By Robert Kagan
Friday, September 05, 2014
First it was the Europeans who sought an escape from the tragic
realities of power that had bloodied their 20th century. At the end of the Cold
War, they began to disarm themselves in the hopeful belief that arms and
traditional measures of power no longer mattered. A new international system of
laws and institutions would replace the old system of power; the world would
model itself on the European Union—and if not, the U.S. would still be there to
provide security the old-fashioned way.
But now, in the wake of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
it is the U.S. that seems to be yearning for an escape from the burdens of
power and a reprieve from the tragic realities of human existence
Until recent events at least, a majority of Americans
(and of the American political and intellectual classes) seem to have come
close to concluding not only that war is horrible but also that it is
ineffective in our modern, globalized world. "There is an evolving
international order with new global norms making war and conquest increasingly
rare," wrote Fareed Zakaria of CNN, borrowing from Steven Pinker of
Harvard, practically on the eve of Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the Islamic
State's march across Syria and Iraq. Best-selling histories of World War I
teach that nations don't willingly go to war but only "sleepwalk"
into them due to tragic miscalculations or downright silliness.
For a quarter-century, Americans have been told that at
the end of history lies boredom rather than great conflict, that nations with
McDonald's never fight one another, that economic interdependence and nuclear
weapons make war among great powers unlikely if not impossible. Recently added
to these nostrums has been the mantra of futility. "There is no military
solution" is the constant refrain of Western statesmen regarding conflicts
from Syria to Ukraine; indeed, military action only makes problems worse. Power
itself isn't even what it used to be, argued the columnist Moisés Naím in a
widely praised recent book.
History has a way of answering such claims. The desire to
escape from power is certainly not new; it has been the constant aspiration of
Enlightenment liberalism for more than two centuries.
The impossibility of war was conventional wisdom in the
years before World War I, and it became conventional wisdom again—at least in
Britain and the U.S.—practically the day after the war ended. Then as now,
Americans and Britons solipsistically believed that everyone shared their
disillusionment with war. They imagined that because war was horrible and
irrational, as the Great War had surely demonstrated, no sane people would
choose it.
What happened next, as the peaceful 1920s descended into
the violent and savage 1930s, may be instructive for our own time. Back then,
the desire to avoid war—combined with the surety that no nation could
rationally seek it—led logically and naturally to policies of appeasement.
The countries threatening aggression, after all, had
grievances, as most countries almost always do. They were "have-not"
powers in a world dominated by the rich and powerful Anglo-Saxon nations, and
they demanded a fairer distribution of the goods. In the case of Germany,
resentment over the Versailles peace settlement smoldered because territories
and populations once under Germany's control had been taken away to provide
security for Germany's neighbors. In the case of Japan, the island power with the
overflowing population needed control of the Asian mainland to survive and
prosper in competition with the other great powers.
So the liberal powers tried to reason with them, to
understand and even accept their grievances and seek to assuage them, even if
this meant sacrificing others—the Chinese and the Czechs, for instance—to their
rule. It seemed a reasonable price, unfortunate though it might be, to avoid
another catastrophic war. This was the realism of the 1930s.
Eventually, however, the liberal powers discovered that
the grievances of the "have-not" powers went beyond what even the
most generous and conflict-averse could satisfy. The most fundamental
grievance, it turned out, was that of being forced to live in a world shaped by
others—to be German or Japanese in a world dominated by Anglo-Saxons.
To satisfy this grievance would require more than
marginal territorial or economic adjustments or even the sacrifice of a small
and weak state here or there. It would require allowing the
"have-not" powers to reshape the international political and economic
order to suit their needs. More than that, it would require letting those
powers become strong enough to dictate the terms of international order—for how
else could they emerge from their unjust oppression?
Finally, it became clear that more was going on than
rational demands for justice, at least as the Enlightenment mind understood the
term. It turned out that the aggressors' policies were the product not only of
material grievances but of desires that transcended mere materialism and
rationality.
Their leaders, and to a great extent their publics,
rejected liberal notions of progress and reason. They were moved instead by
romantic yearnings for past glories or past orders and rejected Enlightenment
notions of modernity. Their predatory or paranoid rulers either fatalistically
accepted (in the case of Japan) or positively welcomed (in the case of Germany)
armed conflict as the natural state of human affairs.
By the time all this became unmistakably obvious to the
liberal powers, by the time they realized that they were dealing with people
who didn't think as they did, by the time they grasped that nothing short of
surrender would avoid conflict and that giving the aggressors even part of what
they demanded—Manchuria, Indochina, Czechoslovakia—only strengthened them
without satisfying them, it was too late to avoid precisely the world war that
Britain, France, the U.S. and others had desperately tried to prevent.
This searing experience—not just World War II but also
the failed effort to satisfy those who couldn't be satisfied—shaped U.S. policy
in the postwar era. For the generations that shared this experience, it imposed
a new and different sense of realism about the nature of humankind and the international
system. Hopes for a new era of peace were tempered.
