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Shall We Go to War?

by Gregory Bresiger

[Posted March 12, 2003]

In deciding whether to wage war against yet another regime  that has
fallen into disfavor with DC, the United States must make some hard
choices. Will we follow the traditions of George Washington or those of
Woodrow Wilson? As Americans grapple with the hard choices involved in a
possible war against Iraq, a larger set of principles is implied in this
decision.

Can America avoid a repeat of the failed interventions of the last century,
the most conspicuous of which was the Vietnam tragedy of the 1960s and
1970s?

A debate over that tragic war has been re-opened by two recent books
about former presidential candidate and U.S. Senator Robert Kerrey.[1] He
was a winner of the Congressional Medal of Honor who lost a limb fighting
in Vietnam, a war that subjected this country to obloquy abroad as well as
at home. The debate over these books comes at the same time that
President George W. Bush insists that the United States must wage war
against Iraq, even if means the opposition of much of the world.

Will we, or our imperial president, choose empire or will we re-discover
ourselves and return to the historic principles of non-intervention? The
latter tradition was established by George Washington, who recommended,
in his Farewell Address, that Americans stay out of the wars of Europe. He
said the young nation should have no permanent military alliances, but
should trade with all nations. He warned against "a passionate attachment
of one Nation for another." He wrote that the attachment for or against
any nation would lead to wars "without adequate inducement and
justification."[2]

Temporary alliances were acceptable, said Washington, thinking of how
our nation had won its independence with the help of the French. But the
French were, by Washington's retirement, trying to drag the U.S. into the
wars of Europe. Here was an example of why permanent alliances must be
avoided. "Tis our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any
portion of the foreign world,"[3] Washington wrote.

Washington wanted a minimum of intercourse between governments and a
maximum of intercourse between peoples. That was also a sentiment
admired by the Manchester School of 19th century Britain, radical MPs
who opposed the British Empire. To use Washington's now apparently
forgotten words is to understand how dramatically America has moved for
its historical roots: "The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign
nations is, in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as
little political connection as possible."[4]

Even in the latter part of the 19th century, this tradition of non-
interventionism remained strong in America. Late in the century there was
a suggestion that, considering our insignificance in the world, the nation
should close the State Department.

These non-interventionist sentiments were expressed in the inaugural
address of President Grover Cleveland: "The genius of our institutions, the
needs of our people…dictate the scrupulous avoidance of any departure
from that foreign policy commended by the history, the traditions and the
prosperity of the Republic. It is the policy of independence…It is the
policy of peace…It is the policy of neutrality, rejecting any share in
foreign boils and ambitions upon other continents." [5]

But the nation began to move away from this tradition with America's
triumph in the Spanish- American war and her subsequent decision to
scoop up the crumbs of the fading Spanish Empire in the Philippines. The
United States, despite the protests of novelist Mark Twain and the leaders
of the Anti-Imperialist League, a laissez-faire group that included William
Graham Sumner, officially joined the imperialist powers. But this decision
had an immediate price. Once Spain was defeated, the United States
ended up fighting a dirty war to retain its control over the islands.

Philippine guerrillas believed the Americans had double-crossed them.
They had previously fought with the Americans to defeat Spain. When they
realized America was turning away from its republican roots, when America
came to embrace the ideas of empire and great power status, the former
Philippine allies turned on the Americans.[6] This began a tragic pattern in
American history. America's leaders speak of democracy and liberty, but
ally themselves with imperial forces. The policy of interventionism
inevitably means that enemies become friends again and again.[7] It
frequently happens because the U.S. insists on taking sides in civil wars.

This pattern was sadly repeated when Vietnamese guerrillas, who had
fought with the Americans against the Japanese in World War II, later made
war on Americans. America, after World War II, had helped re-install the
French empire in Vietnam once World War II ended. The Philippines, a
nation in which the U.S. recently sent advisers and in which the U.S. may
soon send troops to battle a Moslem rebellion against the central
government, is a nation in which the United States may once again become
involved in a civil war.

Whatever course our country takes—continuing down the path of empire,
with all the ugliness and possibly war crimes that go with it, or returning
to its historic roots of non-interventionism —history matters. History is not
"bunk," as Henry Ford said. It matters to a new generation of Americans
who hear the military glorified every day in television commercials. Much
of this generation, brought up in public schools in which history is either
ignored or watered down, has never been been acquainted with the
nation's anti-militarist heritage.

