American Hegemony and the Politics of Provocation
by Jim
Fitzgerald Posted on August 17, 2022
American hegemony is now on life support. Intensive
care specialists are still scurrying about trying to resuscitate the patient.
Family and friends are saying he’s still putting up a fight. However, the
undertakers of this dying order have already arrived, and are standing just
outside the door: one is named Russia, and the other China. When the obituary
is read we will learn that the deceased is survived by an older cousin
representing a different order – balance of power realism.
As John Mearsheimer observed, the
unipolar moment after the fall of the former Soviet Union was an absolutely
unique period of history. At that moment, and for the next 30 years, America
was the only superpower left standing. Francis Fukuyama’s vision of
democratizing the world proved to be an irresistible temptation for Western
foreign policy elites. So, the evangelists of this new world order set out to
spread democracy throughout Eastern Asia, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and
North Africa.
They used the existing architecture of cold war
institutions like the UN, NATO, the EC, the WB, IMF, and WTO to spread liberal
values, and to "addict people to capitalism." Blinded by their own
idealism, they couldn’t imagine anyone would reject such a generous offer.
After all, as President George W. Bush often boasted,
"Freedom is in the heart of every individual." In other words, given
the opportunity everyone would naturally choose to be free. Of course, this
idea is an echo from President Wilson’s dictum,
"The world must be made safe for democracy [emphasis
mine]."
The Wilson doctrine, however, must be interpreted in
light of the French thinker Jean Jacques Rousseau. Rousseau believed that
"Man is born free, but is everywhere in chains." However, for
Rousseau, the human predicament is such that people don’t always know for
themselves what’s good for them. So, they need to be forced to be accessible by
others who know better than they do. As Rousseau asserted, "Whoever
refuses to obey the general will, will be forced to do so by the entire body;
this means merely that he will be forced to be free."
Scarcely has there ever been a more accurate sentence
written to describe the essence of American foreign policy in the post-Cold War
era. America, has steadily been going about the violent business of forcing men
to be free, and yet, they are everywhere in chains.
We need not look further than Iraq, Afghanistan,
Libya, Syria, Yemen, and Iran, to see the failures of American foreign policy.
What’s more, the foreign policy elites in America seem to be emboldened by
their losses as they are now trying the same tired policies in Ukraine, and
Taiwan.
Speaker Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan, and the letter from
Mitch McConnell and 25 other senators supporting her action, are the latest
example of the liberal order’s politics of provocation.
It should be obvious to anyone paying attention that,
rather than prevent wars, American hegemony creates wars where there were none.
Indeed, America has been at war throughout the entire unipolar era, and Pelosi
and others seem to want to provoke another war.
But things are changing, and they are changing fast.
Russia is not the weak, anemic, nation it was 30 years ago. China is not the
same poor country of the post-World War II era. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
has put the American hegemonic project on notice, and it has almost single
handedly exposed the expansionist aims of institutions like NATO.
This is why nearly all foreign policy types in
Washington, the heads of international institutions and thinktanks are going
apoplectic right now. Their order is collapsing, and their decisions and
actions appear to be done in desperation.
Unfortunately, there is no sign that these policy
makers are willing to change course. They are living examples of Einstein’s
definition of insanity: "doing the same thing over and over and expecting
different results."
They seem wholly unable to extricate themselves from a
mindset that, in terms of foreign policy, has already run its course. If they
don’t change their policies, then the American people will change their
politicians.
The next generation of politicians should abandon
American hegemony, and adopt a foreign policy based on realism and the balance
of power. Balance of power realism provides a macro picture of the way great
powers behave on the world stage. However, this realist theory must be
thoroughly infused with noninterventionist foreign policy. Noninterventionism
was the foreign policy of our Founding Father, George Washington, who counseled
future generations of Americans to avoid foreign entanglements in his Farewell
Address in 1796. This is the only system capable of stabilizing the great
powers in the new multipolar world, and the only one likely to ensure peace
going forward.
Jim Fitzgerald is a minister in the Presbyterian
Church in America and a missionary in the Middle East and North Africa. His
articles have appeared in American Greatness, American Thinker, Antiwar.com,
and the Aquila Report.
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