Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

THE POWER TO DO GOOD (VDHanson reviews Niall Ferguson book COLOSSUS: The Price of America's Empire)
New York Post via Benador Associates ^ | April 25, 2004 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 04/26/2004 12:41:12 PM PDT by Tolik

April 25, 2004 -- Colossus: The Price of America's Empire by Niall Ferguson, Penguin Press, 366 pages, $25.95

JOHN Kerry makes the case that the present administration has unduly alienated our allies - leaving us alone, isolated and increasingly frustrated in trying to do too much overseas with too few resources.

Should we Americans rightly be worried about similar charges from allies and enemies alike of unilateralism, preemption and hegemony?

Not to worry, Niall Ferguson assures us in his latest reflection on the state of the world. The problem of failed states, global terrorism and European fury abroad has nothing to do with George W. Bush and the present administration's muscular foreign policy. Instead, the culprits are the isolationist tendency and Americans' innate distaste for staying long abroad that allow most of the worlds' wounds to fester.

Those who got it right about America were not Woodrow Wilson and Jimmy Carter, but Teddy Roosevelt and Douglas MacArthur. The latter did not welcome war, but accepted that the world outside our shores was often a pretty rotten place that would take and take until someone - usually us - stopped it.

In reality, we should be natural imperialists, given our wealth and expertise. Americans are also endowed with an exceptional moral sense. We are a generous people, whose checkered imperial interventions in the past rarely proved profitable or exploitive.

Americans' setbacks - from the negotiated settlement in Korea, the pullout from Vietnam, the mess in Haiti and the last quarter-century of appeasement accorded fundamentalist terrorists - resulted from an innate unease with using our power to its full extent to promote our own liberal values. What limited successes we have enjoyed in nation-building - most notably in postwar Germany and Japan - was a result of one of the few times Americans used their full military might and grasped that occupation was necessary to ensure such potentially dangerous societies reemerged under the aegis of the liberal West.

Does Ferguson propose a new American liberal empire? In fact, he does almost, but not before noting that the British Victorians themselves got a bad rap as exploitive colonialists. In fact, the record of the 18th and 19th centuries prove exactly the opposite: Former and once-prosperous colonies, following autonomy, quickly turned into self-induced miseries, while Britain itself thrived as never before once free of these costly obligations.

Empire turns out not to be a means of making money, but instead an idealist pursuit to keep sea lanes open, bullies at bay and nations trading rather than fighting. The world has been lucky to have the Americans fill this vacuum, inasmuch as the British once did a pretty good job of it as well. And the question anyway for a retiring United States is not if, but when another - far less humane - hyper-power will throw its weight around.

IRAQ is an interesting case study. Leftist critics cry that oil, Halliburton and neoconservative conspiracies are at the heart of our occupation. In fact, our $87 billion investment in security and reconstruction is both a gesture of American magnanimity and service to world stability by implanting consensual government where tribalism, state criminality and terrorism once helped to ruin the region.

The danger there is not military impotence or financial exhaustion, but rather a failure to invest our full military and civilian resources for a sufficient time to ensure success.

But aren't we in danger of going broke, with over 150 bases abroad and hundreds of thousands of troops in the Middle East, Japan, South Korea and Europe? Indeed, the latter continent is busy triangulating with our enemies (witness the latest Spanish appeasement), getting rich while we sacrifice and running huge trade deficits with us as we supply their own security needs.

Not to worry, Ferguson assures us. Despite superficial appearances, Europe is really a mess. Its new union is undemocratic and statist. Its population is static and soon to fall. Its entitlement overspending is far worse even than ours. And unassimilated minorities and a socialist mentality ensure that European electorates are not going to reflect robust unity or idealism any time soon.

True, we are running dangerous annual trade and budget deficits, as well as accruing massive long-term foreign debt that at present rates are simply unsustainable and eventually incompatible with a strong presence abroad. But again the problem, Ferguson assures us, is willpower, not ability. We are just too self-absorbed and suffer from chronic attention deficit disorder when it comes to the need to stay vigilant and engaged overseas.

