http://www.inthesetimes.com/comments.php?id=289_0_4_0_C

The World Was Not Enough

By Christian Parenti 
7.28.03


The role of intellectuals and ideas in the project of empire
has once again come to the fore. Witness the triumphs of
William Kristol, Robert Kagan and others associated with the
Project for the New American Century, who in many ways scripted
the Iraq war long before it happened. The basic scaffolding of
modern empire requires ideas, after all, just as much as it
requires violence and treasure.

Thus it is worth consulting Neil Smith’s new book on Isaiah
Bowman, American Empire: Roosevelt’s Geographer and the Prelude
to Globalization. This volume marks something of a turn for
Smith, whose first book, Uneven Development, focused on Marxist
geographic theory. His second book, the widely read and
perfectly timed New Urban Frontier: Gentrification and the
Revanchist City, applied such theory to gentrification in a
series of international case studies. In American Empire we get
something totally different: a richly detailed, very empirical
political biography. (In the interest of full disclosure I
should mention that I know Smith fairly well.)

Not often addressed by historians, Isaiah Bowman was in fact an
important player in the intellectual entourages of both Woodrow
Wilson and FDR. He helped draw up the modern border of Europe,
helped shape America’s non-committal policy toward Jewish
refugees from Nazism, and ran Johns Hopkins University and the
Council of Foreign Relations. In all these capacities, he
sought to harness ideas to the larger project of American
commercial and political power on a global scale. Smith’s
detailed and well-crafted book is simultaneously the story of
Bowman, the story of geography as a discipline, and the story
of American imperial thinking from World War I to the onset of
the Cold War.

Fittingly, Bowman’s tale begins on the land. Born in 1878 and
raised on a poor farm in Michigan, Bowman was acutely aware of
the enduring frontier character of his natal terrain. By age
19, the bookish farm boy had taken a job as a country
schoolteacher. This coincided with America’s “splendid little
war” in Cuba and the Philippines. To do his part, Bowman formed
a volunteer militia but was never called up. By dint of hard
work and study, he soon made his way to Michigan State and from
there to Harvard. This bastion of WASP erudition and social
power transformed Bowman from a provincial into a real scholar
and properly connected elite. At Harvard the young man studied
geography, a discipline that was then a quasi-hard science, a
stepchild of geology dominated, as Terry Eagleton recently put
it, by “maps and chaps.” Bowman’s impact on geography—he later
taught it at Yale—was to help steer the discipline toward a
more social footing, but it would be many more decades before
geography became the highly theoretical, political, and
star-studded field we’ve seen in recent years.

As part of his geographical fieldwork, Bowman participated in
several South American expeditions mapping and “discovering”
places, in particular very high places in Peru. He was part of
the famous Machu Picchu expedition of 1911 led by the
self-aggrandizing Hiram Bingham, who later became governor of
Connecticut and a U.S. senator. The “discovery” of the ancient
Inca city was actually a rather simple publicity stunt by rich,
white adventurers. Local people had never really “lost” the
fabled city; indeed, some Quechua still lived on and around the
ruins.

Like the gentlemen geographers he emulated, Bowman was steeped
in racism. While on expedition in Peru he once commandeered
pack animals, “hijacked” several Quechua porters at gunpoint,
and even beat another who was reluctant to work. But this sort
of thing, like empire more generally, was justified in Bowman’s
worldview by the noble and anesthetizing pursuit of scientific
knowledge. It was an intellectualizing escape clause that
Bowman would use throughout his life.

In reality, Bowman’s life and thought was progressively less
scientific and evermore pragmatically political. As a young
man, his interests were by today’s definitions rather
geological: He studied with William Morris Davis and was
interested in the role of water in creating landscape; his
explorations in Peru involved mapping rivers. Later, Bowman
became interested in settlement patterns; his assumption was
that “the character of the physical features” of the earth “has
been a prominent factor in the life of a race.” Bowman believed
more or less that space created race, and that the interaction
of racial national groups with the physical landscape was the
essence of politics. Connected to this notion—which leaned
heavily on the German geographer Friedrich Ratzel, who first
coined the term Lebensraum—was the idea that politics was about
controlling people and territory.

Yet later in life, Bowman would articulate a form of American
control that left direct territorial control aside for the sake
of economic conquest. So it is fitting that Bowman’s early
southern “conquests” took a symbolic form of cartography. He
drew maps of territory, seizing it symbolically rather than
actually, but helping to open it to external economic and
indirect political control all the same. It was this flexible,
informal style of governance that was increasingly defining
America’s international power in the era when Bowman was at the
height of his powers in government.

For Smith this is a key point. “American globalism”—by which he
means American capitalist expansion coupled with U.S. military
and diplomatic power projection—never duplicated the cumbersome
European form of direct territorial control. Save for a few
actual colonies like Puerto Rico and the Philippines, the
United States has always preferred the low overhead and
“plausible denial” offered by an informal, arm’s length empire
of client states. The importance of Bowman in all this was that
as official geographer No. 1, it was he who most clearly
articulated a liberal academic justification for American
Lebensraum as economic conquest. The easiest way forward for
American elites was to stick to the heart of the matter:
capital accumulation and the conquest of markets.

