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Has the US lost its way?
Sunday March 3, 2002 - The Observer ^ | Sunday March 3, 2002 | Paul Kennedy

Posted on 03/04/2002 5:38:36 PM PST by vannrox

Does everybody hate America? Maybe the world is just concerned at the lack of visionary leadership from such a powerful nation


Has the US lost its way?




'By what right,' an angry environmentalist demanded at a recent conference I attended, 'do Americans place such a heavy footprint upon God's Earth?' Ouch. That was a tough one because, alas, it's largely true.


We comprise slightly less than 5 per cent of the world's population; but we imbibe 27 per cent of the world's annual oil production, create and consume nearly 30 per cent of its Gross World Product and - get this - spend a full 40 per cent of all the world's defence expenditures. By my calculation, the Pentagon's budget is nowadays roughly equal to the defence expenditures of the next nine or 10 highest defence-spending nations - which has never before happened in history. That is indeed a heavy footprint. How do we explain it to others - and to ourselves? And what, if anything, should we be doing about this?


I pose these questions because recent travel experiences of mine - to the Arabian Gulf, Europe, Korea, Mexico - plus a shoal of letters and emails from across the globe all suggest that this American democracy of ours is not as admired and appreciated as we often suppose. The sympathy of non-Americans for the horrors of 11 September was genuine enough, but that was sympathy for innocent victims and for those who had lost loved ones - workers at the World Trade Centre, the policemen, the firemen.


There was also that feeling of pity that comes out of a fear that something similar could happen, in Sydney, or Oslo, or New Delhi. But this did not imply unconditional love and support of Uncle Sam.


On the contrary, those who listen can detect a groundswell of international criticisms, sarcastic references about US government policies, and complaints about our heavy 'footprint' upon God's Earth. Even as I write, a new email has arrived from a former student of mine now in Cambridge (and a devoted Anglophile), who talks of the difficulty of grappling with widespread anti-American sentiments. And this in the land of Tony Blair! It's lucky he's not studying in Athens, or Beirut, or Calcutta.


Many American readers of this column may not really care about the growing criticisms and worries expressed by outside voices. To them, the reality is that the United States is unchallenged Number One, and all the rest - Europe, Russia, China, the Arab world - just have to accept that plain fact. To act as if it were not so is a futile gesture, like whistling in the wind.


But other Americans I listen to - former Peace Corps workers, parents with children studying abroad (as they themselves once did), businessmen with strong contacts overseas, religious men and women, environmentalists - really do worry about the murmurs from afar. They worry that we are isolating ourselves from most of the serious challenges to global society, and that, increasingly, our foreign policy consists merely of sallying forth with massive military heft to destroy demons like the Taliban, only to retreat again into our air bases and boot camps.


They understand, better than some of their neighbours, that America itself has been largely responsible for creating an ever more integrated world - through our financial investments, our overseas acquisitions, our communications revolution, our MTV and CNN culture, our tourism and student exchanges, our pressure upon foreign societies to conform to agreements regarding trade, capital flows, intellectual property, environment and labour laws. They therefore recognise that we cannot escape back to some Norman Rockwell-like age of innocence and isolationism, and fear we are alienating too much of a world to which we are now tightly and inexorably bound. After my recent travels, this viewpoint makes more and more sense to me.


So what is to be done? One way to clearer thinking might be to divide outside opinion into three categories: those who love America, those who hate America and those who are concerned about America. The first group is easily recognisable. It includes political figures such as Lady Margaret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev; businessmen admirers of US laissez-faire economics; foreign teenagers devoted to Hollywood stars, pop music and blue jeans, and societies liberated from oppression by American policies against nasty regimes. The second group also stands out. Anti-Americanism is not just the hallmark of Muslim fundamentalists, most non-democratic regimes, radical activists in Latin America, Japanese nationalists and critics of capitalism everywhere. It also can be found in the intellectual salons of Europe, perhaps especially in France, where US culture is regarded as being crass, simplistic, tasteless - and all too successful.


Since there is little that can be done to alter the convictions of either of those camps, our focus ought to be upon the third and most important group, those who are inherently friendly to America and admire its role in advancing democratic freedoms, but who now worry about the direction in which the US is headed. This is ironic, but also comforting. Their criticisms are directed not at who we are, but at America's failure to live up to the ideals we ourselves have always articulated: democracy, fairness, openness, respect for human rights, a commitment to advancing Roosevelt's 'four freedoms'.


