen have to make such choices; Pressing their advantage, top Indian offi-
professors do not. cials considered objectives in West Pakistan
To duck these questions, Bass must including a total destruction of Pakistani
implicitly posit an alternative rosy scenario military power and (as Bass himself notes)
in which Nixon and Kissinger are able other ways to crack up West Pakistan it-
to establish an equally effective channel self.15 This outcome could have inaugu-
to Beijing while bringing about a swift rated an ominous precedent in international
improvement in Pakistans domestic orderthe destruction of a sovereign state
conditions. But what would the Chinese by foreign military actionwith conse-
reaction have been if the United States quences that would reverberate far beyond
had informed an adversary of two decades the immediate humanitarian crisis. If India
at an enormously delicate moment that
its watershed invitation to improve 14 Conversation with the author.
relations had been misdirected and that 15 The Blood Telegram, 328.

In Defense of Kissinger January/February 2014 43


succeeded, Kissinger warned during the the planes played in the conflict.17 In Basss
crisis: view, these actions constituted a perverse
betrayal of democratic principles by Nixon
The result would be a nation of 100 million and KissingerAmerican participation in
people dismembered, their political structure Kissingers secret onslaught and an arsenal
changed by military attack, despite a treaty against democracy that drove India into the
of alliance with and private assurances by the arms of the Soviet Union and enduringly
United States. And all the other countries, on alienat[ed] not just Indira Gandhi . . .
whom we have considered we could rely . . . but a whole democratic society. 18 But
would know that this has been done by the this insults the sophistication and agency
weight of Soviet arms and with Soviet diplo- of the main Indian players, in addition
matic support. What will be the effect in the to misrepresenting the actual sequence of
Middle East, for examplecould we tell Israel events.
that she should give up something along a line Scholars will long marvel at how the
from A to B, in return for something else, with worlds two largest democracies ended up
any plausibility?16 on opposite sides of the Cold War. Yet
their rift was growing well before the 1971
And how would China have reacted if Pakistan crisis, and it transcended Richard
Washington had stood by passively and Nixon and Indira Gandhis mutual personal
watched Beijings chosen channel to the dislike. Negotiations over the Indo-Soviet
United States and longtime friend crushed friendship treaty had begun by March
by a combination of Indian military action 1969, when the Soviet defense minister
and Soviet weapons? What then for Maos brought a draft treaty text to New Delhi. A
willingness to pursue the opening of U.S.- draft text was ready by mid-1970, though
Chinese relations? by some Indian accounts its signing was
Seeking to deter such a destructive postponed pending the Indian election.
outcome, the United States deployed an According to one Indian participant
aircraft carrier to the Bay of Bengal (where in the negotiations, all that remained to
it was joined by a Soviet naval task force be negotiated at this point was the final
deployed from Vladivostok) and pushed for wording of the decisive military clause.19
an immediate un-backed cease-fire. With
military aid to Pakistan frozen, the White 16 frus, 19691976, vol. XI, South Asia Crisis,
House encouraged allies to make shows of 1971 (Washington: Government Printing Office,
force, including a back-channel proposal in 2005), 718.
which Iran and Jordan would transfer some 17 The record suggests that, after days of

of their own American-made fighter jets interagency and international deliberations, Jordan
to the West Pakistan front. Bass expresses sent word on December 10 that it would send
indignation at this proposal, suggesting four aircraft. On the morning of December 16,
that it was undertaken to assist in the Kissinger reported to Nixon that Jordan had sent
repression of civilians in East Pakistan. He 17 planes; India declared a unilateral cease-fire
fails to explain that the discussion involved one hour later. See: Ibid., 750, 839.
transferring jets to West Pakistan during a 18 The Blood Telegram, 291, 107, 218.

war in which India was considering a drive 19 Richard Sisson and Leo E. Rose, War and

for total victory and an all-out destruction Secession: Pakistan, India, and the Creation of
of the Pakistani armed forces. In any case, Bangladesh (Berkeley: The University of California
it is not apparent what military role, if any, Press, 1990), 196200.

44 The National Interest In Defense of Kissinger


The 1971 crisis did strain U.S.- M[achine] G[un]s, M[edium] M[achine]
Indian relationsyet this was largely G[uns] and Mortarsin other words,
because Washington and New Delhi Indian military support for a cross-border
had incompatible strategic aspirations. separatist insurgency.20 At the beginning
Washington increasingly accepted that East of April 1971, Indira Gandhi reportedly
Pakistan would become autonomous or told her cabinet that we dont mind a war
independent, but opposed an outcome in and ordered the Indian army to prepare
which this was achieved through a regional for an invasion of East Pakistan. According
war or with Soviet arms. India, pursuing to one high-ranking Indian officer quoted
a sophisticated blend of humanitarian by Bass, she ordered them to move in
impulses and Machiavellian calculation, immediately. When the army balked
opted almost immediately for a military at invading a flood plain on the eve of
a monsoon, a compromise solution was
reached: Indian conventional forces would
prepare to enter East Pakistan around
the fifteenth of November, and in the
meantime India would provide Bengali
separatists with material assistance and
training in guerilla tactics, to prepare
for a long struggle. 21 Bengali guerilla
unitsorganized, trained and armed by
Indiaoperated from border sanctuaries
throughout the summer and fall, backed up
by occasional Indian firepower and at least
one cross-border Indian raid.22
The United Statesincluding Kissinger,
in his trip to New Delhi in July 1971, and
Nixon, during his November summit with
Indira Gandhipressed India to refrain
from provocations on the border and
argued that war would be best avoided if
all parties committed to a peaceful political
track. India, convinced that it had both a
moral obligation and a historic strategic
opportunity to act, denied its covert
assistance to the Bengali insurgency and
solution. As Bass himself notes, On March insisted that the problem was Pakistans
2, over three weeks before Yahya launched to solve. Indira Gandhi refused American
his slaughter, [Indira] Gandhi ordered her requests to send U.S. or un observers to
best and brightest . . . to evaluate giving help administer refugee aid (in retrospect,
help to Bangla Desh and the possibility of most likely because two ambitious Indian
recognizing an independent Bangla Desh. programs were proceeding simultaneously
Bengali partisans, she assessed, would need
aircraft for quick movement inside India 20 The Blood Telegram, 4748.
around the borders of Bangla Desh and 21 Ibid., 9395.
arms and ammunition (including L[ight] 22 War and Secession, 18185, 187.

In Defense of Kissinger January/February 2014 45


among the refugee populationone To blame the White House for failing to
humanitarian and the other covert). secure a peaceful outcome to the winter
Each democracy could claim to have 1971 East-West Pakistan political impasse,
achieved a significant portion of its goals. as Bass doesmuch less to equate this
While welcoming and feeding millions of failure with complicity in genocidesets
refugees, India succeeded in splitting East the bar illogically high. The results of the
and West Pakistan by force and emerging as 1970 election raised fundamental questions
the midwife of an independent Bangladesh. about Pakistans viability as a unified state.
The United States, after attempting to The militaryalready amply armed and
head off a war through both humanitarian equipped by China, France, the Soviet
measures and diplomacy, successfully Union and the United States under Nixons
deterred a major Indian campaign against predecessorsunsurprisingly declared its
West Pakistan while preserving its course refusal to abide an East-West split. Would
of rapprochement with China and dtente preemptively threatening to cut off aid
with the Soviet Union. have moderated the generals in charge of
managing the transition to democracy, or

C oinciding with these events was a vi-


olent internal crisis in Pakistan. On
March 25, 1971, after the collapse of com-
reinforced a sense of siege?25
Bass never seriously considers whether,
given Pakistans existing geographic, ethnic
promise talks between East and West Pak- and political divisions, the United States
istani politicians, Pakistani forces began could have prevented its two wings slide
Operation Searchlight, a systematic plan toward violent dissolution.26 In their widely
to eliminate all resistance in East Pakistan respected study War and Secession: Pakistan,
through an overwhelming application of India, and the Creation of Bangladesh
force. This occurred just as Nixon and Kiss- based on interviews with Indian, Pakistani
inger were awaiting a definitive reply from and Bangladeshi participants in these
China to messages sent that winter through eventsscholars Richard Sisson and Leo
Pakistan and Romania concerning a pro- Rose assessed that the American capacity
spective high-level bilateral meeting in Bei- to shape events within Pakistan at this time
jing (a reply that arrived in April through was, in fact, limited:
the Pakistani channel).
In Basss account, an obsessive and The question remains whether Yahya would
unwarranted desire to preserve Pakistan as have responded to a strong public condem-
a conduit for the unfolding U.S.-Chinese nation of the crackdown by moderating his
rapprochement translated into a green repressive policy in East Pakistan. The general
light for [Yahya Khans] killing campaign.23 consensus, even among the critics in the gov-
In this version of events, the opening to ernment, was probably not. Projected U.S.
China, while an epochal event, was done military and economic aid to Pakistan in 1971
at the cost of American complicity in
genocide, as the Bengalis became collateral 23 The Blood Telegram, 56.
damage for realigning the global balance of 24 Ibid., xv.
power.24 25 Ibid., 113.

This incendiary accusation confuses 26 Bass lauds Pakistans grand experiment in

both the order of events and the ability democracy (27) but discounts that the elections,
of governments to bring about rapid intended to pave the way for civilian rule, produced
changes in other states internal practices. a genuinely fraught result.

46 The National Interest In Defense of Kissinger


Under Basss definition of complicity with
atrocities, few practitioners of American
foreign policy would escape unindicted.

was not of a magnitude to provide Washing- All this was achieved while carrying out a
ton with much leverage to pressure the leader- historic opening to China and ultimately
ship in Rawalpindi to change policies in East promoting dtente with the Soviet Union,
Pakistan to avoid the loss of aid. . . . By 1971 which backed India during the conflict.
Washington lacked much clout in Rawalpindi, It takes an obsessively strained reading to
particularly on issues that, in West Pakistani find in this record, as Bass does, one of the
eyes, struck at the very basis of their national worst moments of moral blindness in U.S.
existence.27 foreign policy.28
Much of the force of Basss narrative
On the particular issue of American arms derives from vivid, often-inflammatory
transfers to Pakistan, the total U.S. cutoff of quotations from the Nixon tapes, and there
the long-term weapons pipeline (which in is no shortage of those. No crass Nixon
any case was exceedingly modest) predict- statement or sarcastic aside seems to have
ably had no appreciable effect on the eth- gone unquoted. Yet presidential vulgarity
nic-cleansing actions of the Pakistani army was hardly a Nixon innovation. Dwight
in East Pakistan. As we have seen recently Eisenhower swore like the trooper he was.
with respect to Egypt, such U.S. punishing At a 1953 summit with Winston Churchill,
actions have a poor record of actually in- Eisenhower dismissed Churchills advice
fluencing foreign governments that believe to engage the post-Stalin Soviet leadership,
that they are fighting for the fundamental stating (as Churchills private secretary
future of their countries. recorded) that Russia was a woman of the
Even so, Bass has scoured the record streets and whether her dress was new, or
for coarse quotations to back his biased just the old one patched, it was certainly the
and incendiary charges, sidestepping (and same whore underneath. America intended
seeming purposefully to avoid) ample to drive her off her present beat into the
evidence that Nixon and Kissinger pursued back streets. 29 Lyndon Johnson once
a far more balanced and constructive pressed a point with the Greek ambassador
courseone in which the United States as follows: F*** your Parliament and your
emerged as the leading donor and organizer Constitution, America is an elephant,
of East Pakistans cyclone relief; provided Cyprus is a flea. Greece is a flea.30 In short,
hundreds of thousands of tons of grain
and extensive emergency supplies and 27 War and Secession, 260.
financial assistance to prevent a famine in 28 The Blood Telegram, xiiixiv.
East Pakistan and among refugees in India; 29 As quoted in Gnter Bischof and Stephen E.

attempted through diplomacy and pressure Ambrose, eds., Eisenhower: A Centenary Assessment
to avert an Indian-Pakistani conflict; and (Baton Rouge: lsu Press/Eisenhower Center for
then, when war broke out, pressed for an Leadership Studies, 1995), 146.
early un-sponsored cease-fire to prevent the 30 William Mallinson, Cyprus: A Modern History

fighting from encompassing West Pakistan. (London: I.B. Tauris, 2005), 1.

In Defense of Kissinger January/February 2014 47


Bass appears to be curiously offended that able Pakistani cooperation on this. . . . But the
conversations in the Oval Office are often famine will start in October. Under the best
not the stuff of a church social. possible scenario, political accommodation will
have barely begun in October.33

F urthermore, Basss treatment of some


sources suggests that he has privileged
outrage over accuracy. For example, he
As for a colleagues argument that the
United States should take [the Pakistani
recounts a July 30, 1971, Senior Review army] out of the civil administration
Group meeting convened to discuss Ameri- because a civilian presence would encourage
can policy in South Asia as follows: refugees to return, Kissinger asked: We can
appropriately ask them for humanitarian
In a Situation Room meeting, Kissinger de- behavior, but can we tell them how
fended the presidents man. Were not out of to run things? 34 The United States, he
gas with Yahya, he said. Yahya will be reason- argued, was better off dealing with an
able. He preferred to be gentle with Yahya, existing government and insisting that it
not hectoring or squeezing him. When a State accept American food relief and logistical
Department official suggested getting the army guidance:
out of running East Pakistan, Kissinger stood
up for Pakistans sovereignty: Why is it our If we are faced with a huge famine and a huge
business to tell the Pakistanis how to run their new refugee outflow in October and were still
government?31 debating political accommodation, well have a
heluva lot to answer for. We need an emergency
Heartless realpolitik? Not quite. No reader relief plan and we need to tell Yahya that this is
of Basss account would guess that Kissinger what has to be done to get the supplies deliv-
was actually discussing how to resolve a ered. Yahya will be reasonable.35
refugee crisis and deliver emergency Ameri-
can food aid to the Bengali population. None of this discussion emerges in the Bass
Responding to the argument that a push account, which splices out-of-context quo-
for political reconciliation should precede tations to recast a discussion of emergency
further humanitarian assistance, Kissinger humanitarian assistance into a scene of care-
argued that the threat of a famine was too less indifference to suffering. Similar mis-
urgent: Were not out of gas with Yahya. representations recur throughout the book.
I think he will do a lot of things that are Bass also glosses over the action points de-
reasonable if we concentrate on the refugee cided upon in the meeting, which included
problem. One thing he will not do is talk to agreement to prepare a comprehensive re-
the Awami League, at least not as an institu- lief program for East Pakistan, including
tion. He might talk to some League lead- what has already been moved and where the
ers as individuals.32 The immediate focus, bottlenecks are as well as a telegram, to be
Kissinger insisted, should be on providing approved by the President, outlining an ap-
food aid:
31 The Blood Telegram, 20910.
On famine relief, we must get a program start- 32 frus, 19691976, vol. XI, South Asia Crisis,
ed under any and all circumstances. If famine 1971, 293.
develops, it will generate another major out- 33 Ibid., 295.

flow of refugees. This is one thing we can do 34 Ibid., 294.

something about. I think we can get consider- 35 Ibid., 296.

48 The National Interest In Defense of Kissinger


proach to Yahya telling him what needs to his conversation by urging Khan to state
be done on refugees, food relief, etc.36 publicly his commitment to effect political
Even as delicate diplomacy unfolded, reconciliation.39
Nixon and Kissinger made repeated appeals Two weeks later Farland met again with
to the Pakistani military to moderate its Yahya Khan and reiterated these points
domestic practices and seek political in sharper terms. As he cabled back to
compromise. In May 1971, Nixon wrote Washington:
to Yahya Khan pressing him to keep the
peace with India and honor his pledges of I went on to note that the flow of refugees con-
a transition to civilian governance. Nixon tinued and that this flow is symptomatic of the
warned that this was both a humanitarian serious situation in East Pakistan. I pointed out
matter and a strategic imperative: that the Embassy continued to receive reports
of Hindu villages being attacked by the army,
I have also noted with satisfaction your public that fear is pervasive, and that until this situa-
declaration of amnesty for the refugees and tion changes the refugees will continue to cross
commitment to transfer power to elected rep- over into India. And I reiterated the U[nited]
resentatives. I am confident that you will turn S[tates] G[overnment]s concern that at some
these statements into reality. I feel sure you point the Hindu exodus, if not checked, could
will agree with me that the first essential step lead to a military clash with India.
is to bring an end to the civil strife and restore
peaceful conditions in East Pakistan. . . . It is Farland admonished Khan that a heavy
absolutely vital for the maintenance of peace in responsibility still rests on Pakistan: One
the Subcontinent to restore conditions in East could hardly expect the flow to cease until
Pakistan conducive to the return of refugees the level of military activity by the army is
from Indian territory as quickly as possible.37 reduced and repressive measures against the
local population, especially the Hindus, was
The same week, the American ended.40
ambassador, Joseph Farland (a political These warnings continued even during
appointee who was personally close to Kissingers landmark secret trip to Beijing
Nixon), met with Yahya Khan in Karachi in July 1971. In Rawalpindi, on the eve of
and told him that the first necessity his unannounced departure for a country
was to stop the shooting and to start where no American diplomat had been
the rebuilding. 38 Citing reports from for two decades, Kissinger admonished
Dacca of atrocities and attacks on East Pakistans foreign secretary that 7 million
Pakistans Hindu minority, Farland warned refugees are an intolerable burden. They
that without the creation of normal overload an already overburdened Indian
conditions in the East, a renewed sense economy, particularly in eastern India. The
of physical security among the Hindu Indians see enormous danger of communal
community, and a patent movement with riots. Unless Pakistan could chart a path
substance behind it toward a peaceful back to normal administration and a
political accommodation . . . the refugee
problem will continue. A continuation 36 Ibid., 292.
of the present course would produce an 37 Ibid., 16263.
escalation of Indo-Pak tensions and 38 Ibid., 133.

increasing anti-Pakistani sentiment in 39 Ibid., 13738.

the United States. Farland concluded 40 Ibid., 169.

In Defense of Kissinger January/February 2014 49


peaceful return of refugees, the likely surely met that test during the South
result would be a military confrontation Asia crisis of 1971. Their geopolitical
which the Indians feel they would win.41 approach, which Bass derides, produced
Warning that a failure to improve domestic an extraordinarily productive Nixon
conditions would result in a catastrophic visit to China in February 1972 and the
defeat by a historic adversary hardly counts signing of the Shanghai Communiqu,
as soft-pedaling the issue. which serves as the basic framework for
This issue of private U.S. admonitions the two countries relations to this day;
versus public condemnations of other a broad, bipartisan U.S. policy approach
governments is, of course, familiar. Similar to China that has lasted for more than
questions have loomed over Americas forty years and has promoted peace and
recent attempts to moderate political stability throughout Asia; major U.S.-
upheavals in friendly countries such as Chinese intelligence cooperation against
Bahrain and Egypt (both with American- the ussr; and a May 1972 Nixon-Brezhnev
trained and -supplied armed forces summit in Moscow that saw the signing of
responding, at times brutally, to what they the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, the first
regarded as existential internal crises). But Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty and the
these are policy dilemmas, not crimes. U.S.-Soviet incidents-at-sea agreement, all
Under Basss definition of complicity with hallmarks of a dtente that reduced the risk
atrocities, few practitioners of American of superpower confrontation even while
foreign policy would escape unindicted. creating conditions that helped undermine
the Soviet Unions moral and geopolitical

T he fact that the partition of Pakistan in


1971 involved such catastrophic loss of
human life must count among the second
claims and bring about its destruction.
Bass would have readers believe that
all these historic U.S. foreign-policy
half of the twentieth centurys greatest trag- accomplishments were written in the
edies. But Basss policy prescriptions seem stars, irrespective of U.S. policy toward
likely to have brought about the worst pos- Pakistan in 1971and that only grotesque
sible outcomesa delay, if not a rupture, callousness prevented Nixon and Kissinger
in the U.S. opening to China; no easing from adding an abject capitulation by the
of the tragic plight of the Hindu Bengalis; Pakistani government and a consequent
and potentially even the complete disinte- radical transformation of Islamabads
gration of the Pakistani state itself, sending human-rights record to their tally of
arms, trained fighters and another round of achievements. Friedrich Nietzsche wrote
refugees into already-unstable South Asia that mans most enduring stupidity is
and setting a dangerous precedent for other forgetting what he is trying to do. We
regional conflicts. Fortunately, none of this should be grateful that Richard Nixon
happened. and Henry Kissinger did not forget what
In White House Years, Kissinger they were trying to do during this crisis
observes, The character of leaders is regarding China, the Soviet Union, South
tested by their willingness to persevere in Asia and the global balance of power.
the face of uncertainty and to build for
a future they can neither demonstrate 41 Ibid., 238, 241.
nor fully discern.42 Nixon and Kissinger 42 White House Years, 716.

50 The National Interest In Defense of Kissinger


Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy
By David V. Gioe

B
etween the trial of Chelsea (former- and law-enforcement communities for
ly known as Bradley) Manning and not connecting the dots and for hoarding
the revelations of Edward Snowden, information, thus leaving America
the debate regarding the leakers and their vulnerable on 9/11. In the reckoning
information has focused primarily on the during the post-9/11 intelligence reforms,
balance between liberty and security, or the enduring counterintelligence principle
between government transparency and se- of need to know was transformed into
crecy. This is a necessary, even overdue, dis- need to share, a new paradigm that
cussion. But it is also important to reflect mandated that intelligence agencies share
upon the lasting damage these unauthor- information broadly across bureaucratic
ized disclosures will have on future U.S. lines and prepare analysis for the widest
intelligence collection. possible dissemination in order to prevent
Both Manning and Snowden betrayed intelligence stovepiping.
the public trust and disclosed national- This expansive conception of information
security information that they had sworn to sharing enabled a young army intelligence
protect. Both seriously impeded Americas analyst to access diplomatic cables from
future ability to recruit foreign sources that around the world that had nothing
provide human intelligence (humint). And to do with her core duties as a military-
both harmed Americas ability to enter into intelligence analyst serving in the Middle
cooperative relationships regarding signals East. This access illustrates the distance
intelligence (sigint) with foreign partner that the intelligence-community pendulum
intelligence agenciestermed liaison has swung in the direction of almost-blind
services in the business. information sharing. If an event of the
The degree of access with which Manning magnitude of 9/11 forced the pendulum
was entrustedhundreds of thousands of in the direction of increased sharing,
diplomatic cables, in addition to the so- more recent events such as the Manning
called war logs of Afghanistan and Iraq and Snowden leaks could reverse the trend
can be traced to the U.S. intelligence- back toward greater compartmentalization,
community reforms suggested by the especially involving mo re stringent
9/11 Commission after the terrorist information-technology protection.
attacks on September 11, 2001. The 9/11
Commission criticized the U.S. intelligence

David V. Gioe is a former cia operations officer


T o calculate or quantify the amount of
damage that a document might cause
if improperly disclosed, the U.S. govern-
and a PhD candidate at the University of ment looks to the sliding scale of its classi-
Cambridge. fication system; logically, the more sensitive

Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy January/February 2014 51


a document, the higher the classification. It remains hotly debated whether
According to Executive Order 12356, rev- Mannings revelations actually led to the
elation of a Confidential document causes deaths of either U.S. soldiers or foreign
damage to U.S. national security, expo- sources. For instance, in 2010 Admiral
sure of a Secret document causes serious Mike Mullen, then chairman of the Joint
damage and a Top Secret documents Chiefs of Staff, suggested that the blood
contents would cause exceptionally grave of some young soldier or that of an Afghan
damage if improperly disclosed. This sys- family might be on Mannings hands.
tem makes sense for characterizing damage Indeed, it is easy to see why this could be
to U.S. national security at a fixed point in the case judging by the sheer volume, and
time, but it is woefully inadequate to as- the classification levels, of material that was
sess the future impact of such disclosures. released. Others have disputed this claim
It may not be possible to charge a leaker based on the recent courtroom testimony
under the law on the basis of what might by the Pentagons damage-assessment
have been obtained had it not been for their team in the Manning trial. Mullen may
negligent public disclosures, but despite the not have been referring exclusively to
lack of legal recourse, it is worth at least American military deaths that may have
discussing the intelligence ramifications past been caused because the locations, timing
the time and date stamp on the document or movements of soldiers were divulged,
itself. It is true that time horizons factor into but rather in terms of revenge attacks
damage assessments because many classi- whose seeds may have germinated in the
fied documents contain automatic declas- outrage over American military mistakes
sification dates that usually range from ten caught on film, such as the widely known
to thirty years in the future. However, most case of the helicopter pilot accidentally
documents dealing with humint sources engaging a media crew or other tragic
and sigint methods usually fall under sev- incidents involving civilians (described by
eral exemption codes and are not automati- the misnomer collateral damage).
cally declassified at any point in time. Nevertheless, the scope of this debate
so far has been about water
under the bridge. It would
be appropriate to consider
the water that will now not
pass under said bridge to fill
American intelligence aquifers.
Thus far the debate about the
damage wrought by Manning
and Snowden has only dealt
with what has been revealed
about U.S. intelligence and
d i p l o m a c y ; s u r p r i s i n g l y,
there has been little public
discourse regarding the
future implications for U.S.
intelligence of their wanton
actions. Perhaps the popular
choice of terms is to blame

52 The National Interest Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy


for this narrow discourse. The term leak for a long time in order to make up his
suggests a drip that, over time, might result mind about such a potentially life-changing
in a problem but in the short term is more decision. Indeed, any slipup on the part of
of a nuisance than an emergency. The the recruiting officer, such as indiscretion
opposite of a deluge, of course, is a drought. or sloppy agent tradecraft, could very well
If intelligence agencies must perform all- cost the foreign agent his life and poten-
source analysis in order to connect the tially even jeopardize the well-being of his
proverbial dots, what happens if a single family in his home country. This is seri-
important dot never materializes? ous business, and a potential foreign agent
Of course, a hypothetical argument will weigh carefully the risks and benefits
is difficult to prove and might not be of a clandestine relationship with the U.S.
considered as evidence in a court of law, government. The potential agent must be
but the prosecution team in the Manning satisfied that the Americans can assure his
case did not even attempt to make the safety, and, of course, these assurances must
argument about future intelligence be credible.
losses and collection efforts that will Recruitment of a foreign source may take
be stillborn because of the leaks. During many forms. For instance, a potential source
the sentencing phase the prosecution did may be sought out due to his placement
solicit testimony about the leaks impact and access, approached by a cia case officer
on American diplomacy, but consideration or fbi special agent. He might walk into
of future effects stopped there. This is a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad and
surprising because future loss of earnings volunteer his services. Or he may seek out
(if intelligence gained is the profit derived an American representative at a diplomatic
from the investment of national-security function, although it will not be obvious for
resources) is often considered in legal cases. him to know who is an intelligence officer.
Granted, the Manning trial is a criminal Perhaps he will need some convincing that
case under the Uniform Code of Military the risk is worth the reward and, in any case,
Justice, not a civil suit, but there is a logical the risks will be minimized by clandestine
parallel between what income is to an interactions with well-trained professionals.
injured person and what intelligence is to a But how can the U.S. government
nation: the latter both require the former to continue to attract these sorts of people
thrive. whose information our policy makers and
defense planners urgently need? Human-

W hat would future losses to American


intelligence actually look like? Re-
cruiting human-intelligence sources is al-
intelligence sources have a nuanced risk
calculus and are motivated to provide secrets
for a range of reasons, including money,
ready a difficult task, made harder by Man- ideology, ego, revenge or some combination
nings treachery in particular. A representa- of these. But in all cases potential sources
tive of a hostile government or a member of must be reassured that hushed words stated
a terrorist network may wish to cooperate in confidence wont endanger them in the
with American intelligence for any number next tranche of leaked information. The
of reasons, provided his safety can be rea- consequences for diplomats, military officers
sonably assured. If he is considering coop- or security personnel of hostile regimes
eration, he will look for an American official or terrorist networks would be swift and
who is a discreet professional to provide his severe. Given this guaranteed punishment,
information. He may study the Americans it is wholly understandable that a potential

Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy January/February 2014 53


Mass disclosure of classified information was
never part of the risk calculus of a potential
human-intelligence source. Surely, it is now.

foreign agent may decide against walking requires trust and discretion, how much
into a U.S. embassy, seeking out a U.S. more difficult is the task for intelligence
representative or accepting a follow-up officers?
meeting with an American. In fact, those The real question of the Manning case,
who would face the harshest retribution if beyond the damage of what information
exposed have the information most desired he has revealed, is the potential value to
by U.S. policy makers. American policy makers of the intelligence
American diplomats might also have that wont be collected. It is the discreet
additional trouble in the future engaging conversation with a potential cooperative
foreign interlocutors, and one can envision source that will not happen that is the
why. Diplomats may meet privately with intelligence price to be paid. To be sure,
each other and may say some typically Manning did not have access to cia
undiplomatic things in order to get past operational cable traffic (the internal
public posturing and move an issue c o m m u n i c a t i o n s o f t h e Na t i o n a l
forward. The American diplomat will Clandestine Service), but we can be
honestly relate the information provided reasonably confident that if he had it, he
by his interlocutor to Washington and will would have provided it to WikiLeaks, and
naturally include the name and position of the cost in human lives would have been
his interlocutor along with his interlocutors dramatically higher.
unvarnished remarks. In the era of The cia takes the protection of source
Manning, foreign government officials will identities extremely seriously, and even in
think twice about sharing frank thoughts a need to share culture, Manning did not
with their U.S. counterparts if they think have access to this sort of information. But
what they say will be online tomorrow. does a potential future human-intelligence
For instance, German Free Democratic source know exactly the types of cable traffic
Party (fdp) member Helmut Metzner was to which a low-level army analyst may or
identified in a WikiLeaks cable as providing may not have access? Or, rather, might he
candid information to the U.S. embassy in assess that people like Manning could know
Berlin about German government coalition his identity? What might he calculate the
negotiations in 2009. Metzner was fired chances to be that his name could be buried
from his position as chief of staff to the somewhere within hundreds of thousands
fdp chairman in light of his forward- of U.S. government cables? A dedicated
leaning approach to keeping U.S. officials counterintelligence service would surely
apprised of German political developments. invest the time and energy to comb through
Perhaps with the Metzner case in mind, tens of thousands of cables to findand
Patrick Kennedy, the under secretary of state connectdots that would lead to the
for management, characterized Mannings exposure of sources, as was vividly illustrated
disclosures as having a chilling effect on by the Iranian revolutionary students who
foreign officials. If the practice of diplomacy painstakingly reconstructed shredded cables

54 The National Interest Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy


from the U.S. embassy in Tehran in 1979. the Talibans threat seriously and steering
Former defense secretary Robert Gates clear of Americans. Carr is probably correct
concluded: given his former position, but the Talibans
credible threat is also worth considering,
I spent most of my life in the intelligence busi- especially if more massive disclosures come
ness, where the sacrosanct principle is protect- in the near term.
ing your sources. It seems to me that, as a Under cross-examination by Mannings
result of this massive breach of security, we have defense team, Carr acknowledged that
considerable repair work to do in terms of reas- Arabic (and presumably Pashto, Dari, etc.)
suring people and rebuilding trust, because they names were not rendered in their original
clearlypeople are going to feel at risk. language in U.S. cables, but rather were
transliterated into English. Mannings

I t would be wrong to conclude that mas-


sive leaks might only affect strategic-level
humint. Operational- and even tactical-
defense team pressed Carr by asking if Iraq
or Afghanistan shared an alphabet with
the United States. Carr truthfully replied,
level humint are also potentially compro- No, and then conceded that Afghans are
mised. For instance, the Taliban claimed to less plugged in than Westerners. Even
have reviewed the WikiLeaks war logs look- if Mannings defense team was able to
ing for names of people who had cooperated demonstrate that Afghans arent as glued to
with the Americans in Afghanistan. The their smartphones as Westerners are, they
Taliban, thanking WikiLeaks for revealing exhibited a fundamental misunderstanding
spies, further claimed to have executed of the nature of Al Qaeda and the Taliban.
tribal elder Khalifa Abdullah of Kandahar, Mannings defense team made the
who was unmasked by the documents. Oth- willfully ignorant suggestion that their
ers have argued that Abdul-
lah was not actually named
in any leaked document.
However, belatedly scour-
ing WikiLeaks for Abdul-
lahs name misses the point:
regardless of whether the
Taliban positively identi-
fied Abdullah in a cable
and then targeted him for
execution, perception is the
reality that matters in the
world of intelligence. An
Afghan who heard the Tali-
bans lethal claim, true or
false, may decide to believe
retired general Robert Carr,
chief of the Manning Information Review clients disclosures did not have a great
Task Force, when he testified that the Tali- impact on the safety of deployed soldiers
bans claim to have executed an American because the areas in which U.S. troops
source was false, but the consequences of are deployed are not English-speaking
believing Carr cannot compete with taking countries. This canard is insidious because

Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy January/February 2014 55


one can be certain that the Taliban, Al cial cooperative partnerships (called liaison
Qaeda, and other extremist or insurgent agreements) with the U.S. government.
groups have plenty of members who speak This has moved beyond a mere
passable or even native English. In fact, in possibility to actually impinging on current
the era of online linguistic and translation intelligence pacts. Consider the recent
tools such as Google Translate, Americas German decision to terminate a cooperative
enemies do not need to speak English. Yet sigint treaty with the United States and
they often doand some are even native- the United Kingdom that dates from
born American citizens or former U.S. 1968. German foreign minister Guido
residents. For instance, the architect of the Westerwelle justified the move by stating,
Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor The cancellation of the administrative
in 1941, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, agreements, which we have pushed for in
attended Harvard University and later was recent weeks, is a necessary and proper
a naval attach at the Japanese embassy in consequence of the recent debate about
Washington, dc. He was not only a fluent protecting personal privacy. Henning
English speaker, but also a true student of Riecke of the German Council on Foreign
his American adversaries. The former leader Relations downplayed the significance of
of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, this event, noting that it may have been
Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S. citizen, held done for domestic political consumption
various advanced degrees from American in advance of pending elections. Riecke
universities. American Taliban John suggested that this abrogation of the treaty
Walker Lindh and Al Qaeda spokesman would not affect the day-to-day sharing
Adam Yahiye Gadahn (born Adam Pearlman agreements between the United States and
in Oregon) are two further American Germany. One hopes that Reickes analysis
citizens who switched allegiances and could is correct insofar as this treaty may have
review WikiLeaks documents just as easily been a loose end and low-hanging political
as any literate American with an Internet fruit for theater-driven politicians, but
connection. Anglo-American sigint officials may not
wish to be thrown under the German

I n addition to American humint, Ameri-


can sigint has also paid a steep price
in potential but nonactualized intelli-
electoral bus as their politicians wish to
be perceived as doing something at the
expense of their allies. The Germans would
gence recently with the Edward Snowden stand to lose more than the Americans,
affair. Appearing before Congress in June but the loss of German sigint might be
2013, fbi director Robert Mueller testified particularly poignant to American audiences
that Snowdens leaks had caused signifi- who may recall that Al Qaedas Hamburg
cant harm to our nation and to our safe- cell, led by hijacker Mohammed Atta,
ty. Mueller could have reasonably gone played a major role in the planning and
even further to assert that Snowdens actions execution of the 9/11 attacks. Obviously,
made intelligence liaison (clandestine di- any German-American intelligence-sharing
plomacy between intelligence services) more agreement did not expose the Hamburg cell
difficult as well. In the same way that po- or stop the 9/11 attacks, but it is hard to
tential human sources may now be wary see how even less cooperation could yield
of working with American intelligence of- mutually beneficial results.
ficers, potential sigint partners may wish to The German government, in this case,
distance themselves from mutually benefi- could have taken a page from the Obama

56 The National Interest Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy


administrations playbook in trying
to actually explain to its concerned
electorate why sigint cooperation
with allies benefits the security of
both parties. Instead, it opted to take
a politically expedient approach that
only reinforced the conception that
sigint cooperation is overly invasive.
Sounding retreat in the face of
misunderstood allegations about the
Prism program likely will reinforce
the pernicious suggestion that such
programs are endeavors of which to
be ashamed. In stark contrast to his
German counterpart, British foreign
secretary William Hague stood his
ground, confidently stating, The
intelligence sharing relationship
between the UK and the US is unique in tions, rely on trusted cooperative services to
the world, its the strongest in the world act as force multipliers for their own efforts.
and it contributes massively to the national It would be beyond the scope of this essay
security of both countries. to include a raft of examples demonstrating
The question must now be asked: the value of intelligence-liaison relation-
What is the intelligence legacy of ships, but, in brief, since World War II the
Snowdens treachery? How many foreign special intelligence relationship between
governments will argue the case to their the United States and the United Kingdom,
electorate like Hague? How many will covering both humint and sigint, has been
cancel extant agreements like Westerwelle? a bedrock of foreign-policy and defense
And how many intelligence services will planning for both sides. As Hague coun-
avoid future collaborative contact with seled, the two countries intelligence ties
the National Security Agency for fear of represented a relationship we must never
being painted with rhetorical brushes that endanger because it has saved many lives
evoke overwrought fears of an East German over recent decades in countering terrorism
surveillance state while chiming the death and in contributing to the security of all our
knell of personal privacy? citizens.
To consider just one case that Hague may

I ntelligence-liaison relationships are vital


to the success of any intelligence or se-
curity service. As H. Bradford Westerfield
have been recalling, the joint handling of
Colonel Oleg Penkovsky, a Soviet military-
intelligence officer, by both the cia and
asserted, liaison holds a central place [in the United Kingdoms Secret Intelligence
the] real world of intelligence and is a core Service (sis) may have saved the world
feature of American intelligence. No single during the tense days of the Cuban missile
service can track every malign actor, every crisis in 1962, according to credible
rogue state, every weapons proliferator or authors who have read the declassified files.
terrorist. Intelligence services, all of which Specifically, Penkovsky first volunteered to
reside in the real world of resource limita- American intelligence in Moscow in 1961,

Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy January/February 2014 57


The issue isnt that American intelligence will become defanged or
wither on the vine, but rather that it will not be as good as it could
be, especially in an unstable global climate when it is most needed.

but the Americans were unable to act on its clandestine sources that it can continue
his request for a cooperative relationship. to work in the shadows, not under a
The British sis, hand in glove with the spotlight.
cia, was able to secure personal meetings It could reasonably be asked if the impact
with Penkovsky both in Moscow as well of the Manning and Snowden disclosures
as in London and Paris. Although unable might be worse than the results of a
to match the siss agent-handling resources traditional penetration agent (commonly
in Moscow, the cia provided two case referred to as a mole) working in the U.S.
officers, including the legendary George intelligence community. The combined
Kisevalter, as well as the primary reports and treachery of former fbi agent Robert
requirements officer to effectively handle Hanssen and erstwhile cia operations officer
Penkovsky and his enormous amount of Aldrich Ames led to dozens of deaths of
intelligence. American human sources and nearly
Although Penkovsky was only active crippled U.S. intelligence operations aimed
for a short period of time, he played a against the Soviet Union (and subsequently
critical role. It is fair to say that the Cuban Russia after the end of the Cold War).
missile crisis may not have been so deftly There are several critical elements to this
handled by the Kennedy administration important question, including the nature of
had it not been for Penkovskys intelligence the intelligence business and the evolution
on Soviet missile systems and artillery- of information technology in the practice
deployment philosophy. Even when the of intelligence. On one hand, despite
prospects of exfiltration dimmed, Penkovsky the Talibans claims, no deaths have been
stayed the course until his arrest in 1962 conclusively linked to the Snowden or
and subsequent execution in 1963. One Manning revelations, in stark contrast to
must wonder if the next Oleg Penkovsky Ames and Hanssen. On the other hand,
to volunteer to the cia will be even more hostile penetrations of U.S. intelligence do
courageous than the last one. He would not seem to have overly retarded offensive
have to be in an era where it appears recruitment operations, even in the Soviet
questionable whether America can keep bloc. Moreover, an intelligence officer who
its secrets from the front pages of major switches allegiances is well aware that the
media outlets and the Internet. In fact, the adversary can penetrate his new intelligence
next Penkovsky may well wish to volunteer service just as well as his original service.
his services but may be reticent lest his This has been an accepted part of spying
identity (or information traceable back to since time immemorial. Its why even the
him) be included in a possible deluge of most productive agents are eventually pulled
American classified information. To retain out of a dangerous assignment before the
its preeminence as well as its reputation risks outweigh the gains. Yet, Snowden
for excellence, American intelligence must and Manning represent a new dimension
satisfy both its official liaison partners and in espionage because mass disclosure of

58 The National Interest Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy


classified information was never part of source, or even the next Penkovsky (al-
the risk calculus of a potential human- though he could be Iranian, North Korean
intelligence source. Surely, it is now. or Chinese, just to name a few) might prefer
to play it safe rather than cooperate with

A merican intelligence will survive, and


possibly thrive, despite the increased
challenges that massive unauthorized dis-
American intelligence, at least until America
gets its intelligence information locked back
down to pre-Manning and -Snowden levels.
closures bring. As in the past, American The future damage of the Manning and
intelligence officers will rise to modern chal- Snowden disclosures will wane over time, but
lenges and continue to provide policy mak- this does not make them any less dangerous,
ers and analysts with timely and relevant especially now. In the short term, America
intelligence, but the mountain has certainly has lost valuable diplomatic leverage as
become steeper and more treacherous. The well as counterterrorist capabilities. In
issue isnt that American intelligence will the medium term, America will have lost
become defanged or wither on the vine, but humint from potential future sources as
rather that it will not be as good as it could well as sigint from liaison partners that
be, especially in an unstable global climate could provide an intelligence advantage
when it is most needed. As the Penkovsky over rival states, avert strategic surprise,
case so aptly demonstrates, a single human and identify terrorists or proliferators of
source with the right placement and access, weapons of mass destruction. Only in the
at the right juncture in time, can have a long term, once America has proven to both
profound impact on policy and potentially its allies and its adversaries that it can keep
even change the course of history. U.S. its secrets, will the country be able to benefit
intelligence will not cease to recruit human from humint and sigint sources that will
sources or enter into important bilateral or not be obtained in the short and medium
multilateral sigint relationships, but one term thanks to Manning and Snowden.
must recognize the chance that a skittish si- This damage could take a generation to
gint liaison partner, a single prized humint repair.

Tinker, Tailor, Leaker, Spy January/February 2014 59


Chinas Near-Seas Challenges
By Andrew S. Erickson

T
he U.S. National Intelligence commonssea and air mediums that all
Council forecasts that China will nations rely on for trade and prosperity,
become the worlds largest economy but that none own. It would undermine
(measured by purchasing-power parity) in important international norms and
2022. Janes predicts that by 2015 Peoples encourage the application of force to more of
Liberation Army (pla) funding will double the worlds many persistent disputes. Finally,
to $238 billion, surpassing that of natos it would threaten to destabilize a region
eight largest militaries after the United haunted by history that has prospered during
States combined. The International Insti- nearly seven decades of U.S. forces helping
tute for Strategic Studies says that Chinas to preserve peace. No other nation has the
defense spending might surpass Americas capability and lack of territorial claims
as early as 2025. Even if these projections necessary to play this still-vital role.
prove exaggerated, economic, technical and A number of strategists appear to believe
industrial activity of an amazing scope and that America faces the threat of conflict
intensity is already affording China potent with China in the future, but that it can
military capabilities. This is especially the be avoided through accommodation or
case when such capabilities are applied prepared for over a protracted period. In
most likely through peacetime deterrence, fact, a different scenario is more likely: even
or a limited skirmish with a neighbor such as the two Pacific powers are sufficiently
as Vietnamto the near seas (the Yellow, interdependent to avoid direct hostilities
East China and South China Seas), cur- and share significant interests on which
rently a major Chinese strategic focus. they may cooperate increasinglyChina
Allowing Beijing to use force, or even the is already beginning to pose its greatest
threat of force, to alter the regional status challenge to U.S. influence and interests in
quo would have a number of pernicious the Asia-Pacific.
effects. It would undermine the functioning
of the most vibrant portion of the global

Andrew S. Erickson is an associate professor


A merican psychologist Abraham
Maslows hierarchy of needs depicts
a fundamental reality that is directly ap-
at the Naval War College and an associate in plicable to Chinas strategic priorities and
research at Harvard Universitys Fairbank Center efforts: basic needs must be fulfilled before
for Chinese Studies. His Jamestown Foundation higher ambitions can be pursued. From the
monograph, Chinese Anti-Ship Ballistic Missile origins of the Chinese Communist Party
(asbm) Development: Drivers, Trajectories and (ccp) and its pla, the party has prioritized
Strategic Implications, offers further details about its own leadership authority and continu-
the subjects discussed in this essay. itydeemed essential for Chinas physi-

60 The National Interest Chinas Near-Seas Challenges


cal integrity, stability and modernization Beijing suffered disputes with nearly all
above all else. Before 1949, the ccp devoted of its fourteen continental neighbors. It
itself to achieving political control over a has since reached settlements with all but
Chinese state; no particular geographic ele- two: India and Bhutan. Such settlements
ment could trump that prerequisite. included major concessions on Beijings
To ensure its continued authority, the part, particularly with Russia. Here
ccp relies on an extensive, elite party- China acted because of imperial treaty
state structure. The ccp boasts eighty obligations, and because its leaders
million members, roughly equivalent to judged that an environment conducive to
Germanys population. Consider the task national development necessitated stable
the Organization Department faces simply relations with its vast land neighbor.
in maintaining its dossiers and presiding Indeed, pacifying the vast majority of its
over its assignment. This governmental land borders offers China the prospect of
structure extends first over Chinas core becoming the first great continental state
homeland territory, which for centuries has since the Persian and Roman Empires to
been dominated by an overwhelming Han make a successful transition from land
majority. Chinese bureaucratic governance of power to sea powerthough the most
this area in some form or another is perhaps realistic outcome is for China to become a
unmatched by any other civilization in its continental-maritime hybrid.
duration and cultural assimilative capacity; Rather than its land borders, it is
any modern Chinese government must Chinas immediate maritime periphery
preserve stability here to maintain both that is most contested today. The issue of
national functions and its own ethnocultural cross-Strait relations aside, China has not
and political legitimacy. At the countrys reached comprehensive agreements with
outer limits are borderlands with significant any of its eight maritime neighbors. The
racial, linguistic and religious minorities. near seas contain the vast majority of
Vast in area, rich in resources and Chinas outstanding claims, all of its island
traditionally associated with imperial China and maritime disputes, and significant
under various arrangements sometimes more resources that Chinese strategists believe
nebulous and contested than is the case can replace depleting continental reserves.
today, these areas are integral parts of the These are of paramount importance
Chinese state but their history can generate to a China that feels acutely wronged by
instability. Ensuring Beijings control therein history, has largely addressed its more
has entailed the expenditure of significant basic security needs and craves further
resources since 1949, initially in the form development. Beijing is therefore focusing
of sticksmilitary, paramilitary and its latest military capabilities on the near
domestic-security activitiesand more seas and their immediate approaches. The
recently supplemented with major carrots pla faces enduring weaknesses in real-
of economic development and preferential time coordination and data fusion, but
policies. While exact figures remain elusive, fiber optics, high-powered line-of-sight
and metrics are fiercely contested by foreign communications, missiles and sea mines
analysts, it is widely reported that Chinas offer workarounds for operations in the
domestic-security budget today exceeds its near seas.
military budget. Beyond the near seas, it remains much
During the Cold War, Chinas land harder for China to fight major militaries.
borders were hotly contested, and The further from China one looks, the

Chinas Near-Seas Challenges January/February 2014 61


lied and friendly military forces
there. By developing abilities
to hold foreign military plat-
forms at risk, Beijing hopes to
deter them from intervening in
areas of sensitivity to China in
the first place, and to persuade
Taipei, Tokyo, Manila, Hanoi
and other regional actors that
Washingtons assistance will be
neither reliable nor forthcom-
ing. The pla thus systematically
targets limitations in foreign
military platforms stemming
fewer forces it can deploy and support, from laws of physics: for example, the fact
the less capable they are, andin a worst- that missile attack tends to be easier and
case scenariothe more susceptible they cheaper than missile defense. China is on
are to disruption and destruction. Beijing the verge of achieving major breakthroughs
lacks the robust network of overseas allies, in multiaxis cruise-missile strikes, antiship
bases, logistics and defenses that America ballistic missiles (asbm), antisatellite weap-
has developed over decades to mitigate ons and navigation satellites. Such achieve-
such problems. Reducing this disparity ments, coupled with determination to ad-
even incrementally would require spending, dress near-seas disputes, promise to enhance
time and policy changes on a scale that Chinas keep out capabilities and under-
Beijing may well prove unwilling or unable mine regional stability.
to muster. Chinas df-21d asbm has reached initial
To u n d e r s t a n d C h i n as m i l i t a r y operational capability and has already been
development clearly, then, it is necessary deployed in small numbers. While it is only
to view it through the lens of distance. one of manifold advanced weapons systems
Chinas ability to deploy military force that China has developed and deployed,
and project power resembles gradually the asbm is illustrative of Beijings ability
dissipating waves. Close to home, they are to utilize its defense industrial base to
cresting dramatically, threatening to overtop develop a novel major system to respond
nearby seawalls. Yet virtually the only waves to an emergent strategic needa capability
China is making far away are the wakes of that only a handful of nations possess.
its ships protecting merchant vessels from Chinas asbm development is an example of
pirates in the Gulf of Aden and engaging in architectural innovation (linking existing
diplomacy beyond. design concepts in new ways), which is
potentially disruptive and unpredictable.

C hina is achieving rapid but uneven


military development. Its capabilities
are divided among pla services limited in
The asbm stands out from this already-
potent antiaccess/area-denial effort because
it draws on over half a century of Chinese
real-time coordination ability. To further experience with ballistic missiles. It may
its near-seas interests, China is attempting be fired from mobile, highly concealable
to undermine the efficacy of, and decrease platforms, and it has the range to strike
the likelihood of involvement by, U.S., al- targets hundreds of kilometers from Chinas

62 The National Interest Chinas Near-Seas Challenges


shores. It also exemplifies the vulnerabilities These events demand American reflection
and risks inherent in Beijings current on the unintended consequences that the
approach. use of force can have. As a prominent
For all their disruptive aspects, however, Chinese policy expert once told this author,
Chinas asbms and associated systems did The problem with you Americans is that
not emerge from a vacuum. For over three you go off and hit someone but then forget
decades, Chinese leaders and strategists that you did it. Later, you wonder why they
have been thinking of using land-based remain reluctant to become close friends
missiles to hit threatening targets at sea. with you. In this sense, Chinas asbm
Beginning in the late 1970s, Chinese development constitutes in part a reaction
experts scrutinized Americas Pershing to actual U.S. force deployments in the
II theater ballistic missile, and appear to 1990s. A negative reaction, to be sure, but
have incorporated, or at least emulated, hardly surprising.
some of its key technologies. Chinas space
program has furthered relevant capabilities.
And Chinas Second Artillery Force,
which assumed conventional missions for
B road-based Chinese asbm develop-
ment since then suggests that China
will continue to make great progress on
the first time in 1993, has capitalized on the infrastructure supporting these mis-
leadership support for missile development siles. China enjoys a formidable science and
and controls land-based ballistic missiles, technology base, and can be expected to
including the asbm. devote considerable resources and expertise
Chinas asbm development dates at least to keep out weapons development. An
to the 19951996 Taiwan Strait crisis, emerging network of air- and space-based
which underscored Chinese feelings of sensors promises to radically improve pla
helplessness against U.S. naval power. But targeting. The df-21ds c4isr infrastructure
it was perhaps the physical destruction and is already sufficient to support basic carrier-
damage to sovereignty caused by the United targeting capabilities.
States accidental bombing of Beijings Beijing is likely seeking to influence
embassy in Belgrade in May 1999 that strategic communications regarding asbms,
most strongly catalyzed Chinas efforts to with its exact motives unclear. However, it
develop the asbm and other keep out seems most likely that Chinas significant
weapons systems, along with the supporting and growing asbm capability could be
command, control, communications, part of a larger pattern in which Beijing is
computers, intelligence, surveillance and becoming increasingly translucent (if still
reconnaissance (c4isr) infrastructure. The not fully transparent) regarding selected
bombing reinforced the visionary thinking capabilities in order to enhance deterrence.
of Chinas paramount leader of the time, China must have conducted a rigorous
Jiang Zemin, concerning the future of program of tests sufficient to demonstrate
warfare and prompted other leaders that the df-21d is mature enough for initial
support. Accordingly, that same month production, deployment and employment.
China began funding megaprojects for the This has likely entailed a variety of flight
development of assassins mace weapons, tests, albeit not yet fully integrated over
systems that promised disproportionate waterperhaps because of a desire to avoid
effectiveness vis--vis a top military power embarrassing failures. Moreover, manifold
such as the United States despite Chinas challenges may limit the asbms tactical and
overall technological inferiority. strategic utility. Data fusion, bureaucratic

Chinas Near-Seas Challenges January/February 2014 63


coordination and jointness remain key of maritime law enforcement (mle)
limitations. forces, now coalescing as a unified coast
For the first time since the 1920s, the guard, is giving it a broad spectrum of
United States thus faces a direct threat to regional coverage, signaling and escalation
the platform that has represented the core options. As the 2012 Scarborough Shoal
of its power projection: the aircraft carrier standoff demonstrated, the Philippines
group. Already, U.S. decision makers must was handicapped in its interaction with
face the possibility that China might decide China by not having an equivalent to
to use asbms in the unfortunate event of Chinas mle vessels that it could deploy.
conflict, and that they might be able to Indeed, the United States itself faces
strike and disable one or more aircraft a challenge in responding to Chinas
carriers. assertiveness with civilian white hulls, as
When it comes to targeting a carrier, the majority of its forces in the region are
there will not be a sharp red line between naval gray hulls. This leaves Washington
initial operational capability and full with difficult alternatives: Should it risk
operational capability. This is part of escalating an already-sensitive situation, or
a larger analytical challenge in which appear acquiescent to bullying behavior?
Chinese hardware continues to improve Facilitating development of Chinas
dramatically, but the caliber of the neighbors mle forces could help limit
software supporting and connecting it Chinese coercion while reducing the risk of
remains uncertain and untested in war. escalation.
Chinas present focus on developing While substantial Sino-American
potent capabilities to useor, preferably, cooperation is already possibleand in
to threaten the use ofmilitary force to most cases highly desirableregarding
resolve disputes in its favor in the near many global issues, particularly those
seas jeopardizes stability and important involving commerce and nontraditional
international norms in a critical area of security threats, there is at present
the global commons. Beijing seeks not a regrettably little hope of reaching an
global Soviet-style military presence, but effective, durable understanding on
rather to carve out the near seas and the traditional security issues in Chinas
airspace above them as a zone within which immediate backyard.
existing global legal, security and resource-
management norms are subordinated to
Chinese interests. That would be a loss for
the world: these are the same standards
G rowing challenges stand in the way
of China fulfilling its objectives in
the near seas and shifting emphasis to safe-
that ensure the global system operates guarding growing overseas interests and re-
openly and effectively, for the security and source imports through far seas opera-
prosperity of all. Beijing wants to use this tions. First, China insists on preconditions
zone to address Chinas historical grievances involving recognition of its sovereignty over
and rise again as a great power that disputed claims that its neighbors are un-
commands its neighbors deference. likely to accept. It is difficult to see how
While Beijing emphasizes cooperation, it Beijing can hope to realize its objectives
continues to insist on acknowledgment of anytime soon over its neighbors growing
its sovereignty as a precondition for joint opposition and Washingtons continued
resource development in disputed areas. commitment to preserving regional peace.
Chinas rapid, broad-based development Second, overseas objectives lack strategic

64 The National Interest Chinas Near-Seas Challenges


Allowing Beijing to use force, or even the threat of force, to alter the
regional status quo would have a number of pernicious effects.

coherence, limiting support for military however, internal inefficiencies and external
approaches. This is especially true as the overextension slow growth. It is fashionable
U.S. provides substantial global-commons to trace such patterns in American power,
security gratis. but observers are only just beginning to
Even larger factors are in play, however. appreciate how this type of analysis might
More basic Chinese security achievements apply to China. While Beijingto its
could come undone. While Chinas credithas studiously avoided Moscows
continental neighbors remain reluctant Cold War military overstretch, domestically
to disrupt its borders, even cross-Strait it faces rent-seeking behavior, aging, rising
integrationhowever unlikely to happen labor costs and growing welfare demands.
rapidlyportends complex historical- Moreover, unlike other nations, China is
political questions that could convulse already facing such headwinds long before
Chinese society. Then there is the it has achieved high per capita income,
continued question of stability in Chinas comprehensive welfare programs or an
hinterlands, particularly given increasing innovative, high-efficiency economy that
cross-border trade and international can absorb rapid cost increases generated
religious and ethnocultural currents. Yet by temporary or permanent resource
even in Chinas core homeland territory, scarcity. Demographics represent one of
a wide range of domestic challenges Chinas most intractable growth challenges:
could rapidly rise to the fore. China faces three decades of a largely enforced one-
profound environmental damage, resource child policy combined with one of historys
constraints, worsening health problems, largest, most dramatic urbanization efforts
corruption and income inequalityall make it virtually impossible for Chinas
issues that greatly concern even the most already-low birthrate to recover. That
nationalistic Han citizens. Chinese leaders leaves transition to a consumption-driven
themselves acknowledge these problems economy as one of the few conceivable
existence and importance. ways to sustain rapid growth. Achieving this
Yet the tools available to meet these new growth model will require significant
challenges may be increasingly limited. As economic reforms, however, and it remains
the work of American political scientist to be seen how politically entrenched vested
Robert Gilpin demonstrates, great powers interests can be made to yield.
typically follow an S-curved growth
trajectory. Initially, national consolidation
and infrastructure construction, combined
with competitive labor costs, unleash rapid
W ith these gathering challenges come
both risks and opportunities. One
risk is that Beijing will seek to compen-
economic development. The resulting sate for waning economic achievements
increases in economic, military and political by bolstering its one other major source
power facilitate domestic consensus and of popular legitimacy: nationalism. While
international influence. Eventually, Chinas leaders are unlikely to seek diver-

Chinas Near-Seas Challenges January/February 2014 65


sionary war, fanning historical grievances China craves requires embracing reciprocity
and pursuing diversionary tension vis--vis and a responsible stakeholder mentality.
its near-seas claims may be a real tempta- A popular movie says this better than any
tion. Efforts at deterrence themselves, how- demarche: with great power comes great
ever envisioned, can have significant strate- responsibility. There are direct implications
gic consequences; defensiveness is in the for Chinas fulfillment of its hierarchy
eye of the beholder. Disturbingly, authori- of priorities: absent military contests
tative pla sources reveal overconfidence in with other nations, defense of Chinese
Chinas ability to control escalation. Close citizens, assets and imports from substate
encounters between Chinese and foreign malefactors and natural disasters is readily
military platforms could readily produce an achievable and affordable. Other nations
accident, yielding at best a crisis harming all might even be willing to help toward this
parties involved. That is one of the reasons end as Beijing might desire.
why Washington must continue to play its Perhaps slowing growth will eventually
role of maintaining its presence and preserv- help moderate public expectations and
ing the peace. thereby allow Chinese leaders to pursue
From the perspective of the United States positive approaches even in the sensitive
and many of Chinas neighbors, Beijing has near seas. Until that happens, however, only
voiced concerns about regional tensions but U.S. security capabilities and partnerships
maintained that it is always other parties can preser ve the peace there that
that must make concessions to reduce them. underwrites the success of all Asia-Pacific
Chinas leaders are motivated at least in nations, including China itself.
part by genuine domestic pressure, which Beijing is here to stay as a great power,
is fueled in turn by Chinas meteoric rise and has the potential to recapture its
and corresponding expectations. Why historically preponderant regional status, as
agree to something today when you will be well as achieve unprecedented influence in
much stronger tomorrow? Chinese citizens a globalized world. Yet in the longer term,
and officials alike show signs of expecting likely within a decade, Chinas growth rate
treatment based not only on how strong is almost certain to slow considerably and
their nation is today, but also on how strong its domestic challenges proliferate while the
it is projected to be in the future. Yet no United Statesfor all its problemsenjoys
economy is permanently immune to the sustained advantages in national power and
business cycle, and rare is the straight- influence. Time is likely to be far kinder
line projection that is proven in practice. to Americas approach and overall position
No matter how capably managed, China in the Asia-Pacific than to Chinas. This
cannot defy the laws of economics. may finally establish a basis for the two
An abnormally weak China became Pacific powers to achieve a competitive
vulnerable to invasion and humiliation coexistence by allowing Beijing to
two centuries ago, and it is understandable adjust on its own rather than pressuring
that its people have spent decades ensuring Washington. The key for the United
that this unjust history can never be States is to weather the present window
repeated. From now on, however, achieving of vulnerability without making unilateral
the great-power status to which China concessions, losing credibility vis--vis its
understandably aspires will hinge largely allies or China, orworst of allallowing
on what it provides the world, not what it Beijing to change the status quo through
demands from it. Receiving the recognition the threat or use of force. n

66 The National Interest Chinas Near-Seas Challenges


Reviews & Essays
The Myth of latter stages of the Cold War. And both
terms originated as insults. After the
Americas Triumph socialist thinker and leader Michael
Harrington sought to stigmatize liberal and
social-democratic opponents of the New
By Michael Lind Left by calling them neoconservatives,
Irving Kristol and others adopted what
was intended as an insult as the name of
Josef Joffe, The Myth of Americas Decline: their movement, though some intellectuals
Politics, Economics, and a Half Century such as Daniel Bell and Sidney Hook
of False Prophecies (New York: Liveright, continued to insist that they remained on
2013), 352 pp., $26.95. the left, not the right. Declinism, another
insult masquerading as a description,

I
n The Myth of Americas Decline, Josef was popularized by the late Samuel P.
Joffe offers a book-length version of Huntington, a neoconservative Democrat,
what, by now, is a familiar line of argu- in a 1988 article for Foreign Affairs. In the
mentthe antideclinist polemic. Joffe, the piece, he criticized Paul Kennedy (among
American-educated publisher of the Ger- others) for underestimating Americas power
man weekly Die Zeit, has been closely as- and potential, most notably in Kennedys
sociated with neoconservative foreign-policy 1987 surprise best seller The Rise and Fall of
thinkers on both sides of the Atlantic for a the Great Powers. Unlike neoconservatism,
generation. An engaging and entertaining however, declinism has not been adopted as
writer, widely read in history and current a proud label by any individual or school of
events, Joffe scores many hits against his thought.
targets. But he goes too far in trying to Ev e r s i n c e Hu n t i n g t o ns e s s a y,
counter the errors of declinism with a de- neoconservatism and declinism have been
fense of American triumphalism. Instead of closely linkedif only because thinkers
dispelling myths about America, he creates and writers of the neoconservative school
his own. have specialized in denouncing those who
T h e t e r m s d e c l i n i s m a n d do not share their optimistic vision of
neoconservatism have been the sibling Americas potential power and influence as
rivals of American foreign policy. Both declinists. An all-purpose term of abuse,
terms originated and passed into popular declinism allows neoconservatives to
usage around the same time, during the denounce their rivals across the political
spectrum, from paleoconservative and
Michael Lind is cofounder of the New America libertarian isolationists who have always
Foundation and author of Land of Promise: An supported a minimalist foreign policy to
Economic History of the United States (Harper, anti-interventionist liberals who insist on
2012). nation building at home and realists who

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 67


propose a U.S. foreign policy of offshore mitments abroad that the country can no lon-
balancing. ger afford.
Much of The Myth of Americas Decline
is, in effect, a restatement, updating and He concluded:
expansion of Huntingtons 1988 article,
The U.S.Decline or Renewal? In it, Declinist literature sets forth images of a nation
Huntington declared: winding down economically, living beyond
its means, losing its competitive edge to more
In 1988 the United States reached the zenith dynamic peoples, sagging under the burdens of
of its fifth wave of declinism since the 1950s. empire, and suffering from a variety of intensi-
The roots of this phenomenon lie in the po- fying social, economic and political ills. It fol-
litical economy literature of the early 1980s lows that American leadership must recognize
that analyzed the fading American economic and acquiesce in these conditions and accept
hegemony and attempted to identify the con- the need to manage affairs so that the rela-
sequences of its disappearance. These themes tive erosion of the United States position takes
were picked up in more popular and policy- place slowly and smoothly, and is not acceler-
oriented writings, and the combination of the ated by policies which bring merely short-term
budget and trade deficits plus the October advantage but longer-term disadvantage.
1987 stock market crash produced the envi-
ronment for the spectacular success of Paul Joffe follows Huntington in describing
Kennedys scholarly historical analysis in early several waves of declinism. In Joffes version
1988 [The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers]. of the schema, Decline 1.0 in the late 1950s
Decline has been on everyones mind, and the and the early 1960s was associated with
arguments of the declinists have stimulated the shock of Sputnik and the fear that the
lively public debate. United States was losing the arms race and
the space race to a dynamic Soviet Union.
Huntington offered three core proposi- Decline 2.0 came with the malaise (to
tions of the alleged declinist school: use Jimmy Carters term) that afflicted the
American national psyche in the 1970s,
First, the United States is declining economi- when U.S. failure in Vietnam, out-of-
cally. . . . Second, economic power is the cen- control inflation and two oil-price shocks
tral element of a nations strength, and hence created a depressed and defensive national
a decline in economic power eventually affects mood.
the other dimensions of national power. Third, A third wave of declinism, according
the relative economic decline of the United to Joffe, took place in the 1980s, when
States is caused primarily by its spending too Americans feared economic eclipse by a
much for military purposes, which in turn is rapidly growing Japan and perhaps Western
the result, in Kennedys words, of imperial Europe. In the fourth and fifth waves,
overstretch, of attempting to maintain com- American decline has been attributed

68 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


by some to a rising China or a
broken economy, symbolized by
the U.S.-centered financial crisis
that triggered the Great Recession.
Joffe notes that each time
that the perception of American
decline has become part of the
conventional wisdom, the foreign
challenger has failed and the
United States has enjoyed, at
least temporarily, an economic
and military comeback. Thus,
the Soviet Union that seemed
unstoppable at the time of
Sputnik stagnated in the 1970s and 1980s undertake reforms that are desirable for
and disintegrated in the 1990s. Japans other reasons.
remarkable industrial boom gave way to A good example of this tendency is
decades of stagnation following the crash provided by Joffe in the case of American
of the early 1990s. Chinas rapid economic education reform. Again and again,
takeoff, like Japans, cannot be sustained the proponents of reforms in schooling
over time. And thanks to shale gas and (justifiable on their own merits) have
other factors, the United States, where felt the need to justify them in terms of
the Great Recession originated, may find Americas geopolitical competition with
it easier to recover than China, Japan the Soviets or Americas geoeconomic
and Germany find it to rebalance their competition with the Japanese or the
economies away from excessive dependence ChineseSputnik moments. After the
on export markets. National Academies issued an alarmist
Joffe provides a thorough and often- report claiming that America graduated
amusing history of alarmist prophecies only seventy thousand engineers in a year,
culled from the public debates of the last compared to 350,000 in India and more
half century, from misguided alarm about than six hundred thousand in China,
the missile gap in the Kennedy years to subsequent reports slashed the Chinese
Ezra Vogels 1979 work Japan as Number and Indian numbers, which included many
One. And he makes a shrewd observation students who would be considered lower-
about the popularity of the jeremiad as level technicians in the United States.
a genre in America. Arguments that the When Shanghai led the United States
United States is about to lose its place in in the Program for International Student
the world, Joffe observes, often have Assessment (pisa) rankings, former Reagan
been deployed to persuade Americans to education official Chester E. Finn Jr.

