Dominance and Its Dilemmas 

The Bush administration’s Imperial Grand Strategy 

Noam Chomsky 

The past year has been a momentous one in world
affairs. In the normal rhythm of political life, the
pattern was set in September of 2002, a month marked
by several important and closely related events. The
most powerful state in history announced a new
National Security Strategy, asserting that it will
maintain global hegemony permanently: any challenge
will be blocked by force, the dimension in which the
United States reigns supreme. At the same time, war
drums began to beat to mobilize the population for an
invasion of Iraq, which would be “the first test [of
the doctrine], not the last,” the New York Times
observed after the invasion, “the petri dish in which
this experiment in pre-emptive policy grew.”1 And the
campaign opened for the midterm congressional
elections, which would determine whether the
administration would be able to carry forward its
radical international and domestic agenda. 

The basic principles of this new “imperial grand
strategy,” as it was aptly termed at once by John
Ikenberry, trace back to the early days of World War
II and have been reiterated frequently since. Even
before the United States entered the war, planners and
analysts concluded that in the postwar world it would
seek “to hold unquestioned power,” acting to ensure
the “limitation of any exercise of sovereignty” by
states that might interfere with its global designs.
They outlined “an integrated policy to achieve
military and economic supremacy for the United States”
in a “Grand Area” to include at a minimum the Western
Hemisphere, the former British empire, and the Far
East, later extended to as much of Eurasia as possible
when it became clear that Germany would be defeated.2 

Twenty years later, elder statesman Dean Acheson
instructed the American Society of International Law
that no “legal issue” arises when the United States
responds to a challenge to its “power, position, and
prestige.” He was referring specifically to
Washington’s post–Bay of Pigs economic warfare against
Cuba, but he was surely aware of Kennedy’s terrorist
campaign aimed at “regime change,” a significant
factor in bringing the world close to nuclear war only
a few months earlier and a course of action that was
resumed immediately after the Cuban missile crisis was
resolved. 

A similar doctrine was invoked by the Reagan
administration when it rejected World Court
jurisdiction over its attack against Nicaragua. State
Department Legal Adviser Abraham Sofaer explained that
most of the world cannot “be counted on to share our
view” and “often opposes the United States on
important international questions.” Accordingly, we
must “reserve to ourselves the power to determine”
which matters fall “essentially within the domestic
jurisdiction of the United States”—in this case, the
actions that the Court condemned as the “unlawful use
of force” against Nicaragua; in lay terms,
international terrorism. 

Their successors have continued to make it clear that
the United States reserves the right to act
“unilaterally when necessary,” including “unilateral
use of military power” to defend such vital interests
as “ensuring uninhibited access to key markets, energy
supplies and strategic resources.”3 

Even this small sample illustrates the narrowness of
the planning spectrum. Nevertheless, the alarm bells
sounded in September 2002 were justified. Acheson and
Sofaer were describing policy guidelines, within elite
circles. Other cases may be regarded as worldly-wise
reiterations of the maxim of Thucydides that “large
nations do what they wish, while small nations accept
what they must.” In contrast, Cheney-Rumsfeld-Powell
and their associates are officially declaring an even
more extreme policy. They intend to be heard, and took
action at once to put the world on notice that they
mean what they say. 

That is a significant difference. 

The imperial grand strategy is based on the assumption
that the United States can gain “full spectrum
dominance” through military programs that dwarf those
of any potential coalition and that have useful side
effects. One is to socialize the costs and risks of
the private economy of the future, a traditional
contribution of military spending and the basis of
much of the “new economy.” Another is to contribute to
a fiscal train wreck that will, it is presumed,
“create powerful pressures to cut federal spending,
and thus, perhaps, enable the administration to
accomplish its goal of rolling back the New Deal,”4 a
description of the Reagan program that is now being
extended to far more ambitious plans. 