SO, the real crises of American power are soaring entitlements, unfunded social mandates and ever-increasing laxity and affluence among an indulgent citizenry. While we fret about prescription-drug benefits, the madrassas turn out soldiers of Islam who are emboldened in their hostility precisely because of our restraint and self-absorption. We have deficits of sorts galore - but they involve shortcomings in galvanizing spiritual power, fielding enough willing soldiers and setting sensible budget priorities.

This is a bold, original and eccentric argument, and there will be plenty of critics who will pounce on Ferguson's Gibbonesque theory of internal decline and imperial denial. Indeed, sometimes Ferguson himself gives critics easy ammunition.

Need soldiers? Ferguson advises that we look at the millions of prison convicts, illegal immigrants and chronic unemployed who could easily be induced to serve in a massive new imperial army - as if the U.S. military is looking for such bodies for its high-tech, high morale expeditionary forces.

Ferguson really does argue that far from spending too little at home, our real problems are federal wasteful entitlements for couch potatoes. Americans risk becoming softies, pear-shaped and fat, with maxed-out credit cards, waiting to check out in luxurious rest homes - the entire society in danger of becoming an "inert lump of old iron."

But the Marines - some with dyed hair and Ray Bans - who drove to Baghdad in three weeks, and the Rangers who sleep out in the Hindu Kush, hardly seem the same sort of fellows as those who pour out into the streets of European cities to protest for a 35-hour work week and more government unemployment insurance.

Twenty-six days after 9/11, Americans were in Afghanistan; 40 hours after a similar al Qaeda attack, the Spanish electorate voted in Socialists on the promise that they would get out of Iraq pronto. Our population may seem soft and flabby on university campuses and think tanks, but the sort of Americans I see out here in rural central California like to fight, work to exhaustion and, for the most part, worry more about what we are going to do to our enemies in the Middle East, rather than they to us.

Ferguson, in contrast, thinks that if we keep this indulgence up as a nation, we should fear not the Chinese, Middle East or jealous Europeans, but rather ourselves, who will have to either appease, bribe or apologize to a growing group of emboldened barbarians and terrorists.

SOMETIMES "Colossus" reads as if it is slapped together as a collection of at least five previously published but unconnected essays that don't always work as unified and consecutive chapters. And often the analyses of popular American culture seem stereotyped and more the impressions of an Oxbridge don who has puttered around Boston, New York or San Francisco rather than hung out much in Kansas City or Salt Lake City.

But those are really minor complaints given Ferguson's great strengths as an astute diplomatic and economic historian and a fearless, politically incorrect critic who offers a needed warning for a country that he genuinely believes in. So this is a welcome and controversial book from a principled scholar - and it couldn't come at a better time.

Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the author most recently of "Between War and Peace."

This item is available on the Benador Associates website, at http://www.benadorassociates.com/article/3767


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: colossus; empire; imperialism; niallferguson; phonycons; vdh; victordavishanson

1 posted on 04/26/2004 12:41:17 PM PDT by Tolik
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: seamole; Lando Lincoln; quidnunc; .cnI redruM; yonif; SJackson; dennisw; monkeyshine; Alouette; ...
Victor Davis Hanson moral clarity huge BUMP  

[please freepmail me if you want or don't want to be pinged to Victor Davis Hanson articles]

If you want to bookmark his articles discussed at FR: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/k-victordavishanson/browse

His NRO archive: http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson-archive.asp

His blog: http://victorhanson.com/index.html     BIO: http://victorhanson.com/Author/index.html

Yes, he is listened by the Bush Administration; they like him maybe as much as we do: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1085464/posts?page=6#6

2 posted on 04/26/2004 12:42:34 PM PDT by Tolik
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
bttt
3 posted on 04/26/2004 12:43:43 PM PDT by Tares
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Tolik; quidnunc
Thank you for NOT excerpting this.
4 posted on 04/26/2004 12:45:07 PM PDT by upchuck (Message to Senator John F'ing sKerry: Egotism is the anesthetic that dulls the pain of stupidity.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
our $87 billion investment in security and reconstruction is both a gesture of American magnanimity and service to world stability by implanting consensual government where tribalism, state criminality and terrorism once helped to ruin the region.

