How empire is destroying the American republic
OCTOBER 5, 2020
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2020/10/05/how-empire-is-destroying-the-american-republic/
Many American
hawks fail to grasp one of the most axiomatic rules of history: when a republic
becomes an empire, it is no longer a republic.
For all their concern about spreading democracy abroad, many hawks show
a decidedly noticeable failure to recognize that imperial adventures weaken
republican government at home. The devolution from republic to empire has a
number of causes, some practical and some cultural, with most on display in our
current politics.
On a practical level, the massive national security commitment necessary
to maintain an empire tends to overwhelm the republican safeguards against
unnecessary wars. In recent decades, for example, the national security state
has gone to war in numerous countries — Libya and Syria are only two examples —
on the basis of an Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) that was
enacted by Congress to sanction attacks on the perpetrators of 9/11.
The use of that AUMF to justify wars unrelated to 9/11 made these wars
blatantly unconstitutional. Yet it is apparent that most of Congress is now a
mere appendage of the national security state and no longer protects its
constitutional prerogative to sanction war as this would require difficult
votes as well as jeopardize the largesse bestowed by defense contractors.
Madison’s famous argument in Federalist #51 that, in a republic with separated
powers, one branch of government would “resist encroachments of the others”
becomes obviated in an empire. Empires tend to ignore republican rules.
The other practical difficulty of maintaining a republic when it aspires
to empire is that the technologies created to fight wars abroad end up
undermining the republican government at home. In imperial Rome, the legions
themselves became a threat to domestic order; in the present U.S., the domestic
attacks are more subtle.
Numerous media reports indicate,
for example, that an anti-Trump PAC, Defeat Disinfo, is employing retired Army
General Stanley McCrystal to deploy a Defense Department-developed Artificial
Intelligence (AI) tool to counter candidate Trump’s social media posts and to
create “counter-narratives” using a network of “paid influencers.” The AI
technology was developed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to
counter the propaganda of terrorist groups overseas. The culture of our present
officer corps seems a long way from that of General George Marshall who once remarked to
Eisenhower, “I may make a thousand mistakes in this war, but none will be the
result of political meddling!”
McCrystal’s deployment of anti-terrorism technology to manipulate
domestic political opinion during an election is surely incompatible with
republican values. One would have thought that the McCrystal revelation would
have generated more controversy as it comes on the heels of the astonishing
abuse of another anti-terrorism tool, NSA surveillance, by FBI agents who
submitted phony warrants to the FISA court in order to frame Trump campaign
operatives.
As observers from both parties have noticed, military technology and
tactics have bled into domestic policing with local police departments
deploying armored vehicles and drones. One need not be a Trump partisan, nor a
rabid libertarian, to conclude that the technologies developed to maintain the American empire is now being used to undermine our republican
traditions.
Tufts law professor Michael Glennon has concluded that the national
security state has in fact grown so large that the “Madisonian” branches of
government — the presidency, Congress, and the courts — are no longer in charge
of national security policy. Glennon asserts that we now have a “double
government” in which policy decisions are made by “a largely concealed
managerial directorate, consisting of the several hundred leaders of the
military, law enforcement, and the intelligence departments and agencies of our
government” who “operate at an increasing remove from constitutional limits and
restraints, moving the nation slowly toward autocracy.” Despite his clear
desire to do so, Trump’s inability to extricate us from Afghanistan is
confirmation that the Madisonian branches of government no longer determine
policy.
The rise of a double government was captured perfectly in a Tweet by
Michael McFaul, an Obama national security official, who commented that, “Trump
has lost the Intelligence Community. He has lost the State Department. He has
lost the military. How can he continue to serve as our Commander in Chief?” To
those with an imperial outlook, the President serves at the pleasure of those
who run the empire, not the voters. To Michael McFaul, the unelected members of
the foreign policy establishment determine the legitimacy of elected
leaders.
While legal breakdowns and the technologies of the American empire are
overwhelming our republican traditions, the much deeper problem is that
American leaders have eschewed a constitutional culture and adopted an imperial
culture.
Republican institutions cannot operate unless its leaders embody a
certain temperament or “constitutional personality.” They must demonstrate
measured and restrained habits even with political opponents. They will seek
common ground and compromise. They would, in Hamilton’s words, “withstand the
temporary delusion” of popular pressures and engage in “more cool and sedate
reflection.”
In foreign policy, this constitutional temperament would, in
Washington’s words, “observe good faith and justice toward all nations;
cultivate peace and harmony with all” and “nothing is more essential than that
permanent, inveterate antipathies against particular nations, and passionate
attachments for others should be excluded.” In other words, republics
have leaders of a certain quality and type, leaders who demonstrate restraint
not only in domestic politics but on the world stage.
Contrast this constitutional temperament with our current crop of
leaders. In domestic politics, we have fierce, vituperative, and irrational
partisanship. There is no spirit of compromise and no willingness to show good
faith with political opponents. Our politics, as Hobbes said of the state of
nature, exhibit “a perpetual and restless desire of power after power, that
ceaseth only in death.” In foreign
policy, the imperial personality shows itself in “maximum pressure” campaigns,
an “inveterate” antipathy toward Russia, and chest-thumping assertions of
American exceptionalism. The constitutional personality exhibits a certain
humility; the imperial personality exhibits none.
Removing the practical dangers of the empire would be hard, but not
impossible. Restoring congressional authority in matters of war and peace and
banning the domestic use of military and intelligence technologies are both
achievable goals for those wishing to restore republican values. However, the
imperial culture of our national security elites flows out of a will to power
that is, at root, a character flaw. Changing laws is easy compared with improving character.
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