As the grand strategy was announced on September 17,
the administration “abandoned an international effort
to strengthen the Biological Weapons Convention
against germ warfare,” advising allies that further
discussions would have to be delayed for four years.5
A month later, the U.N. Committee on Disarmament
adopted a resolution that called for stronger measures
to prevent militarization of space, recognizing this
to be “a grave danger for international peace and
security,” and another that reaffirmed “the 1925
Geneva Protocol prohibiting the use of poisonous gases
and bacteriological methods of warfare.” Both passed
unanimously, with two abstentions, the United States
and Israel. U.S. abstention amounts to a veto:
typically, a double veto, banning the events from the
news record and from history. 

A few weeks later, the Space Command released plans to
go beyond U.S. “control” of space for military
purposes to “ownership,” which is to be permanent, in
accord with the Security Strategy. Ownership of space
is “key to our nation’s military effectiveness,”
permitting “instant engagement anywhere in the world.
. . . A viable prompt global strike capability,
whether nuclear or non-nuclear, will allow the United
States to rapidly strike high-payoff,
difficult-to-defeat targets from stand-off ranges and
produce the desired effect . . . [and] to provide
warfighting commanders the ability to rapidly deny,
delay, deceive, disrupt, destroy, exploit and
neutralize targets in hours/minutes rather than
weeks/days even when U.S. and allied forces have a
limited forward presence,”6 thus reducing the need for
overseas bases that regularly arouse local antagonism.

Similar plans had been outlined in a May 2002 Pentagon
planning document, partially leaked, which called for
a strategy of “forward deterrence” in which missiles
launched from space platforms would be able to carry
out almost instant “unwarned attacks.” Military
analyst William Arkin comments that “no target on the
planet or in space would be immune to American attack.
The U.S. could strike without warning whenever and
wherever a threat was perceived, and it would be
protected by missile defenses.” Hypersonic drones
would monitor and disrupt targets. Surveillance
systems would provide the ability “to track, record
and analyze the movement of every vehicle in a foreign
city.”7 The world is to be left at mercy of U.S.
attack at will, without warning or credible pretext.
The plans have no remote historical parallel. Even
more fanciful ones are under development. 

These moves reflect the disdain of the administration
for international law and institutions and for arms
control measures, dismissed with barely a word in the
National Security Strategy. They illustrate a
commitment to an extremist version of long-standing
doctrine. 

Since the mid-1940s, Washington has regarded the
Persian Gulf as “a stupendous source of strategic
power, and one of the greatest material prizes in
world history”—in Eisenhower’s words, the “most
strategically important area of the world” because of
its “strategic position and resources.” Control over
the region and its resources remains a policy
imperative. After taking over a core oil producer, and
presumably acquiring its first reliable military bases
at the heart of the world’s major energy-producing
system, Washington will doubtless be happy to
establish an “Arab façade,” to borrow the term of the
British during their day in the sun. Formal democracy
will be fine, but if history and current practice are
any guide, only if it is of the submissive kind
tolerated in Washington’s “backyard.” 

To fail in this endeavor would take real talent. Even
under far less propitious circumstances, military
occupations have commonly been successful. It would be
hard not to improve on a decade of murderous sanctions
that virtually destroyed a society that was,
furthermore, in the hands of a vicious tyrant who
ranked with others supported by the current incumbents
in Washington, including Romania’s Ceausescu, to
mention only one of an impressive rogues’ gallery.
Resistance in Iraq would have no meaningful outside
support, unlike in Nazi-occupied Europe or Eastern
Europe under the Russian yoke, to take recent examples
of unusually brutal states that nevertheless assembled
an ample array of collaborators and achieved
substantial success within their domains. 

The new grand strategy authorizes Washington to carry
out “preventive war.” Whatever the justifications for
pre-emptive war may sometimes be, they do not hold for
preventive war, particularly as that concept is
interpreted by its current enthusiasts: the use of
military force to eliminate an invented or imagined
threat, so that even the term “preventive” is too
charitable. Preventive war is, very simply, the
“supreme crime” condemned at Nuremberg. 