Hanson is brilliant. This statement, in a nutshell, summarizes our policy and purpose in Iraq.

5 posted on 04/26/2004 12:50:12 PM PDT by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: My2Cents
From his own website, http://victorhanson.com/

Response to Readership

Victor will post a response to readers' questions daily.

Current Affairs

Niall Ferguson, in the Opinion Telegraph, claims that the current insurrections in Iraq are identical to those the British faced (1918-20) when they occupied the region and that we were naive to expect anything different. How do you respond to this claim?

With all due respect, the British were not pouring billions into the country or promising democratic autonomy or dealing with a society that had just been liberated from 30 years of reign by a mass murderer. The point? The resources at our disposal are far greater, and the magnitude of the problem equally more formidable. Are we naïve? I don’t think so at all. Defeating Iraq was always a difficult task. Those who predicted 5,000 dead and millions of refugees now feel vindicated; when in fact much of the current problem is explicable in the fact that the US military simply overran the country so rapidly and at so little cost, that many Baathists and fundamentalists themselves woke up and realized that they had been awed rather than militarily defeated. Despite the tragedy of the constant bombing and sniping, the very fact that an entire country has been liberated and is operating again in less than a year— at the rate of losses not unusual for a single week or two in Vietnam -- is unprecedented.

6 posted on 04/26/2004 12:52:50 PM PDT by Tolik
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
VDH bump.

My personal take? This is what a Golden Age looks like from the inside. Pity the ones who will come to long for it in retrospect, and pray that it doesn't turn out to be us.

7 posted on 04/26/2004 12:54:25 PM PDT by Billthedrill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: upchuck
Thank you for NOT excerpting this.

I second that motion.

There is nothing so annoying as seeing a thread you would like to read,and seeing Quidnuncs' name attatched to it.

8 posted on 04/26/2004 1:08:40 PM PDT by Redcoat LI ("help to drive the left one into the insanity.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
Interesting ping, thank you.
9 posted on 04/26/2004 1:09:22 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
" Our population may seem soft and flabby on university campuses and think tanks, but the sort of Americans I see out here in rural central California like to fight, work to exhaustion and, for the most part, worry more about what we are going to do to our enemies in the Middle East, rather than they to us."

"Ain't it the truth, ain't it the truth!" ...said the Cowardly Lion in the Wizard of Oz.

10 posted on 04/26/2004 1:16:39 PM PDT by semaj ("....by their fruit you will know them.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
Please add me to your Victor Davis Hanson ping-list. He's a great American.
11 posted on 04/26/2004 1:27:01 PM PDT by CIBvet (It's about preserving OUR Borders, OUR Language and OUR American Culture)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
Bump for some clear analysis.
12 posted on 04/26/2004 1:34:06 PM PDT by Steelerfan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: CIBvet
Added. Thanks

VDH BUMP!
13 posted on 04/26/2004 1:34:14 PM PDT by Tolik
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: upchuck
Upchuck, Did you read Ferguson's last book, Empire?
14 posted on 04/26/2004 8:45:34 PM PDT by Huber (NEVER vote for a RINO in a primary!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
IRAQ is an interesting case study. Leftist critics cry that oil, Halliburton and neoconservative conspiracies are at the heart of our occupation.


We'll never make money on this. That's not why we went there. It was to free a people and attempt to bring freedom to an area that desperately needs it. Of course if we did make money on this the left would piss an moan about that.
15 posted on 04/26/2004 9:26:35 PM PDT by Valin (Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
Middle of the night heartfelt thanks Tolik!
16 posted on 04/27/2004 1:37:05 AM PDT by lainde (Heads up...We're coming and we've got tongue blades!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
Belated thanks.
17 posted on 04/29/2004 6:54:14 PM PDT by happygrl (this war is for all the marbles...we can't go Spanish!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson