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Michael Brenner

Michael Brenner

Posted: December 7, 2010 10:31 AM

Know thy Enemy is the famed dictum of the renown Chinese military thinker Sun Tzu. He took for granted something even more crucial: know thyself. Yet, Americans routinely ignore that latter counsel -- at our growing peril. That uncomfortable truth becomes abundantly clear when immersing oneself in the dense cable traffic revealed to us by Wikileaks. Their exposure of the mindset and outlook of the country's policy-makers and diplomats is more telling than any of the details. For it reveals who we are, who we think we are, and how that self conception is out of line with both world realities and others' perception of us.

Most striking is the unstated but pervasive belief that the United States is wiser, more skillful and dedicated than anybody else. Therefore, it is natural that America rules the roost. Our serial failures of judgment and action, at home as well as abroad, have left not a trace of modesty on our conduct. That hubris has a number of practical meanings: One is the conviction that Washington should set the policy direction for allies and friends, jerk them back into line when they show a tendency to stray or are unresponsive to American leads, and cultivate a corps of informers and helpmates from among the native elites. Access to antechambers of imperial power and favors magisterially bestowed are the coin in which they are paid. Examples of successful efforts by the United States to maintain order in the ranks include: the incessant pressure to expand troop commitments in Afghanistan; cajoling that borders on coercion to accept Guantanamo alumni whom we've abused for eight years only to be faced with the dilemma of where to safely dispose of these unwanted innocent nobodies; demands that the SWIFT banking clearinghouse hand over legally protected private data; and insistence on the right to overfly and using airport facilities on the sovereign territories of other nations whenever the U.S. deems it necessary as part of some dark mission or other. Washington does not accept 'no' as an answer whether it is made on strategic, ethical or domestic political grounds. The last is the object of frequent disparaging remarks dutifully dispatched to apolitical and guileless superiors back in Washington.

A second manifestation is the disparagement of anyone else's opinion. In the hundred or so cables and excerpts that I've looked at, I have yet to find one instance of a visiting Assistant or Under Secretary of State or resident Ambassador seeking out interpretations or assessments of situations -- much less encouraging their interlocutors to offer policy advice. The sole aim of these meetings seemingly is to test their foreign counterparts' fidelity to the Washington line and to sniff out any dangerous deviations. The outstanding case in point is Turkey from which emanated literally hundreds of cables on the theme that the Erdogan government was showing increasing signs of unreliability and independence (almost synonymous) on matters ranging from Iran to Iraq to Central Asia. The sophisticated, well developed Turkish perspective on the region's intersecting problems was dismissed out of hand as of little interest, despite the country's half millennium domination of, and affinity with the neighborhood they inhabit. And despite our own woeful record there.

Another cardinal feature of the prevailing American attitude, about which we exhibit no self awareness, is the reflex to divide foreigners into the two categories of "pro-American" or "anti-American." This Manichean carry-over from the Cold war days has been given new life by the obsession with the 'war on terror' which overshadows all else just the way the life-and-death struggle against Godless Communism did in the old days. So Mr. Nicholas Sarkozy, while still a minister under Jacques Chirac, is identified as a very eager would-be friend of the United States who could be counted on to shed Gallic ant-American attitudes. His purring around the Americans' ankles is rewarded, and encouraged, with stroking and a tickling of his ears. Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, instinctively 'pro-American,' nonetheless is a bit of an irritant because she has the distressing habit of thinking for herself, if only occasionally, on matters like the propriety of the American kidnapping and torture of a German citizen. She also is not assertive enough in instructing her voters why today's historic challenge to FREEDOM comes from Taliban mullahs and their Pashtun peasant followers. Equally vexing was her lack of enthusiasm for the Missile Shield whose military utility was as obscure to her as is its potential to estrange Russia was evident. Hence, Ms Merkel was temporarily located in limbo according to the two cell political map of American strategists.

The aforementioned Mr. Erdogan is repeatedly labeled as a candidate to join the 'anti-American category.' His most grievous sin is the cultivation of commercial and political ties with Tehran. This reprehensible behavior is ascribed to the propensities of the Islamic AKP party which he leads as well as the worrisome fact that he is himself is a believing, practicing Muslim. His religious orientation is more troubling that that of the Saudis et al for two reasons: the former have proven themselves loyal pro-Americans, and Erdogan personifies backsliding from the secular, pro-American elites with whom Washington was accustomed to doing business. There is no self consciousness that America's own leading politicians all seem to 'find Christ' on the eve of the Iowa caucuses and make a show of having a personal communication channel to their Christian Deity. Perhaps even more troubling is what this view of Erdogan says about Washington's ignorance of elementary truths of Turkish domestic politics. For the AKP, the fundamentalist Iranian regime was a distinct electoral liability since it gave a bad name to the mixing of politics and Islam and perpetuated voters' fears about a political party uninhibited about affirming Turkey's predominantly Muslim identity. Religion has been a repellent factor not a magnetic one in the current government's approach to Iran. Whether such ignorance is offset by the acquired knowledge of Erdogan's DNA profile or Foreign Minister Ahmet DavutoÄŸlu's E-bay password remains to be seen.

