The fatal
expense of American imperialism
By Jeffrey D.
Sachs bostonglobe.com
THE SINGLE
MOST important issue in allocating national resources is war versus peace, or
as macroeconomists put it, “guns versus butter.” The United States is getting
this choice profoundly wrong, squandering vast sums and undermining national
security. In economic and geopolitical terms, America suffers from what Yale
historian Paul Kennedy calls “imperial overreach.” If our next president
remains trapped in expensive Middle East wars, the budgetary costs alone could
derail any hopes for solving our vast domestic problems.
It may seem
tendentious to call America an empire, but the term fits certain realities of
US power and how it’s used. An empire is a group of territories under a single
power. Nineteenth-century Britain was obviously an empire when it ruled India,
Egypt, and dozens of other colonies in Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean. The
United States directly rules only a handful of conquered islands (Hawaii,
Puerto Rico, Guam, Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands), but it stations troops
and has used force to influence who governs in dozens of other sovereign
countries. That grip on power beyond America’s own shores is now weakening.
The scale of
US military operations is remarkable. The US Department of Defense has (as of a
2010 inventory) 4,999 military facilities, of which 4,249 are in the United
States; 88 are in overseas US territories; and 662 are in 36 foreign countries
and foreign territories, in all regions of the world. Not counted in this list
are the secret facilities of the US intelligence agencies. The cost of running
these military operations and the wars they support is extraordinary, around
$900 billion per year, or 5 percent of US national income, when one adds the
budgets of the Pentagon, the intelligence agencies, homeland security, nuclear
weapons programs in the Department of Energy, and veterans benefits. The $900
billion in annual spending is roughly one-quarter of all federal government
outlays.
The United
States has a long history of using covert and overt means to overthrow
governments deemed to be unfriendly to US interests, following the classic
imperial strategy of rule through locally imposed friendly regimes. In a
powerful study of Latin America between 1898 and 1994, for example, historian
John Coatsworth counts 41 cases of “successful” US-led regime change, for an
average rate of one government overthrow by the United States every 28 months for
a century. And note: Coatsworth’s count does not include the failed attempts,
such as the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba.
This tradition of US-led regime
change has been part and parcel of US foreign policy in other parts of the
world, including Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia. Wars of
regime change are costly to the United States, and often devastating to the
countries involved. Two major studies have measured the costs of the Iraq and
Afghanistan wars. One, by my Columbia colleague Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard
scholar Linda Bilmes, arrived at the cost of $3 trillion as of 2008. A more
recent study, by the Cost of War Project at Brown University, puts the price
tag at $4.7 trillion through 2016. Over a 15-year period, the $4.7 trillion amounts
to roughly $300 billion per year, and is more than the combined total outlays
from 2001 to 2016 for the federal departments of education, energy, labor,
interior, and transportation, and the National Science Foundation, National
Institutes of Health, and the Environmental Protection Agency.
It is nearly a truism that US
wars of regime change have rarely served America’s security needs. Even when
the wars succeed in overthrowing a government, as in the case of the Taliban in
Afghanistan, Saddam Hussein in Iraq, and Moammar Khadafy in Libya, the result
is rarely a stable government, and is more often a civil war. A “successful”
regime change often lights a long fuse leading to a future explosion, such as
the 1953 overthrow of Iran’s democratically elected government and installation
of the autocratic Shah of Iran, which was followed by the Iranian Revolution of
1979. In many other cases, such as the US attempts (with Saudi Arabia and
Turkey) to overthrow Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, the result is a bloodbath and
military standoff rather than an overthrow of the government.
WHAT IS THE
DEEP motivation for these profligate wars and for the far-flung military bases
that support them?
From 1950 to
1990, the superficial answer would have been the Cold War. Yet America’s
imperial behavior overseas predates the Cold War by half a century (back to the
Spanish-American War, in 1898) and has outlasted it by another quarter century.
America’s overseas imperial adventures began after the Civil War and the final
conquests of the Native American nations. At that point, US political and
business leaders sought to join the European empires — especially Britain,
France, Russia, and the newly emergent Germany — in overseas conquests. In
short order, America grabbed the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Panama, and
Hawaii, and joined the European imperial powers in knocking on the doors of
China.
As of the
1890s, the United States was by far the world’s largest economy, but until
World War II, it took a back seat to the British Empire in global naval power,
imperial reach, and geopolitical dominance. The British were the unrivaled
masters of regime change — for example, in carving up the corpse of the Ottoman
Empire after World War I. Yet the exhaustion from two world wars and the Great
Depression ended the British and French empires after World War II and thrust
the United States and Russia into the forefront as the two main global empires.
The Cold War had begun.
The economic
underpinning of America’s global reach was unprecedented. As of 1950, US output
constituted a remarkable 27 percent of global output, with the Soviet Union
roughly a third of that, around 10 percent. The Cold War fed two fundamental
ideas that would shape American foreign policy till now. The first was that the
United States was in a struggle for survival against the Soviet empire. The
second was that every country, no matter how remote, was a battlefield in that
global war. While the United States and the Soviet Union would avoid a direct
confrontation, they flexed their muscles in hot wars around the world that
served as proxies for the superpower competition.
