US military
should get out of the Middle East
By Jeffrey D. Sachs APRIL
03, 2017 bostonglobe.com
It’s time to end US military engagements in the
Middle East. Drones, special operations, CIA arms supplies, military advisers,
aerial bombings — the whole nine yards. Over and done with. That might seem
impossible in the face of ISIS, terrorism, Iranian ballistic missiles, and
other US security interests, but a military withdrawal from the Middle East is
by far the safest path for the United States and the region. That approach has
instructive historical precedents.
America has been no different from other imperial
powers in finding itself ensnared repeatedly in costly, bloody, and eventually
futile overseas wars. From the Roman empire till today, the issue is not
whether an imperial army can defeat a local one. It usually can, just as the
United States did quickly in Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003. The issue is
whether it gains anything by doing so. Following such a “victory,” the imperial
power faces unending heavy costs in terms of policing, political instability,
guerilla war, and terrorist blowback.
Terrorism is a
frequent consequence of imperial wars and imperial rule. Local populations are
unable to defeat the imperial powers, so they impose high costs through terror
instead. Consider the terrorism used by Jewish settlers against the British
Empire and local Palestinians in their fight for Israel’s independence and
territory; or Serbian terrorism deployed against the Hapsburg Empire; or
Vietnamese terrorism used against the French and United States in Vietnam’s
long war for independence; or American terrorism, for that matter, that
independence fighters used against the British in America’s war of
independence.
This is of
course not to condone terrorism. Indeed, my point is to condemn imperial rule,
and to argue for political solutions rather than imperial oppression, war, and
the terror that comes in its wake. Imperial rulers, whether the British in
pre-independence America; the Americans in Cuba and the Philippines after 1898;
the French and Americans in Vietnam; and the United States in the Middle East
in recent decades, foment violent reactions that destroy peace, prosperity,
good governance, and hope. The real solutions to these conflicts lie in
diplomacy and political justice, not in imperial rule, repression, and terror.
Let me get
some verbiage out of the way. By “empire” I mean a state that uses force to
impose the rulers of another country. Empires are most visible when they rule
directly through conquest and annexation, such as in the US conquests of
Hawaii, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico at the end of the 19th century. Yet
empires also rule indirectly, when they use force, covert or overt, to depose a
government they deem hostile and replace it with a government of their design
and that they intend to be under their control.
Indirect rule
has been the more typical US approach, for example when America overthrew the
elected government of Iran in 1953 in order to impose the autocratic Shah of
Iran. Similarly, America toppled the Taliban-led government of Afghanistan in
2001, and Iraq’s Saddam Hussein in 2003, in order to install regimes friendly
to the United States Easier said than done. In all of these cases, the American
imperial vision proved to be a fantasy, and the US-led violence came to naught in
terms of US interests.
In fact, there
are dozens of cases in which the CIA or American military has overthrown
governments in Latin America, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, with the aim
of indirect rule. And there are also countless bloody cases, such as Syria and
Yemen today, where the United States and local allies tried and failed to
overthrow a government and instead fomented a prolonged war. Whether the
overthrows have succeeded or failed, the long-term consequences have almost
always been violence and instability.
Perhaps the
most distinctive characteristic of the American empire is that it was a
latecomer to imperial rule. While the European powers, especially Britain and
France, were building their far-flung overseas empires in the 19th century, the
United States was still engaged in its genocidal wars against Native Americans
and its Civil War. America’s overseas empire building began almost like
clockwork in the 1890s, once the United States finally stretched from coast to
coast, thereby “closing the frontier” in North America. The next step for
America was overseas empire.
As a latecomer
empire, the United States repeatedly found itself taking up the imperial cloak
from a former European imperial power. Thus, the United States grabbed Puerto
Rico, Cuba, and the Philippines from Spain in 1898. It did so in the name of
supporting local freedom fighters against the Spanish Empire, only to betray
those freedom fighters immediately by installing US-backed regimes (in Cuba) or
direct rule (in Puerto Rico and the Philippines).
From 1898
until the end of World War II, America had few prospects for expanding its
imperial reach, since the British and French empires were still expanding.
Their biggest expansion occurred after World War I, when Britain and France
carved up the Arab lands of the defeated Ottoman Empire. Today’s Middle Eastern
war zones, including Israel-Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq, are the
post-World War I creations of the British and French empires, designed
originally not for local rule but for rule by the outside empires.
