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William Astore

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The Siren Song of American Imperialism

Posted: 09/20/2012 8:32 am

Considering the scale of our mistakes over the last decade in Iraq and Afghanistan, if we as a country truly want to pursue a leaner, smarter, more effective foreign policy, the first step we must take is to stop listening to the siren song of our own imperial rhetoric. We need to stop posing as benevolent caregivers and start being more honest with ourselves.

And that honesty extends to our own history. The French have a saying that translates to "the more things change, the more they remain the same." The appropriateness of that saying was brought home to me last week when a good friend of mine played an old campaign speech of William Howard Taft. In 1908, when he was running for president to succeed Teddy Roosevelt, Taft recorded several speeches on Edison-era cylinders. Fortunately for me, my friend collects vintage Edison phonographs and cylinders.

As I stood in front of the large trumpet-like horn of the player, Taft's voice came alive for me. As Taft sought to justify the U.S. invasion and occupation of the Philippines, it occurred to me that the rhetoric he was using a century ago was the same as that of Presidents Bush and Obama in justifying our most recent foreign misadventures in Iraq and Afghanistan. Taft, as we shall see, was if anything more direct and honest than our most recent commanders-in-chief.

The thrust of Taft's speech was that Americans were lifting up the benighted and "ignorant masses" of the Philippines. In Taft's words, we were involved "in a great missionary work that does our nation honor," one that "is certain to promote ... the influence of Christian civilization." Evidence of our progress included improvements to Filipino infrastructure such as the building of harbors, roads, and railroads. More evidence included our role in building up Filipino police forces to improve internal security. Education was also cited as decreasing "the dense ignorance of the ninety percent."

Having portrayed our presence in the Philippines as purely benevolent and disinterested, Taft ended with a rousing dismissal of critics who were advocating what today would be termed "cutting and running." To relinquish the "burden" of our civilizing mission in the Philippines, Taft concluded, would be "cowardly."

Considering Taft's rhetoric and comparing it to that of Bush and Obama, it's clear that little has changed in one hundred years. It's true that we no longer talk openly about spreading "Christian" civilization. And we're more circumspect about portraying native peoples as "dense" and "ignorant." But other than that, our imperial rhetoric hasn't changed at all. Our presidents still praise our country as being motivated entirely by benevolence; as evidence of our generosity and "progress," they still tout infrastructure built and native police forces trained; and they still dismiss critics of our imperial efforts as misguided (at best) or cowardly (of the worst kind of "cut and run" variety).

But the truth is that it's tragically hard to win hearts and minds overseas when we don't even recognize what's in our own hearts and minds. We venture forth on "civilizing" missions when our own culture could use some civilizing. We think we're pure of heart, but "civilizing" missions based on military occupation inevitably contain a heart of darkness.

Whether it's the presidential election of 1908 or our current one of 2012, we've heard enough speeches about how great and noble and honorable we are. To chart a new course, let's educate our own "ignorant natives" in the USA before we try to cure ignorance elsewhere. Let's rebuild our own crumbling infrastructure. Let's tame our own passions. And let's reconnect with a virtue that, though not unique to Christianity, was then and is now closely associated with it. The virtue? Humility.

To put this in words that may have resonated with Taft, the self-styled "Christian missionary," let's first work on removing the beam from our own eye before focusing on the motes in the eyes of others. For it's only after removing our own beam that we'll succeed in charting a smarter foreign policy -- as well as a far less hypocritical one.

To paraphrase Taft, it would be cowardly indeed to lay down the burden of removing that beam until our purpose is achieved.

Astore writes regularly for TomDispatch.com and can be reached at wjastore@gmail.com.

 
 
 
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Considering the scale of our mistakes over the last decade in Iraq and Afghanistan, if we as a country truly want to pursue a leaner, smarter, more effective foreign policy, the first step we must tak...
Considering the scale of our mistakes over the last decade in Iraq and Afghanistan, if we as a country truly want to pursue a leaner, smarter, more effective foreign policy, the first step we must tak...
 
 
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03:56 AM on 09/21/2012
1. Remember the deadly Filipino attacks on America in Taft's time? Me neither.

2. Whether you want to admit it or not, all cultures are not equal. Some are more advanced than others and some have a value set that is superior to the value set of others. Those facts have consequences.

Mutual respect between differing cultures is a good idea, but there are limits to cultural relativism, even for a cultural anthropologist. Culture-neutral humans do not exist for the same reason that all fish are wet.

3. It's not a good idea to allow the perfect to become the enemy of the good.
09:45 AM on 09/21/2012
The only measure of whether a value set is "superior" is if it allows a culture to survive.
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01:43 PM on 09/21/2012
I don't agree.

There are worse things than dying.
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07:07 PM on 09/20/2012
I disagree on what our foreign policy aims or our international aid has been.

"...the first step we must take is to stop listening to the siren song of our own imperial rhetoric. We need to stop posing as benevolent caregivers and start being more honest with ourselves."