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 69


managed a declinist twofer by declaring: Joffe an unreliable guide to the subjects of
Wow, Im kind of stunned, Im thinking economic growth, demography and the wel-
Sputnik. As Joffe rightly observes: fare state.
Consider his views on capitalism. Joffe
Comparing the richest, best-educated, and contrasts state-directed, modernitarian
privileged city of China with a broad sample of capitalism like that of Japan, the little
U.S. and European schools is like matching a tigers and now China with the liberal
choice apple against the entire harvest. Pitting capitalism exemplified most by Britain
Shanghai against Cambridge, Palo Alto, and and the United States. To maintain his
Bethesda with their tiger mothers and Volvo dichotomy between modernitarianism
dads would have yielded a different tally. and liberalism, Joffe must rewrite British
and American history, to minimize
As Joffe points out, when Americas dispro- the significant modernitarian or state-
portionately poor and less educated immi- capitalist and mercantilist periods. Joffe says
grant population is factored out, the United that free trade was an early American idea
States rises from the middle of pisa rankings that defied the mercantilist spirit of the
to near the top. In this case, declinism is times. He adds:
bipartisan; misleading claims that Americas
relatively successful educational system is As the nineteenth century progressed, the Unit-
a failure allows the Left to justify higher ed States, like all developing nations, became a
spending on public schools even as it allows high-tariff country. The average peaked at 45
the Right to argue for charter schools or percent in 1870; today it is 1.3 percent. Still,
complete privatization of K-12 education. Jeffersonian idealism, though conveniently
framed by self-interest, made for a commercial

I f Joffe had limited The Myth of Ameri-


cas Decline to observations like these, he
would have produced a slight but persuasive
policy quite different from Frances in the eigh-
teenth or Chinas in the twenty-first century.

study of the perils of linear extrapolation Not so fast. The commercial policy of France
in geopolitics and the abuse by American influenced the early United States by several
reformers of the jeremiad as a genre. Unfor- channels. Alexander Hamilton, whose Re-
tunately, he defends a version of American port on Manufactures laid out the case for
triumphalism that is as unbalanced as the American import-substitution protection-
very declinism he scorns. It is not enough ism, learned much of his economics from
for Joffe to declare that the United States Malachy Postlethwayts mid-eighteenth-cen-
is not doomed to relative decadence and tury English translation of the Dictionnaire
decline; he must insist that Europe and Asia universel de commerce. It was written by the
are themselves doomed to decadence and sons of the French merchant Jacques Sa-
decline relative to the United States. Among vary, who codified French commercial law
other things, this inverted declinism makes for Jean-Baptiste Colbert, the great archi-

70 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


Joffe defends a version of American triumphalism
that is as unbalanced as the very declinism he scorns.

tect of French economic reform. Hamil- were to achieve uncontested manufacturing


tons most important successor in the early dominance, it too could be expected to drop
nineteenth century, Kentucky senator Henry mercantilism and preach free trade to other
Clay, explained to Congress that his Ameri- nations, for the same selfish reasons that
can System of protectionism, infrastructure Britain and the United States did.
and manufacturing was inspired in part by In addition to downplaying the
Napoleons autarkic Continental System. contribution of generations of
As for Thomas Jefferson, he introduced a protectionism to U.S. industrial supremacy,
French military system for the mass produc- Joffe minimizes the role of Americas native
tion of guns to the United States, where the version of state capitalism in American
imported French technique helped lay the innovation. According to Joffe, Top-
basis for Americas later industrial miracle. down, modernitarian states are not good
By 1816, Jefferson had renounced his ear- at fabricating the intellectual explosives
lier support for free trade and become rec- that crack old molds and break new
onciled to protectionism: He . . . who is paths. He concedes that the U.S. federal
now against domestic manufacture, must be government contributed to technological
for reducing us either to dependence on that innovation through massive subsidies
foreign nation [Britain], or to be clothed in of higher education and research and
skins, and to live like wild beasts in dens and development beginning in World War II
caverns. He continued, I am not one of but he does not fully acknowledge the role
these; experience has taught me that manu- of the government and large corporations
factures are now as necessary to our indepen- in the founding of Silicon Valley, while
dence as to our comfort. exaggerating the role of venture capitalists
Joffe concedes that the United States and independent inventors.
pursued protectionist policies from the As Joffe says:
1790s to the 1940sthat is, for 70 percent
of its history under the Constitution. Present at the creation was an academic entre-
Behind their tariffs, the United States and preneurnay, a buccaneerby the name of
Germany flourished at the expense of free- Frederick Terman. The engineering professor,
trading Britain, which finally abandoned free who would later become provost, was obsessed
trade too late to rescue its ravaged industrial with building steeples of excellence at the
base in the 1920s. As Britain had done in Farm [owned by Stanford]. As a by-product,
the 1840s, the United States in the 1940s he launched Silicon Valley, which would grow
adopted free trade only when its national in symbiosis with Stanford, each nourishing
industries, developed behind tariff walls, the other. The unwitting founding act occurred
no longer needed protection and expected in 1939 when Terman prodded two of his stu-
to dominate foreign marketsnot because dents, David Packard and William Hewlett,
of some harmony between Americas liberal to start a little electronics company, now a
political principles and free trade. If China very big one, in a Palo Alto garage. . . . The

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 71


It is hardly a sign of decadence that many
Americans prefer nation building at home to
debacles like those in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya.

empire builder Terman then lured back Wil- technology. In the same way, the near-
liam Shockley. The inventor of the transistor monopoly status of the Western Union
set up Shockley Semiconductors, a prototypical Telegraph Company helped it bankroll
start-up. . . . The Shockley renegades went off some of the early experiments of Thomas
to found Fairchild Semiconductors with a $1.5 Edison. From the 1940s to the 1980s,
million investment from New Yorks Fairchild staid, corporate ibm led the evolution of the
Camera, the first of the venture capitalists or computer industry, making the careers of
angels who populate Sandhill Road on Stan- later entrepreneurs like Bill Gates and Steve
fords northern border today. Jobs possible.
Why are these details important? To the
Note what is left out of Joffes rather extent that the American-bred it revolution
conventional account of the tech revolution depended on procurement and research
as the product of audacious inventors by big government and big corporations,
in garages and visionary venture capital. and not only on geniuses in garages and
The U.S. military was a client of Termans venture capitalists, the contrast drawn by
Radio Research Laboratory at Harvard Joffe between the uncreative state capitalism
during World War II, and it remained the of Japan and China and the creative,
chief customer for most early computer individualistic liberal capitalism of the
technology for decades. In addition, United States is undermined. As Joseph
giant corporations, many of them defense Schumpeter observed in the middle of the
contractors like Lockheed, were early twentieth century, the site of invention has
tenants of Stanfords Industrial Park. Joffe moved from the labs of individual geniuses
neglects to tell his readers that Shockley, to corporate and government laboratories.
before founding Shockley Semiconductors, Research in subjects from dna to subatomic
worked from 1936 to 1955 at Bell Labs, particles requires enormous up-front
where he coinvented the transistor in 1947. investments in equipment and teams of
Elsewhere he mentions the telephone researchers.
company, only to disparage it: Recall So it remains today. China trounces
Ma Bell in twentieth-century America, US in Top500 supercomputer race was
a government-sponsored monopoly that the headline of a June 17, 2013, piece in
could hold back on new technology and Computerworld. The author of the piece,
keep long-distance rates sky-high. But Joab Jackson, claimed:
however laggard Bell might have been in
switching to wireless a few decades ago, its The supercomputing arms race is heating up
prolonged status as a government-sponsored again between the United States and China, as
monopoly, by letting it recycle profits China retakes the top spot in the 41st Top500
into Bell Labs research and development, listing of the worlds most powerful supercom-
allowed Bell to support the development of puters with Tianhe-2, an updated system that
the transistor, among much other modern was able to execute 33.86 petaflops, or 33.86

72 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


thousand trillion floating point operations per American demography. On this issue, Joffe
second. reflects the conventional wisdom of the
transatlantic elite that circulates among
According to Joffe, the Chinese can never Aspen, Davos and the Clinton Global Ini-
replicate American creativity. Jackson dis- tiative and opines in the prestige press.
agrees: According to this conventional wisdom,
Americas immigration policy gives the
Besides challenging the U.S. dominance of the United States a demographic advantage over
Top500, the Tianhe-2 system is also notable its rivals, by providing the American econo-
for its use of technologies developed in China. my with foreign-born talent and higher fer-
Most of the features of the system were devel- tility. But this conflates skilled and unskilled
oped in China, and they are only using Intel immigration. The foreign-born skilled im-
for the main compute part. The interconnect, migrants, largely Asian and European, con-
operating system, front-end processors and tribute next to nothing to American fertility
software are mainly Chinese, said Top500 edi- rates, while the unskilled immigrants who
tor Jack Dongarra in a statement. contribute to relatively high U.S. fertility
and relative youth, largely Latin American,
Oh, well. Let modernitarians relying on tend to lower Americas overall educational
state capitalism and national-champion cor- levels and, in some cases, depress wages for
porations build supercomputers; the lib- low-income workers.
eral United States can specialize in social- Indeed, as a proportion of its immigrant
media software like Facebook. population, the United States gets far fewer
Mid-twentieth-century Britain was educated immigrants than do other Western
extremely innovative, contributing to the countries. The majority of American
development of computer technology, immigrants come to the United States
radar, the jet engine and television. But the under the family reunification program,
lack of a modernized industrial base, large which disproportionately brings in less
and successful industrial corporations, and educated Mexicans and Central Americans
government procurement on a sufficient compared to their native-born peers. In
scale doomed Britain to fall behind the contrast, Canada, with its point system
United States, Germany, Japan and other that assigns points for higher education,
rivals. Todays deindustrialized Britain makes English proficiency and other factors, tends
a mockery of Joffes paean to the genius of to get more educated immigrants from
Anglo-American liberal capitalism, while many of the same countries in the Western
providing the United States with an example Hemisphere that send immigrants to the
of a fate it should try to avoid. United States.
Another claim of the demographic-

N or is Joffe any more persuasive when


it comes to the contentious issue of
exceptionalist wing of American
triumphalism is that a never-ending

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 73


percent in India. Surely a better description
of this scenario would be: Graying China
and Graying America, Youthful India. Will
China really be crippled by having 45
percent more of its population over the age
of sixty-five than the United States half a
century from now?
Demography is neither as favorable for
the United States nor as dire for China as
Eberstadt and Joffe suggest. In the case of
the United States, immigration (legal and
illegal) and birthrates plummeted during
the Great Recession, as they did during the
Great Depression of the 1930s. They might
resume, with a strong, prolonged economic
recovery. But if the United States, like other
advanced industrial economies, endures
stream of youthful immigrants with high decades of weak demand and slow growth,
birthrates will expand the U.S. labor then recent forecasts of an immigration-
force while reducing budgetary pressure driven population explosion in the United
on entitlements for the elderly for States in the twenty-first century may turn
generations to comeeven as European out to have been mistakes, caused by a
and Japanese populations shrink, followed one-generation boom in Latin American
by low-fertility, aging China. Joffe quotes immigration attracted by an unsustainable,
the demographer Nicholas Eberstadt: By debt-driven bubble economy.
2025, under current un and Census Bureau
projections, China would account for less
than a fifth of the worlds population but
almost a fourth of the worlds senior citizens
L ike many on the political right, Joffe
believes that modern, Western-style
welfare states crowd out investment capi-
[emphasis added by Joffe]. tal: Another reason for slowing growth is
The reality is hardly as apocalyptic the enormous welfare burden, with trans-
as Joffe makes it sound. A chart that he fer spending eating up about one-third of
reproducesGraying China, Youthful Western Europes gdp, leaving correspond-
A m e r i c a , Yo u n g I n d i a a c t u a l l y ingly less for investment, which is a down
undermines his argument. In 2050, payment on tomorrows growth. This is
according to the graph, about 21 percent confused in three ways.
of the U.S. population and about 25 First, as noted above, in the particular
percent of the Chinese population will be case of China, reducing overinvestment
over sixty-fivecompared to only about 13 and boosting consumptionincluding

74 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


consumption by the elderlywould be the lotus-eater comfort of a European-style
a good thing. Second, the world for the welfare state. He writes:
foreseeable future is likely to be awash in
private and sovereign-wealth-fund capital For the great democracies of Europe and Japan,
which cannot find adequate investment the load [of the welfare state] is not as weighty
opportunities, notwithstanding high levels as it is for the United States. The former are
of spending on the elderly in the United not in the business of world order; in fact, they
States, Europe and Japan. Third, and most have been steadily shifting from warfare to wel-
important, the main constraint on global fare. Twenty-first century America is straggling,
growth is not the competition of overly but moving in the same direction.
generous welfare states with productive
industry for money, but rather the toxic Apart from a small group of
interaction of glut-inducing overinvestment neoconservative Republicans, there is
in heavy industries by China and other no constituency in the United States for
mercantilist economies with inadequate expanding military spending while cutting
global consumer demand. Social Security and Medicare. It is hardly
Inadequate global consumer demand, a sign of decadence, however, that many
in turn, has a short-term causethe Americans prefer nation building at home
collapse in spending by households that to debacles like those in Iraq, Afghanistan
are deleveraging or reducing their and Libya. Nor is there necessarily a trade-
indebtedness, in the aftermath of housing off between military preparedness and a
and stock-market bubblesand a long- generous social safety net. The fact that
term cause: the refusal of economic Americans spend a larger percentage of their
elites, including both the kleptocratic economy than do Europeans on health care,
Communist Party princes of China and for comparable or worse results, suggests
Americas increasingly plutocratic investors that reforming Americas dysfunctional
and managers, to share the gains from medical-industrial complex could free
economic growth equitably with most of resources for more butter and more guns, if
their workers in their own nations. In such more guns really were needed.
an environment, slashing entitlements for
the elderly would not significantly increase
investment, while it would contract demand
further, by suppressing spending both by the
C onnecting all of Joffes critiques of de-
clinism is a largely implicit but partly
articulated theory of history that blends
elderly and the younger relatives who would both American and liberal triumphalism, a
have to support them more directly. theory of a kind familiar among contempo-
Echoing Robert Kagans thesis that rary neoconservative and neoliberal think-
Americans are from Mars and Europeans ers. Nowhere does he set forth his version
are from Venus, Joffe warns Americans of triumphalism systematically; he is writing
against surrendering their martial virtue to a polemic, not a treatise. Nevertheless, a

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 75


There is a contradiction between Joffes confidence in the long-term
triumph of liberal-democratic principles and his concern
that liberalism and democracy depend on American power.

more or less coherent account of world his- survival and diffusion of liberal capitalism
tory and Americas role in it can be pieced and democracy in the twentieth and
together from the incidental comments he twenty-first centuries has been a historical
makes while attacking declinism. accident, contingent on the geopolitical
Like Francis Fukuyama and the Whig triumph of the United States over illiberal
historians of yesteryear, Joffe evidently great powers.
believes that liberal capitalism and The fascist model of modernity found
democracy are destined to supersede supporters from Latin America to the
other ways of organizing modern Middle East and Asia and was discredited
industrial societies. Democracy is a more only by the military defeat of Nazi
or less inevitable spin-off of the economic Germany, Imperial Japan and fascist Italy
growth produced by industrial capitalism: in World War II. Suppose that the United
The historical correlation is perfect. States had stayed out of World War II and
Growth favors democratization, and as that the world beyond the Americas had
democracy expands, growth shrinks as been divided among totalitarian empires. Is
the empowered masses will demand more it really the case that economic growth in a
for themselves and grant less to the state. victorious Nazi Germany or Imperial Japan
According to Joffe: would have led to successful demands for
democratizing those authoritarian, state-
The benign historical experience of the West capitalist regimes? Would the murderous
from wealth to liberty, though with murder- totalitarian lapses in Germany and Japan
ous totalitarian lapseshas jelled into a kind have been mere temporary blips in the
of economic determinism: with development benign historical experience of the West
comes democracy. . . . This deterministic blend on the road to liberal, capitalist democracy,
of Karl Marx and John Locke does hold for the absent the pulverization and occupation of
West, as well as for East Asias first risers, where Germany and Japan by the United States
it happened much faster. and its allies?
Similarly, the discrediting of Marxism-
Thus, todays authoritarian China will be Leninism and the wave of democratization
pressured to choose democracy by the very and marketization that followed the fall
economic success that it has enjoyed recent- of the Berlin Wall can be viewed more
ly under authoritarian rule. as a case of opportunistic emulation
The view that world history is moving of the triumphant superpower than as a
in one direction, toward free markets and vindication of a deterministic blend of
multiparty democracy, has become the Karl Marx and John Locke. The rapidity
conventional wisdom among Atlantic elites with which the nostrums of the New Left
since the end of the Cold War. A more of the era of Khrushchev and Mao gave
plausible minority view is that set forth by way within the global intelligentsia to
the Israeli scholar Azar Gat and others: the paeans to markets and democracy in the

76 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


1990s suggests tides of fashion, not deep, Pushing against the fences, revisionists like
underlying currents of history. From this China and Russia threaten to break into the
perspective, the collapse of the Soviet threat global commons. . . . Others like revolution-
in the 1980s removed the rationale by which ary Iran or Terror International, which respect
anti-Communist military regimes around neither fences nor rules, must be defanged, a
the globe had justified their rule, both to task that demands collective action and hence
their own populations and to their U.S. ally. a leader who harnesses and maintains the coali-
If the Soviet bloc had remained intact and if tion.
the Cold War had persisted to the present, is
there any reason to believe that the United It is particularly ironic that someone
States would have pressured its authoritarian long associated with neoconservatism like
allies to democratize? The absence of Soviet- Joffe should endorse a complacent view
American competition is one reason that of history that makes Lockean liberal
the United States today can afford to be democracy a quasi-Marxist epiphenomenon
relatively relaxed about the overthrow of of capitalism, including initially successful
friendly autocracies like Hosni Mubaraks in authoritarian state capitalism. After all, the
Egypt as part of the Arab Spring. neoconservative school has been defined
There would seem to be a contradiction by its opposition to appeasement and its
between Joffes expression of confidence in emphasis on the willpower of nations and
the long-term triumph of liberal-democratic alliances rather than on material resources
principles and his concern, expressed and constraints. If economic growth would
elsewhere in the book, that liberalism have inevitably produced liberalism and
and democracy in the world depend on democracy anyway, and if totalitarian
American military and economic power. lapses were temporary deviations from
A rules-based world requires a caretaker. . benign historical experience, then perhaps
. . How would the world fare if the global Americans could have saved much blood
commons were run by China or Russia, and treasure by forgoing participation
illiberal giants both? Or even by democratic in the world wars and the Cold War and
India, Japan, or Europe, which cannot take waiting patiently for prosperous, confident
care of their own back yards? Joffes list consumers to take to the streets demanding
of dangerous powers that only the United multiparty democracy and civil rights
States can stand up to is the familiar from the mellowing heirs of Hitler, Tojo,
neoconservative most-wanted list: Mussolini, Stalin and Mao.

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 77


J offe is largely right in his critique of
what might be called premature declin-
ists. However, from the fact that earlier
States in their own regions by means of
what the U.S. military calls antiaccess
forces, converting the United States from
prophecies of American decline were fol- a truly global superpower to a less exalted
lowed by American resurgences, it does not regional or multiregional power.
follow that Joffes Decline 5.0 will neces- Even then, the United States would
sarily be succeeded by a new, Reaganesque remain part of the great-power club. All
Morning in America. Chicken Little was other things being equal, a First World
wrong to claim that the sky was falling. But country with a large population will be
in Aesops fable about the boy who cried more powerful and influential than less
wolf, it should be recalled, a genuine wolf developed large-population nations and
eventually showed up. What if this time less populous developed nations. Even if
things really are different? its long-term population growth is lower
All of Americas previous would-be than expected, because of less immigration
peer competitorsNazi Germany, or lower fertility or both, the United States,
Imperial Japan and the Soviet Union along with China and India, will be one
had economies smaller than that of the of the most populous nation-states in the
United States and succumbed, directly world.
or indirectly, to American strategies But it is not clear that immigration-
of economic attrition. Depending on driven population growth creates more
whether one prefers purchasing-power opportunities than it solves. Nor is it clear
parity or other comparisons, Chinese that the United Statesthe most unequal
gdp will surpass U.S. gdp in the near- or society in the Western world, with the
medium-term future. Even if, as seems lowest rates of intergenerational mobility
likely, Chinese economic growth slows, is capable, in the twenty-first century, of
a world in which the United States has providing rapid assimilation and mobility
the second-biggest economy after China for low-skilled immigrants, now that
(if disunited Europe is not treated as a the frontier is closed and good wages for
single power) presents challenges which are unskilled and semiskilled jobs are a thing of
fundamentally different from those of the the past.
twentieth century. Joffes affection for America is plain,
And while it is true that the United but it has misled him into becoming its
States has been the only great power with cheerleader at a moment when the flaws
global reach since the end of the Cold War, in the American model are increasingly
that global reach may be a wasting asset. To visible. His mistake is to present excessive
cut the United States down to size, regional optimism about Americas relative standing
great powers like China need not develop in the world as the alternative to excessive
global navies and air forces of their own. pessimism. There is an alternative to both
They need merely overmatch the United declinism and triumphalism: realism.

78 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


Western Civs occupy much psychic space. Instead, Her-
man is a serial extoller, a panegyrist whose
Life Coach attention is periodically seized by one great
man (Winston Churchill or Senator Joseph
McCarthy, upon whom he lavished an ad-
By David Rieff miringly revisionist biography) or a great
people (the Scots) or a great institution
(the Royal Navy, American business), which
Arthur Herman, The Cave and the Light: he then presents as the explanatory key to
Plato Versus Aristotle, and the Struggle for the success and dynamism of the Western
the Soul of Western Civilization (New York: world, even if we epigones in the West no
Random House, 2013), 704 pp., $35.00. longer necessarily understand our own great
intellectual, moral, political and technical

A
lbert Einstein is said to have rec- inheritance.
ommended that everything should Even by Hermans own grandiloquent
be made as simple as possible, but standards, however, The Cave and the Light
not simpler. It is an injunction that Ar- is in a class of its own. It is a monument
thur Herman would have been well ad- not to the importance of historical thought
vised to heed when he embarked on the but to his own hollowness. He begins
writing of his latest book, The Cave and in bombast and ends in triviality. He is
the Light. But then oversimplification has a self-appointed life coach for Western
been at the heart of Hermans enterprise civilization.
from the outset. Anyone who has already
extruded works such as The Idea of Decline
in Western History, To Rule the Waves: How
the British Navy Shaped the Modern World,
A t the outset, he asseverates, Everything
we say, do, and see has been shaped in
one way or another by two classical Greek
Gandhi and Churchill: The Epic Rivalry that thinkers, Plato and Aristotle. That such
Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age, wisdom constitutes little more than the
Freedoms Forge: How American Business Pro- conventional thought inculcated in nine-
duced Victory in World War II and How the teenth-century British public schools does
Scots Invented the Modern World is clearly not seem to trouble Herman unduly. This is
not someone in whose imagination either in part because his project is to refute those
nuance or complexity can be assumed to in the contemporary West who, in his tell-
ing, dismiss these thinkers as dead white
David Rieff is the author of eight books, including males and the classics as having no future.
A Bed for the Night: Humanitarianism in Crisis Herman at times in his book takes a break
(Simon & Schuster, 2003) and At the Point of a from his breathless romp through Western
Gun: Democratic Dreams and Armed Intervention history and philosophy to settle scores real
(Simon & Schuster, 2005). and imagined with the global Leftin this

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 79


To say that one can understand all the major political
events in Western history as somehow being expressions of
the spirit of Plato or Aristotle really does stretch credulity.

case, the cynical teaching assistants tag for moral food chainin Rands as well, such
History 101, From Plato to nato, is liter- a view is anathema. Late in The Cave and
ally accurate. But while he is a political con- the Light, Herman approvingly quotes
servative (currently a fellow at the American Rands assertion that everything that
Enterprise Institute) and an admirer of both makes us civilized beings, every rational
Friedrich Hayek and Ayn Rand, even he value that we possessincluding the birth
might have thought twice about the gran- of science, the industrial revolution, the
deur that was Greece, glory that was Rome creation of America, even the [logical]
approach. structure of our language, is the result of
This is where the second part of his thesis Aristotles influence. Hayeks view was
comes in, the one already limned in his far more nuanced (but then, compared
books subtitle, where Herman posits that with Rands, whose wasnt?), and he was
the conflicts in Western civilization ever less concerned with praising Aristotle
since ancient Greece have their roots in than with rejecting Platonism. For as his
the dichotomy between Aristotles vision denunciations of solidarity and altruism
of what he calls governing human beings in his book The Fatal Conceit make clear,
and Platos philosopher-king. To be sure, Hayek viewed Platonism as a kind of
Hermans heart is unquestionably with owners manual for totalitarianism and saw
Aristotle, as he makes clear in his broad socialism as Platonisms twentieth-century
praise for Rands aversion to Platonism avatar, much in the same way that Karl
and also in his description of Hayek Popper did. But unlike his intellectual
at the end of his life watching televised heroes, Herman insists on Western
images of the overthrow of Communism societys need for Platonism as well as
in Czechoslovakia in 1989. I told you Aristotelianism. Though he returns over
so, Hayek tells his son, to which Herman and over to Platonisms intrinsic faults, and,
adds, So had Aristotle. Given his political by extension, to its economic fatuities and
views, this Aristotelianism should come as the world-historical crimes to which it has
no surprise. Todays affluent, globalized given rise, from Bolshevism and the Gulag
material world, Herman writes, was to what Herman calls Platos American
largely made by Aristotles offspring. But offspringa term capacious enough
while he not only greatly prefers Aristotle, to include Josiah Royce, John Dewey,
but also taxes Platos intellectual and Woodrow Wilson and fdrHerman is
spiritual heirs with virtually every political adamant that Platonism remains key to the
tendency and historical development in Wests identity, and a necessary corrective to
European and global history that he Aristotelian dynamism, with its constant,
deplores, Herman nevertheless insists that stupefying potential for change.
our world still needs its Plato. This may seem contradictory (it certainly
In Hayeks terms, andto careen would have to Hayek and Rand, and surely
vertiginously down the intellectual and cannot sit well with many of Hermans

80 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


colleagues at the aei), but in fact it over Darwinism and creationism or
constitutes the core of Hermans thesis. For intelligent design. He is explicitly
him, it is the tension between the Wests making a case for what he calls the
Platonic spiritual self and its Aristotelian indispensability of both the Platonic
material self that has allowed the West to and the Aristotelian worldviews in the
continue its never-ending ever-ascending creation of the Western synthesis that the
circle of renewal. all-pervasive tug of war between those
For so proudly an anti-Hegelian, anti- worldviews has produced over the centuries.
Marxist writer as Herman, this tension he That tension and renewal, he argues, are
deems so essential bears a surprisingly close our [Western] identity.
resemblance to G. W. F. Hegels idea, later
taken up by Karl Marx and his twentieth-
century inheritors, of the dialecticthat is,
of thesis and antithesis that sooner or later
T o a hammer, everything is a nail. No
one would deny that, in the Western
tradition at least, the Greeks invented
are combined in a synthesis that represents politics. But to go from this to saying that
either a compromise between the two one can understand all the major political
initial philosophical or moral positions, or a events in Western history as somehow being
combination of the best features of each. To expressions of the spirit of Plato or Aristotle
be sure, Hermans version of the dialectic is or of some tension between the two schools
one that puts more emphasis on the creative of thought as refracted down through the
tension between the two philosophical centuries really does stretch credulity. In
stances and less on the possibility of any fairness, such vast oversimplifications have
enduring compromise or synthesis between always been the stuff of popular history, and
them. As Herman puts it, while discussing popular history certainly has its place. If, for
what he argues was the English romantics example, one wanted to recommend a book
doomed effort to reconcile the Platonic to an intellectually ambitious but not par-
and the Aristotelian, The creative drive of ticularly well-read high-school sophomore,
Western civilization had arisen not from a one could do a lot worse than Hermans
reconciliation of the two halves but from a conspectus. It moves along jauntily, and
constant alert tension between them. its explanations, wild oversimplifications
But Herman is inconsistent on this though they generally are, provide a basic
point. For example, in the concluding framework for the future studies that, if un-
paragraphs of his book he asserts that dertaken and supervised properly, will chal-
this tension inspired one breakthrough lenge and overturn most of Hermans facile
after another in the clash between binary summations. Herman himself points
Christianity and classical culture, in what to this approach when he rather startlingly
he anachronistically calls the culture declares in his books concluding passage
wars between the romantics and the that the intellectual and moral tug-of-war
Enlightenment, and today, in the clash dating back to classical times between Plato

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 81


and Aristotle could also be called yin and of some synthesis of the two. Thus, what
yang or right brain versus left brain. Machiavelli did in reality was to plug
In doing this, Herman in effect vitiates Aristotles formula for understanding
his own most fundamental claims. There civic liberty into Polybiuss time machine,
is no point in assaying a vast work of the inevitable cycle of historical rise and
intellectual history if all one is actually decline. To cite another example, Herman
doing is saying that in all cultures and, quotes Percy Bysshe Shelleys celebrated if
arguably, in all human beings, there is a floridly narcissistic line about poets being
tension between the rational and the the unacknowledged legislators of the
irrational, the spiritual and the material, world. According to Herman, what Shelley
or the scientific and the artistic. Any of a actually meant was that poets were Platos
thousand self-help books published over Philosopher Rulers in the flesh, for a world
the last three decades can tell you that. desperately needing the emanations of their
And yet, reduced to its bare essentials, geniusa claim about which the fine old
this is precisely what Herman ends Scottish legal verdict, with which Herman,
up doing. According to him, It is the given all the hagiographical things he has
balance between living in the material and said of the Scots, is surely aware, would
adhering to the spiritual that sustains any seem to be the most generous response
societys cultural health. This seems more one can make: not proven. But to describe
appropriate to a New Age retreat than to historical events is not the same thing as
a believer in a very different, and in many being a historian in any true sense of the
ways far more mystical constructa West word, just as writing sweepingly on a broad
that will never decline or be superseded range of subjects does not make you a
because of that never-ending ever-renewing polymath.
circle of renewal Herman invokes as if it
were an undeniable fact rather than the
hubristic, ahistorical fantasy that it actually
is. It also raises the more interesting
T he problem with The Cave and the
Light is not Hermans unfortunate ten-
dency to ignore the sensible adage, usu-
question of whether The Cave and the Light ally attributed to Mies van der Rohe, that
can properly be called a work of history at sometimes less is more, and instead to pro-
all. vide utterly baseless color and novelistic
To be clear, while the book begins details about the historical figures he is de-
and ends philosophically, its core is a scribinggrating as these often are. Exam-
straightforward work of intellectual history ples of these abound, even if, for example,
in which each major paradigm shift Herman cannot possibly know whether,
within the Western tradition, whether as Michelangelo walked from his lodgings
religious or secular, is described as being to the Vatican Palace in 1510 to work on
the expression in history of either the the Sistine Chapels ceiling, whether Bra-
Platonic or the Aristotelian tradition or mantes workmen appeared like shadows,

