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LeMonde Diplomatique
September 2002

UNITED STATES : 'DREAMING OF A SPLENDID LITTLE WAR'
Westward the course of empire
BY PHILIP S GOLUB

The aftermath of the terrorist attacks has revived imperialist ideology in
the United States, rather than caused it to query its world role. Writers
do not hesitate to draw parallels between their nation and ancient Rome,
which they hold to be a model for world domination in the 21st century.


A WHILE before 11 September the American historian, Arthur Schlesinger Jr,
suggested that despite the "absence of international checks and balances"
in the modern unipolar world, the United States would not "stroll too far
down the perilous highway to hubris ... No one nation is going to be able
to assume the role of world arbi- trator and policeman" (1). Like many
American intellectuals, he remained confident about US democracy and the
rationality of decision mak- ing. And Charles William Maynes, an
influential voice in US foreign policy, asserted: "America is a country
with imperial capabilities but without an imperial mind" (2).

But now we must face facts: a new imperial doctrine is taking shape under
George Bush. It is reminiscent of the late 19th century, when the US began
its colonial expansion into the Caribbean, Asia and the Pacific, the first
steps to world power. Then the US was seized by great imperialist fervour.
Journalists, businessmen, bankers and politicians vied to promote policies
of world conquest.

"American economic leaders were fixing their eyes on the industrial
supremacy of the world" (3) and political leaders were dreaming of a
"splendid little war", as Theodore Roosevelt put it, to justify
international expansion. "We have a record of conquest, colonisation and
expansion unequalled by any people in the 19th century. We are not about to
be curbed now," said Henry Cabot Lodge, the leading ideologue of the
imperial camp, in 1895 (4). Roosevelt, an admirer of the British
imperialist poet Rudyard Kipling, believed the national destiny was clear:
"I wish to see the US the dominant power on the Pacific Ocean. Our people
are neither cravens nor weaklings and we face the future high of heart and
confident of soul, eager to do the great work of a great world power" (5).

Summing up the imperialist fashion of the era, the journalist Marse Henry
Watterson wrote in 1896: "We are a great imperial Republic, destined to
exercise a controlling influence upon the actions of mankind and to affect
the future of the world as the world was never affected, even by the Roman
Empire" (6). Haughty but premonitory words.

US historians have generally considered the late 19th century imperialist
urge as an aberration in an otherwise smooth democratic trajectory.

The US had emerged from a war of independence to cast off British colonial
domination, and had played its part in the Enlightenment project against
absolutist continental European monarchies. Surely this experience
inoculated it once and for all against the virus of imperialism?

Yet a century I ater, as the US empire engages in a new period of global
expansion, Rome is once more a distant but essential mirror for American
elites. In 1991 the US found itself the only remaining great power. Now,
with military mobilisation on an exceptional scale after September 2001,
the US is openly affirming and parading its imperial strength. For the
first time since the 1890s, the naked display of force is backed by
explicitly imperialist discourse.

"The fact is," writes Charles Krauthammer, a Washington Post columnist and
a spokesman of the neo-conservative right, "no country has been as dominant
culturally, economically, technologically and militarily in the history of
the world since the late Roman Empire" (7). According to Robert Kaplan, a
conservative essayist and an international policy mentor to President
George Bush, "Rome's victory in the Second Punic War, like America's in
World War 11, made it a universal power" (8).

Even writers closer to the political centre feel obliged to refer to Rome.
Joseph S Nye Jr, dean of the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard
University and Assistant Secretary of State for Defence under the Clinton
administration, began his latest book: "Not since Rome has one nation
loomed so large above the others" (9) (see Don't go it alone, page 5).

The historian Paul Kennedy, who made his name in the 1980s with his
premature prediction of US imperial overstretch, goes further: "Nothing has
ever existed like the disparity of power [in the present world system]. The
Pax Britannica was run on the cheap. Napoleon's France and Philip II's
Spain had powerful foes and were part of a multipolar system. Charlemagne's
empire was merely western European in stretch. The Roman empire stretched
further afield, but there was another great empire in Persia and a larger
one in China. There is no comparison" (10). In inner and outer circles of
US power all agree "the US is enjoying a pre-emmence unrivalled by even the
greatest empires of the past" (11).

