Harry Targ
President Obama has retrenched U.S. global engagement in a
way that has shaken the confidence of many U.S. allies and encouraged some
adversaries. That conclusion can be heard not just from Republican hawks but
also from senior officials from Singapore to France and, more quietly, from
some leading congressional Democrats. As he has so often in his political
career, Mr. Obama has elected to respond to the critical consensus not by
adjusting policy but rather by delivering a big speech (Washington Post editorial, May 28, 2014).
President Obama gave what was framed
as a major foreign policy address to a West Point graduating class on
Wednesday, May 28, 2014. Many peace activists hoped for a forthright statement
on the limits of U.S. power and expressions of humility about the correct role
of the country in the world. They should be sorely disappointed. Paradoxically,
though, the most militaristic segment of the foreign policy establishment, such
as reflected in the Washington Post
editorial, cited above, implied that the Obama statement signaled retreat and
defeat in the face of a world which the U.S. should be directing.
Interpreters supporting Obama’s
offering likened it to the dramatic statements made over fifty years ago by
former President Eisenhower. For example, the Cold War President declared in
1953 that “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired
signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed,
those who are cold and are not clothed….This is not a way of life at all, in
any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from
a cross of iron.” Seven years later in his famous farewell address Eisenhower
warned: “In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition
of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the
military/industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced
power exists and will persist.”
Other influential foreign policy analysts
such as Arkansas Senator William Fulbright spoke of “the arrogance of power.”
Dr. Martin Luther King in his famous speech at Riverside Church in 1967 decried
the abomination of killing overseas and ignoring poverty at home. And President
Carter in 1979 condemned government by special interests that created gridlock
and dysfunctionality.
No part of President Obama’s major
foreign policy address rose to the heights of clarity and truth as these famous
statements from the past. Instead he continued to highlight international
terrorism as the number one concern of U.S. policymakers. He identified
extremists in Syria, Nigeria, Somalia, Yemen, Mali, and other vulnerable
countries such as Iraq, Lebanon, and Turkey which required attention. To prepare for the ongoing terrorist threat
he proposed that Congress establish a Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund
totaling $5 billion. He also indicated that the United States was willing to
help some of the opposition to the government of Syria. In the spirit of the
old Nixon Doctrine, Obama seemed to be suggesting that the United States would
help allies in Syria and elsewhere fight against adversaries they and we faced.
Also the President continued to
frame his remarks within the narrative of American exceptionalism. Not only is
the U.S. militarily superior to most of the world’s nations combined, he
suggested, but it remained the beacon of hope for humankind. The Reagan era “City
on the Hill” metaphor still framed the rhetoric of this President as it did
virtually every other post-World War II President.
Contemporary U.S. foreign policy,
Obama claimed, has been successful in ending two wars, eliminating the global
terrorist leadership, giving support to the democratization of Ukraine,
challenging Russian expansion in Central Europe and working to counterbalance
Chinese hostilities against her neighbors. In addition, the United States is
having some success negotiating with Iran over its nuclear weapons program. But,
the President said, despite these foreign policy achievements, more needs to be
done.
President Obama endorsed once again
the belief in the special responsibility of the United States to the world, the
need to help others fight terrorism, opposing big power expansion of Russia and
China, pressuring Iran to end its commitment to nuclear weapons, and promoting
what former President Clinton called “market democracies.”
But recognizing the
demonstrated opposition of the American people to more foreign wars, Obama
stressed limiting military engagement (at least the use of large land armies),
expanding the use of diplomacy, working with allies (what used to be called
“collective security”), participating in international institutions such as the
United Nations, and in serious cases applying economic sanctions.
It is the non-military parts of the
Obama speech that peace activists should mobilize around, weak as they are:
America must always lead on the world stage. But U.S.
military action cannot be the only—or even primary—component of our leadership
in every instance. Just because we have the best hammer does not mean that every
problem is a nail.”
For the peace movement supporting
diplomacy, collective security, and economic sanctions as opposed to covert
operations and war are not enough. The peace movement should;
-challenge the view that “America is
the indispensable nation.” This is pure ideology that permeates media punditry,
popular culture, and education from kindergarten through graduate schools.
-bring the concept of imperialism
back into public conversation, particularly arguing that United States foreign
policy has been driven by economic interests by financial and manufacturing
capital, and energy interests.
-raise again the ugly truth that the
United States has been the major source of death and poverty all across the
face of the globe since the end of World War II, particularly targeting people
of color.
Americans should be reminded that,
as President Eisenhower and Dr. King suggested, U.S. militarism has impacted
negatively on the lives of most of the population, while it has buoyed the
profits of the military/industrial complex.
In the end, in the climate of 21st
century U.S. militarism, President Obama’s proclamations about using “soft
power” rather than war as the number one instrumentality of U.S. foreign policy
should be supported and encouraged. But
that is only a modest beginning.