Posted on 01/18/2002 4:03:49 PM PST by Pokey78
I love America. I love the place and I love the people. I admire the country as a nation. I spent two years as a postgraduate studying at Yale on a fellowship paid for by an American philanthropist, and assimilated fast. I like their warmth, their courage, their vision. I like their individualism, energy and capitalist spirit; and I like their deep belief in liberty. You will not find a readier apologist for American values or the American way of life. So if I sound a note of warning about the United States as a political ally, do not write me off as one of those sour European lefties with a grudge against Uncle Sam. I am a pro-American British Conservative. My difficulty is not with America as America, but with Washington as a hoped-for coalition partner. Partnership in foreign policy is not in their nature. Consensus is not in their lexicon. They do not see their place in our world as we would do. America is either right outside, or right on top. For Americans, alongside is not an option. My first encounter with this truth came at Yale in the 1970s. A group of us were talking about oil prices and Saudi Arabia. My friend Dave McCormack, a spirited Southerner from Charleston, had pointed out that while US hegemony protected producers from the Russians, US technology enabled Arabs to extract their oil, and US demand created the market in which to sell it. Its our oil, goddammit! Dave roared. He meant it. When Ronald Reagan remarked of the Panama Canal: We built it; its ours; and were going to keep it, he was tapping into the same vein. The vein runs deep. It is not unusually greedy; and not, in any malignant way, bullying. It is a simple conviction that America will decide. Her citizens do not see her as one country among many but as nonpareil, the biggest, the best, the one-and-only: final judge of her own interests and a pretty fair judge of whats good for the rest of us too. None of this is inconsistent with a strong sense of justice: a sense of justice characterises America at home and abroad, but it will be their justice and they will be the arbiters. Nor is it inconsistent with a wish to do good abroad: no people have shown such a consistently generous ambition to make our world a better place. But their help will be given ex gratia and its terms dictated by them. America will save the planet if America must, and it will pay the piper: but it will then call the tune. A negotiated process of cooperation is not what America has in mind. It seems to me that the past century of international affairs points this lesson in no very shaded way. British dreams of a transatlantic marriage of interests are always being dashed, yet still hope triumphs over experience. My earliest political memory is Suez, a debacle on which it is unnecessary to elaborate. Succeeding memories are of a colonial boyhood in Southern Rhodesia. The United States was running her own clear policy in Southern Africa at the time and it was unfriendly to British interests and our gradualist approach to decolonisation. The American Reading Room in Salisbury (now Harare) was a focal point for impatient young African nationalists whom America was eager to befriend before the Russians did. Washington may have been right. My point is that it would not have occurred to them to reconsider if we had not agreed. Twenty years later the Queen was actually head of state in Grenada when America invaded the Caribbean island, to the acute discomfiture of Sir Geoffrey Howe, our Foreign Secretary. Tory Eurosceptics, ever-vigilant for threats from an alliance in whose policies we do have a say, carelessly recommend one where we dont. Now that President Bush has signed up Tony Blair as British Robin to the American Batman, is there reason to think these verities have been suspended? The question is not posed rhetorically, for there are some reasons for hope. Terrorism is, after all, against all our interests. But how we define terrorism, where we diagnose it, and to what resorts we think it right to go in combating it, are debates in which we Europeans and the United States may find our preferred positions sliding apart. I think that slide began this week, as the unsavoury pantomime took to the stage in Guantanamo Bay. Take Donald Rumsfelds angry brushing aside of concerns about the treatment of prisoners, an outburst which, from the Prime Minister down, members of the British Government have been trying to sidle past, looking the other way. Said the US Defence Secretary: I do not feel the slightest concern at their treatment. They are being treated vastly better than they treated anybody else. In a saloon bar this will do, but is that the standard? How much does the Secretary of State really know about these individuals? And why are they not prisoners of war? Face it: Mr Rumsfeld does not care about the niceties and cares little who knows it. Washingtons way of fighting terror is not, despite appearances, the same as Britains. We seek to project the message that there are rules to which all nations are subject. America has a simpler message: kill Americans, and youre dead meat. The British Foreign Office may huff and puff that US swagger is counterproductive, alienating moderate Arab opinion, but Washington proposes a different approach: show them whos boss. America not Britain, Europe and America and not the international community, but America is boss. On this analysis Rumsfeld with his visual aids cages, razor-wire, manacles and sedating syringes is not maladroit: hes on message. Be sure that frantic private telegrams are winging their way over the Atlantic explaining the embarrassment this is causing Mr Blair. Be equally sure where Mr Bush is putting them. America has simple gods and likes to keep her satan simple, too. Every populace has a tendency to see for a while evidence of a single demons fiendish plans beneath every stone, but Americans take this to extremes. In Salem it was once witches. In Senator Joe McCarthys heyday it was Commies. Now it is al-Qaeda. And September 11 offered tremendous provocation. Of the brutality and ill-intent of the United States fundamentalist foe there can be no doubt, nor of the righteousness of American wrath. But this does not make their assessment of the foe accurate. We are told on very little evidence that the al-Qaeda network is incredibly sophisticated, yet the things we know it has done have been relatively crude, the technology modest. We are told (and the slavishness of the British press in printing this unquestioned is depressing) that al-Qaeda masterminds are at work here in London, Leicester, or wherever else some fundamentalist nutcase with nasty ambitions and contacts abroad is found in a bedsit. But in the claimed evil genius about whom we do know a bit, Richard Reid, we see little to justify the term. This imbecile is about as inconspicuous as a bag-lady. He has been attracting suspicion wherever he goes. When he flies El Al it puts a marshal in the adjacent seat. He couldnt even devise a way of detonating his own shoes, short of bending down in his aeroplane seat, with passengers around, and trying to set fire with matches to a foot-sweaty fuse. Why didnt he go into the loo? If this really is the cream of al-Qaeda then things are less dire than we feared. You, reader, will have furrowed your brow about some of this already. So will a million others. A silent minority used likewise to wonder if half the village really were witches; if the goofy clerk at work really was a key communist spy. Of course al-Qaeda exists; of course it is numerous; of course it is murderous; of course it must be fought. But it is not the only, and may not even be the cleverest, terrorist organisation in the world. Suicide bombing is as old as the bomb, and dangerous prisoners who would stop at nothing have been transported and held in custody since courts and prisons were invented. This is not the greatest evil the world has ever seen, nor the cleverest, nor the first and nor, certainly, will it be the last. But America is moving into a phase of believing so, and America is apt to throw her weight around. It may go to some lengths and last some time. We should hang back.
Love it. Excellent post, e-lips.
This article made me all warm and fuzzy.
If the 9/11 attacks weren't so close to home, we would've probably sought wider consensus.
Sound to me it's Mr. Parris who needs to go to the loo. What a constipated self-righteous jackass.
This is just the sort of thinking that has taken the British Conservative Party from the Thatcher triumphs to its present political insignificance. Honestly, Blair isn't this bad.
Basically this all boils down to:
(a) Bloody Americans wouldn't subordinate their own interests to help us cling to little bits of the Empire we had already proved in India we had no will to keep.
(b) We may be a second rate power, but at least we're subtle.
I say this with all respect and gratitude for the support the US has gotten from Britain. But this guy represents a kind of conservatism that is basically obsolete, because its only real belief is that "the world should be ruled by superior chaps like me." Its natural allies are in Brussels and with the elite Left generally.
Reid wanted to be right over the wing and the center fuel tank. It's kinda hard painting Al-Qaeda as buffoons, while slipping on a banana peel yourself.
America is the 800-pound gorilla of the world. It couldn't be alongside the chimpanzees, even if it wanted to. America rolls over in its sleep and certain countries in the world get squished. It's unavoidable.
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.