World peace or world police?
The Limits of Power: Andrew Bacevich on the Limits of American Exceptionalism
AMY GOODMAN: Our next guest is Andrew Bacevich. He’s a conservative historian. He spent twenty-three years serving in the US Army. He also lost his son in Iraq. Andrew Bacevich writes, “In joining the Army, my son was following in his father’s footsteps: Before he was born, I had served in Vietnam. As military officers, we shared an ironic kinship of sorts, each of us demonstrating a peculiar knack for picking the wrong war at the wrong time.”
Andrew Bacevich holds both parties accountable for the Iraq war. As he writes, “To be fair, responsibility for the war’s continuation now rests no less with the Democrats who control Congress than with the president and his party. After my son’s death, my state’s senators, Edward M. Kennedy and John F. Kerry, telephoned to express their condolences. Stephen F. Lynch, our congressman, attended my son’s wake. Kerry was present for the funeral Mass. My family and I greatly appreciated such gestures. But when I suggested to each of them the necessity of ending the war, I got the brushoff.” Bacevich goes on to write, “To whom do Kennedy, Kerry and Lynch listen? We know the answer: to the same people who have the ear of George W. Bush and Karl Rove—namely, wealthy individuals and institutions.”
Andrew Bacevich has just published a new book. It’s called The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism. He joins me here in the firehouse studio.
Welcome to Democracy Now!, Professor Bacevich.
ANDREW BACEVICH: Thank you very much for having me.
AMY GOODMAN: How hard was it to write this book after your son’s death? This is not theoretical for you.
ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, I try not to talk about my son’s
death, because it’s a private matter, and to tell you the truth, I
don’t want to do anything that even looks like it might be exploiting
his memory. I would say that I imagine that some of the energy that
informed the writing a book came from the emotional response to my
son’s death. But the content, the critique, is unrelated to that
tragedy.
The content of the book very much reflects my dismay at the
direction of US foreign policy since the end of the Cold War. There’s a
lot in the book that tries to hold the Bush administration accountable
for recent events, but I would not for a second want to suggest that
the crisis in which we find ourselves today ought to be laid simply at
the foot of the Bush administration or the Republican Party, because
it’s been a long time coming.
AMY GOODMAN: What do you mean by “exceptionalism”?
ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, this is not an idea that’s
original with me. It’s clear that from the founding of the
Anglo-American colonies, from the time that John Winthrop made his
famous sermon and declared that “we shall be as a city upon a hill” a
light to the world—it’s clear that, from the outset, there has been a
strong sense among Americans that we are a special people with a
providential mission.
In the twentieth century, probably going back to roughly the
time of Woodrow Wilson, certainly since the end of the Cold War, this
concept of a providential mission, a responsibility to the world, has
translated into a sense of empowerment or prerogative to determine the
way the world is supposed to work, what it’s supposed to look like, and
also, over the last twenty years or so, an increasing willingness to
use military force to cause the world to look the way we want it to
look. And I think that that expression of American exceptionalism is
one that’s not only utterly false, but is greatly at odds with own
interests as a country.
AMY GOODMAN: You write, “Recalling how Washington saw the
post-Cold War world and America’s place in or atop it helps us
understand why policymakers failed to anticipate, deter or deflect the
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.”
ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, I mean-–and again, this is very
much not something that one would lay at the foot of the Bush
administration, but you recall that at the end of the Cold War, when
history had supposedly ended, when globalization, which really was a
synonym for Americanization, was thought to be sweeping the world and
creating a new order, when Democrats and Republicans alike declared
with great confidence that not only was the US the sole superpower, but
that the US possessed military might such as the world had never seen,
well, an attack on Manhattan killing 3,000 Americans wasn’t something
that was supposed to happen.
So the focus in the ’90s in the Clinton era and the focus into
the first nine months we saw of the Bush era was very much out there
somewhere, you know, where we were going to sort out the problems of
the world. Nobody was paying attention to the possibility of actually
having to defend the United States of America. So, there we were,
spending on defense—well, “defense” in quotes—defending on our military
probably as much as the rest of the world was spending on their
militaries, and yet our military simply wasn’t prepared to perform what
ought to be its primary mission, and that is defending the people of
the United States of America.
