By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday,
February 05, 2025
Some people are excited about the release of the newest
PlayStation or the latest Air Jordans. Me, I get kind of giddy when they roll
out some new ideological faction. Of course, much like a new video game console
or line of sneakers, what’s new is usually pretty superficial and cosmetic.
Still, it gives us something to talk about.
Even more exciting: when they discover an old ideological
faction hiding in plain sight. It’s a little like when they find some new
species of goat or jungle cat. It’s been here all this time, but nobody snapped
a picture until now. Or maybe it’s like finding out that a network of Druids or
Pythagoreans are a
powerful and influential constituency and you never noticed.
That’s a bit how I felt reading this essay
in the New York Times explaining Donald Trump’s foreign policy. He’s not
an isolationist or non-interventionist, and he’s obviously not a
neoconservative or internationalist. He’s a … sovereignist, writes
historian Jennifer Mittelstadt.
Sovereignist? What’s that? I mean, my spellchecker
doesn’t even recognize it. Well, the gist is that sovereignists believe that
the guiding principle of American foreign policy is we can do whatever we
want—or whatever we can get away with. To that end, alliances are problematic
because they constrain our freedom of action. But what should really be avoided
are international institutions, multilateral compacts, treaties, bowling
leagues, etc.
In Mittelstadt’s telling, the sovereignist movement was
born in reaction to the effort to enlist America in the League of Nations. The
“irreconcilables,” were those senators who opposed joining the league no matter
what. Mittelstadt doesn’t get into the weeds, but the irreconcilables’ biggest
peeve (other than just disliking Woodrow Wilson) was with Article X of the
League Covenant, which would require members of the league to defend each other
if attacked. For the sovereignists, being on the hook to get into someone
else’s fight was an unacceptable violation of, well, American
sovereignty.
Since then, the sovereigntist movement has been the
driving force behind opposition to U.S. membership in the U.N., various
multilateral agreements—and even NATO.
Now, I have quibbles with Mittelstadt’s narrative and
analysis. First, calling it a “movement” makes it sound a bit more organized
and coherent than it is. It’s more like a longstanding sentiment or argument,
than a cause with meetings and the like. Second, it’s a little problematic to
say the president is part of a movement that he’s almost surely never heard of.
But only a little. I mean, just because he’s never declared “I’m a narcissist”
doesn’t mean he isn’t one.
Last, Mittelstadt suggests that this is a decidedly
conservative movement. I get why she does this — sovereigntism is and has been
a more robust force on the right for the last century. Robert Taft was
definitely a sovereigntist. So was Jesse Helms. Reagan definitely had a
sovereigntist streak—hence his opposition to giving away the Panama Canal.
Anti-U.N. sentiment has always been a significant force on the right. But if
we’re going to say this thing was born in 1919 with the “Irreconcilables,” it’s
worth pointing out that some of them were Democrats and quite a few of the
Republicans were progressives, like Hiram Johnson, William Borah, and Robert La
Follette.
Also, I could make the argument that, in his first term
at least, FDR was the most consequential American sovereigntist of the 20th
century. His decision to screw Europe, and much of the world, by torpedoing the
London Economic Conference in 1933 as well as moving off the gold standard was
grounded entirely in sovereigntist arguments (though most historians use
the label “nationalist”).
I could go on quibbling, but the fact is, I think
Mittelstadt’s focus on sovereigntism is actually very smart and helpful. It’s
definitely a better label than “isolationist.” I’ve written tons
on how people misuse and abuse the term isolationism. The claim that
isolationism is definitionally right-wing or conservative is ahistorical
claptrap. Many so-called libertarian isolationists on national security are in
fact globalists on economics. Some opposition to joining the League of Nations
or the U.N. was isolationist, but more often it was sovereigntist.
Which is why sovereigntist is a better word: It more
accurately and fairly captures the views of people who get called isolationist.