That is widely understood. As the United States
invaded Iraq, Arthur Schlesinger wrote that Bush’s
grand strategy is “alarmingly similar to the policy
that imperial Japan employed at Pearl Harbor, on a
date which, as an earlier American president said it
would, lives in infamy.” FDR was right, he added, “but
today it is we Americans who live in infamy.” It is no
surprise that “the global wave of sympathy that
engulfed the United States after 9/11 has given way to
a global wave of hatred of American arrogance and
militarism” and to the belief that Bush is “a greater
threat to peace than Saddam Hussein.”8 

For the political leadership, mostly recycled from
more reactionary sectors of the Reagan–Bush I
administrations, “the global wave of hatred” is not a
particular problem. They want to be feared, not loved.
They understand as well as their establishment critics
that their actions increase the risk of proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and terror. But
that too is not a major problem. Higher on the scale
of priorities are the goals of establishing global
hegemony and implementing their domestic agenda:
dismantling the progressive achievements that have
been won by popular struggle over the past century and
institutionalizing these radical changes so that
recovering them will be no easy task. 

It is not enough for a hegemonic power to declare an
official policy. It must establish it as a “new norm
of international law” by exemplary action.
Distinguished commentators may then explain that law
is a flexible, living instrument, ensuring that the
new norm is available as a guide to action. It is
understood that only those with the guns can establish
“norms” and modify international law. 

The selected target must meet several conditions. It
must be defenseless, important enough to be worth the
trouble, and an imminent threat to our survival and
ulitimate evil nature. Iraq qualified on all counts.
The first two conditions are obvious. For the third,
it suffices to repeat the orations of Bush, Blair, and
their colleagues: The dictator “is assembling the
world’s most dangerous weapons [in order to] dominate,
intimidate or attack”; and he “has already used them
on whole villages leaving thousands of his own
citizens dead, blind or transfigured. . . . If this is
not evil then evil has no meaning.” 

President Bush’s eloquent denunciation surely rings
true. And those who contributed to enhancing evil
should certainly not enjoy impunity: among them, the
speaker of these lofty words, his current associates,
and those who joined them in the years when they were
supporting the man of ultimate evil long after he had
committed these terrible crimes and won the war with
Iran, with decisive U.S. help. We must continue to
support him, the Bush I administration explained,
because of our duty to help U.S. exporters. 

It is impressive to see how easy it is for political
leaders, while recounting the monster’s worst crimes,
to suppress the crucial words “with our help, because
we don’t care about such matters.” Support shifted to
denunciation as soon as their Iraqi friend committed
his first authentic crime: disobeying (or perhaps
misunderstanding) orders by invading Kuwait.
Punishment was severe—for his subjects. The tyrant
escaped unscathed, and his grip on the tortured
population was further strengthened by the sanctions
regime then imposed by his former allies. 

Also easy to suppress are the reasons why Washington
returned to supporting Saddam immediately after the
Gulf War as he crushed rebellions that might have
overthrown him. The chief diplomatic correspondent of
the New York Times explained that “the best of all
worlds” for Washington would be “an iron-fisted Iraqi
junta without Saddam Hussein,” but since that goal
seems unattainable, we must be satisfied with the
second best. The rebels failed because Washington and
its allies held that “whatever the sins of the Iraqi
leader, he offered the West and the region a better
hope for his country’s stability than did those who
have suffered his repression.”9 All of this is
suppressed in the commentary on the mass graves of the
victims of Saddam’s U.S.–authorized paroxysm of
terror, crimes that are now offered as justification
for the war on “moral grounds.”10 It was all known in
1991 but ignored for reasons of state: successful
rebellion would have left Iraq in the hands of Iraqis.

Within the United States, a reluctant domestic
population had to be whipped into a proper war fever,
another traditional problem. From early September
2002, grim warnings were issued about the threat
Saddam posed to the United States and about his links
to al Qaeda, with broad hints that he was involved in
the 9/11 attacks. Many of the charges “dangled in
front of [the media] failed the laugh test,” the
editor of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Linda
Rothstein, commented, “but the more ridiculous [they
were], the more the media strove to make wholehearted
swallowing of them a test of patriotism.” 

As has often happened in the past, the propaganda
assault had at least short-term effects. Within weeks,
a majority of Americans came to regard Saddam Hussein
as an imminent threat to the United States. Soon
almost half believed that Iraq was behind the 9/11
terror. Support for the war correlated with these
beliefs. The propaganda campaign proved just enough to
give the administration a bare majority in the midterm
elections, as voters put aside their immediate
concerns and huddled under the umbrella of power in
fear of the demonic enemy. 