Three times in the past century most of the world looked with hope and yearning toward an American leader who advocated transcendent human values: for Woodrow Wilson, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Bill Clinton and John Kennedy made hearts rise abroad when they rejected narrow 'America First' sentiments and spoke of the needs of all humankind.



It is a return to this tolerant and purposeful America that so many worried and disappointed foreign friends want to see. Unilateralist US policies on land mines, an international criminal court and Kyoto environmental protocols fall well below those expectations. Underfunding the United Nations seems both unwise and contrary to solemn pledges. Committing an extra $48 billion to defence, but not committing to amounts or percentages for next month's Monterrey conference on financing development looks hypocritical. In fact, a few of these US policies (for example, on the early Kyoto proposals) can probably be well defended. But the overall impression that America has given of late is that we simply don't care what the rest of the world thinks. When we require assistance - in rounding up terrorists, freezing financial assets and making air bases available for US troops - we will play with the team; when we don't like international schemes, we'll walk away. My guess is that every American ambassador and envoy abroad these days spends most of his time handling such worries - worries expressed, as I said above, not by America's foes but by her friends.


Finally, individual policy changes matter much less than the larger issue. There is a deep yearning abroad these days for America to show real leadership. Not what Senator William J. Fulbright once termed 'the arrogance of power', but leadership of the sort perhaps best exemplified by Roosevelt. This seems to be what EU external affairs commissioner Chris Patten wants when he voices his worries about America shifting into 'unilateral overdrive'.


It would be a leadership marked by a breadth of vision, an appreciation of our common humanity, a knowledge that we have as much to learn from others as we have to impart to them. It would be a leadership that spoke to the disadvantaged and weak everywhere, and that committed America to join other advantaged and strong nations in a common endeavour to help those who can scarce help themselves. Above all, it would be a leadership that turned openly to the American people and explained, time and time again, why our deepest national interest lies in taking the fate of our planet seriously and in investing heavily in its future.


Were that to happen, we would fulfill America's promise - and probably get a surprise at just how popular we really are.


· Paul Kennedy CBE, Professor of History and Director of International Security Studies at Yale University, is the author of The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
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· Paul Kennedy CBE, Professor of History and Director of International Security Studies at Yale University...
1 posted on 03/04/2002 5:38:36 PM PST by vannrox (MyEMail)
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To: vannrox
Paul Kennedy CBE, Professor of History and Director of International Security Studies at Yale University, is the author of The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers,and he's an idiot.
2 posted on 03/04/2002 5:42:14 PM PST by woofie
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3 posted on 03/04/2002 5:42:59 PM PST by Texaggie79
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To: vannrox
Has Paul Kennedy lost his mind or just his ability to reason?

A. Cricket

4 posted on 03/04/2002 5:43:41 PM PST by another cricket
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To: vannrox
Hit with rotten tomatoes here.
5 posted on 03/04/2002 5:44:22 PM PST by dighton
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To: vannrox
'By what right,' an angry environmentalist demanded at a recent conference I attended, 'do Americans place such a heavy footprint upon God's Earth?'

Because we PAY for them!

6 posted on 03/04/2002 5:44:35 PM PST by GalvestonBeachcomber
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To: vannrox
You think these people would check into the gross production of the US. Obviously we must be creating something the world wants.
7 posted on 03/04/2002 5:46:17 PM PST by Bogey78O
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To: vannrox
for Woodrow Wilson, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Bill Clinton and John Kennedy made hearts rise abroad when they rejected narrow 'America First' sentiments and spoke of the needs of all humankind.

Bill Clinton? Is this a joke?

8 posted on 03/04/2002 5:48:00 PM PST by The_Media_never_lie
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To: woofie
Sure spells like an Englishman, not an American. (centre, defence etc.)
9 posted on 03/04/2002 5:49:14 PM PST by Howie
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To: vannrox
"...three times in the past century the world looked... toward American leaders..Wooodrow Wilson...Franklin Roosevelt... Bill Clinton... John F. Kennedy..."

The depth of this weenie's intellect is illustrated by his arithmetic skills.

Truly, the product of a well-organized paranoid trying to think. The flaws of logic and outright fallacies fly like dead leaves in the November wind.

10 posted on 03/04/2002 5:51:37 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: The_Media_never_lie; vannrox
for Woodrow Wilson, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Bill Clinton and John Kennedy made hearts rise abroad when they rejected narrow 'America First' sentiments and spoke of the needs of all humankind.

Bill Clinton? Is this a joke?

Every name listed is a "joke". We've just been fed an avalanche of bulls**t over the years so we now believe otherwise.

11 posted on 03/04/2002 5:52:53 PM PST by AAABEST
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To: vannrox
Paul Kennedy CBE, Professor of History and Director of International Security Studies at Yale University

So if you are thinking of sending your children to Yale.....DON'T!

12 posted on 03/04/2002 5:53:57 PM PST by eddie willers
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To: vannrox
We comprise slightly less than 5 per cent of the world's population; but we imbibe 27 per cent of the world's annual oil production, create and consume nearly 30 per cent of its Gross World Product and - get this - spend a full 40 per cent of all the world's defence expenditures.

Well, we defend 90% of the world and produce about 40% of its food, so which numbers, precisely, are out of whack?

Nice try, Professor. Thank you for playing the home version of Daschle Jeopardy.

13 posted on 03/04/2002 5:58:05 PM PST by Mr. Jeeves
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To: vannrox
"'By what right,' an angry environmentalist demanded at a recent conference I attended, 'do Americans place such a heavy footprint upon God's Earth?' Ouch. That was a tough one because, alas, it's largely true."

Alas, it is BS. America's "heavy footprint" is not embossed on the world because it's a "right"; it's there because America grew to such a weight due to it's heritage and values. The footprint is there because it is what's left when we walk about the earth.

Also, it should be pointed out that in the past, our "heavy footprint" left residual matter such as freedom, food, and shelter to many countries who were too "light" to walk about on their own. Now many nations who were beneficiaries of our largesse feel the need to trash us. It's akin to a spoiled teenager hurling invectives at his parents after they had spent 16 or 17 years raising them, at great cost.

(BTW, by what right does an "angry environmentalist" use the name of God in an intellectually bankrupt argument?)

14 posted on 03/04/2002 6:03:41 PM PST by yooper
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To: eddie willers
Sure we are only 5% of the worlds population. We use probably 40% of the worlds energy. Shock of shocks we only let 5% of the polution into the atmosphere. We must be saving the world from something. Like our technolagy will burn 95 % of the fuel we do burn. And as far as we buying all the worlds GDP. Well we pay a good price for everything. The world is clammering to sell to Americans. If America did not buy the rest of the worlds output they would have to trade it to the Africans for dirt. Every try to run a nation on dirt??????? We grow the world food. The rest of the world relies on North America to supply food. We honestly demand some value for the money we send them. But it seems right know we are the opnly ones sending them money right now.
15 posted on 03/04/2002 6:07:13 PM PST by coffmg
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To: vannrox
Unilateralist US policies on land mines, an international criminal court and Kyoto environmental protocols fall well below those expectations.

If we undercut ourselves economically, so the EU, India, and China have a perpetual advantage over us, surrender our national sovereignty to the UN, and allow the Third World nations to make our Constitution null by giving them the right to haul any of our citizens before the ICC for violating any law or treaty the UN cares to pass by majority vote (a UN dominated by those same nations that showed at Durban how they plan to fleece the west)...Then they'll like us.

I'd rather they hate and fear us.

16 posted on 03/04/2002 6:07:35 PM PST by kaylar
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To: vannrox

17 posted on 03/04/2002 6:09:33 PM PST by SAMWolf
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To: vannrox
....needs of all humankind. That always means "Uncle Sam picks up the tab while we enlightened (read:empoverished or threatened) Europeans kick him in the crotch." It becomes pretty damn disgusting to listen to these people whine for US products, productivity and protection on one hand and fly birds at us with the other.

And as for the French, their greatest problem has always been who to surrender to next. May they all be peed on from a great height.

18 posted on 03/04/2002 6:11:47 PM PST by Adrastus
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To: SAMWolf
Damn, Sam. Now that's just downright good. My compliments, Sir.
19 posted on 03/04/2002 6:18:42 PM PST by Adrastus
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To: Adrastus
I knew that would come in handy some day.
20 posted on 03/04/2002 6:20:45 PM PST by SAMWolf
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