World War II
bled Europe dry. Though Britain was a victor of the war, and France was
liberated, neither country had the economic, financial, military, or political
wherewithal to hold on to their overseas empires, especially since freedom
movements in their colonies were engaged in terrorism and guerilla warfare to
gain their independence. Britain and France peacefully granted independence to
some of their colonies but in other cases fought bloody wars against the
independence movements (as the French did in Algeria and Vietnam), almost
always losing in the end.
After World
War II, the United States asserted global leadership, including through
indirect rule. The United States had lent, rather than given, Britain the
armaments to fight Hitler. As a result, Britain was in debt to the United
States and the United States was well positioned to replace Britain as the
dominant world power.
America’s
postwar empire building coincided with the Cold War. More often than not,
America justified its overseas wars and CIA-led coups as necessary to defend
itself and its allies against the Soviet Union. American leaders shunned the
language of empire and direct rule. Yet the simple fact is that the United
States very often had its own narrow interests at heart: oil wealth in the
Middle East; valuable farmlands and industry in Latin America; and US military
bases across the world.
The United
States often found itself fighting a continuation of earlier imperial wars.
Vietnam is a clear case in point. Following World War II, Vietnamese freedom
fighters under Ho Chi Minh battled French imperial rule to establish an
independent Vietnam. When the Vietnamese defeated the French in a key battle in
1954, and France decided to withdraw, the United States stepped in the fight
against the Vietnamese independence fighters, a costly and bloody war that
lasted until the US withdrawal in 1975. By that point, more than one million
Vietnamese had died at US hands and more than 50,000 American soldiers had lost
their lives for no reason. The US war-making also spread disastrously to
neighboring Laos and Cambodia.
In the Middle
East, the United States also took up the preceding wars of imperial Britain and
France. America’s motives were essentially the same: to secure Mideast oil and
to project military power in Western Asia, Eastern Mediterranean, and Indian
Ocean. In 1953, the CIA teamed up with Britain’s MI6 to overthrow the elected
government of Iran in order to secure Iran’s oil for the UK and United States.
Yet this was Britain’s last imperial hurrah in the region, since the United
States took the lead from that point onward.
To examine the
political histories of Lebanon, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, Yemen,
and Israel-Palestine after 1950, is to observe the United States engaged in the
intrigues, wars, CIA-led coups, and military overthrows that had been the
handiwork of Britain and France during earlier decades. The CIA toppled
governments in the Middle East on countless occasions. Media pundits tended to
overlook the US role in this instability.
The United
States is now ensnared in a perpetual, indeed expanding Middle East war, with
drones and air strikes increasingly replacing ground troops. In the past, US
ground troops committed atrocities, such as My Lai in Vietnam, that were seared
into the national conscience. Now we have drone strikes, killing hundreds of
civilians, that barely register in the news. The atrocities continue, but the
reaction to them has been automated with the efficiency of the information age.
The United
States is trapped in the Middle East by its own pseudo-intellectual
constructions. During the Vietnam War, the “domino theory” claimed that if
America withdrew from Vietnam, communism would sweep Asia. The new domino
theory is that if the United States stops were to stop fighting ISIS, Islamic
terrorists would soon be at our doorstep.
The truth is
almost the opposite. ISIS is a ragtag army of perhaps 30,000 troops in a region
in which the large nations — including Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, and Turkey —
have standing armies that are vastly larger and better equipped. These regional
powers could easily drive ISIS out of existence if they chose to do so. The US
military presence is actually ISIS’s main recruiting tool. Young people stream
into Syria and Iraq to fight the imperial enemy.
Empires trapped in regional wars can
choose to fight on or more wisely to acknowledge that the imperial adventure is
both futile and self-destructive. King George III was wise to give up in 1781;
fighting the Americans wasn’t worth the effort, even if it was possible
militarily. The United States was wise to give up the war in Cambodia, Laos,
and Vietnam in 1975. America’s decision to cut its losses saved not only
Southeast Asia but the United States, as well. The United States was similarly
wise to curtail its CIA-led coups throughout Latin America, as a prelude to
peace in the region.
The United States should immediately
end its fighting in the Middle East and turn to UN-based diplomacy for real
solutions and security. The Turks, Arabs, and Persians have lived together as
organized states for around 2,500 years. The United States has meddled
unsuccessfully in the region for 65 years. It’s time to let the locals sort out
their problems, supported by the good offices of the United Nations, including
peacekeeping and peace-building efforts. Just recently, the Arabs once again
wisely and rightly reiterated their support for a two-state solution between
Israelis and Palestinians if Israel withdraws from the conquered territories.
This gives added reason to back diplomacy, not war.
We are at the 100th anniversary of
British and French imperial rule in the Mideast. The United States has unwisely
prolonged the misery and blunders. One hundred years is enough.
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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