George Bush's Gift To The World - The End of American Imperialism

By David Michael Green

George W. Bush was unquestionably the worst American president in the
two and a quarter centuries of the country’s existence.

After all, James Buchanan, the previous aspirant to the title, merely
did nothing while the South seceded. Hah! You’ll have to do better
than that, Jimmy, if you want to wear this crown!

Bush did far better, of course. It would appear to be the one thing in
his entire life he actually worked hard at, and the one challenge he
was able to meet successfully. This was an astonishingly destructive
presidency, that’s true even despite the fact that we don’t really
know much about his administration, because in addition to being the
worst, it was also the most secretive ever. (I’m sure that’s just a
coincidence, too.) Moreover, that’s also even considering that most
Americans still vastly underestimate the depravity of Team Bush. As I
have argued previously, if you think they were ‘merely’ arrogant
bunglers with exceptionally bad politics, you’ve grossly
underestimated them. In fact, they were predators who launched their
class warfare agenda behind the smoke-screen of national security,
faux patriotism and secret government.

Does this record of unparalleled devastation mean that Bush never did
anything right in eight years? No, though it’s pretty much the case
that he never did anything right on purpose.

Unquestionably, however, Bush did make some positive contributions to
American life, even if they were completely inadvertent, and even if
they were dwarfed by the swath of destruction he left all across the
landscape. Put simply, George W. Bush’s greatest success was that he
gave a very bad name to very bad things.

Like the Republican Party, for example. Or conservative ideology. Or
theocracy. Or presidents with the last name of Bush. Or emotional
midgets who seek the White House as a salve for their personal
psychological neediness.

We can be grateful for all these contributions, and I certainly am –
though “thanks” is not likely what I would say if I had the pleasure
of relating my assessment of Mr. Bush to him directly. More likely it
would be something closer to the gracious words Dick “Dick” Cheney had
for Patrick Leahy early on in the administration, when the two bumped
into each other on the Senate floor. Those remarks were not, shall we
say, fit for print in a family newspaper.

But I digress.

George Bush left us many gifts, but perhaps the greatest of them is
that he has ruined the sport of imperialism in America, maybe forever.

Admittedly, that may of course be wishful thinking. Woe be unto the
world, for example, should there be another 9/11 type of event.
Somebody somewhere would have to pay in spades, and they likely
wouldn’t be nice white folks.

And god only knows, alternatively, what Americans might be capable of
under conditions of real resource deprivation. Considering what we’ve
already done while being the richest and most powerful country in the
world, it’s scary to think of what we could do with our back genuinely
to the wall.

But leaving those unusual situations aside, it must be said that,
after Iraq, the fun has really gone out of eviscerating small foreign
countries, even those foolish enough to locate themselves on top of
our oil.

Imperialism used to be a fairly sporting avocation for gentlemen of a
certain class. You could occupy hapless Latin American countries,
topple Iranian democracies, and simultaneously sponsor apartheid
suppression of whole populations, still having time left by mid-
afternoon for a couple belts with the boys down at the club, all in
celebration of a good day’s work at the office. It was jolly good fun
for all. Except, of course, for all for whom it wasn’t.

Unfortunately, that latter category included more or less the entirety
of the southern hemisphere, and not a few in the north to boot. But,
so what? We’re Americans! Caring about the morality of imperialism is
for pre-dictatorship revolutionary anti-colonialist leaders and washed-
up European former empires who can’t get it up anymore.

Truth be told, we’re now closer to being in that latter category than
not, and we can thank George W. Bush for that, one of the few
contributions of this complete and utter disaster going by the name of
the 43rd presidency.

I’d say we’re more than a bit lucky for that outcome, too. Imagine if
Iraq had been a success. Imagine if it had been the cakewalk they
obviously thought it would be. Indeed, one of the great ironies of
American politics is that Iraq probably readily could have been a
‘great success’, at least in terms of what could be marketed as such
to a foolish American public.

In that sense, we are really quite fortunate, in a perverse sort of
way, that Bush was as much a lazy boob as he was a warmonger. We are
lucky that Rumsfeld was as dogmatic about his 21 century military
ideas as Cheney was a completely psycho amoral sociopath. For had they
simply run an occupation that was as carefully planned and as
adequately staffed as the invasion, or had they toppled Saddam and
then promptly left, “Mission Accomplished” would have been a lot more
than some banner duct-taped onto the bridge of an aircraft carrier.

