On the
stakes of 2012 for what might—or might not—be America’s next war.
I’ve
written a good deal about war in this space, for obvious reasons: you can’t
write about American history without addressing the many wars in which we’ve
been involved, from the
first conflicts between European arrivals and Native Americans through the
latest wars in the Middle East. While every war is unique and complex, and
demands its own attention and analyses, I would say that I’ve tried to consistently
emphasize two interconnected ideas when it comes to all American (and really
all) wars: that no matter the causes or reasons for a war, no
matter how just or understandable it might be, war
always produces horrors that come to define it for all involved; and that
the most important thing we can do, when it comes to remembering
the histories and stories of wars, is to do the fullest justice we can to
those effects, on
soldiers, on civilians, on communities, on nations.
If we’re
able to remember and engage with those things, I believe there would be a
number of positive results, but here want to highlight one for our political
conversations and debates: such memories and engagement would make it very
hard, if not impossible, for us to treat war as a political option, as one of
many ways to resolve various world crises or problems. Certainly George
W. Bush’s doctrine of preemptive war, as illustrated dramatically in his
attack on Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, is the most recent and striking example of
this attitude toward war; but the truth is that many American wars, from the 19th
century’s Mexican
American and Spanish
American Wars up through that most recent war in the Persian Gulf, have
been similarly wars of choice, pursued (sometimes more covertly and under the
context of “attacks” on America, to be sure, as was the case in the 19th
century wars) by our government in an effort to gain territory, to resolve
international difficulties, to influence other nations and relationships, and
so on. Again, each situation has been specific and complex, but the fact
remains that the United States has consistently treated war as a choice, an
option to consider when confronted with various (and not immediately
threatening, to be clear) problems.
You would
think, perhaps, that the catastrophic failure of the most recent Iraq War would
make it unlikely for us to treat war in this way again, at least so soon after
that war’s horrors. But I believe you would be wrong, and that the very
prominent and continuing drumbeat for war with Iran—led by many of the same
neoconservatives who drove Bush’s foreign policy—exemplifies the presence and
power of these same arguments in 2012. Moreover, Mitt Romney’s foreign policy
advisors consist almost exclusively of such neoconservatives, as best
illustrated by John
Bolton, the former Bush Ambassador to the UN who has recently appeared in print
advocating for a war with Syria (which, I assume, he thinks we could handle
smoothly before moving on to Iran). There’s obviously no way to know for sure
what our foreign policy future will include, nor whether President Obama will
or would in a second term be able to resist various pressures pushing for
conflict with Iran; but it seems clear that a vote for Mitt Romney represents,
at the very least, a vote for a foreign policy team for whom preemptive, chosen
war is an entirely valid, if not indeed often the first, option.
Next election
and American issue tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
6/20 Memory Day nominee: Charles Chesnutt, author of (to my
mind) the
greatest and most significant American novel, among his many other
complex and important,
and far too unremembered, literary
and historical
works.
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