AMY GOODMAN: You say the Department of Defense didn’t actually do defense. It was prepared—it specialized in power projection.
ANDREW BACEVICH: It still doesn’t do defense. I mean, it
is a remarkable thing, I think, that the reflexive response to 9/11 is,
first of all, to create a new bureaucratic entity that supposedly does
defend the country—that’s the Department of Homeland Security, as we
call it—but to continue to see the purpose of the Department of
Defense, so-called, as power projection.
So, what has the Department of Defense been doing for the last
seven years since 9/11? Well, been fighting a war in—where?
Afghanistan. And a second one in Iraq. Now, I think you can make the
case for Afghanistan, at least in terms of you can make a case for the
necessity of holding the Taliban accountable for having given sanctuary
to al-Qaeda. You can’t make any case for the invasion of Iraq as
related to the global war on terror. And frankly, it’s becoming rather
difficult, I think, to make a case for the continuation of the
Afghanistan war as part of the global war on terror.
AMY GOODMAN: Why?
ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, I mean, you identified me as a
conservative, and I don’t deny that label, but I think in this
particular context what conservatism means is to be realistic in
understanding how the world works and being respectful of history and
taking care not to overstate one’s own capacity to influence events.
And I think, in that regard, if we look at Afghanistan today, we
have to see a country that historically, at least as I understand
Afghan history, has never really functioned as an integrated and
coherent nation state. It’s never been ruled from Kabul. It’s always
been ruled from the—in the provinces by people you might call tribal
chiefs. You might call them warlords, you can call them local bosses,
but authority has been widely distributed. But we are engaged in a
project in which we insist that we’re going to transform Afghanistan
into something more or less like a modern, coherent nation state, and
indeed, we insist that it has to conform to our notions of liberal
democracy.
Were we able to actually do that, I think it would be a
wonderful thing. But seven years or so into this project, I’m not sure
we can do it. Matter of fact, I’m increasingly persuaded that we can’t
do it, and therefore—and I think in your news summary you made
reference to this—you know, for somebody like Senator Obama to say,
“Elect me. I’ll win the global war on terror by sending more troops to
Afghanistan,” I think ought to give people pause and, frankly, ought to
cause them to wonder how much change an Obama administration would make
with regard to a foreign policy. That’s not an argument for voting for
McCain, by a long shot, but it suggests the narrowness of the debate
over foreign policy.
AMY GOODMAN: So how is this narrowness taking place? I
mean, yes, you have McCain saying we’ll be in Iraq for a hundred years.
You have Obama speaking out against the war, but he votes with McCain
for funding for the war all through the years—
ANDREW BACEVICH: Right, right, right.
AMY GOODMAN: —as a senator, and then he says we’ll send thousands more, we should send thousands more troops to Afghanistan.
ANDREW BACEVICH: Right, right. I think there are
differences between the two, but I think we should see the differences
as differences in operational priorities. McCain insists that Iraq is
the central front in the war on terror and that it must be won, and
it’s clear that if we, the American people, elect him, that we will be
engaged in Iraq for a long, long time. Senator Obama says, “No,
Afghanistan is the central front in the global war on terror. Elect me
and will shift our military effort to Afghanistan.” It’s a difference,
but it’s a difference in operational priorities; it’s not a difference
in strategy.
Both of them—McCain explicitly, I think Obama implicitly—endorse
the notion that a global war on terror really provides the right frame
for thinking about US national security policy going forward. A real
debate would be one in which we would have one candidate, and certainly
it would be McCain, arguing for the global war on terror and an
opponent who was questioning whether the global war on terror makes
sense. I don’t think it makes sense.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about this, the global war on terror.
ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, I mean, the phrase itself is one
that really ought to cause people to have their heads snap back a
little bit, because President Bush and others around him—Rumsfeld was
certainly very clear on this—it’s a war, it’s global, and how long is
it going to go on? Well, they said from the outset it’s going to go on
for decades. In the Pentagon, there’s a phrase that gets used,
“generational war,” a war that lasts a generation or more.
Well, we need to ask ourselves whether that really makes sense?
What are the costs entailed by waging war for a generation? Where does
the money come from? What are we not doing because we’re spending all
this money on war? And in a very human sense, who actually pays the
cost? I mean, who serves? Who doesn’t serve? Whose social needs are
getting met, and whose are not getting met, as a consequence of having
open-ended global war be this national priority?