Over the
course of nearly a half century, Cuba, Congo, Ghana, Indonesia, Vietnam, Laos,
Cambodia, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Iran, Namibia, Mozambique, Chile,
Afghanistan, Lebanon, and even tiny Granada, among many others, were
interpreted by US strategists as battlegrounds with the Soviet empire. Often,
far more prosaic interests were involved. Private companies like United Fruit
International and ITT convinced friends in high places (most famously the
Dulles brothers, Secretary of State John Foster and CIA director Allen) that
land reforms or threatened expropriations of corporate assets were dire threats
to US interests, and therefore in need of US-led regime change. Oil interests
in the Middle East were another repeated cause of war, as had been the case for
the British Empire from the 1920s.
These wars
destabilized and impoverished the countries involved rather than settling the
politics in America’s favor. The wars of regime change were, with few
exceptions, a litany of foreign policy failure. They were also extraordinarily
costly for the United States itself. The Vietnam War was of course the greatest
of the debacles, so expensive, so bloody, and so controversial that it crowded
out Lyndon Johnson’s other, far more important and promising war, the War on
Poverty, in the United States.
The end of the
Cold War, in 1991, should have been the occasion for a fundamental
reorientation of US guns-versus-butter policies. The occasion offered the
United States and the world a “peace dividend,” the opportunity to reorient the
world and US economy from war footing to sustainable development. Indeed, the
Rio Earth Summit, in 1992, established sustainable development as the
centerpiece of global cooperation, or so it seemed.
Alas, the blinders and arrogance
of American imperial thinking prevented the United States from settling down to
a new era of peace. As the Cold War was ending, the United States was beginning
a new era of wars, this time in the Middle East. The United States would sweep
away the Soviet-backed regimes in the Middle East and establish unrivalled US
political dominance. Or at least that was the plan.
THE QUARTER
CENTURY since 1991 has therefore been marked by a perpetual US war in the
Middle East, one that has destabilized the region, massively diverted resources
away from civilian needs toward the military, and helped to create mass budget
deficits and the buildup of public debt. The imperial thinking has led to wars
of regime change in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Somalia, and Syria, across
four presidencies: George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack
Obama. The same thinking has induced the United States to expand NATO to
Russia’s borders, despite the fact that NATO’s supposed purpose was to defend
against an adversary — the Soviet Union — that no longer exists. Former Soviet
president Mikhail Gorbachev has emphasized that eastward NATO expansion “was
certainly a violation of the spirit of those declarations and assurances that
we were given in 1990,” regarding the future of East-West security.
There is a
major economic difference, however, between now and 1991, much less 1950. At
the start of the Cold War, in 1950, the United States produced around 27
percent of world output. As of 1991, when the Dick Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz
dreams of US dominance were taking shape, the United States accounted for
around 22 percent of world production. By now, according to IMF estimates, the
US share is 16 percent, while China has surpassed the United States, at around
18 percent. By 2021, according to projections by the International Monetary
Fund, the United States will produce roughly 15 percent of global output compared
with China’s 20 percent. The United States is incurring massive public debt and
cutting back on urgent public investments at home in order to sustain a
dysfunctional, militarized, and costly foreign policy.
Thus comes a
fundamental choice. The United States can vainly continue the neoconservative
project of unipolar dominance, even as the recent failures in the Middle East
and America’s declining economic preeminence guarantee the ultimate failure of
this imperial vision. If, as some neoconservatives support, the United States
now engages in an arms race with China, we are bound to come up short in a
decade or two, if not sooner. The costly wars in the Middle East — even if
continued much less enlarged in a Hillary Clinton presidency — could easily end
any realistic hopes for a new era of scaled-up federal investments in
education, workforce training, infrastructure, science and technology, and the
environment.
The far
smarter approach will be to maintain America’s defensive capabilities but end
its imperial pretensions. This, in practice, means cutting back on the
far-flung network of military bases, ending wars of regime change, avoiding a
new arms race (especially in next-generation nuclear weapons), and engaging
China, India, Russia, and other regional powers in stepped-up diplomacy through
the United Nations, especially through shared actions on the UN’s Sustainable
Development Goals, including climate change, disease control, and global
education.
Many American conservatives will sneer
at the very thought that the United States’ room for maneuver should be limited
in the slightest by the UN. But think how much better off the United States
would be today had it heeded the UN Security Council’s wise opposition to the
wars of regime change in Iraq, Libya, and Syria. Many conservatives will point
to Vladimir Putin’s actions in Crimea as proof that diplomacy with Russia is
useless, without recognizing that it was NATO’s expansion to the Baltics and
its 2008 invitation to Ukraine to join NATO, that was a primary trigger of
Putin’s response.
In the end, the Soviet Union bankrupted
itself through costly foreign adventures such as the 1979 invasion of
Afghanistan and its vast over-investment in the military. Today the United
States has similarly over-invested in the military, and could follow a similar
path to decline if it continues the wars in the Middle East and invites an arms
race with China. It’s time to abandon the reveries, burdens, and
self-deceptions of empire and to invest in sustainable development at home and in
partnership with the rest of the world.
Jeffrey D. Sachs is University Professor and Director of the Center for
Sustainable Development at Columbia University, and author of “The Age of
Sustainable Development.”
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