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Victor Davis Hanson: The Disenchanted American, Are we growing world-weary? [Imagine no USA]
NRO ^ | January 7, 2005 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 01/07/2005 6:07:16 AM PST by Tolik

We expect the world to hate us.

There is a new strange mood of acceptance among Americans about the world beyond our shores. Of course, we are not becoming naïve isolationists of 1930s vintage, who believe that we are safe by ourselves inside fortress America — not after September 11. Nor do citizens deny that America has military and moral obligations to stay engaged abroad — at least for a while yet. Certainly the United States is not mired in a Vietnam-era depression and stagflation and thus ready to wallow in Carteresque malaise. Indeed, if anything Americans remain muscular and are more defiant than ever.

Instead, there is a new sort of resignation rising in the country, as the United States sheds its naiveté that grew up in the aftermath of the Cold War. Clintonism may have assumed that terrorism was but a police matter, that the military could be slashed and used for domestic social reform by fiat, that our de facto neutrals were truly our friends, and that the end of the old smash-mouth history was at hand. The chaotic events following the demise of the Soviet Union, the mass murder on September 11, and the new strain of deductive anti-Americanism abroad cured most of all that.

Imagine a world in which there was no United States during the last 15 years. Iraq, Iran, and Libya would now have nukes. Afghanistan would remain a seventh-century Islamic terrorist haven sending out the minions of Zarqawi and Bin Laden worldwide. The lieutenants of Noriega, Milosevic, Mullah Omar, Saddam, and Moammar Khaddafi would no doubt be adjudicating human rights at the United Nations. The Ortega Brothers and Fidel Castro, not democracy, would be the exemplars of Latin America. Bosnia and Kosovo would be national graveyards like Pol Pot's Cambodia. Add in Kurdistan as well — the periodic laboratory for Saddam's latest varieties of gas. Saddam himself, of course, would have statues throughout the Gulf attesting to his control of half the world's oil reservoirs. Europeans would be in two-day mourning that their arms sales to Arab monstrocracies ensured a second holocaust. North Korea would be shooting missiles over Tokyo from its new bases around Seoul and Pusan. For their own survival, Germany, Taiwan, and Japan would all now be nuclear. Americans know all that — and yet they grasp that their own vigilance and military sacrifices have earned them spite rather than gratitude. And they are ever so slowly learning not much to care anymore.

In fact, an American consensus is growing that envy and hatred of the United States, coupled with utopian and pacifistic rhetoric, disguise an even more depressing fact: Outside our shores there is a growing barbarism with no other sheriff in sight. Any cinema student of the American Western can fathom why the frightened townspeople — huddled in their churches and shuttered schools — almost hated the lone marshal as much as they did the six-shooting outlaw gang rampaging in their streets. After all, the holed-up 'good' citizens were always angry that the lawman had shamed them, worried that he might make dangerous demands on their insular lives, confused about whether they would have to accommodate themselves either to savagery or civilization in their town's future, and, above all, assured that they could libel and slur the tin star in a way that would earn a bullet from the lawbreaker. It was precisely that paradox between impotent high-sounding rhetoric and blunt-speaking, roughshod courage that lay at the heart of the classic Western from Shane and High Noon to The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance and The Magnificent Seven.

The U.N., NATO, or the EU: These are now the town criers of the civilized world who preach about "the law" and then seek asylum in their closed shops and barred stores when the nuclear Daltons or terrorist Clantons run roughshod over the town. In our own contemporary ongoing drama, China, Russia, and India watch bemused as the United States tries to hunt down the psychopathic killers while Western elites ankle-bite and hector its efforts. I suppose the Russians, Chinese, and Indians know that Islamists understand all too well that blowing up two skyscrapers in Moscow, Shanghai, or Delhi would guarantee that their Middle Eastern patrons might end up in cinders.

So an entire mythology has grown up to accommodate this false world of ours — sadly never more evident than during the recent tsunami disaster, a tragedy that has juxtaposed rhetoric with reality in a way that becomes each day more surreal. The wealthy Gulf States pledge very little of their vast petrol-dollar reserves — swollen from last year's jacked-up gasoline prices — to aid the ravaged homelands of their Islamic nannies, drivers, and janitors. Indeed, Muslim charities advertise to their donors that their aid goes to fellow Muslims — as if a dying Buddhist or Christian is less deserving of the Muslim Street's aid. In defense, officials argue that the ostracism of "charities" that funded suicide killers to the tune of $150 million has hampered their humanitarian efforts at scraping up a fifth of that sum. But then blowing apart Americans or Jews is always a higher priority than saving innocent Muslim children.

So even in death and misery, the world's pathologies remain — as Israel is disinvited to help the dying as the most benevolent United States, which freed Afghanistan and toppled Saddam, is supposedly under scrutiny to "regain" its stature for its "crimes" of jailing a mass murderer and sponsoring elections in his place. Last year alone the United States gave more direct money to Egypt and Jordan than what the entire billion-person Muslim world has given for the dead in Indonesia.

China, flush with billions in trade surplus, first offers a few million to its immediate Asian neighbors before increasing its contributions in the wake of massive gifts from Japan and the United States. Peking's gesture was what the usually harsh New York Times magnanimously called "slightly belated." In this weird sort of global high-stakes charity poker, no one asks why tiny Taiwan out-gives one billion mainlanders or why Japan proves about the most generous of all — worried the answer might suggest that postwar democratic republics, resurrected and nourished by the United States and now deeply entrenched in the Western liberal tradition of democracy, capitalism, and humanitarianism, are more civil societies than the Islamic theocracies, socialist republics, and authoritarian autocracies of the once-romanticized third world.

In the first days of the disaster, a Norwegian U.N. bureaucrat snidely implied that the United States was "stingy" even though private companies in the United States, well apart from American individuals, foundations, and the government, each year alone give more aggregate foreign aid than does his entire tiny country. Apparently the crime against America is not that it gives too little to those who need it, but that it gives too little to those who wish to administer it all. When the terrible wave hit, Kofi Annan was escaping the conundrum of the Oil-for-Food scandal by skiing at Jackson Hole, so naturally George Bush down in 'ole Crawford Texas was the global media's obvious insensitive leader — "on vacation" as it were, while millions perished.

The U.S. military is habitually slurred even though it possesses the world's only lift and sea assets that could substantially aid in the ongoing disasters in Indonesia and Thailand. Blamed for having too high a profile in removing the Taliban and Saddam, it is now abused for having too meek a presence in Southeast Asia. No doubt America should have "preempted" the wave and acted in a more "unilateral" fashion. Meanwhile we await the arrival of the Charles De Gaulle and its massive fleet of life-saving choppers that can ferry ample amounts of Saudi, Chinese, and Cuban materiel to the dying — emissaries all of U.N. and EU multilateralism.

All this hypocrisy has desensitized Americans, left and right, liberal and conservative. We will finish the job in Iraq, nursemaid democratic Afghanistan through its birthpangs, and continue to ensure that bandits and criminal states stay off the world's streets. But what is new is that the disenchanted American is becoming savvy and developing a long memory — and so we all fear the day is coming when he casts aside the badge, rides the buckboard out of town, and leaves such sanctimonious folk to themselves.

Victor Davis Hanson is a military historian and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. His website is victorhanson.com.
 

 


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: vdh; victordavishanson
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To: Tolik

Ping me, please.


21 posted on 01/07/2005 7:03:10 AM PST by wizr (Freedom ain't free.)
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To: Tolik
Imagine a world in which there was no United States during the last 15 years.

I can imagine it. It would be called the World Union of Soviet Socialist Republics!

Those of us who survived (very few would be those who inhabit FReerepublic) would wake up daily to our chains and gulags, thankful if the Black Marias didn't visit our apartment blocks this morning at 3 AM.

22 posted on 01/07/2005 7:05:18 AM PST by Gritty ("Outside our shores there is a growing barbarism with no other sheriff in sight"-VD Hanson)
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To: Tolik
Americans know all that — and yet they grasp that their own vigilance and military sacrifices have earned them spite rather than gratitude. And they are ever so slowly learning not much to care anymore.

100% agree!

23 posted on 01/07/2005 7:07:33 AM PST by technochick99
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To: hershey

All of these ideas have about a million to one shot of ever being realized. But just beginning to discuss them would produce such conniptions among our enemies and false friends that it couldn't help but produce positive effects.


24 posted on 01/07/2005 7:28:31 AM PST by NaughtiusMaximus (Their women give good lamentation, maybe we can conquer them again sometime.)
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Hanson writes:

--- We will finish the job in Iraq, nursemaid democratic Afghanistan through its birthpangs, and continue to ensure that bandits and criminal states stay off the world's streets.

But what is new is that the disenchanted American is becoming savvy and developing a long memory —

-- and so we all fear the day is coming when he casts aside the badge, rides the buckboard out of town, and leaves such sanctimonious folk to themselves.

_____________________________________


I don't get it. Why should we all fear that day?
Why not work for that day when the sanctimonious get their just reward?


-- We have our base in the middle east, as planned.
-- So why not let these tribal factions in Iraq kill each other. Let the Afghani's suffer birthpangs.
- And continue to ensure that bandits and criminals stay off of OUR streets.

It's time to face facts.. We cannot police the world. Let it suffice to kill our enemies.
25 posted on 01/07/2005 7:40:06 AM PST by jonestown ( Tolerance for intolerance is not tolerance at all. Jonestown, TX)
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To: NaughtiusMaximus

+1000


26 posted on 01/07/2005 7:42:38 AM PST by thejokker
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To: rhombus

That guy is not a liberal; he is a NeoLib.

Use that, it drives them nuts.


27 posted on 01/07/2005 7:57:18 AM PST by FreedomPoster
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To: roses of sharon
Where has investigative journalism gone? What governments, individuals, or organizations, have been financing, supporting, urging, and encouraging these cults for the last decades?

Go to Amazon.com and look-up "Treachery", by Bill Gertz, an investigative reporter for the Washington Times who specialises in intelligence matters. He has done the work. The more pertinent question is why is this information being ignored by the so-called mainstream media and our political leaders?

28 posted on 01/07/2005 8:04:37 AM PST by tarheelswamprat (Negotiations are the heroin of Westerners addicted to self-delusion.)
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To: steplock

"We do have the capability of sealing our country from the world and destroying anyone who would dare enter or attack."

LOL


29 posted on 01/07/2005 8:39:35 AM PST by MEG33 (GOD BLESS OUR ARMED FORCES)
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To: Tolik

Hanson bump!


30 posted on 01/07/2005 8:46:03 AM PST by MEG33 (GOD BLESS OUR ARMED FORCES)
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To: Tolik
Above all, the United States MUST remain powerful and strong and must defend herself and her allies--and remain capable of doing so. The American people must unite behind America's benevolent purpose and the American Dream. The anti-American Left--embodied in the Americacidal Democrat Party--must be dopped into the oubliette of history where it belongs--and all vestiges of the '60's hippy-tantrum along with it.
"Outside our shores there is a growing barbarism with no other sheriff in sight"
And its most destructive--and understandably anti-American--currents are Islam, European decadence, and Russian corruption. The violence-promoting rhetoric and self-serving propaganda of the American Left--including yesterday's inflammatory attack by Congressional Democrats on the 2004 U.S. Presidential Election--pour gasoline on the flames of worldwide anti-Americanism and further inflame America's enemies, both domestic and foreign.
"Muslim charities advertise to their donors that their aid goes to fellow Muslims — as if a dying Buddhist or Christian is less deserving of the Muslim Street's aid."
Do not forget. To the Muslim mind, Infidels are deserving of no justice, no rights, no help, and no mercy. Such is the nature of the god they serve.

The overt and declared goal of Islam is the establishment of a worldwide Islamic theocracy with the Koran as the only constitution, dhimmitude for all non-Muslims, and the shariah as international law. For this reason alone--the United States must remain the strongest and most powerful nation the world has ever known, and her resolve must be adamantine.

The world is dangerous. America is its greatest hope.

We must not fail.

31 posted on 01/07/2005 9:01:52 AM PST by Savage Beast (9/11 was never repeated--thanks to President George W. Bush!)
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To: Tolik

Hanson uses a good analogy. May I suggest another one to explain Europe and the United Nations? My coworker owns a large lot out in the country. It takes a lot of maintenance. He is getting up there in years and he hires a local young man who is borderline retarded but "strong as a horse". The young man earns some spending money to supplement his SSI and my coworker gets the hard, dirty work done without hurting himself. Win-win. The thing is, I believe that's what Europe and the United Nations wants the United States to do: the dirty work and leave the thinking to the smart ones (them). They are perfectly happy to see us maintain an expensive, high degree of readiness to serve or defend. They just want to be the ones to tell us where to go and what to do. Bypassing them makes them, of course, superfluous and "smart people" can't stand being considered superfluous. So Europe and the United Nations work overtime to convince our home-grown "intellectuals" that only Europeans and international diplomats can possibly understand world affairs. They characterize our efforts abroad as bull-in-a-china-shop disasters. They want us strong. They just don't want us uppity. As long as we are willing to act the part of brawn-without-brains, we are being a constructive part of the "world community", according to these "experts". Doing things on our own threaten their entire house of cards.


32 posted on 01/07/2005 9:16:35 AM PST by caseinpoint
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To: FreedomPoster
Actually you maybe correct, he is a registered Demo rat, go to his web site and read a little of history.
33 posted on 01/07/2005 9:17:17 AM PST by dts32041 (When did the Democratic party stop being the political arm of the KKK?)
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To: dts32041

Hanson is *far* from a NeoLib. He is a classical liberal, old-school Democrat, with more in common with a Zell Miller than the nutcases running the Dem party today.

I was referring to rhombus' university professor friend. See the replied to post, from my post.


34 posted on 01/07/2005 9:31:37 AM PST by FreedomPoster
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To: Tolik
But what is new is that the disenchanted American is becoming savvy and developing a long memory — and so we all fear the day is coming when he casts aside the badge, rides the buckboard out of town, and leaves such sanctimonious folk to themselves.

Can't happen soon enough. We need to fortify our own walls and let the rest of the world fend for themselves for a few years.

35 posted on 01/07/2005 9:35:54 AM PST by spodefly (This message packaged with desiccant. Do not open until ready for use or inspection.)
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To: FreedomPoster
So maybe the term should be neolib as a new liberalism that is strong on defense, with some social conservatism, but not the liberalism of the FDR's and the Joe Kennedy's.
36 posted on 01/07/2005 9:37:26 AM PST by dts32041 (When did the Democratic party stop being the political arm of the KKK?)
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To: dts32041

FDR and Joe Kennedy are conservative, compared to the nutcase NeoLibs running the Dem party today. And FDR was pretty strong on defense.


37 posted on 01/07/2005 9:44:57 AM PST by FreedomPoster
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To: FreedomPoster
FDR not really strong on defense and would have left germany alone if it had not attacked russia.
38 posted on 01/07/2005 9:50:07 AM PST by dts32041 (When did the Democratic party stop being the political arm of the KKK?)
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To: wizr
Sure.

I like your tagline, btw.
39 posted on 01/07/2005 10:29:44 AM PST by Tolik
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To: Tolik
VDH has touched on a fundamental fact of the cold-war world: free-riding. If you look at data on military spending from SIPRI you find that Germany, France and the UK are all spending considerably less in real terms on defense than in the early 1990s. Only the US among the NATO powers is spending more. Other nations are free-riding off the overwhelming military might of the US, both in terms of military spending and in terms of foreign-policy cheating. For the latter, think of France's extensive ties with Saddam, and the attempt by Germany, France and Russia to actively work against what the president of the US decided was a vital US national security interest in Iraq. Think also of the way other powers acquiesce to the deflection of blame by Araby for all of its dysfunctionality on America.

Global security is in economic terms a public good, and the other powers are behaving as economic theory predicts. We should get used to being unloved and indeed actively sabotaged for as long as we maintain the burden of preserving global order. In some sense it's a miracle that the UK and Australia have stood by us as steadfastly as they have.

40 posted on 01/07/2005 12:09:00 PM PST by untenured
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