It’s 2024. Is America still indispensable?
If so, that would mean employing US power and
influence to bring this wretched war to an immediate end
JAN 01, 2024
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/us-ceasefire-gaza/
Joe Biden is neither an original thinker nor a
profound one. Granted, few if any figures laboring in the trenches of
contemporary American politics can claim to be either. On that score, it would
be unreasonable for us to hold Biden’s lack of depth and originality against
him. He is, after all, just an Average Joe.
Somewhat more problematic is Biden’s penchant
for appropriating
the words of others without
attribution. The habit has not enhanced his reputation. Yet to be fair, when
the President recently described the United States as the “indispensable
nation,” he did credit the origin of that phrase to his “friend” Madeleine
Albright.
Such honesty is commendable. Even so, wary Americans
might find Biden’s resurrection of Albright’s several decades-old phrase to be
more than a little troubling.
The provenance of the expression is worth noting.
Speaking on national television in 1998, then Secretary of State Albright had
used the occasion to articulate an Albright Doctrine of sorts. “If we have to
use force,” she declared with sublime confidence, “it is because we are
America; we are the indispensable nation. We stand tall and we see further than
other countries into the future.”
In Albright’s defense, she issued this grandiose
pronouncement at a moment when American elites were enjoying a prolonged
post-Cold War victory lap. In political circles, chest-thumping triumphalism
had become the lingua franca. Had not the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989
ostensibly brought history itself to its intended conclusion? A mere decade
later, had not Operation Desert Storm definitively affirmed history’s verdict?
By the 1990s, America was on a roll, destined, it seemed, to remain the world’s
number one in perpetuity.
Soon enough, however, all of this came to seem like so
much hot air. First came the terrorist attacks of 9/11, with the follies of the
Global War on Terrorism following in short order. The
epic failure of the Afghanistan War in tandem with costly and bungled efforts
to “liberate” Iraq left America’s reputation for peering into the future in
tatters. Sundry other missteps demolished claims that the United States
possessed some special knack for anticipating what comes next. Then came the
election of Donald Trump, unforeseen by those ostensibly in the know.
If remembered at all, the
Albright Doctrine survived as a sort of punchline — the equivalent of “Mission
Accomplished” or “We got him!”
Today the future to which
Albright had confidently alluded in 1998 has become our own immediate past.
Events since have brought us to where we are today. They provide a backdrop and
frame of reference for the exercise of American power. That Biden has chosen
our present moment to resuscitate the Albright Doctrine is, to put it mildly,
disconcerting. It suggests someone badly out of touch with reality.
Albright had credited the
United States with the ability to “see” and by implication to shape the future
course of world history. Today, with the nation’s ability to sustain its own
democracy beyond the upcoming presidential election up for debate, we may
question the Biden administration’s ability to see beyond next Thursday.
Yet let us take Biden at his
word, as a true believer in American indispensability, advised by a cadre of
like minded civilian and military officials. Even today, their collective
confidence in American global primacy is undiminished, as if events since 1998
either didn’t happen or don’t matter.
Today challenges to the
nation’s erstwhile indispensability premier abound: the rise of China, a
stalemated conflict in Ukraine, porous borders at home, the pressing
existential threat posed by climate change. Yet none poses a more urgent test
than the ongoing war in Gaza. Here, more than anywhere else, events summon the
United States to affirm its claim to primacy. Right now, without delay.
Doing so would mean employing
U.S. power and influence to bring this wretched war to an immediate end.
As measured by actions rather
than rhetorical gestures, however, the Biden administration has done just the
opposite. By providing immense quantities of ordnance to one side, it ensures
the war’s perpetuation and facilitates the continued slaughter of noncombatants.
By vetoing UN Security Council efforts to force a ceasefire, it stands
virtually alone in defiance of world opinion. While American diplomats travel
hither and yon, their efforts cannot be rated as other than ineffectual.
On a recent trip to the Middle
East, national security adviser Jake Sullivan remarked, “We’re not here to tell
anybody, ‘You must do X, you must do Y’.” How this accords with any meaningful
conception of indispensability is not clear.
My guess is that Madeleine
Albright would be embarrassed. Joe Biden should be as well.
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