82 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


as they yawned and stretched among the called Geistesgeschichtethat is, history
piles of masonry and coils of rope in front conceived of almost exclusively as the
of the unfinished basilica of St. Peters. Nor identification and description of the spirit
can Herman have the remotest idea as to of the times. It is actually almost refreshing,
whether Gerard of Cremona, who would if not very serious, to read a work from
go on to translate Aristotles On the Heavens which material history as practiced by such
into Latin, thus reintroducing him to the great historians as Fernand Braudel and
Western world, reacted to the Muslim call Emmanuel Le Roy Laduriethe history
to prayer by thinking that it seemed like of climate, of agriculture, of migration
an audial illusion, like the cry of a bird is so singularly absent and in which great

that you briefly mistake for a human voice men and great (or terrible) ideas all but
when he visited Toledo in 1140. And these exclusively determine the course of
are only two of many examples of such events. At times, Herman can be quite
poorly grounded speculation. shameless about this, as when, in his
A more serious defect is that Herman chapter describing the rise of Christianity
is an extraordinarily old-fashioned writer in the Roman world, he blandly opines
(not, to avoid misunderstanding, because that today, historians point to social and
he is a man of the political Right: so is economic factors to explain Christianitys
John Lukacs and his work suffers from no amazing spread. But the key factor was its
such infirmity), and an even more defiantly skill in seizing the high ground of Greek
retrograde thinker. Hermans practice thought, especially Plato.
as a historian is a throwback to what To call this an impoverished and partial
nineteenth-century German academics account not only of Christianitys encounter

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 83


with the classical world but also of Western in tone then certainly in substancedismis-
civilization more broadly is about the sive treatment of the centrality of Judaism
kindest possible way to put the matter. This in the formation of Western culture and
can seem almost poignant given that his politics. In Hermans account, it was Plato
general toneand at least some of the way whose works provided a framework for
he chose to frame his thoughtssuggests making Christianity intellectually respect-
that Hermans purpose was to defend the able [in the classical world], while Christi-
West against its detractors both at home anity in turn gave Platos philosophy a shin-
and abroad. But by insisting that everything ing new relevance. There is no doubt that
that has happened in the West since the history of its interaction with classical
Aristotles death is in one form or another culture is central to the early churcheven
indebted to the legacy left by him and by if Herman is at his vulgar worst when, ap-
Plato, Herman does the tradition he is so parently in all seriousness, he observes that
determined to uphold no favors. Quite the the forerunners of the stereotypical nuns
contrary. Hermans own discipline, history, with steel rulers are Platos Guardians in the
owes everything to the Greeks but little or Republic. Herman does devote some pas-
nothing to Plato or Aristotle. As the great sages to the Alexandrian Jewish philosopher,
Oxford classicist Sir Moses Finley pointed Philo. But, to appropriate the title of one of
out in his 1965 essay, Myth, Memory and Leo Strausss most important books, Athens
History, Aristotle, though he founded a is omnipresent but Jerusalem all but absent
number of sciences and made all the others from Hermans account of Christianitys
his own, too, in one fashion or another. . rise, even though, as Strauss wrote, The
. . did not jibe at history, he rejected it. Platonic statement taken in conjunction
Finley goes on to quote the passage in with the biblical statement brings out the
the ninth chapter of the Poetics in which fundamental opposition of Athens at its
Aristotle says, Poetry is more philosophical peak to Jerusalem: the opposition of the
and more weighty than history, for poetry God or gods of the philosophers to the God
speaks rather of the universal, history of of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the opposi-
the particular. Both Plato himself and the tion of reason and revelation.
Neoplatonists were even more dismissive. This is a grave and telling error both
And, again, as his remark about the eternal historically and philosophically. Instead of a
renewal of the West suggests, it is hard not polarity between Plato and Aristotle, Strauss
to feel that, almost in defiance of his own posed what the great French political
vocation, Herman shares this view to an philosopher, Pierre Manent, has correctly
uncomfortable, not to say embarrassing, characterized as a different polarity. Plato
extent. and Aristotle (not Plato or Aristotle) are
on one side of this dichotomy, but it is

A second difficulty with the book is its


woefully superficial andif not wholly
Judaism and not philosophy that is on the
other. Herman discusses St. Augustine in

84 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


Perhaps the most curious aspect of The Cave and the
Light is the way in which Herman seems to want to
downplay the Western tradition as fundamentally Christian.

considerable detail, but what he focuses defined their spiritual pre-disposition as


on is what he calls Augustines final anti-Hellenic. To be sure, had the early
authoritative fusion of Neoplatonism Christians chosen to expunge all traces of
and Christianity, which would have a their faiths Jewish roots, Hermans account
sweeping impact on Western culture for the of what he calls the thoroughgoing
next thousand years and beyond, even if, synthesis between Christian revelation and
four hundred years later, in what even for ancient reason, between Plato and Jesus
Herman is a crass low stylistically, Aristotle would be dispositive. It was this that the
would strike back. Manents version is second-century bishop Marcion had pressed
rather different. For him, Augustine co- for, proposing an alternate canon beginning
opted Plato for his own purposes, rather with an expurgated version of the Gospel of
than, as it so often seems reading Herman, Luke and the ten Epistles of Paul. But the
being co-opted by him. Anyone tempted by Marcionite project that opposed the God
Hermans reductive account would be well of the Old Testament to Jesus as revealed
advised to read Manents entire essay, which in the New Testament failed, and with it
appeared in First Things in 2012. In it, he so did the attempt, as the English Biblical
wrote: scholar Sydney Herbert Mellone once put
it, to propose the advent of Jesus as an
For Augustine, Christianity confirms these two entirely new event, with no roots in the
separations while overcoming them. He pres- past history of the Jewish people or of the
ents Christianity as the resolution of the two human race. One can fairly assert that
decisive breaks of human unity: the Jewish and historically relations between institutional
the Greek. The mediation of the God-man Christianity and the Jewish people have
Christ allows the unity of mankind to be re- been nothing short of catastrophic. But
stored while each human being is made capable this does not mean that, to cite Boman
of sharing in the truth enacted by Jewish life as again, the question of the formal and
well as the truth discovered by Greek philoso- real relationship between Israelite-Jewish
phy. Jewish life and Greek philosophy, two very and Greek-Hellenistic thinking was any
different ways of finding ones way toward the less of a live problem for Christianity
true God, prepared humanity for the decisive and the church, as one might infer from
step only God could take. the scant attention Herman pays to the
role of Hebrew thought in the shaping of
We are a long way from Hermans dire Christian dogma and the formation of the
simplicities about how Augustines City of Christian commonwealth. And even if one
God represents a kind of Platonic ideal. views Augustine largely as a Christianized
As Thorleif Boman pointed out more than Neoplatonist, as Herman apparently does,
half a century ago in his magisterial study, the relevant tension, to use Hermans
Hebrew Thought Compared with Greek, the preferred term, is not between Augustines
Jews of the Roman Empire of that period Neoplatonism and some Aristotelian

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 85


alternative, but between that Neoplatonism After all, Augustine or Aquinas could be
and the Jewish tradition out of which adduced to deal with that. Rather, it is
Christianity had come. the fact that Hermans depiction of our
But perhaps the most curious aspect own times is almost ostentatiously post-
of The Cave and the Light is the way in Christian. He does emphasize the spiritual
which Herman seems to want to downplay needs to which Platonism and its heirs seem
the Western tradition as fundamentally to be able to respond while Aristotelianism
Christian. If, as Herman claims, the cannot. But this spirituality has no specific
content, and certainly no particularly
Christian content. Indeed, near the end
of his book, Herman speaks not of Jesus
Christ dying for the sins of humankind,
but instead avers that all of Western history
can be summed up as a battle founded,
in the last analysis, on the irreconcilable
contradiction between Platos God and
Aristotles Prime Mover.
Given all the historical elements this
analysis forces Herman to downplay or
at times ignore, this claim seems much
more far-fetched than the traditional
understanding, well articulated in the
modern era by Pope John Paul II, of Western
civilization as a fundamentally Christian
construct, to which, unquestionably, the
thought of both Plato and Aristotle made
important contributions. But then, Herman
does appear to have an awfully pagan
understanding of Western identity. When
he writes that tension and renewal are our
[Western] identity, he begins to sound more
influence of Plato and Aristotle down like a member of some mystery cult of the
through the centuries was the greatest Roman eraMithraism comes to mind,
intellectual and cultural journey in history, though there were othersthan either a
then in a sense he is forced to write from Greek philosopher or a Christian. And why
the perspective of Christianity being only he thinks that rediscovering that identity
one stop, however long and important, on might allow the West to save the world
that trip. It is not only the obvious fact that is not the smallest puzzle of this comically
neither Plato nor Aristotle was Christian. pretentious excursus into the past.

86 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


The Odd Couple characterizations in the press, as he himself
had done, although unlike you I have fre-
quently been myself responsible.
By Robert W. Merry Such expressions betokened a special
relationship between public servants that
extended beyond political expediency and
Doris Kearns Goodwin, The Bully Pul- touched deep cords of personal affection.
pit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard For his part, Taft described their friendship
Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism (New as one of close and sweet intimacy.
York: Simon & Schuster, 2013), 928 pp., After Taft succeeded Roosevelt as
$40.00. president and sought in his own way to
extend the tr legacy, though, the friendship

I
n the early 1890s, when Theodore fell apart. Roosevelt, concluding his old
Roosevelt met William Howard Taft chum didnt measure up, turned on him
during their early stints as government with a polemical vengeance that negated
officials in Washington, Roosevelt said, the mutual affections of old. Going
One loves him at first sight. Later, as pres- after his former friend, first in an effort
ident, Roosevelt extolled the virtues of Taft, to wrest from him the 1912 Republican
then U.S. governor-general of the Philip- presidential nomination and then as an
pines: There is not in this Nation a higher independent general-election candidate,
or finer type of public servant than Gover- Roosevelt destroyed the Taft presidency
nor Taft. After Taft became Roosevelts war and brought down the Republican Party
secretary, the president reported to a friend in that years canvas. When the Taft forces
that the new cabinet chief was doing excel- prevailed in a typical credentials fight at the
lently, as I knew he would, and is the great- gop convention, tr seized upon it as proof
est comfort to me. Before going on vaca- of Tafts mendacity and corruption. The
tion, tr assured the nation that all would receiver of stolen goods is no better than
be well in Washington because I have left the thief, he declared. When Tafts political
Taft sitting on the lid. Subsequently, when standing began to wane, largely from trs
Taft expressed embarrassment about a news own attacks, he dismissed his erstwhile
article unflattering to Roosevelt that had companion as a dead cock in the pit. The
been spawned by a Taft campaign function- former president said, I care nothing for
ary, the president was unmoved. Good Tafts personal attitude toward me.
heavens, you beloved individual, he wrote, In the annals of American history,
suggesting Taft should get used to false few stories of personal fellowship are as
poignant and affecting as the story of the
Robert W. Merry is the political editor of The Roosevelt-Taft friendship and its brutal
National Interest and an author of books on disintegration. But it carries historical
American history and foreign policy. significance beyond the shifting personal

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 87


In the annals of American history, few stories of personal
fellowship are as poignant and affecting as the story of the
Roosevelt-Taft friendship and its brutal disintegration.

sentiments of two politicians. This after the sands of time have eroded the
particular story of personalities takes place sharp edges of animus, is restored. The
against the backdrop of the Republican authors narrative doesnt bring a strong
Partys emotion-laden effortand the focus to Roosevelts powerful views and
nations effort, and these two politicians actions on foreign policyhis vision of
effortsto grapple with the progressive America as preeminent global power,
movement and the pressing contradictions for example, or his dramatic decision to
and societal distortions created by send his Great White Fleet around the
industrialization. world as a display of U.S. naval prowess
Now the distinguished historian Doris and a spur to congressional support for
Kearns Goodwin scrutinizes the Roosevelt- his cherished naval buildup. Nor does she
Taft saga, bringing to it her penchant for trace in elaborate detail the challenging
presenting history through the prism of developments in the Philippines, called
personal storytelling. In No Ordinary Time, by tr biographer Kathleen Dalton the
she illuminated the Franklin Roosevelt war that would not go away (although
presidency by probing the complex and tr finally brought it to a conclusion
mysterious marriage of Franklin and through a notable level of military brutality
Eleanor. In Team of Rivals, which examined directed against insurgent forces). Rather,
Abraham Lincolns unusual decision to fill this is a book about the emergence of
his cabinet with his political competitors, the progressive impulse, which sought to
she not only laid bare crucial elements of apply federal intervention to thwart the
Lincolns political temperament but also corrupt consolidation of wealth and power
presented a panoramic survey of his time within industrial America. Goodwin clearly
and gave currency to a term that now believes this counterforce was necessary
figures prominently in the nations political to protect ordinary Americans from the
lexicon. And now, with The Bully Pulpit, unchecked machinations of the selfish
she deciphers a pivotal time in American rich, industrial titans, and corrupt local
politics through the moving tale of tr and state governments.
and Will, girded by her characteristic deft She is correct, of course. The advent of
narrative talents and exhaustive research. American industrialization had generated
And theres a bonus: she weaves into her substantial economic growth through the
narrative the story of S. S. McClures latter half of the nineteenth century, and
famous progressive magazine, named that in turn had fostered the creation of
after himself and dedicated to the highest vast new wealth. The Republican Party,
standards of expository reporting and lucid as the champion of this development,
writing. enjoyed a dominant position in American
Go o d w i ns n a r r a t i ve t a k e s o n a politics. But the party was beginning to
particularly powerful drive as the tr- falter at centurys end as it failed to address
Taft friendship crumblesand then, the attendant problems of the industrial

88 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


erapredatory monopolies, abuse of the sensibility dedicated to clean government
working classes, fraud and malpractice in and opposition to political bossism. Both
the distribution of food and medicines. A began their formative years of political
new turn was necessary, but any suggestion consciousness with a mild conservatism
of one antagonized entrenched interests, of the kind typically found among the
many within the Republican Party itself. privileged, but both later developed an
These included industrial plutocrats, their appreciation for elements of the progressive
cronies among the urban political bosses ethos.
and allied members of Congress. A potent There the similarities end. Roosevelt
political clash was probably inevitable. was a man in perpetual motionrestless,
forceful, cocky, a bubbling, explosively

R oosevelt and Taft, born thirteen


months apart in the late 1850s, en-
joyed comfort and privilege as children.
exuberant American, as the Boston Daily
Globe put it. A British viscount said he
had seen two tremendous works of nature
Tafts father was a prominent Cincinnati in Americathe Niagara Falls and Mr.
lawyer and judge who served as U.S. war Roosevelt. The writer William Allen White
secretary and attorney general in the ad- suggested trs mind moved by flashes or
ministration of President Ulysses Grant. whims or sudden impulses.
He was a loving but demanding father who Roosevelts theatrical self-importance
approached life as relentless duty, devoid led even his children to acknowledge
of anything resembling joy. By contrast, that he wanted to be the bride at every
Roosevelts father, scion of a family that had wedding and the corpse at every funeral.
amassed a substantial fortune in New York His speech sparkled with vivid expressions
commerce, real estate and banking, took that reflected his unabashedly held strong
delight in his work but skillfully combined opinions. When Supreme Court justice
it with a robust social life and exuberant Oliver Wendell Holmes came down on
family activities. He was the most intimate what tr considered the wrong side of an
friend of each of his children, recalled The- important decision, Roosevelt declared, I
odores sister, Corinne. could carve out of a banana a judge with
Both youngsters demonstrated acute more backbone than that.
intellectual abilities and developed early On the other hand, wrote White, Tafts
ambitions to leave a mark on society. mind moved in straight lines and by long,
Both emerged among their peers as logical habit. He was easygoingmodest
natural leaders to whom others looked in demeanor, conciliatory by temperament.
for guidance. Both gravitated to the law While Roosevelt garnered attention
and to public service and never hankered by putting himself forward with endless
for private attainment or wealth. Both quips, asides and pronunciamentos, the
experienced significant career propulsion more self-conscious Taft let others come to
at an early age. Both embraced a reformist him, and because he stood out as solid and