The recurrence of compari sons with Rome and the omnipresence of the word
empire in the US press are not just descriptive; they reflect the emergence
of a new imperial ideology. In an article by Max Boot, a Wall Street
Journal columnist, under the title "The Case for American Empire", he
writes: "It is striking - and no coincidence - that America now faces the
prospect of military action in many of the same lands where generations of
British colonial soldiers went on campaigns. These are all places where
Western armies have had to quell disorder. Afghanistan and other troubled
foreign lands cry out for the sort of enlightened foreign administration
once provided by self-confident Englishmen in jodhpurs and pith helmets" (12).

Dinesh D'Souza is a far right ideologue and researcher at the Hoover
Institution, who caught the public attention with theories on the "natural"
inferiority of Afro-Americans. In a recent article, "In praise of American
empire", he argued that Americans must finally recognise that the US "has
become an empire, the most magnanimous imperial  power ever" (13).

These apologists of empire are not confined to the far right. Imperial
thinking has also infiltrated academia. Stephen Peter Rosen, head of the
Olin Institute for Strategic Studies at Harvard University, maintains with
scientific detachment that: "A political unit that has overwhelming
military power, and uses that power to influence the internal behaviour of
other states, is called an empire. Our goal is not combating a rival, but
maintaining our imperial position, and maintaining imperial order" (14). An
order, as a more critical Harvard professor emphasises, entirely "crafted
to suit American imperial objectives. The empire signs on to those pieces
of the transnational legal order that suit its purposes (the WTO), while
ignoring or even sabotaging those parts (the International Criminal Court,
the Kyoto Protocol, the ABM Treaty) that do not" (15).

The idea of empire is a radical departure from the image, as articulated by
Alexis de Tocqueville, that Americans have of themselves and their country,
as a democratic exception among nations. This contradiction is no longer a
cause of great concern. Those who still have any scruples, and they are
increasingly few, qualify the words empire and hegemony with adjectives
such as benevolent or gentle. Robert Kagan of the Carnegie Endowment
writes: "And the truth is that the benevolent hegemony exercised by the US
is good for a vast portion of the world's population. It is certainly a
better international arrangement than all realistic alternatives" (16) .

A century ago Theodore Roosevelt used almost exactly the same words.
Rejecting any comparison between the US and Europe's colonial predators, he
wrote: "The simple truth is there is nothing even remotely resembling
imperialism in the development of the policy of expansion which has been
part of the history of America since the day she became a nation. There is
not an imperialist in the country that I have met yet" (17).

Sebastian Mallaby writes for the Washington Post, which, despite its
reputation after Watergate and its belated opposition to the Vietnam war,
has become more jingoistic since last September. He calls himself a
"reluctant imperialist". Writing in the review Foreign Affairs in April
2002, Mallaby suggests that the current world disorder obliges the US to
pursue imperialist policies. He apocalyptically pictures the third world,
its bankrupt states, uncontrolled population growth, endemic violence and
social decay. He maintains that the only rational choice is a return to
imperial rule. Third world states threatening Western security should be
placed under direct control. He concludes that: "Non-imperialist options,
notably, foreign aid and various nation building efforts, are not
altogether reliable. The logic of neo-imperialism is too compelling for the
Bush administration to resist" (18).

Bush does not seem to be trying too hard to resist. He is reluctant to
invest in nation building or commit the US to humanitarian interventions.
But he is quick to deploy US armed forces all over the world to crush the
enemies of civilisation and forces of evil. His vocabulary, with its
constant references to civilisation, barbarians and pacification, betrays
classical imperial thinking.

There is no knowing quite what Bush learned at Yale and Harvard, but since
I I September he has become the unlikely Caesar of the imperial camp in the
US. According to Cicero, Caesar "fought with the greatest success against
those most valiant and powerful nations and the other nations he alarmed
and drove back and defeated, and accustomed to yield to the supremacy of
the Roman people" (19). In much the same way Bush and the new US right now
plan to secure the US empire through war, subjugating fractious third world
peoples, overthrowing rogue states and perhaps even taking direct control
of bankrupt post-colonial states.

Under Bush, the US hopes to achieve greater security and prosperity through
the force of arms, rather than international co-operation. It is prepared
to act alone or in temporary coalitions, unilaterally and in defence of
narrowly-defined national interests. Instead of dealing with the economic
and social causes that nurture recurrent violence in the South, the US is
fuelling instability. That its objective is not territorial gain but
control makes little difference. Benevolent or reluctant imperialists are
imperialists all the same.

