Rome, AD ... Rome, DC? 

They came, they saw, they conquered, and now the Americans dominate the
world like no nation before. But is the US really the Roman empire of
the 21st century? And if so, is it on the rise - or heading for a fall?
Jonathan Freedland sifts the evidence 

Wednesday September 18, 2002
The Guardian
 http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,3604,794029,00.html

The word of the hour is empire. As the United States marches to war, no
other label quite seems to capture the scope of American power or the
scale of its ambition. "Sole superpower" is accurate enough, but seems
oddly modest. "Hyperpower" may appeal to the French; "hegemon" is
favoured by academics. But empire is the big one, the gorilla of
geopolitical designations - and suddenly America is bearing its name. 
Of course, enemies of the US have shaken their fist at its "imperialism"
for decades: they are doing it again now, as Washington wages a global
"war against terror" and braces itself for a campaign aimed at "regime
change" in a foreign, sovereign state. What is more surprising, and much
newer, is that the notion of an American empire has suddenly become a
live debate inside the US. And not just among Europhile liberals either,
but across the range - from left to right. 
Today a liberal dissenter such as Gore Vidal, who called his most recent
collection of essays on the US The Last Empire, finds an ally in the
likes of conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer. Earlier this year
Krauthammer told the New York Times, "People are coming out of the
closet on the word 'empire'." He argued that Americans should admit the
truth and face up to their responsibilities as the undisputed masters of
the world. And it wasn't any old empire he had in mind. "The fact is, no
country has been as dominant culturally, economically, technologically
and militarily in the history of the world since the Roman empire." 
Accelerated by the post-9/11 debate on America's role in the world, the
idea of the United States as a 21st-century Rome is gaining a foothold
in the country's consciousness. The New York Review of Books illustrated
a recent piece on US might with a drawing of George Bush togged up as a
Roman centurion, complete with shield and spears. Earlier this month
Boston's WBUR radio station titled a special on US imperial power with
the Latin tag Pax Americana. Tom Wolfe has written that the America of
today is "now the mightiest power on earth, as omnipotent as... Rome
under Julius Caesar". 
But is the comparison apt? Are the Americans the new Romans? In making a
documentary film on the subject over the past few months, I put that
question to a group of people uniquely qualified to know. Not experts on
US defence strategy or American foreign policy, but Britain's leading
historians of the ancient world. They know Rome intimately - and,
without exception, they are struck by the similarities between the
empire of now and the imperium of then. 
The most obvious is overwhelming military strength. Rome was the
superpower of its day, boasting an army with the best training, biggest
budgets and finest equipment the world had ever seen. No one else came
close. The United States is just as dominant - its defence budget will
soon be bigger than the military spending of the next nine countries put
together, allowing the US to deploy its forces almost anywhere on the
planet at lightning speed. Throw in the country's global technological
lead, and the US emerges as a power without rival. 
There is a big difference, of course. Apart from the odd Puerto Rico or
Guam, the US does not have formal colonies, the way the Romans (or
British, for that matter) always did. There are no American consuls or
viceroys directly ruling faraway lands. 
But that difference between ancient Rome and modern Washington may be
less significant than it looks. After all, America has done plenty of
conquering and colonising: it's just that we don't see it that way. For
some historians, the founding of America and its 19th-century push
westward were no less an exercise in empire-building than Rome's drive