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 89


Benjamin Harrison administration.
Thus, he moved with his wife
Nellie to Washington and took
up residence near Dupont Circle,
just a thousand feet from the new
residence of Theodore Roosevelt,
recently appointed to the Civil Service
Commission. The two took to walking
together to work each morning.
Based on their experiences under
Harrison, Taft would have appeared to
be on the faster track. The president
found his temperament much more
to his liking than that of Roosevelt
fair-minded they almost always did. White who, the president complained, seemed
described him as America incarnate to feel that everything ought to be done
sham-hating, hardworking, crackling before sundown. Sensing the presidents
with jokes upon himself, lacking in pomp disdain, Roosevelt complained to his sister
but never in dignity . . . a great, boyish, that his fight against corruption in federal
wholesome, dauntless, shrewd, sincere, employment practices was conducted with
kindly gentleman. the little gray man in the White House
As the two men made their way in looking on with cold and hesitating
government service, Roosevelt moved amid disapproval. Goodwin writes that Harrison
a constant cloud of controversy. And yet he considered firing the underling but feared a
discovered that his penchant for relentlessly backlash from the large numbers of people
pushing his pet issues to the forefront and who appreciated his forceful anticorruption
forcing decisions could be highly effective. agitations. Conversely, Harrison took an
As the youngest member of the New York immediate liking to Taft, inviting him to
state legislature, he became one of New call at the White House every evening
Yorks leading reform politicians. I rose if convenient. Harrison eventually
like a rocket, he later explained with nominated the thirty-four-year-old Taft to
characteristic pride. a seat on the U.S. Circuit Court, the second
Taft meanwhile gravitated to the highest in the federal judicial system.
judiciary, which proved compatible with Roosevelt, meanwhile, returned to New
his judicious nature. At the remarkably York City as police commissioner.
young age of twenty-nine, he was appointed
an Ohio state judge. He distinguished
himself sufficiently to win a presidential
appointment as U.S. solicitor general in the
T he next Republican president, William
McKinley, developed similar views of
the two men. When he needed a judicious

90 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


and calm figure to become governor-gen-
eral of the Philippines, he chose Taft. But
when Roosevelts friends sought to get
him appointed assistant naval secretary,
McKinley hesitated. He told one Roo-
sevelt promoter, I want peace, and. . .
. I am afraid he is too pugnacious. But
eventually he relented and gave Roos-
evelt the job, to which the new assistant
secretary brought a whirlwind of activity
aimed at getting the navy ready for a war
with Spain that he not only foresaw but
also welcomed with a kind of romantic
martial spirit.
When war came, Roosevelt embraced it franchise tax on corporationsstreetcar
not only philosophically but also physically, firms, telephone networks, telegraph lines
organizing his Rough Rider militia unit that had been given lucrative business
that distinguished itself in the campaign opportunities through state franchises.
to capture the crucial city of Santiago You will make the mistake of your life
in Cuba. Leading his famous charge up if you allow that bill to become a law,
Kettle Hill on the San Juan Heights, he Platt warned, hinting at a suspicion that
demonstrated a disregard for his personal Roosevelt harbored Communist or socialist
safety that was courageous and foolhardy in tendencies. Roosevelt countered: I do
equal measure. That single action cemented not believe that it is wise or safe for us as
his place among his countrymen as the a party to take refuge in mere negation
most stirring personality of his time. He and to say that there are no evils to be
already had become nationally known for corrected. He got the bill passed, though
his impetuous ways and reformist zeal; now with some amendments designed to placate
he was a national hero. Platt if possible. The party boss sought to
Roosevelt promptly parlayed his new put a friendly face on the outcome, but
status into a successful run for New York the machine now considered Governor
governor. His budding progressivism ran Roosevelt a marked man.
headlong into the conservative doggedness Undeterred, Roosevelt sent to the
of the states political bosses, particularly legislature a call for state actions to curtail
Senator Thomas Platt, who ran the New the growth and power of corporate trusts,
York Republican machine. Although the increasingly monopolistic enterprises
Roosevelt sought to nurture a working that sought to squeeze out competitors,
association with Platt, he ran afoul of the often through corruption and dishonesty,
senator when he pushed for a business and thus gain dominance over crucial

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 91


burgeoning markets. Taking a cue from I am President, he declared with
his friend Elihu Root, one of the countrys characteristic audacity, and shall
leading lawyers and war secretary in the act in every word and deed precisely as
McKinley administration, Roosevelt if I and not McKinley had been the
carefully crafted his language on the candidate for whom the electors cast the
trusts to avoid any hint of radicalism. He vote for President. Roosevelt proved
stressed, We do not wish to discourage adept in working with the congressional
enterprise; we do not desire to destroy opposition and in encasing his antitrust
corporations; we do desire to put them goals in descriptive language designed to be
fully at the service of the State and the moderate, measured and balanced. Federal
people. Notwithstanding this measured power over the trusts, he declared, must
approach, which was to become a hallmark be exercised with moderation and self-
in subsequent years, the antitrust effort restraint. And he argued that Democratic
never got off the ground. The reason, calls to eradicate all trusts would destroy
he concluded, was that the problem had all our prosperity. But he encountered an
not seeped sufficiently into the political apathetic public on the issue, just as he had
consciousness of the people. during his days as New York governor.
But Roosevelts apostasy was never
forgotten by Boss Platt and his cronies.
They sought to oust him from the
governors chair and perhaps even
E nter S. S. McClure. He hit upon the
idea of sending his talented young writ-
er, Ida Tarbell, after a single trust, thus ren-
deny him renomination at the next gop dering the story vivid and understandable.
convention. The solution came in the form She chose John D. Rockefellers Standard
of a movement to get Roosevelt on the Oil, the Mother of Trusts. In a twelve-part
McKinley ticket as vice president in the series that later became a best-selling book,
1900 balloting. Roosevelt wasnt sure he Tarbell documented, among other things,
could handle being stuck in such a passive, how Rockefeller induced corrupt railroad
backwater job, but the threat of being magnates to impose discriminatory freight
upended as governor proved a powerful rates upon his independent rivals, thus
incentive. As his friend Henry Cabot killing off competition and cornering the
Lodge succinctly put it, If you decline the mushrooming oil market. The reaction was
nomination, you had better take a razor and electric. Suddenly the trust problem became
cut your throat. a matter of high concern to the nation.
Less than seven months after assuming This helped pave the way for Roosevelts
the vice presidency, tr became president, progressive agenda, which he pressed with
to the consternation of his foes, following his usual urgency. He pushed through a
the assassination of McKinley in September reluctant legislature the Hepburn Act,
1901. The countrys new chief executive which authorized the Interstate Commerce
was just forty-two years old. Commission to set the rates charged by

92 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


railroads to their shipping customersa two realities surrounding the Roosevelt
direct reply to Tarbells famous Rockefeller presidency merit attention. First, the
series. He got Congress to create the Rough Rider president, in bringing
Department of Commerce and Labor (later progressive precepts into the national
split into two separate departments), with government, stopped short of the kinds of
regulatory powers over large corporations, redistributive economic policies favored
and to pass legislation expediting by more radical progressives of the era.
prosecutions under the Sherman Antitrust His aim was to level the playing field by
Act. Responding to other muckraking outlawing practices and privileges that
journalism in McClures Magazine and
elsewhere, he fostered passage of the Meat
Inspection Act and the Pure Food and
Drug Act. Roosevelts Justice Department
filed suit against the Northern Securities
Company under antitrust laws and brought
the company down. It broke up Standard
Oil and went after the beef trusts that had
colluded to parcel out territories and fix
prices, resulting in sharp cost increases for
consumers of meat.
In addition, he personallyand
adroitlyhandled a coal-strike crisis that
threatened the national economy. And he
preserved some 230 million acres in public
trust through creation of a multitude of
national parks, forests and monuments.
In foreign affairs, he set in motion the
building of the Panama Canal by fomenting
a successful Panamanian revolt against
Colombia and then negotiating with the
new Panamanian nation for rights to the
swath of isthmus needed for the canal. He allowed favored groups to thrive at the
put himself forward as mediator to foster a expense of the mass of ordinary citizens.
negotiated end to the Russo-Japanese War, He didnt embrace the goal of a graduated
a bit of diplomacy that earned him a Nobel income tax, for example. And, although
Peace Prize. he despised the high tariff rates of the
Roosevelt deployed federal power McKinley administration, he shied away
on behalf of national goals, far beyond from attacking those discriminatory levies
anything seen since the Civil War. But because he wasnt prepared to expend the

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 93


The country saw the gop rupture based on atmospherics,
brazenly inaccurate accusations, ideological fervor and personal
whims writ large. It was the politics of temper tantrum.

kind of political capital that would have sought to exploit his landslide reelection
been required for such a fight against party victory of 1936 by packing the Supreme
bosses committed to protectionist policies. Court.
Indeed, Roosevelt constantly expressed But Theodore Roosevelt, with his big
h i s p re f e re n c e f o r m i d d l e - g ro u n d domestic initiatives, had altered the
approaches that raised the ire of both political landscape of America and thus
laissez-faire conservatives and more radical had emerged as a leader of destiny among
elements of the progressive movement. American presidents. Accepting, based on
Even as New York governor, he confessed his two-term commitment, that he must
that he wasnt sure which he regarded with relinquish the presidency, he deftly fostered
the most unaffected dreadthe machine the election of Taft as his successor and then
politician or the fool reformer. He added headed off to Africa for a year of big-game
that he was emphatically not one of the hunting, confident that his friend would
fool reformers. As president he declared carry on his policies. Upon his return, he
that there is no worse enemy of the wage- thought otherwise.
worker than the man who condones mob
violence in any shape or who preaches class
hatred. He identified the rock of class
hatred as the greatest and most dangerous
T hroughout their friendship and in-
tertwined careers, Roosevelt and Taft
had been a powerful combination, com-
rock in the course of any republic. plementing each others weaknesses and
Second, Roosevelt found that during the foibles. That was in part what each appreci-
latter part of his seven-year presidency he ated about the other. Roosevelt the impetu-
no longer possessed the political clout to ous, instinct-driven politician appreciated
get his initiatives through Congress. He Tafts measured, careful decision making.
attributed this to the lame duck effect Taft admired Roosevelts ability to size up
of his promise to the American people, a political situation instantly and seize the
when he ran for a second term, that he initiative on it. Roosevelt wrote: He has
wouldnt seek a third. Goodwin credits nothing to overcome when he meets people.
this rationale, and no doubt it contributed I realize that I have always got to overcome
to his diminished political force as his a little something before I get to the heart
White House tenure wound down. But of people. . . . I almost envy a man pos-
another factor was that the country had sessing a personality like Tafts. For his
absorbed about as much progressivism as part, Taft often wished he could incorporate
it was prepared to handle at that time in some of Roosevelts quick insightfulness and
its history, absent the kind of crisis that scintillating use of the language. I wish I
emerged a generation later with the Great could make a good speech, he confessed to
Depression. Indeed, even Roosevelts distant his wife, adding that a recent performance
cousin, Franklin Roosevelt, found his New in Michigan had left a bad taste in my
Deal initiatives reaching their limit after he mouth.

94 The National Interest Reviews & Essays


But once their paths diverged with hikes. He created a special Commerce
Roosevelts trip to Africa, these differences Court to expedite judgments and brought
in temperament took on an entirely new telegraph and telephone companies under
coloration. Progressives who expected the authority of the Interstate Commerce
Taft to carry on Roosevelts policies often Act. New reporting requirements for
seemed unmindful that even Roosevelt had campaign contributions were enacted.
failed to carry on his own policy preferences Arizona and New Mexico joined the union
to the end of his presidency. Worse, the as states. A new Bureau of Mines emerged
most ardent progressives seemed to want to regulate worker safety in the mining
Taft to operate in tr fashion. That wasnt industry. Taft also fostered the creation of
possible. At one point, when President Taft a postal savings bank to provide people of
shied away from taking a particular fight to limited means a safe haven for their savings.
the American people, as tr no doubt would Much of this was possible because of Tafts
have done, he said wistfully, There is no deft deal making during the arduous efforts
use trying to be William Howard Taft with to get his tariff bill through Congress, when
Roosevelts ways. he accepted amendments from old-guard
Indeed, there was a halting quality to conservatives in exchange for later support
Tafts leadership. But he pursued significant for his broader agenda.
elements of the progressive agenda, In addition, Taft proposed legislation to
ultimately with considerable success. enact a corporate income tax, which cleared
While Roosevelt had avoided a tariff fight Congress, and a constitutional amendment
lest he drive a wedge through his party, authorizing an individual income tax,
Taft plunged into the fray and helped which also cleared Congress and was sent
produce trade legislation that represented a to the states for ratification. (It was ratified
significant party turnaround on the issue. in 1913.)
Though he didnt get as much as he wanted Its impossible to know what drove
and radical reformers complained when he Roosevelt to ignore all these achievements
didnt veto it, the legislation represented a and go after his old friend, to destroy his
significant political achievement. But then presidency and deliver a powerful blow to
the president unwisely heralded the bill as his own party. But its difficult to escape
the best bill that the Republican party ever the conclusion that the greatest factor
passed, signaling that he had no intention was the former presidents outsized ego. A
of pursuing any future tariff reductions. telling clue may be the report, mentioned
Predictably, the radical reformers cried by Goodwin, that Roosevelt told a friend
betrayal. he would cut his hand off at the wrist if
Despite such political lapses, Taft brought he could retrieve his pledge not to run for
forth a new railroad bill that bolstered a third term. Wisconsin senator Robert
the power of the Interstate Commerce La Follette, a close Roosevelt observer,
Commission to initiate action against rate speculated that he left the White House

Reviews & Essays January/February 2014 95


with a prospective 1916 run for president sorbed his last stores of political capital long
firmly in mind. But, when he saw Tafts before the end of his presidency.
weakness with gop reform elements and But Taft managed to wend his way
tasted the nectar of his own lingering through this political environment and keep
popularity, he began to think of 1912 for the flame alive, to replenish the stores of
himself. It was four years better than 1916. political capital through his own deft deal
After all, it isnt easy becoming an ex- making and good-natured compromising.
president at age fifty, yielding to others the His most dangerous adversaries turned out
power and glory that once were so heady to be those people Roosevelt had called
and thrilling in ones own hands. For a fool reformers. Then his old friend Teddy
man who wanted to be the bride at every returned from Africa and joined the fool
wedding and the corpse at every funeral, reformers. But suppose Roosevelt had taken
it was particularly difficult to accept a different tack. Suppose he had rushed
such a loss of position and power. In any to the defense of his old companion and
event, while Roosevelt couldnt win on an heralded his middle-ground techniques as
independent-party ticket, he could keep being firmly in the tradition of his own
Taft from winning. And that paved the way political ethos. Suppose that, in doing this,
for the presidency of Democrat Woodrow he had enabled Taft to arrive at a synthesis
Wilson. of politics that could have sustained a
winning coalition and carried him through

G oodwin believes Tafts political demise


stemmed from his own limitations as
president. For all of [his] admirable quali-
the coming election and into a second
term. Then Roosevelts legacy would have
remained secure under the Republican
ties and intentions to codify and expand banner, and he would have been positioned
upon Roosevelts progressive legacy, she to take ownership of the 1916 canvas, when
writes, he ultimately failed as a public lead- he would have been a vigorous fifty-eight
er, a failure that underscores the pivotal im- years old.
portance of the bully pulpit in presidential Instead, the country saw a party
leadership. Perhaps. But presidential lead- rupture based on atmospherics, brazenly
ership comes in many guises, and ultimately inaccurate accusations, ideological fervor
its about performance. Tafts performance, and personal whims writ large. It was the
based on the political sensibility he shared politics of temper tantrum, the product
with Roosevelt, was exemplary. His largest of a man whose most outrageous traits,
burden was the split within the Republican though frequently charming, had always
Party spawned by Roosevelts own resolve to been potentially problematic but generally
interject progressive concepts into nation- under control. Now they erupted onto
al governance. This resolve, coupled with the political scene with unchecked force,
Roosevelts own increasingly rough-hewn sweeping his old friend, his party and his
manner of dealing with Congress, had ab- country into the resulting vortex.

96 The National Interest Reviews & Essays

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