In the new US worldview, third world countries must submit to a period of
colonisation or semi -sovereignty. Europe would have to make do with a
subordinate role in the imperial system. Far from being an autonomous power
Europe is seen as a dependent zone, lacking the willpower and resources to
defend itself, and subservient to US decisions to wage war. It would have
to find its place in a new imperial division of labour in which "America
does the bombing and fighting, the French, British and Germans serve as
police in the border zones, and the Dutch, Swiss and Scandinavians provide
humanitarian aid" (20).

As Michael Ignatieff notes, apart from the British, the US trusts its
allies so little that it excludes them from any but the most menial
peacekeeping tasks. Zbigniew Brzezinski, who initiated the anti-Soviet
jihad in Afghanistan, formulated the idea, now widely shared in Washington,
arguing that the US should seek to "prevent collusion and maintain
dependence among the vassals, keep tributaries pliant and protected, and to
keep the barbarians from coming together" (21).

Charles Krauthammer puts it even more bluntly: "America won the cold war,
pocketed Poland and Hungary and the Czech Republic as door prizes, then
proceeded to pulverise Serbia and Afghanistan and, en passant, highlighted
Europe's irrelevance with a display of vast military superiority" (22).
This contempt goes a long way to explain the tension that has affected
transatlantic relations since 11 September.

Pursuing this hard imperial option will condemn the US to building walls
around the West. To borrow a powerful phrase from the South African writer,
John Michael Coetzee, the US, like all previous empires, will spend its
remaining period of power, however long it lasts, haunted by a single
thought: "How not to end, how not to die, how to prolong its era" (23).

Translated by Harry Forster

Philip S Golub is a journalist and lecturer at the Institute of European
Studies, University of Paris VIII-Saint-Denis

(1) Arthur Schlesinger Jr, "Unilateralism in Historic Perspective", in
Understanding Unilateralism at US.foreign Policy, RIIA, London, 2000.
(2) Charles William Maynes, "Two blasts against unilateralism", ibid.
(3) Quoted by William Appleman Williams, The Tragedy of American Diplomacy,
Dell, New York, 1962.
(4) Ibid.
(5) Quoted by Howard K Beale, Theodore Roosevelt (end the, Rise of America
to World Power, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore and London, 1989.
(6) Quoted by David Healy in US Expansionism, the Imperialist Urge at the
1980s, University of Wisconsin Press, 1970.
(7) Quoted in "it takes an empire say several US thinkers", The New York
Times, I April 2002. See also C Krauthammer, "The Unipolar Moment", Foreign
Affairs, New York, 1990.
(8) Quoted in "It takes an empire  say several US thinkers" , ibid
(9) Joseph S Nye Jr, The paradox of American Power, Oxford
University Press, New York, 2002.
(10) Paul Kennedy, "The Greatest Superpower Ever", New perspectives
Quarterly, Washington, winter 2002.
(11) Henry Kissinger, Does America Need a Foreign Policy, Simon & Schuster,
New York, 2001.
(12) Max Boot, "The Case forAmerican Empire", Weekly Standard, Washington,
15 October 200 1, vol 7, no 5.
(13) Christian Science Monitor, Boston, 26 April 2002.
(14) "The Future ofWar and the American Military", Harvard Review, May-June
2002, vol 104, no 5.
(15) Michael Ignatieff, "Barbarians at the Gate?", New York Review ofBooks,
28 February 2002. See a] so Pierre Conesa and Olivier Lepick "The new world
disorder", Le Monde diplomatique English language edition, July 2002.
(16) Robert Kagan, "The Benevolent Empire", Foreign Policy, Washington,
summer 1998.
(17) Howard K Beale, op cit.
(18) Sebastian Mallaby, "The Reluctant Imperial ist, Terrorism, Failed
States, and the Case for American Empire", Foreign Affairs, New York,
March-April 2002.
(19) Cicero, On the consular provinces, XIII, 32-35.
(20) Robert Kagan, "Power and Weakness, Why Europe and the US see the world
differently", policy Review, Washington, June- July 2002, no 113.
(2 1) Quoted by Charles William Maynest.
(22) Washington Post, 20 February 2002.
(23) John Michael Coetzee, Waiting for the Barbarians, Secker &Warburg,
London, 1980.

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