A third feature of the American mindset is set in stark relief by the Wikileak cables. It is the identity in our officials' minds of the American national interest with the world's interest. In instance after instance, they declare the cavalier premise that Washington's foreign policy serves the well-being of the international community. Indeed, any other worldview that does not accept this premise is illegitimate -- selfish and dangerous, too. That applies not only to hostile governments like that of Iran, or independent minded countries like Russia. It applies as well to putative partners like the Pakistanis. Our officials are unrelenting in insisting that they have a better sense of what is in Pakistan's interests than do General Kayani and members of the political elite less deferential than the indebted President Zakari. Here is an instance where an uncommonly astute Ambassador, Ann Patterson, writes cogent analyses explaining why the surmise conceit is dead wrong. Indeed, she makes the compelling case that our own self defined goals are less likely to be realized following the current course of Washington's polices in AfPak than if we adjusted them in accordance with Kayani's reading of political realities in his country. Ms Patterson somehow has escaped being placed in the 'anti-American' category -- as far as we know.

There is another singular feature of how the United States sees itself that takes shape as we read these cables. It is the extraordinary sense of entitlement. An entitlement endowed by 9/11. It hallows all those other characteristic American traits with a robe of righteousness. Our unique virtue, our superior wisdom, our mission to save the world, our right to judge and to proclaim, our authority to set new rules or to break old ones -- all is rendered true and just by the calamity that we have endured. America feels that it has found in 9/11 a diplomatic ace that wittingly or not matches the Israelis' use of the Holocaust. It is not at all clear, though, that it serves us well.

 
 
 
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dotmafia
boj edisni na saw 11/9
06:25 AM on 01/04/2011
The supreme arrogance and ignorance of the United States of America is that it has erroneously led its people to believe that they should rightfully be the ones bringing freedom and democracy to the people and nations of this world.

I think this natural ignorance comes from an inherent ultra-patriotism. This is the belief instilled in every American, from birth to death, that there is no greater citizen, no greater country, and no greater way of life than America.

Thus, in such a way, the American public has been unconsciously conditioned to view the peoples of Third World countries with low regard, allowing for the terrible abuses such as torture seen in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay.

The criminal Bush "administration" deviously and immorally seized upon this inherent ultra-patriotism, unifying it with intense propaganda to manipulate the public's perception into supporting its illegal aggressions. Anyone speaking out against their policies was labeled unpatriotic, a dissident or even a domestic terrorist.

This was textbook historical fascism at work, and it is a very subtle slide down into its abyss.

The U.S. effectively transported the public's fear as an American form of state terrorism onto innocent Iraqi civilians, exploiting anger and retribution for 9/11, while fueling the fires of inherent arrogance and ignorance. Most of the general public won't recognize or accept their exploitation as fact. State terrorism waged by the leaders of the U.S. against other nations, and even upon its own citizens, is a fact.
08:33 AM on 12/11/2010
Important article! The sense of entitlement the author refers to as being endowed by 9/11 needed little endowment and 9/11 amounts to but a spite in the graph of the Manifest Destiny. The manifest destiny DOCTRINE, in its most simple form, is the belief that Americans are the anointed of God and therefore everything other people do is less than and therefore all their belongings are forfeit and if they don't see the rightness of this course of action, their lives are forfeit. The foundation of the manifest destiny Doctrine rested on the belief that Americans prayed harder, more thoroughly and were more sincere in their prayers that everything in sight belonged to them and that cultural practices not in line with theirs were in need of some serious corrections. As the author points out all of this is highly protected and to question it can cause the questioner any number of problems ranging from career problem, social ostracism and on to beatings in red neck bars. The great, although not educationally great, State of Texas is now in the process of writing new text books for the schools that further entomb the true American history, fortunately few in Texas read so the damage will be limited. Free no log-in editorial cartoons http;//www.saintpeterii.com
12:37 PM on 12/11/2010
Unfortunately, what Texas decides for their textbooks, their state being the biggest textbook market in America, usually ends up being what all school children in America are stuck with. Fear not, all of our children will be dumbed down in this process and brainwashed to believe the Empire's arrogant lies.
06:20 PM on 12/09/2010
Great article.