This tradition goes back two centuries, even before the United States
became a nation. Samuel Adams, in 1768, warned that it is "very
improbable" that "any people can long remain free with a strong military
power in the heart of the people."[8] Adams had inherited many of the
attitudes of Englishmen who had fought two civil wars to prevent huge
military establishments, which were viewed as a weapon that would be
used by monarchs to intimidate domestic critics.

Adams wrote of a military establishment that "a wise and prudent people
will always have a watchful and jealous eye over it; for the maxims and
rules of the army, are essentially different from the genius of a free
people, and the laws of a free government."[9]

It is important to remember that today there are soldiers such as retired
general Wesley Clark who call for the nation to move into the Middle East
and run these societies, something that would have amazed and disgusted
the authors of the American anti-militarist tradition.

Many people in this generation are also not aware of the disastrous
consequences of the Vietnam War. These wars betrayed America's
noninterventionist traditions.

These young people were never taught that their nation, in its first
century of existence, tried to stay out of the wars of Europe. This
tradition was summed up by John Quincy Adams when he said, "The United
States does not go abroad in search of monsters to destroy."[10] Yet, at
least since World War I, a large part of American foreign policy has been a
monster hunt. The irony, of course, is that many of today's monsters were
yesterday's allies.[11]

So many Americans have only known the traditions of "internationalism," a
shorthand for a policy of alliances and interventionism. This policy is
exemplified by permanent military alliances like Nato and the National
Security Act. The latter created the CIA and has been the centerpiece of
American foreign policy for over a half-century.

Many Americans seem to know little or nothing about the older traditions
of noninterventionism. Today it is usually disparagingly dismissed in the
popular press, not usually a noted source of historical expertise, as
"isolationism." So it is not surprising that many young Americans know little
of the history of the empires, including their own.

Can America learn from its history; from the disasters of another terrible
imperial war it waged in the Philippines after the Spanish-American War?
And will it learn from the disasters of other empires, whose death throes
resulted in the deaths of many innocent civilians?

The historical slaughterhouse has included the horrors of a dirty war
waged by the French Army in Algeria in the 1950s and 60s, to the brutality
of Spain's concentration camps in Cuba in the late 19th century and the
brutalities of American atrocities in the dirty war in Vietnam. That was a
war that divided many Americans because they understood little of what
our nation's goals were. Here was a repeat of the French-Algerian War,
which inevitably led to torture and crimes by both the French and the
Algerian guerrillas. This war divided France and brought down the nation's
Fourth Republic.

This led to France's condemnation by much of the world. It also almost
resulted in a military coup de etat. It also nearly led to the assassination of
French leader Charles de Gaulle by disgruntled officers who were angry
when de Gaulle reversed himself and negotiated an end to the war.

France was in chaos in the early 1960s, just as America would be a few
years later when a trio of imperial presidents went around Congress and
the American people and sent about 500,000 troops to Vietnam. This
divisive war nearly triggered a civil war in our country. That's because the
government secretly began the war in Vietnam under presidents Kennedy
and Johnson, neither of whom ever received a mandate to send troops to
Southeast Asia and yet proceeded to do exactly that. Nixon would
continue this war.

Americans, at this time of choice, should remember this deception of
politics. Johnson campaigned as the peace candidate in 1964, the man who
would save us from World War III if Republican Barry Goldwater was
defeated. Nixon campaigned in 1968 as the man who had a secret plan to
end the war. (He slowly pulled out U.S. troops while expanding the war
into Cambodia through bombing. Ultimately more Americans died in
Vietnam during Nixon's presidency than even under the unpopular
Johnson).

George W. Bush, campaigning in 2000, was critical of the Clinton
administration for sending American troops around the world. He wanted
to reduce the American commitments around the world. Are we seeing
another example of the irony of American interventionism?

Woodrow Wilson entered office as a president uninterested in foreign
policy; as a critic of dollar diplomacy and the use of force in foreign
policy, yet his administration became one of counterrevolution, of de
facto aid to the Whites in the Russian Civil War.[12]

The three Vietnam presidents—Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon—had one
common characteristic. They all admired Woodrow Wilson, who formulated
the concept of American Empire. He ran for reelection in 1916 as the man
who kept us out of World War I and who claimed his opponent, Charles
Evans Hughes, was a warmonger. Wilson, five months after his reelection,
took the country into World War I.

Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon couldn't break with the Wilsonian tradition
because it fit their desire for the United States to lead the world to
American style democracy, even if it meant using bombing to do it. Bush
now has the same burden. All these presidents were and are continuing an
imperial policy that was established in World War I and formalized in the
buildup and fighting of World War II by another Wilson disciple, FDR.

America, George W. Bush wants to extend this failed policy to every
corner of the world and against every leader who is a former CIA
helpmate—such as Saddam Hussein, etc.—or former favorite of the State
Department—Castro in the 1950s[13]—but who is now defined as a tyrant.

This is also a story of how America, over approximately the last century,
has departed from its republican heritage of antimilitarism and a
noninterventionist foreign policy; how it is slowly adopting itself to the
principles of an empire and the consequences of the changed policy.

Like the Spanish Empire, imposing its religion, or the British Empire,
imposing its law and culture, American must now fight everywhere because
it insists on bringing its democratic values to every corner of the globe,
whether the people there want them or not. This is why, even though
America's great nemesis, the Soviet Union, died over a decade ago, the
United States continues to fight war after war.

But this is also the story on the costs of this imperial policy. The killing of
civilians. The bombing of villages. The destruction of economies.  These
difficult questions were recently re-opened by an examination of the
actions of one of our leading public figures some 35 years ago when he was
a young man. This is a chapter of what a failed foreign policy did to a small
country fighting its own civil war. This was a war in which the United
States—as in Somalia, Afghanistan and now Iraq—insisted it had the magic
formula to bring American style democracy to nations that have never had
democracy.

To date, Vietnam, has probably been the greatest disaster of this Wilsonian
imperial policy, a war that even many of its most fervent supporters turned
against. And with good reason.

Robert Kerrey was part of a group of Navy Seals, an elite fighting unit that
was trained to do terrible things and not ask questions. Sent on a mission
to track down and kill some Viet Cong leaders, they were sent to a small
village,Thang Phong, in the Mekong Delta. They went to the right village.
They came in the wrong way, according to one account.

The details of what happened in that hamlet are somewhat in dispute as
outlined in two new books, "The Education of Lieutenant Kerrey" by
Gregory L. Vistica and Kerrey's own memoir, "When I Was a Young Man."
These are disturbing books that recount some of the most grisly details on
the missions and consequences of a leviathan state with worldwide
commitments. These books also detail the effects of this war on individual
human beings.

Kerrey, for example, came home and had countless physical and mental
problems. He was reluctant to receive his medal. He was bitter about the
war, saying he didn't understand why it was fought. He came home and
was confused. He had nightmares. He despised Nixon. He voted for Nixon
in 1968 because of the promise to end the war, and felt betrayed.[14] Still,
Kerrey believed he was compelled to attend a public ceremony in which
he received his medal from the president.[15]

But ultimately what makes these books relevant and timely—as President
Bush insists that the U.S. must go to war and replace the regime in
Baghdad—is the story of one mission, a mission in which both the dead and
survivors, as well as the nation that supported these kind of actions, were
scarred.

In both Kerrey books, there are the usual arguments over who fired first
and were the Seals merely defending themselves, etc. But the horrid
results of this mission are not in dispute: the wrong people were killed.
Unlike bombing from 10,000 feet, which is impersonal, these killings will
torture those who carried them until their dying days.

Dozens of Vietnamese civilians, including an old man who was defending his
children, were shot down or, in the case of the old man, were knifed to
death. Why? The Seals operated under their own special type of morality,
a morality that can justify almost anything that one does in wartime.

"To tie them up and leave them in place puts the entire operation at
risk,"[16] Kerrey believed. So the old man died, so did his children and so
did a large part of the village, which was mostly comprised of women and
children because the young men had run off to escape conscription by
the Viet Cong or the South Vietnamese armies. But finally the mission was
given away when someone started shooting. The Seals opened up with
their considerable firepower and dozens of women and children were
killed.