It seems to me that were we to accurately gauge the actually
existing threat—and there is a threat. I mean, 9/11 happened. There are
people out there who want to kill us. But were we to actually gauge
that threat in a realistic way, we would see that open-ended global war
is not only unnecessary, but it’s probably counterproductive, that
there are better ways to go about keeping us secure than to engage in
global war.
AMY GOODMAN: And I want to talk about those ways after
break. We’re talking to Andrew Bacevich, a retired colonel, spent
twenty-three years in the US Army, now a professor of history and
international relations at Boston University. He’s just written the
book The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism. Stay with us.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: Our guest is Professor Andrew Bacevich,
retired colonel who spent twenty-three years in the US Army, now a
professor at Boston University. And his latest book is The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism.
Could you talk about the cost of war and how the militarists
learned from your war, from Vietnam, how we are insulated from the true
cost?
ANDREW BACEVICH: Yeah, this is not something people
intended to happen, but it’s an unintended consequence that we today
really need to intend to. This is the way I would tell the story.
President Nixon ends the draft and creates the so-called all-volunteer
force, which really is a professional army. When Nixon ends the draft,
he doesn’t do it because he thinks having a professional army would be
in the nation’s interest. What Nixon is trying to do is to basically
cut the antiwar movement off at the knees, and his calculation was that
by ending the draft, kids would get out of the streets and go back to
class. And to some degree, he actually was right. It’s worth
remembering that the JCS at the time, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were
opposed to ending the draft, because they felt that they could never
find enough volunteers to fill the force.
By the time we get into the 1980s, those JCS concerns have been
proven incorrect, and we do end up with, I think, a magnificent
professional army. In terms of what you want an army to be like and to
do, they are competent, they are disciplined, they know their business.
Alas, after the end of the Cold War, we have a political elite—and
again, I would emphasize both parties—who decide that, gosh, with this
great army we have, shouldn’t we go find some use for it? And the
post-Cold War period, beginning with the elder Bush, sees this pattern
of interventionism—you know, Panama, Iraq, Haiti, Bosnia, Kosovo, on
and on and on—mostly small conflicts, mostly brief conflicts, conflicts
in which we, the people, sit on the sidelines and mostly applaud, and
the all-volunteer force seems like the most successful federal program
of the recent decades. Until you get to Iraq, because Iraq turns out to
be not a short war, not a clean war, protracted, ugly, rightfully, I
think, controversial and unpopular.
But what we have found is that we, the people, have so distanced
ourselves from the professional army that unless you have a family
member serving in uniform—and most people don’t—you don’t know where
this military is, you don’t know what it’s like, and you really don’t
have much say in the way it’s used.
President Bush exploits that after 9/11. He decides he knows how
it wants to be used. And, of course, for the first time in our history,
when we go to war, instead of a president turning to the Congress and
turning to the country and say, “We’re going to have to change the way
we do business, because we’re at war,” President Bush actually says,
“Go to Disney World. Go shopping. Go back to doing what you have been
doing for the last ten years, and I’ll take care of everything.” And I
have to say, the great majority of the American people—I don’t think
listeners of your show or of yours or your show—but the great majority
of the American people basically did what Bush said and in tuned the
war out and allowed the burden to fall on a very small percentage of
the population, which I find, frankly, morally objectionable.
AMY GOODMAN: Who benefits, Andrew Bacevich?
ANDREW BACEVICH: From the war? There are obviously
corporations, contractors who benefit, and I would not—never want to
dismiss that, but I don’t really think that that provides us an
adequate explanation of how we got into this fix. I think who really
benefits or what benefits is the political status quo. The national
security state, the apparatus of the national security state benefits.
It’s gotten larger since 9/11, immensely larger. The tacit bargain
between our political leaders and the American people, which basically
assumes that our culture of consumption, our refusal to save, our
addiction to oil, as President Bush himself described it, that all of
these things can be sustained indefinitely, if we can simply employ our
military power in ways to shape the world to our liking.
Now, of course, what we found over the past five, six years is,
our military power is really not nearly as great as many people
imagined it to be back in the 1990s, and war has not become an
effective instrument of politics, as many people imagined back in the
1990s.