As an expert on settlement patterns, Bowman got his first truly
big break when Woodrow Wilson called upon him to join the
American delegation to the Paris Peace Conference of 1919.
There the American geographer helped lead a massive study,
called The Economic and Social History of the World War, better
known simply as the “Inquiry,” whose whole purpose was to
formulate the basis of a “scientific peace.” Toward that end
Bowman created “scientific” yet rather generous borders for
Poland, which—along with being based on much closer study of
economic, cultural, and topographical regions—created a healthy
bulwark against the young Bolshevik state to the east. In Paris
Bowman was also instrumental in building closer ties between
the U.S. and U.K. delegations. After the war, these links
deepened, and as head of the newly created Council of Foreign
Relations (CFR) one of Bowman’s many projects was to cement
postwar Anglo-American cooperation. In many ways this
development augured the passing of the baton of global hegemony
across the Atlantic from England to America.

Under Bowman’s lead, the CFR became a hothouse of American
imperial imagination and a “contact bazaar.” By the 1970s the
CFR was dismissed by conservatives as too liberal, but during
Bowman’s tenure the CFR was a virtual private adjunct to the
State Department. Every secretary of state who held office
between 1921 and 1944 made speeches of “historic significance”
before the CFR, and many of its members graduated from its
private and highly secretive seminars into direct government
service. It was around this time in 1935 that Bowman also
became president of John Hopkins University, a post he would
hold until 1948.

Smith describes this period of Bowman’s career as marked by
forward thinking liberalism. By today’s bellicose Rumsfeldian
standards, Bowman and the rest of his ilk were downright
sissies: They believed in diplomacy, and for a while even had a
modus vivendi with the Soviet Union. Bowman even expressed an
amoral, technocratic concern about the disruptive impacts of
U.S. foreign investment in Latin America. But in some ways,
this phase in his thought strikes one as simple Realpolitik in
the face of socialism and a faltering global economy. He was,
in short, a careful international planner, but his guiding
vision was still U.S. economic domination—not as colonial ruler
but as “resource trustee,” guarding the wealth and development
of the tropics.

Bowman’s moment of greatest political influence was also his
absolute moral nadir. Like most WASPs, Bowman at first greeted
Hitler as a “windbag” but one that might actually be useful in
putting down the red tide of socialism. Bowman even rejoiced
during the 1942 Nazi counter-offensive, when Operation
Barbarossa looked like it would take down the Soviet Union by
liquidating millions of Russians. But all this became truly
deranged when Bowman was put in charge of “Project M,” in which
the question of Jewish refugee resettlement was to be
“scientifically” managed. Again Bowman was tapped because of
his expertise on settlement patterns and “frontier belts.” But
nothing useful or concrete ever came of Bowman’s reams of data
and maps, much of which remained classified until 1960.

In the face of clear Nazi genocide, Bowman, like many other
beltway elites, twiddled his thumbs while the Jews were
slaughtered. In this regard Bowman hid behind the academic
pettifogging of “Project M”: Refugee settlement required lots
of planning, thin population distribution, lots of capital and
suitable rural or frontier zones to absorb the deracinated
populations. Instead of urging Roosevelt to absorb refugees
from Nazi terror, Bowman suggested elaborate, expensive,
developmentalist policies that sought to link refugee flows to
the needs of capital by settling out-of-the-way areas like
rural Venezuela or Argentina.

Behind Bowman’s studied lack of concern for the victims of
Nazism was a deep-seated anti-Semitism. It seems he felt
threatened by Jews, or at least by too many of them in one
urban place where they might exert influence on the levers of
capital and political power. As for the creation of a Jewish
state, Bowman opposed the idea as it was developing in
Palestine, not so much out of anti-Semitism but rather because
he feared the Zionist project would require massive America
subsidies and military support (which indeed it did, and does).
Ultimately, Bowman’s work on “Project M” calls to question the
whole political edifice of scholarly detachment and the moral
compartmentalization it promulgates.


For Smith, the guiding thread in Bowman’s work was that he
“envisaged a global supervisory role for the United States.” At
the end of World War II, this was best advanced through an
American-dominated United Nations, which would create a
diplomatic check on Soviet power and structure the inevitable
decolonization movements on the horizon. But this effort turned
out to be something of a failure, at least from an imperialist
point of view, because the United Nations always had too much
autonomy and too many states, and was not an effective enough
tool of the United States. While this is true, Smith may go too
far when he says the United Nations “frustrated” American
global ambition. In the Cold War, America never ruled just as
it pleased, but neither was it denied a role as the leading
global power, from the Bretton Woods financial framework to
nuclear proliferation to the crushing of Third World
insurgencies in Guatemala and Iran.

At home Bowman embraced the Cold War with red-phobic zeal,
denouncing Marxism in the universities and turning harshly on
the Soviet Union, which he saw as the only real check on
American power. Ultimately, Bowman was both a visionary who
provided academic services and imperial imagination to American
rulers and a craven egghead who wasted vast sums of government
wealth on unread and unused geographical studies.

But what strikes one most is Bowman’s opportunism: He was to
the right of Roosevelt but subtly changed positions so as to
always be in favor. He spent his life in the cloistered comfort
of Ivy League universities and the inner sanctums of the
executive branch. He was a stone-cold racist and anti-Semite
who let Jews burn and talked of brown people in the global
south as “smaller peoples” in need of control and guidance. One
of his last acts of accommodation just before his retirement
and early death was to passively allow a Hopkins colleague and
social acquaintance, Owen Lattimore, to be red-baited by
McCarthy and driven out of a job. It was the perfect, politely
brutal end to Bowman’s career, which is to say his life.

Christian Parenti is the author of The Soft Cage: Surveillance
in America, to be published in September by Basic Books. 

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