Finally, the Seals realized the mission had failed. They were horrified the
people they shot were not Viet Cong leaders. The leaders were in another
part of the village. When they heard the shooting, they stayed where they
were and none of them was hurt, killed or captured.

The Seals are one of the special forces units that each branch of the
armed forces now has because President Kennedy—the first president to
send combat soldiers to Vietnam—was so taken with the concept of super
soldiers who could do anything—such as assassination.

Seals were supposed to be so strong and accomplished that they can kill
the old man quickly. Seals were taught to stick a knife in a man's kidney.
"Put your hand over their mouth," explained one Seal, "and stab 'em up in
underneath the ribs and twist the knife and then hold'em. They'll shake a
little bit and then they'll die." [17]

But the old man refused to follow the Seals textbook. He struggled and a
second Seal was needed to cut his throat. One of the Seals instructors
would say of these missions that some men never recovered from these
kind of killings: "Blood would get on your hands between your fingers: it
would be sticky and smell a certain way." [18]

Vistica calls Kerrey's mission a "war crime."[19]  Of course many Americans,
the same as many of the French people who wanted an end to the
Algerian war, were disgusted by the policy, just as many Americans are
wary about a war against Iraq.
Will the bombing of civilians be any different in a war in Iraq? In a war
against Iraq, will more young Americans die in order to bring a regime
change? Will more of our young people find they can't get the blood off
their hands? How many more will be recruited into the vengeful armies of
terrorists? How much of our precious freedoms will we lose because they
are incompatible with a global military empire?

Many of the most influential Americans, while denying our nation's history
of antimilitarism and noninterventionism, are ready to unleash Hell."War
and high civilization are incompatible," said Mises. The price of empire is
high indeed.

------

Gregory Bresiger, a business writer living in Kew Gardens, New York, holds
a graduate degree in history from New York University.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] See archive and Mises.org's catalog items on war.




[1] Kerrey’s own account is "When I Was a Young Man, a Memoir," by Bob
Kerrey (Harcourt,
New York, 2002). The other book is "The Education of Lieutenant Kerrey,"
by Gregory L. Vistica,  (St. Martin’s Press, New York, 2003), an investigative
reporter who accused Kerrey of war crimes in Vietnam.

[2] Quotes from this paragraph are from Alexander DeConde’s "A History of
American Foreign Policy." (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1971, New York) p. 66.

[3] Ibid.

[4] This so impressed Richard Cobden, the leader of the Manchester
School, that , some 40 years later, he included those words in his
pamphlet, "England, Ireland and America." See "The Political Writings of
Richard Cobden, Vol. I," (Garland Publishing, New York, 1973).

[5] See "A Compilation of Messages and Papers of the Presidents,
1789–1897," James D. Richardson, editor, Vol. VIII, (Washington, D.C., 1900).

[6] "The Politics of War. The Story of Two Wars which Altered Forever the
Political Life of the American Republic, " by Walter Karp, pp. 109–10.
(Harper & Row, New York, 1979).

[7] An excellent book on the contradictions of American foreign policy is
"Endless Enemies: The Making of an Unfriendly World," by Jonathan Kwitny
(New York: Congdon and Weed, 1984).

[8] "The Civilian and the Military," by Arthur A. Ekirch, Jr., (Oxford
University Press, New York, 1956) p. 9.

[9] Ibid.

[10] Karp, p. 159.

[11] A good example of this is supplied in the book "Iraq. In the Eye of the
Storm," by Dilip Hiro. The author details the US’s onetime friendship with
Saddam Hussein, noting he was helped by the U.S. in his war against Iran in
the 1980s.

[12] A book illustrating this is N. Gordon Levin’s "Woodrow Wilson and
World Politics. America’s Response to War and Revolution" (Oxford
University Press, New York, 1968).

[13] Mario Lazo, a Cuban lawyer and exile, points out how it was the State
Department in the 1950s that pushed for the end of the relatively
benevolent Batista regime and helped put Castro in power. See his "Dagger
in the Heart. American Policy Failures in Cuba." See especially pp. 115–130
(Twin Circle Publishing, New York, 1968).

[14] When I Was a Young Man, p 268.

[15] Ibid.

[16] "The Education of Lieutenant Kerrey," p. 5.

[17] Ibid p. 90.

[18] Ibid.

[19] Ibid, p. 267.

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