And that would have been very bad news indeed for the rest of the
world. Syria, Iran, Venezuela, Cuba – there’s no telling where they
might have gone next, and likely with the full support of the American
public, at that point popping the buttons off their jingoistic shirts
(made in Thailand, of course), their chests puffed out to the wall.

Americans were already growing dubious of regressive exploits in
international adventurism, it seems to me. I remember laughing at the
senior Bush, whose first pronouncement after defeating the
pathetically under-matched Iraqi military in 1991 was “By God, we’ve
licked the Vietnam syndrome once and for all!” Yeah, he actually said
that. All I could think at the time was, if you have to say it, dude,
it ain’t really happenin’. And all I can think now is, out of 300
million people in this country, did we really go to the Bush family
twice to staff the presidency?

But, in fact, the Vietnam syndrome had not been licked. That war was a
traumatic experience, and it changed public perceptions about the
desirability of war itself. On top of which, America was not
completely immune to the general Western post-World War II movement
away from militarism as a means of settling disputes. Then there’s
always been our long-standing vision of ourselves as both peace-loving
and anti-imperialistic – however absurd those perceptions often were
in light of actual practice. These also provided at least a speed-bump
along the road to war in all but the more obvious cases.

Indeed, two things about public opinion and war in America struck me
as pretty notable, but not much noted, these last years. One is that
there was a surprising – I thought – lack of blood lust after 9/11. I
guess part of that was that there was no state enemy to be attacked,
as there had been in the past, and part of that was the foregone
conclusion that we would be invading Afghanistan. But, really, I’m
surprised there wasn’t a far more intense call for revenge. As one
measure of the absence of this, consider that Osama bin Laden still
has not been captured or killed, almost a decade (!) later, and that
nobody seems much to care about that or mention it very often.

The other thing worth noting is that the public was, in fact, dubious
about the Iraq invasion, right up until the weeks before. People
realized that it was bogus, at some basic level, and they certainly
had a hard time connecting it to 9/11. It took a marketing full-court
press to eventually garner public support for the war (America’s
pathetic excuse for a Congress was a lot easier to roll). It never
worked abroad (another reason Americans were a bit slower to come on-
board), but in the context of post-9/11 fears, a general tendency to
trust the president, and the regressive movement’s prowess at equating
militarism with patriotism, the Madison Avenue campaign finally
produced a tenuous majority support for the Iraq invasion in the weeks
right before it actually went down.

I think it’s slightly encouraging that, even in that context, it still
took a real effort to sell the war. It’s also seriously discouraging,
on the other hand, that it could be sold, and that it was. But, as
noted, this was a tenuous acceptance. Had the war gone well it would
have amplified the militarism in the Bush team and the country’s
willingness to let them run rampant. Since it went disastrously, it
had the opposite effect.

Iraq is probably not the last time America will go to war. But I think
it’s fair to say that this country – its nose once more bloodied by a
stupid imperial adventure, stupidly prosecuted – will be that much
more reticent to repeat the experience. We do learn in America. It is
often a painfully slow process, sometimes punctuated by reverse
trajectories (can you say ‘creation science’), but we do occasionally
exhibit the classic clinical signs of a student who can be taught,
however reluctantly and inadvertantly.

And thus we owe a debt of gratitude to the Iraqis, perhaps a million
of whom have been murdered, another four or five million dislocated,
and countless others wounded – emotionally, if not physically, if not
both – for helping us to learn. And the people of Syria and Iran and
much of the rest of the developing world owe these Iraqis thanks as
well, for giving the US pause from invading other countries at will.

America’s place in the world is likely to be entering a new period
now, for several reasons. One is that the low-key successes of the
Obama administration will help underscore the sheer lunacy of the Bush
years, and all the policies associated with them. Another is that we
are rapidly coming face-to-face with the reality that empire is
expensive. As our standards of living go from mere steady decline to
sheer precipitous decline, you’ll know that we’ve actually turned that
corner when mainstream politicians finally have the courage to talk
about scaling back expenditures on the obscenely bloated American
military machine.

But, in the end, it may truthfully be said that no one did more to
discourage American militaristic tendencies than Jingo George,
himself, however odd that may seem.

And, who knows? If I ever met him, maybe I could even bring myself to
thank him for that, after all.

But only, of course, from above, after I had decked him.

Authors Website: www.regressiveantidote.net

Authors Bio: David Michael Green is a professor of political science
at Hofstra University in New York.  He is delighted to receive
readers' reactions to his articles ([email protected]), but
regrets that time constraints do not always allow him to respond. His
website is www.regressiveantidote.net.>end

Peace,
Doc


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