AMY GOODMAN: You talk about massive amounts of money that go into the military, and yet it can be stopped by an IED.
ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, it’s an interesting thing. I mean,
the military’s self-image, or the image of the military that many
national security experts had developed during the 1990s, was that
because our military was so adept at exploiting information technology,
that in every respect we were faster than any prospective opponent: we
could think faster, we could decide faster, we could see faster, we
could use our weapons faster.
One of the great ironies, I think, of the Iraq war is that our
adversary, who in a technological sense, we would say, has been fairly
primitive, our adversary has actually acted much more quickly than we
have. In the competition between the improvised explosive devices as a
major weapons system that they have used and our efforts to defeat that
system, they have repeatedly acted more quickly than we have. And
there’s an important lesson there, I think. And the lesson is,
technology is not all it’s cracked up to be when it comes to military
affairs.
AMY GOODMAN: The first meeting of Barack Obama and McCain
was with an evangelical reverend, Rick Warren, in California, and they
talked about evil and good, and they talked. And McCain said he will go
to the gates of Hell and back to get Osama bin Laden. Your thoughts?
ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, I’m a conservative, and this is
another one of those things that leads me to believe that not only is
President Bush not a conservative, but Senator McCain is not, either.
Of course there is evil in the world and there is good in the
world, but guess what? Some of the evil is right here. I mean, to view
international politics through this lens of good and evil leads you to
vastly oversimplify and I think also leads you to make reckless
decisions. Bush’s—I do believe President Bush genuinely—not cynically,
genuinely—saw Saddam Hussein as evil, and I think he actually genuinely
believes that—again, consistent with this notion of American
exceptionalism—that we were called upon to bring democracy to Iraq. But
what a ludicrous way to view US-Iraqi relations over the past twenty or
thirty years, because if you really look at US-Iraqi relations or US
policy in the Middle East over the last twenty, thirty, fifty, sixty
years, it’s impossible to see the question as simply one of good versus
evil. It’s not black and white; it’s grey. And you need to see the
world as grey if you’re going to be a sensible statesman.
AMY GOODMAN: Where do you see all this heading? Your last
chapter is “The Limits of Power.” Why don’t people on the ground,
overwhelmingly opposed to the war, have a say now?
ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, I think we have. Again, I don’t
mean to make this as a statement that applies to 100 percent of the
American people, but I think the great majority of us basically have
allowed ourselves to become seduced by this culture of consumption, of
not taking seriously the notion that someday the bills come due, that
you can’t simply run up a line of credit that stretches from here to
infinity. We don’t want to look ourselves in the mirror. We don’t want
to recognize the need to make some changes in the way we live.
AMY GOODMAN: Do you see the end of American empire?
ANDREW BACEVICH: Yes, I do. And I think the key question
is, will the American empire end catastrophically because of our blind
insistence that we will not change? Or will we be able to disengage
ourselves from and dismantle the American empire in a sensible,
reasonable way that will do the least damage to the world and the least
damage to ourselves?
AMY GOODMAN: Andrew Bacevich, I want to thank you very much for being with us. His book is The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism.
















With all the words that we want to hear, solving economic problems and to have world peace is the one that we want to hear the most. In an effort to alleviate economic problem leaders of different nations together with Obama are defending his pick for the United States Secretary of the Treasury, though it seems imprudent to appoint to one of the top financial posts in the country to a guy that makes big tax mistakes that require a massive payoff. Someone may want to get Timothy Geithner a payday loan or two, because the Obama nominee for Treasury Secretary just got slapped with $42,000 worth of fines from the Internal Revenue Service. Economy as of today gets worsen and worsen, in any situation, you will always have the ability to carefully analyze and come to a prolific decision. For example, if an unexpected expense comes crashing down on your budget, and were looking for financial relief. Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, for reinstatement, has recommended the uptick rule. In essence, short selling is a transaction in which a company, or individual, borrows stock from the holder, and then sells it to someone else with an agreement to buy it back from the original lender. The state of the economy is obviously the largest influence, as the number of layoffs increase, the stock market continues to decline, and the credit freeze has seen record numbers of people going out for cash advance for short term credit needs.