A good few of the commenters should remember (if they ever knew) that WWII started well before Dec 6 1941. London (that's in England) suffered severe bombing during 1940-41, during which America sat on its collective arse and watched. In that time the death toll was the equivalent of one 9/11 incident every 9 days or so. For nine months.

And this is the country that wants the rest of the world to follow its lead?
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04:26 PM on 12/09/2010
Fascinating.
Unless citizens of the United States of America have spent an extended time outside of the United State, they may find it hard to understand this.
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aprilglaspie
03:36 PM on 12/09/2010
Dear Michael,

Do you find that same sense of entitlement in Israel's flouting of international law and UN resolutions by continuing to build settlements? Just wondered. Where were all of you critics when Raygun subborned the murder of Archbishop Romero?
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electrosef
Blue-green-purple Reality exposure
04:36 PM on 12/08/2010
The current behavior of the US is not first told by Wikileaks, and is not at all unique, if one takes away the time frame. The self-serving behavior Brenner tells about in describing diplomatic doings of the US is consistent with that of most all in the succession of dominant political powers throughout history. It would be nice if thoughtful, more evolved points of view (such as Brenner alludes to) could make their presence felt in the time frame of today's world, but it seems that human nature and old-time-religion nationalism yet remain below the threshold of conscious awareness.
02:37 PM on 12/08/2010
Right on target. To foreigners, the sheer state of hubris, of narcissism and jingoism of the U.S. mentality is common knowledge. I do not know any other people in the world so domesticated and brainwashed that lack any capability for introspection, self-assessement and critical thinking necessary to question the official mantra used to impress on their minds what this country is supposedly all about. The problem is that their self-endulgence ("we are the best and we are so good") creates sheer havoc around the world with a cost of, literally, millions of lives. Perhaps some day there will be an "awakening" that will change such a frame of mind for the good of the world. I just hope that if it happens it does not come at the cost of millions of lives. And if it doesn't take place, I believe humanity will not see the 22nd Century.
04:21 PM on 12/09/2010
Yes it is high time. But the "change" is certainly going to take lots of sacrifices, voluntarily or involuntarily.
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marthamothra
09:32 AM on 12/08/2010
Very accurate post. I have long felt embarrassment with my country's sense of entitlement (as well as the wealthy's sense of entitlement -- the same, these days). Of course we need to look out for our security, but we also need to really LISTEN to other peoples, for their perspective on a topic or situation. Humility is not weakness. Nationalism makes me sick to my stomach. It is not patriotism, which tries to guide one's country to live up to its ideals. CITIZENSHIP IS A VERB -- M. Eberle.
12:56 PM on 12/08/2010
You are confusing the terms embarrassment, guilt,and entitlement.

I do not feel guily the USA controls the Internet, nor the skies, nor the oceans. Someone must do it, and I'm damn glad it isn't Venezuela today.
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electrosef
Blue-green-purple Reality exposure
04:42 PM on 12/08/2010
"...patriotism... tries to guide one's country to live up to its ideals. CITIZENSHI­P IS A VERB...
Nice thought, well said. In order for culture to evolve to a better place, we must learn to value honesty and humankind above having power to dominate others.
07:46 AM on 12/08/2010
An interesting look in the mirror and self-analysis of American world views and attitudes, while 9-11 definitely gave you the increased aggressiveness in all military matters, the idea of a diplomatic ace on par with Israeli's use of the holocaust is a bit of a stretch, comparing 3000 deaths with 6,000,000 is quite indicative of the present American mindset and sense of world superiority, and is quite worrisome.
01:46 AM on 12/08/2010
Yes it true we stick our nose where it doesn't belong, and America wants the whole world have the same principles and philosophies as we do, but does that make us all bad. Yes, it is true that America sometimes wants other countries to see it are way, and sometimes at any cost. But on this, the horrible anniversary of December 7, as well as September 11, America asks why?Why didn't we know, how come we weren't better prepared. Whether it is simple aggression or religious and cultural beliefs the world has become this "black and white", for or against. Quite honestly, if a country doesn't reflect our views, don't really care, But America should never allow innocent men, women and children to be killed for the sake of some ridiculous diplomacy.
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MJinCanada
Safe from zombies until my 2nd cup of coffee
09:53 AM on 12/08/2010
It isn't the rest of the world that wants things in "black and white." That's how US so-called diplomats were apparently viewing it -- "your either for us or against us." Being opposed to, say, having Monsanto come in and take over one's country's water and seed supply does not make the people of that country anti-American. Nor does celebrating a different set of holidays. Other people have rights too.
12:45 PM on 12/08/2010
"America wants the whole world have the same principles and philosophies as we do?"
That is exactly what the article is about. What are they, what we say or what we do? The image we have in our minds or the one we see in the mirror? So I don't know what you mean by "does that make us all bad?"