I agree with that.

We continue to follow our economic interest with our aid and military engagements. Iraq was a lie and a crying shame before [wo]man and g-d.

Afghanistan- Pakistan is an unwinnable engagement. The inhospitabe region they are fighting in has completely stomped Britain at its height and Russia at its military peak. Some of the area was hosting Al Queda but the movement itself seems to be amorphous enough to operate anywhere.

We've spent a lot of money and soldier's lives in those areas. As a country we went after the financing to 'terror networks'. We've also created a hit list for their leadership. We've changed how much of our budget is absorbed the new security state.

I say that Seal Team 6 looks like a better investment than a massive deployment.
04:17 PM on 09/20/2012
Excellent observations from Mr. Astore. But he could go farther. He—and apparently everyone else—miss the main significance of the riots in the Muslim world.
The uproar is not about a crummy film. That was only the spark that ignited the dynamite. What the Muslims and the Middle East is in turmoil about is the very presence of Western influence in the lands of Muhammad, exemplified by the U.S.
It is an open revolt against Western colonialism, stretching back to the 18th Century’s rush for empire by the European powers. It’s a story that stretches all the way to the present with America’s “liberation” of Iraq and Afghanistan as well as its continued military (read “neo-colonial”) presence. The people of the Middle East are exploding over our misguided efforts to bring the blessings of freedom and democracy to a world that is diametrically opposed to those values. The U.S. support of radical dictators, particularly in Persia, Egypt and the rest of North Africa in the 1950s and beyond doesn’t help either.
What the Muslim World is saying is “get out!”
The only way that this crisis will ever be resolved is for Europe and the U.S. to pull entirely out of their internal affairs in the same way we did in Vietnam. Now that they have had their Arab Spring and a taste of their own brand of self-determination, the peoples of the Quran want to put their countries together their own way without outside influence.
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joshmcdonald
08:53 PM on 09/20/2012
a) I completely agree with you and would add all manner of previous protest and terrorist activity to that which is response to our presence in the Middle East (including 9/11).

b) It ain't gonna happen.
12:00 PM on 09/27/2012
"b) It ain't gonna happen."

Not voluntarily. But in the long run, the US will bring itself down. It's current and future military expenditures (presently, $3 billion/day) will lead to that. Never say never.
09:41 AM on 09/21/2012
Anti-Americanism is simply a convenient platform for internal groups bidding for power. The Muslim world is not a homogenous brotherhood waiting for the foreign devils to leave so they can all hold hands and sing songs together. It is a world of tribal and sectarian factions who have been engaged in cutthroat political manuevering for centuries. A lot of people in the USA have an inflated view of their place in the world. The reality is that America is a remote boogeyman with little impact and rarely thought of in the daily lives of the millions of people in northern Africa, the Middle East, central Asia.
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delia ruhe
Peace, Order, and Good Government
02:19 PM on 09/20/2012
Have you ever known an empire to give up its power voluntarily just because it's the right thing to do? Empires are forced out of power by bankruptcy -- moral and financial. And today we see where that financial bankruptcy begins, namely at the lowest levels of society, and it goes up from there. As for the moral bankruptcy, it starts at the top and works its way down. That process has been underway since at least the end of the Cold War.
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joshmcdonald
08:55 PM on 09/20/2012
Actually, it began under Eisenhower and he warned us about it even as he made certain that our course was set. We had a moment of clarity under Carter but it was all so confusing that we didn't give REAL peace a chance. Then Reagan. And it has been all downhill from there.
01:44 PM on 09/20/2012
The rhetoric is a byproduct of Christianity. National leaders make war according to national interest & justify it by moral criteria agreeable to the citizenry. The Roman legions were honest about their motivation - the glory of Rome - in other words, national interest. Emperors needed a new rationalization for war making after the Empire became nominally Christian. The clergy provided the just war doctrine to fill that need & it's going strong 1700 years later. The specific criteria for a just war have evolved over time. Democracy or communism has been combined with or replaced Christianity as the superior philosophy in different places & times.
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ttsgw
Atheist and secular humanist
12:03 PM on 09/20/2012
You're asking for the impossible. Americans are just too occupied with their own excellence to understand what the world really is like.
11:24 AM on 09/20/2012
Thank you Mr. Astore. I wish each candidate would read and respond to the point you make as thoughtfully as you wrote it. But I believe ex-missionary Romney wouldn't have a clue what you were talking about, and Obama, though he gets it, is too pragmatic to acknowledge your point before election day.. I wonder about after. Besides, there is some serious Nasty in our military-industrial complex that will never tolerate the point you make. They live on the bubble whose transparency you reveal.
11:01 AM on 09/20/2012
I don't think truer words have ever been spoken. And when you add the evangelical campaign of some of our military leaders to the mix, it becomes a modern Crusade. When did THAT ever win hearts and minds?