Imperial
Capital but America-First Nation
by Patrick J. Buchanan Posted on October 25, 2019
https://original.antiwar.com/buchanan/2019/10/24/imperial-capital-but-america-first-nation/
https://original.antiwar.com/buchanan/2019/10/24/imperial-capital-but-america-first-nation/
"Let someone else
fight over this long blood-stained sand," said President Donald Trump in
an impassioned defense of his decision to cut ties to the Syrian Kurds,
withdraw and end these "endless wars."
Are our troops in Syria,
then, on their way home? Well, not exactly.
Those leaving northern
Syria went into Iraq. Other U.S. soldiers will stay in Syria to guard oil wells
that we and the Kurds captured in the war with ISIS. Another 150 US troops will
remain in al-Tanf to guard Syria’s border with Iraq, at the request of Jordan
and Israel.
And 2,000 more US troops
are being sent to Saudi Arabia to help defend the kingdom from Iran, which
raises a question: Are we coming or going?
In his conflicting
statements and actions, Trump seemingly seeks to mollify both sides of our
national quarrel:
Is America still the
world’s last superpower with global policing obligations? Or should we shuck off
this imperial role and make America, again, in Jeane Kirkpatrick’s phrase,
"a normal country in normal time"?
In Middle America,
anti-interventionism has carried the day. As Trump says, no declaration at his
rallies is more wildly welcomed than his pledge to end our Middle East wars and
bring the troops home.
But in this imperial
capital, the voice of the interventionist yet prevails. The media, the foreign
policy elite, the think tanks, the ethnic lobbies, the Pentagon, the State
Department, Capitol Hill, are almost all interventionists, opposed to Trump’s
abandonment of the Kurds. Rand Paul may echo Middle America, but Lindsey Graham
speaks for the Republican establishment.
Yet the evidence seems
compelling that anti-interventionism is where the country is at, and the
Congress knows it.
For though the
denunciations of Trump’s pullout from Syria have not ceased, one detects no
campaign on Capitol Hill to authorize sending US troops back to Syria, in
whatever numbers are needed, to enable the Kurds to keep control of their
occupied quadrant of that country.
Love of the Kurds, so
audible on the Hill, does not go that far.
While surely loud, the
neocons and liberal interventionists who drown out dissent in D.C. appear to
lack the courage of their New World Order convictions.
In 1940-41, the
anti-interventionists of "America First" succeeded in keeping us out
of the world war (after Hitler and Stalin invaded Poland in September of 1939
and Britain and France went to war). Pearl Harbor united the nation, but not
until Dec. 7, 1941, two years later – when America First folded its tents and
enlisted.
Today, because of both sides
of our foreign policy quarrel have powerful constituencies, we have paralysis
anew, reflected in policy.
We have enough troops in
Afghanistan to prevent the Taliban from overrunning Kabul and the big cities,
but not enough to win the war.
In Iraq, which we invaded
in 2003 to oust Saddam Hussein and install democracy, we brought to power the
Shia and their Iranian sponsors. Now we battle Iran for political influence in
Baghdad.
Across the Middle East, we
have enough troops, planes, and ships to prevent our expulsion, but not enough
to win the wars from Syria to Yemen to Afghanistan.
Bahrain in the Persian Gulf
is the home base of the US Fifth Fleet. We have 13,000 troops and a major airbase at Al Udeid in Qatar. US Army Central Command and 13,000 US troops are in
Kuwait. Trump has sent more troops to Saudi Arabia, but it was the
"infidel" troops’ presence on sacred Saudi soil that was among the reasons
Osama bin Laden launched 9/11.
To the question, "Are
we going deeper into the Middle East or coming out?" the answer is almost
surely the latter.
Among the candidates who
could be president in 2021 – Trump, Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders
– none is an interventionist of the Lindsey Graham school. Three are
anti-interventionist and antiwar, which may help explain why Democrats are
taking a second look at Hillary Clinton.
According to polls, Iran is
first among the nations that Americans regard as an enemy. Still, there is no
stomach for war with Iran. When Trump declined to order a strike on Iran –
after an air and cruise missile attack shut down half of the Saudi oil production –
Americans, by their silent acquiescence, seemed to support our staying out.
Yet if there is no stomach
in Middle America for war with Iran and a manifest desire to pull the troops
out and come home, there is ferocious establishment resistance to any
withdrawal of US forces. This has bedeviled Trump through the three years of
his presidency.
Again, it seems a stalemate
is in the cards – until there is some new explosion in the Mideast, after which
the final withdrawal for America will begin, as it did for the exhausted
British and French empires after World War II.
That we are leaving the
Middle East seems certain. Only the departure date is as yet undetermined.
Patrick J. Buchanan is the
author of Churchill, Hitler, and
“The Unnecessary War”: How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World. To find out more about
Patrick Buchanan and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists,
visit the Creators Web page at www.creators.com.
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