It also better describes the views of people who often get called
“neoconservatives.” The best illustration of this is John Bolton, arguably the
most consistent and effective proponent of sovereigntism alive today. He’s been
swinging his cowbell in favor of a more assertive, but also more independent,
America for decades. Which is ironic, given how so many of today’s putative sovereigntists
hate him and mislabel him a neocon (as you know, I think there’s nothing wrong
with being a neocon, but when Bolton’s critics, on the left and right, use the
term, it’s almost always a pejorative – and inaccurate).
Indeed, during the Iraq war, every conservative “hawk”
was labeled a neocon, when some of the most forceful and articulate hawks
utterly rejected things like nation building and democracy promotion. In 2006,
Rich Lowry wrote an essay
titled “The ‘To Hell With Them’ Hawks” whom he described as “conservatives who
are comfortable using force abroad, but have little patience for a deep
entanglement with the Muslim world, which they consider unredeemable, or at
least not worth the strenuous effort of trying to redeem.” This was often
shorthanded, somewhat problematically at times, to “the rubble
doesn’t make trouble”
school.
It’s certainly the case that the sovereigntist label fits
Trump better. It helps explain why Trump is much more keen on screwing with
allies and withdrawing from multilateral entanglements far better than the word
“isolationist.” I mean, you can’t really call the dude looking to annex
Greenland, reclaim the Panama Canal, and absorb Canada a doctrinaire
isolationist. And his absolutely wild idea of seizing Gaza, ethnically
cleansing it of Palestinians, and creating a Middle East
Riviera—“Mar-a-Gaza”—is not exactly the sort of “come home America” foreign
policy J.D. Vance has been teasing. I mean, the phrase “Pax Trumpiana” is proliferating
on Twitter, which is strange given that much of the MAGA movement has been
crapping over the idea of America as the “world’s policeman” for a long
time.
So, you might ask, what’s wrong with sovereigntism? And
my short answer is nothing, in moderation. As you probably recall, I’m a
the-poison-is-determined-by-the-dose guy. So I am entirely comfortable saying
that I subscribe to, or have serious sympathy for, many sovereigntist
arguments. America shouldn’t join any club or contract that is not in America’s
interest. But in most cases, that’s not a binary, yes/no calculation. It’s a
cost-benefit analysis. Do we gain more than we lose by joining this or that organization
or compact? With NATO, for example, the benefits far outweigh the costs, in my
opinion. That doesn’t mean it’s unreasonable to want to increase the benefits
or decrease the costs at any specific juncture.
This introduces another concept that we need to consider:
hegemonism. One of the reasons FDR’s decision to bail on an agreement to
stabilize global currencies in 1933 has been criticized is that he rejected the
expectation that America—the richest nation at the time (and now)—would and
should replace the U.K. as the global economic hegemon. We can debate whether
that was a wise decision, and there are good arguments on both sides, but it’s
worth noting that FDR, and America generally, ultimately decided that it was in
America’s interests to become the global economic hegemon after World War
II. It turns out that our go-it-alone approach in the mid-1930s was one
of the reasons the Nazis came to power, and the world was set on fire. America
was right to recognize that it was better to lead the world than be dragged
into yet another world war.
The decision to lead the world, with like-minded allies,
was good for the world and us. It’s why the dollar is the world’s reserve
currency, which is good for America. We set the rules for global trade. We lead
the free world.
The hardcore sovereignists never made peace with that.
But most sovereignists were also internationalists, too. There was a vast
consensus, among Goldwaterites, Reaganites, Buckleyites, social conservatives,
neoconservatives, Scoop Jackson Democrats, etc. believed—rightly —that being
the global hegemon benefitted us more than it cost us. Even Pat Buchanan was
all in for American leadership until the end of the cold war. NATO
amplified our power in the world, while only minimally constraining our freedom
of action. Our alliances didn’t prevent us from doing what we wanted—right and
wrong—in our backyard. And they helped contain the Soviet Union.
I am in favor of a healthy balance between sovereigntism
and alliance-supported hegemonism, because it’s good for America. The hardcore
sovereigntists don’t like the second part, because it requires behaving like an
adult and being a reliable friend. Trump thinks that makes us suckers. I think
it makes us grown-ups.
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