to take charge of the Mediterranean. While Julius Caesar took on the
Gauls - bragging that he had slaughtered a million of them - the
American pioneers battled the Cherokee, the Iroquois and the Sioux.
"From the time the first settlers arrived in Virginia from England and
started moving westward, this was an imperial nation, a conquering
nation," according to Paul Kennedy, author of The Rise and Fall of the
Great Powers. 
More to the point, the US has military bases, or base rights, in some 40
countries across the world - giving it the same global muscle it would
enjoy if it ruled those countries directly. (When the US took on the
Taliban last autumn, it was able to move warships from naval bases in
Britain, Japan, Germany, southern Spain and Italy: the fleets were
already there.) According to Chalmers Johnson, author of Blowback: The
Costs and Consequences of American Empire, these US military bases,
numbering into the hundreds around the world, are today's version of the
imperial colonies of old. Washington may refer to them as "forward
deployment", says Johnson, but colonies are what they are. On this
definition, there is almost no place outside America's reach. Pentagon
figures show that there is a US military presence, large or small, in
132 of the 190 member states of the United Nations. 
So America may be more Roman than we realise, with garrisons in every
corner of the globe. But there the similarities only begin. For the
United States' entire approach to empire looks quintessentially Roman.
It's as if the Romans bequeathed a blueprint for how imperial business
should be done - and today's Americans are following it religiously. 
Lesson one in the Roman handbook for imperial success would be a
realisation that it is not enough to have great military strength: the
rest of the world must know that strength - and fear it too. The Romans
used the propaganda technique of their time - gladiatorial games in the
Colosseum - to show the world how hard they were. Today 24-hour news
coverage of US military operations - including video footage of smart
bombs scoring direct hits - or Hollywood shoot-'em-ups at the multiplex
serve the same function. Both tell the world: this empire is too tough
to beat. 
The US has learned a second lesson from Rome, realising the centrality
of technology. For the Romans, it was those famously straight roads,
enabling the empire to move troops or supplies at awesome speeds - rates
that would not be surpassed for well over a thousand years. It was a
perfect example of how one imperial strength tends to feed another: an
innovation in engineering, originally designed for military use, went on
to boost Rome commercially. Today those highways find their counterpart
in the information superhighway: the internet also began as a military
tool, devised by the US defence department, and now stands at the heart
of American commerce. In the process, it is making English the Latin of
its day - a language spoken across the globe. The US is proving what the
Romans already knew: that once an empire is a world leader in one
sphere, it soon dominates in every other. 
But it is not just specific tips that the US seems to have picked up
from its ancient forebears. Rather, it is the fundamental approach to
empire that echoes so loudly. Rome understood that, if it is to last, a
world power needs to practise both hard imperialism, the business of
winning wars and invading lands, and soft imperialism, the cultural and
political tricks that work not to win power but to keep it. 
So Rome's greatest conquests came not at the end of a spear, but through
its power to seduce conquered peoples. As Tacitus observed in Britain,
the natives seemed to like togas, baths and central heating - never
realising that these were the symbols of their "enslavement". Today the
US offers the people of the world a similarly coherent cultural package,
a cluster of goodies that remain reassuringly uniform wherever you are.
It's not togas or gladiatorial games today, but Starbucks, Coca-Cola,
McDonald's and Disney, all paid for in the contemporary equivalent of
Roman coinage, the global hard currency of the 21st century: the dollar.

When the process works, you don't even have to resort to direct force;
it is possible to rule by remote control, using friendly client states.
This is a favourite technique for the contemporary US - no need for
colonies when you have the Shah in Iran or Pinochet in Chile to do the
job for you - but the Romans got there first. They ruled by proxy
whenever they could. We, of all people, should know: one of the most
loyal of client kings ruled right here, in the southern England of the
first century AD. 
His name was Togidubnus and you can still visit the grand palace that
was his at Fishbourne in Sussex. The mosaic floors, in remarkable
condition, are reminders of the cool palatial quarters where guests
would have gathered for preprandial drinks or a perhaps an audience with
the king. Historians now believe that Togidubnus was a high-born Briton
educated in Rome, brought back to Fishbourne and installed as a
pro-Roman puppet. Just as Washington's elite private schools are full of
the "pro-western" Arab kings, South American presidents or African
leaders of the future, so Rome took in the heirs of the conquered
nations' top families, preparing them for lives as rulers in Rome's
interest. 
And Togidubnus did not let his masters down. When Boudicca led her
uprising against the Roman occupation in AD60, she made great advances
in Colchester, St Albans and London - but not Sussex. Historians now
believe that was because Togidubnus kept the native Britons under him in
line. Just as Hosni Mubarak and Pervez Musharraf have kept the lid on
anti-American feeling in Egypt and Pakistan, Togidubnus did the same job
for Rome nearly two millennia ago. 
Not that it always worked. Rebellions against the empire were a
permanent fixture, with barbarians constantly pressing at the borders.
Some accounts suggest that the rebels were not always fundamentally
anti-Roman; they merely wanted to share in the privileges and affluence
of Roman life. If that has a familiar ring, consider this: several of
the enemies who rose up against Rome are thought to have been men
previously nurtured by the empire to serve as pliant allies. Need one
mention former US protege Saddam Hussein or one-time CIA trainee Osama
bin Laden? 
Rome even had its own 9/11 moment. In the 80s BC, Hellenistic king
Mithridates called on his followers to kill all Roman citizens in their
midst, naming a specific day for the slaughter. They heeded the call -
and killed 80,000 Romans in local communities across Greece. "The Romans
were incredibly shocked by this," says ancient historian Jeremy Paterson
of Newcastle University. "It's a little bit like the statements in so
many of the American newspapers since September 11: 'Why are we hated so
much?' " 
Internally, too, today's United States would strike many Romans as
familiar terrain. America's mythologising of its past - its casting of
founding fathers Washington and Jefferson as heroic titans, its
folk-tale rendering of the Boston Tea Party and the war of independence
- is very Roman. That empire, too, felt the need to create a mythic
past, starred with heroes. For them it was Aeneas and the founding of
Rome, but the urge was the same: to show that the great nation was no
accident, but the fruit of manifest destiny. 
And America shares Rome's conviction that it is on a mission sanctioned
from on high. Augustus declared himself the son of a god, raising a
statue to his adoptive father Julius Caesar on a podium alongside Mars
and Venus. The US dollar bill bears the words "In God we trust" and US
politicians always like to end their speeches with "God bless America." 
Even that most modern American trait, its ethnic diversity, would make
the Romans feel comfortable. Their society was remarkably diverse,
taking in people from all over the world - and even promising new
immigrants the chance to rise to the very top (so long as they were from
the right families). While America is yet to have a non-white president,
Rome boasted an emperor from north Africa, Septimius Severus. According
to classicist Emma Dench, Rome had its own version of America's
"hyphenated" identities. Like the Italian-Americans or Irish-Americans
of today, Rome's citizens were allowed a "cognomen" - an extra name to
convey their Greek-Roman or British-Roman heritage: Tiberius Claudius
Togidubnus. 
There are some large differences between the two empires, of course -
starting with self-image. Romans revelled in their status as masters of
the known world, but few Americans would be as ready to brag of their
own imperialism. Indeed, most would deny it. But that may come down to
the US's founding myth. For America was established as a rebellion
against empire, in the name of freedom and self-government. Raised to
see themselves as a rebel nation and plucky underdog, they can't quite
accept their current role as master. 
One last factor scares Americans from making a parallel between
themselves and Rome: that empire declined and fell. The historians say
this happens to all empires; they are dynamic entities that follow a
common path, from beginning to middle to end. 
"What America will need to consider in the next 10 or 15 years," says
Cambridge classicist Christopher Kelly, "is what is the optimum size for
a nonterritorial empire, how interventionist will it be outside its
borders, what degree of control will it wish to exercise, how directly,
how much through local elites? These were all questions which pressed
upon the Roman empire." 
Anti-Americans like to believe that an operation in Iraq might be proof
that the US is succumbing to the temptation that ate away at Rome:
overstretch. But it's just as possible that the US is merely moving into
what was the second phase of Rome's imperial history, when it grew
frustrated with indirect rule through allies and decided to do the job
itself. Which is it? Is the US at the end of its imperial journey, or on
the brink of its most ambitious voyage? Only the historians of the
future can tell us that. 
. Rome: The Model Empire, presented by Jonathan Freedland, is on Channel
4 on Saturday at 6.50pm.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,3604,794029,00.html


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