As for killing innocent women and children, that's what usually drives desperate people to commit horrendous acts.
09:38 PM on 12/07/2010
This article and the responses to it should be read by every America hater out there in the Western world. It proves once more, if proof be needed, that the USA is not some homogeneous gun totting, fundamentalist, intellect-free zone and that there are plenty of Americans who are caring, perceptive, intelligent and most importantly, wise.
The WikiLeaks fiasco and the responses to it by the US and Australian governments have left me outraged and more disillusioned than ever about the processes of modern power politics. The revelations in the leaks are as nothing compared to the reaction and the vicious, unprincipled attacks led by some of the most disgusting politicians in both of our countries.
Just as my emotions were turning a distinct black and white towards the USA I came across this article. Thank you all for restoring some of my faith in the basic decency and wisdom of the American people.
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10:46 AM on 12/08/2010
It is unconscionable that you should be without any fans yet. So there. ;)
12:11 PM on 12/08/2010
"War, concentrat ion camps and torture are hysterical ly funny for some, you know."

Nice attempt at mischaracterizing what I say.

"It's not about engaging in a genuine debate about things that matter, but about pushing people's buttons, stretching arguments by playing "gotcha!" games, and "winning" verbal spars by any means possible (having the last word a preferable end game), as you can see. (All this is otherwise known as trolling on most web discussion forums.)"

Right back at you.

As I've told you before, you seem to always be interested in shutting down debate, by sophomorically taunting those people with opposing opinions. You seem to get angry when others refuse to speak with one voice, when they similarly refuse to toe the party line, as YOU define it. Sorry Bella. I suggest you start defending your positions (if you've got the mental ability to do so) and allow others to express their points of view. That's democratic, don't you think? You pretend to revile those who "push people's buttons" who "play gotcha games", but that's precisely what you've previously done to me, and I'm sure, others. Hypocrite.
12:22 PM on 12/08/2010
Since I was unable to reply to your previous snark listed elsewhere, I'm doing so here:

War, concentrat ion camps and torture are hysterical ly funny for some, you know."

Nice attempt at mischaract­erizing what I say.

"It's not about engaging in a genuine debate about things that matter, but about pushing people's buttons, stretching arguments by playing "gotcha!" games, and "winning" verbal spars by any means possible (having the last word a preferable end game), as you can see. (All this is otherwise known as trolling on most web discussion forums.)"

Right back at you.

As I've told you before, you seem to always be interested in shutting down debate, by sophomoric­ally taunting those people with opposing opinions. You seem to get angry when others refuse to speak with one voice, when they similarly refuse to toe the party line, as YOU define it. Sorry Bella. I suggest you start defending your positions (if you've got the mental ability to do so) and allow others to express their points of view. That's democratic­, don't you think? You pretend to revile those who "push people's buttons" who "play gotcha games", but that's precisely what you've previously done to me, and I'm sure, others.
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09:00 PM on 12/07/2010
Thank you, thank you, thank you! Give them more info that many of us knew but no one would listen!
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Livinginthenow
Social Justice
08:03 PM on 12/07/2010
Every diplomat should read this article. And every citizen who does not understand why there is any ill-will expressed towards the USA.
07:41 PM on 12/07/2010
I can't stand our foreign policy, from top to bottom, and what you describe is white supremacy.

It is deeply rooted in our foreign policy and I would rip it up from the roots.

This governments foreign policy DOES NOT REPRESENT ME.

Exceptionalism my foot.
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Reno Fickler
Head Lifeguard/Dead Sea Marina
07:39 PM on 12/07/2010
WWII defined the USA. Not only as the power who won the war, but our victory cemented (at least in our eyes)the notion that "Might is Right". And like most bullies, if I can kick your butt, I can tell you what to do. We did not care what anybody did, as long as they did what we told them to do.
Economically and morally our form of govt is not the best for some countries. But that fact does not deter our govt from trying to impose their will on those less fortunate. Why? Three words.
Military Industrial Complex. (Thank you, Ike.) Which generates one third of our GNP. $5 trillion/yr.
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08:54 PM on 12/07/2010
WOW!! Someone agrees with me??!!!! :)
Take a look at John Perkins books!
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Tara Dass
03:17 AM on 12/08/2010
the policy is all dictated from the CIA too, who gives them orders? ... read Ret. Col. L Fletcher Prouty's work... from the horses mouth, this whistle blower was there from the early days as point person between the CIA and the Pentagon... unbelievable