American leaders and the American public generally if
regretfully accepted the inescapable and tragic reality of power. They adopted
the posture of armed liberalism. They built unimaginably destructive weapons by
the thousands. They deployed hundreds of thousands of troops overseas, in the
heart of Europe and along the rim of East Asia, to serve as forward deterrents
to aggression. They fought wars in distant and largely unknown lands, sometimes
foolishly and sometimes ineffectively but always with the idea—almost certainly
correct—that failure to act against aggressors would only invite further
aggression.
In general, except for a brief bout of fatalism under
President Richard Nixon and former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, they
were disinclined to assuage or even acknowledge the grievances of those who
opposed them. (President Harry Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson, the
architects of armed liberalism, never had much interest in bargaining with the
Soviets, while President Ronald Reagan was interested chiefly in bargaining
over the terms of their surrender.)
Behind the actions of the U.S. architects of containment
lay the belief, based on hard experience, that other peoples couldn't always be
counted on to value what the liberal world valued—prosperity, human rights or
even peace—and therefore the liberal world had to be constantly on its guard,
well-armed and well-prepared against the next stirring of the non-liberal,
atavistic urges that were a permanent feature of humankind.
How much easier it was to maintain this tragic vigilance
while the illiberal, conflict-based ideology of communism reigned across more
than half of the Eurasian continent—and how much harder has it been to sustain
that vigilance since the fall of communism seemingly ushered in a new era of
universal liberalism, and with it the prospect, finally, of a Kantian peace in
a world dominated by democracy.
For a time in the 1990s, while the generations of World
War II and the early Cold War survived, the old lessons still guided policy.
President George H.W. Bush and his national security adviser, Brent Scowcroft,
sent half a million American troops to fight thousands of miles away for no
other reason than to thwart aggression and restore a desert kingdom that had
been invaded by its tyrant neighbor. Kuwait enjoyed no security guarantee with
the U.S.; the oil wells on its lands would have been equally available to the
West if operated by Iraq; and the 30-year-old emirate ruled by the al-Sabah
family had less claim to sovereign nationhood than Ukraine has today.
Nevertheless, as Mr. Bush later recalled, "I wanted no appeasement."
A little more than a decade later, however, the U.S. is a
changed country. Because of the experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan, to suggest
sending even a few thousand troops to fight anywhere for any reason is almost
unthinkable. The most hawkish members of Congress don't think it safe to argue
for a ground attack on the Islamic State or for a NATO troop presence in
Ukraine. There is no serious discussion of reversing the cuts in the defense
budget, even though the strategic requirements of defending U.S. allies in
Europe, Asia and the Middle East have rarely been more manifest while America's
ability to do so has rarely been more in doubt.
But Americans, their president and their elected
representatives have accepted this gap between strategy and capability with
little comment—except by those who would abandon the strategy. It is as if,
once again, Americans believe their disillusionment with the use of force
somehow means that force is no longer a factor in international affairs.
In the 1930s, this illusion was dispelled by Germany and
Japan, whose leaders and publics very much believed in the utility of military
power. Today, as the U.S. seems to seek its escape from power, others are
stepping forward, as if on cue, to demonstrate just how effective raw power
really can be.
Once again, they are people who never accepted the
liberal world's definition of progress and modernity and who don't share its
hierarchy of values. They are not driven primarily by economic considerations.
They have never put their faith in the power of soft power, never believed that
world opinion (no matter how outraged) could prevent successful conquest by a
determined military. They are undeterred by their McDonald's. They still
believe in the old-fashioned verities of hard power, at home and abroad. And if
they are not met by a sufficient hard-power response, they will prove that,
yes, there is such a thing as a military solution.
This lesson won't be lost on others who wield increasing
power in other parts of the world and who, like Vladimir Putin's autocratic
Russia and Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's fanatical Islamic State, have grievances of
their own. In the 1930s, when things began to go bad, they went very bad very
quickly. Japan's invasion of Manchuria in 1931 exposed the hollow shell that
was the League of Nations—a lesson acted upon by Hitler and Mussolini in the
four years that followed. Then Germany's military successes in Europe
emboldened Japan to make its move in East Asia on the not unreasonable
assumption that Britain and the U.S. would be too distracted and overstretched
to respond. The successive assaults of the illiberal aggressors, and the
successive failures of the liberal powers, thus led to a cascade of disasters.
The wise men and women of our own time insist that this
history is irrelevant. They tell us, when they are not announcing America's
irrevocable decline, that our adversaries are too weak to pose a real threat,
even as they pile victory upon victory. Russia is a declining power, they
argue. But then, Russia has been declining for 400 years. Can declining powers
not wreak havoc? Does it help us to know that, in retrospect, Japan lacked the
wealth and power to win the war it started in 1941?
Let us hope that those who urge calm are right, but it is
hard to avoid the impression that we have already had our 1931. As we head
deeper into our version of the 1930s, we may be quite shocked, just as our
forebears were, at how quickly things fall apart.
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