The End Stage of American Empire
by William J. Astore and Tom
Engelhardt
https://original.antiwar.com/William_Astore/2023/06/06/the-end-stage-of-american-empire/
Posted on June 07, 2023
All around us things are falling apart. Collectively,
Americans are experiencing national and imperial decline. Can America save
itself? Is this country, as presently constituted, even worth saving?
For me, that last question is radical indeed. From my
early years, I believed deeply in the idea of America. I knew this country
wasn’t perfect, of course, not even close. Long before the 1619 Project,
I was aware of the “original sin” of slavery and how central it was to our
history. I also knew about the genocide of Native Americans. (As a teenager, my
favorite movie — and so it remains — was Little Big
Man, which pulled no punches when it came to the
white man and his insatiably murderous greed.)
Nevertheless, America still promised much, or so I
believed in the 1970s and 1980s. Life here was simply better, hands down, than
in places like the Soviet Union and Mao Zedong’s China. That’s why we had to
“contain” communism — to keep them over there, so
they could never invade our country and extinguish our lamp of liberty. And
that’s why I joined America’s Cold War military, serving in the Air Force from
the presidency of Ronald Reagan to that of George W. Bush and Dick Cheney. And
believe me, it proved quite a ride. It taught this retired lieutenant colonel
that the sky’s anything but the limit.
In the end, 20 years in the Air Force led me to turn
away from empire, militarism,
and nationalism. I found myself seeking instead some antidote to the mainstream
media’s celebrations of American exceptionalism and the exaggerated version
of victory
culture that went with it (long after victory
itself was in short supply). I started writing against
the empire and its disastrous wars and found likeminded people at TomDispatch —
former imperial operatives turned incisive critics like Chalmers Johnson and Andrew Bacevich,
along with sharp-eyed journalist Nick Turse and,
of course, the irreplaceable Tom Engelhardt, the founder of those “tomgrams”
meant to alert America and the world to the dangerous folly of repeated U.S.
global military interventions.
But this isn’t a plug for TomDispatch.
It’s a plug for freeing your mind as much as possible from the thoroughly militarized matrix
that pervades America. That matrix drives imperialism, waste, war, and global
instability to the point where, in the context of the conflict in Ukraine, the
risk of nuclear Armageddon could imaginably approach that of the 1962 Cuban
Missile Crisis. As wars — proxy or otherwise — continue, America’s global
network of 750-odd military bases never seems to decline. Despite upcoming cuts
to domestic spending, just about no one in Washington imagines Pentagon budgets
doing anything but growing, even soaring toward the trillion-dollar level, with
militarized programs accounting for
62% of federal discretionary spending in 2023.
Indeed, an engorged Pentagon — its budget for 2024 is
expected to rise to $886 billion in
the bipartisan debt-ceiling deal reached by President Joe Biden and House
Speaker Kevin McCarthy — guarantees one thing: a speedier fall for the American
empire. Chalmers Johnson predicted it;
Andrew Bacevich analyzed it.
The biggest reason is simple enough: incessant, repetitive, disastrous wars and
costly preparations for more of the same have been sapping America’s physical
and mental reserves, as past wars did the reserves of previous empires
throughout history. (Think of the short-lived Napoleonic empire, for example.)
Known as “the arsenal of democracy” during World War
II, America has now simply become an arsenal, with a military-industrial-congressional complex
intent on forging and feeding wars rather than seeking to starve and stop them.
The result: a precipitous decline in the country’s standing globally, while at
home Americans pay a steep price of accelerating violence (2023 will
easily set a record for
mass shootings) and “carnage”
(Donald Trump’s word) in a once proud but now much-bloodied “homeland.”
Lessons from History on Imperial Decline
I’m a historian, so please allow me to share a few
basic lessons I’ve learned. When I taught World War I to cadets at the Air
Force Academy, I would explain how the horrific costs of that war contributed
to the collapse of four empires: Czarist Russia, the German Second Reich, the
Ottoman empire, and the Austro-Hungarian empire of the Habsburgs. Yet even the
“winners,” like the French and British empires, were also weakened by the
enormity of what was, above all, a brutal European civil war, even if it
spilled over into Africa, Asia, and indeed the Americas.
And yet after that war ended in 1918, peace proved
elusive indeed, despite the Treaty of Versailles, among other abortive
agreements. There was too much unfinished business, too much belief in the
power of militarism, especially in an emergent Third Reich in Germany and in
Japan, which had embraced ruthless European military methods to create its own
Asiatic sphere of dominance. Scores needed to be settled, so the Germans and
Japanese believed, and military offensives were the way to do it.
As a result, civil war in Europe continued with World
War II, even as Japan showed that Asiatic powers could similarly embrace and
deploy the unwisdom of unchecked militarism and war. The result: 75 million
dead and more empires shattered, including
Mussolini’s “New Rome,”
a “thousand-year” German Reich that barely lasted 12 of them before being
utterly destroyed, and an Imperial Japan that was starved, burnt out, and
finally nuked. China, devastated by war with Japan, also found itself ripped
apart by internal struggles between nationalists and communists.
As with its prequel, even most of the “winners” of
World War II emerged in a weakened state. In defeating Nazi Germany, the Soviet
Union had lost 25 to 30 million people. Its response was to erect, in Winston
Churchill’s phrase, an “Iron Curtain” behind which it could exploit the peoples
of Eastern Europe in a militarized empire that ultimately collapsed due to its
wars and its own internal divisions. Yet the USSR lasted longer than the
post-war French and British empires. France, humiliated by its rapid
capitulation to the Germans in 1940, fought to reclaim wealth and glory in
“French” Indochina, only to be severely humbled at Dien Bien Phu.
Great Britain, exhausted from its victory, quickly lost India, that “jewel” in
its imperial crown, and then Egypt in the Suez debacle.
There was, in fact, only one country, one empire, that
truly “won” World War II: the United States, which had been the least touched
(Pearl Harbor aside) by war and all its horrors. That seemingly never-ending
European civil war from 1914 to 1945, along with Japan’s immolation and China’s
implosion, left the U.S. virtually unchallenged globally. America emerged from
those wars as a superpower precisely because its government had astutely backed
the winning side twice, tipping the scales in the process, while paying a
relatively low price in blood and treasure compared to allies like the Soviet
Union, France, and Britain.
History’s lesson for America’s leaders should have
been all too clear: when you wage war long, especially when you devote
significant parts of your resources — financial, material, and especially
personal — to it, you wage it wrong. Not for nothing is war depicted in the
Bible as one of the four horsemen of the apocalypse. France had lost its empire
in World War II; it just took later military catastrophes in Algeria and
Indochina to make it obvious. That was similarly true of Britain’s humiliations
in India, Egypt, and elsewhere, while the Soviet Union, which had lost much of
its imperial vigor in that war, would take decades of slow rot and overstretch
in places like Afghanistan to implode.
Meanwhile, the United States hummed along, denying it
was an empire at all, even as it adopted so many of the trappings of one. In
fact, in the wake of the implosion of the Soviet Union in 1991, Washington’s
leaders would declare America the exceptional “superpower,” a
new and far more enlightened Rome and “the indispensable nation”
on planet Earth. In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, its leaders would confidently
launch what they termed a Global War on Terror and begin waging wars in
Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere, as in the previous century they had in
Vietnam. (No learning curve there, it seems.) In the process, its leaders
imagined a country that would remain untouched by war’s ravages, which was we
now know — or do we? — the height of imperial hubris and folly.
For whether you call it fascism, as with Nazi Germany,
communism, as with Stalin’s Soviet Union, or democracy, as with the United
States, empires built on dominance achieved through a powerful, expansionist
military necessarily become ever more authoritarian, corrupt, and
dysfunctional. Ultimately, they are fated to fail. No surprise there, since
whatever else such empires may serve, they don’t serve their own people. Their
operatives protect themselves at any cost, while attacking efforts at
retrenchment or demilitarization as dangerously misguided, if not seditiously
disloyal.
That’s why those like Chelsea
Manning, Edward Snowden,
and Daniel Hale,
who shined a light on the empire’s militarized
crimes and corruption, found themselves
imprisoned, forced into exile, or otherwise silenced. Even foreign journalists
like Julian Assange can
be caught up in the empire’s dragnet and imprisoned if they dare expose its war
crimes. The empire knows how to strike back and will readily betray its own
justice system (most notably in the case of Assange), including the hallowed
principles of free speech and the press, to do so.
Perhaps he will eventually be freed, likely as not
when the empire judges he’s approaching death’s door. His jailing and torture
have already served their purpose. Journalists know that to expose America’s
bloodied tools of empire brings only harsh punishment, not plush rewards. Best
to look away or mince one’s words rather than risk prison — or worse.
Yet you can’t fully hide the reality that this
country’s failed wars have added trillions of dollars to its national debt,
even as military spending continues to explode in the most wasteful ways
imaginable, while the social infrastructure crumbles.
Clinging Bitterly to Guns and Religion
Today, America clings ever more bitterly to guns and
religion. If that phrase sounds familiar, it might be because Barack
Obama used it in
the 2008 presidential campaign to describe the reactionary conservatism of
mostly rural voters in Pennsylvania. Disillusioned by politics, betrayed by
their putative betters, those voters, claimed the then-presidential candidate,
clung to their guns and religion for solace. I lived in rural Pennsylvania at
the time and recall a response from a fellow resident who basically agreed with
Obama, for what else was there left to cling to in an empire that had abandoned
its own rural working-class citizens?
Something similar is true of America writ large today.
As an imperial power, we cling bitterly to guns and religion. By “guns,” I mean
all the weaponry America’s merchants of death sell
to the Pentagon and
across the world. Indeed, weaponry is perhaps this country’s most influential
global export, devastatingly so. From 2018 to 2022, the U.S. alone accounted for
40% of global arms exports, a figure that’s only
risen dramatically with military aid to Ukraine. And by “religion,” I mean a
persistent belief in American exceptionalism (despite all evidence to the
contrary), which increasingly draws sustenance from a militant Christianity
that denies the very spirit of Christ and His teachings.
Yet history appears to confirm that empires, in their
dying stages, do exactly that: they exalt violence, continue to pursue war, and
insist on their own greatness until their fall can neither be denied nor
reversed. It’s a tragic reality that the journalist Chris Hedges has written about with
considerable urgency.
The problem suggests its own solution (not that any
powerful figure in Washington is likely to pursue it). America must stop
clinging bitterly to its guns — and here I don’t even mean the nearly 400
million weapons in private hands in this
country, including all those AR-15 semi-automatic rifles. By “guns,” I mean all
the militarized trappings of empire, including America’s vast structure of
overseas military bases and its staggering commitments to weaponry of all
sorts, including world-ending nuclear ones.
As for clinging bitterly to religion — and by “religion” I mean the belief in
America’s own righteousness, regardless of the millions of people it’s killed
globally from the Vietnam era
to the present moment — that, too, would have to stop.
History’s lessons can be brutal. Empires rarely die
well. After it became an empire, Rome never returned to being a republic and
eventually fell to barbarian invasions. The collapse of Germany’s Second Reich
bred a third one of greater virulence, even if it was of shorter duration. Only
its utter defeat in 1945 finally convinced Germans that God didn’t march with
their soldiers into battle.
What will it take to convince Americans to turn their
backs on empire and war before it’s too late? When will we conclude that Christ
wasn’t joking when He blessed the peacemakers rather than the warmongers?
As an iron curtain descends on a failing American
imperial state, one thing we won’t be able to say is that we weren’t warned.
Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and
join us on Facebook.
Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new dystopian novel, Songlands (the
final one in his Splinterlands series), Beverly Gologorsky’s novel Every Body Has
a Story, and Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation
Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows
of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power, John
Dower’s The Violent
American Century: War and Terror Since World War II, and
Ann Jones’s They Were
Soldiers: How the Wounded Return from America’s Wars: The Untold Story.
William J. Astore, a retired
lieutenant colonel (USAF) and professor of history, is a TomDispatch regular and
a senior fellow at the Eisenhower Media Network (EMN), an organization of
critical veteran military and national security professionals. His personal substack is Bracing Views.
Copyright
2023 William J. Astore
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