Despite its narrow successes, the intensive propaganda
campaign left the public unswayed in more fundamental
respects. Most continue to prefer U.N. rather than
U.S. leadership in international crises, and by two to
one prefer that the U.N., rather than the United
States, should direct reconstruction in Iraq.11 

When the occupying army failed to discover WMD, the
administration’s stance shifted from “absolute
certainty” that Iraq possessed WMD to the position
that the accusations were “justified by the discovery
of equipment that potentially could be used to produce
weapons.” Senior officials suggested a “refinement” in
the concept of preventive war that entitles the United
States to attack “a country that has deadly weapons in
mass quantities.” The revision “suggests instead that
the administration will act against a hostile regime
that has nothing more than the intent and ability to
develop [WMD].”12 The bars for resort to force are
significantly lowered. This modification of the
doctrine of “preventive war” may prove to be the most
significant consequence of the collapse of the
declared argument for the invasion. 

Perhaps the most spectacular propaganda achievement
was the lauding of the president’s “vision” to bring
democracy to the Middle East in the midst of a display
of hatred and contempt for democracy for which no
precedent comes to mind. One illustration was the
distinction between Old and New Europe, the former
reviled, the latter hailed for its courage. The
criterion was sharp: Old Europe consists of
governments that took the same position as the vast
majority of their populations; the heroes of New
Europe followed orders from Crawford, Texas,
disregarding an even larger majority in most cases.
Political commentators ranted about disobedient Old
Europe and its psychic maladies while Congress
descended to low comedy. 

At the liberal end of the spectrum, Richard Holbrooke
stressed “the very important point” that the
population of the eight original members of New Europe
is larger than that of Old Europe, which proves that
France and Germany are “isolated.” So it does, if we
reject the radical left heresy that the public might
have some role in a democracy. Thomas Friedman urged
that France be removed from permanent membership on
the Security Council because it is “in kindergarten”
and “does not play well with others.” It follows that
the population of New Europe must still be in nursery
school, judging by polls.13 

Anger at Old Europe has much deeper roots than
contempt for democracy. The United States has always
regarded European unification with some ambivalence
because Europe might become an independent force in
world affairs. Thus senior diplomat David Bruce was a
leading advocate for European unification in the
Kennedy years, urging Washington to “treat a uniting
Europe as an equal partner”—but following America’s
lead. He saw “dangers” if Europe “struck off on its
own, seeking to play a role independent of the United
States.”14 In his “Year of Europe” address 30 years
ago, Henry Kissinger advised Europeans to keep to
their “regional responsibilities” within the “overall
framework of order” managed by the United States.
Europe must not pursue its own independent course
based on its Franco-German industrial and financial
heartland. 

In the tripolar world that was taking shape at that
time, these concerns extend to Asia as well. Northeast
Asia is now the world’s most dynamic economic region,
accounting for almost 30 percent of global GDP (far
more than the United States does) and holding about
half of global foreign exchange reserves. It is a
potentially integrated region with advanced industrial
economies and ample resources. All of this raises the
threat that it, too, might flirt with challenging the
overall framework of order, which the United States is
to manage permanently, by force if necessary,
Washington has declared. 

Violence is a powerful instrument of control, as
history demonstrates. But the dilemmas of dominance
are not slight.< 

Noam Chomsky, professor of linguistics at MIT, is
author most recently of Understanding Power, Middle
East Illusions, and Hegemony or Survival
(forthcoming). 

Notes 

1 David Sanger and Steven Weisman, New York Times, 10
April 2003. 

2 Memorandum of the War and Peace Studies Project of
the Council on Foreign Relations, with State
Department participation, 19 October 1940. Laurence
Shoup and William Minter, Imperial Brain Trust
(Monthly Review Press, 1977), 130ff. 

3 Dean Acheson, American Society of International Law
Proceedings 13, 14 (1963); Abraham Sofaer, U.S.
Department of State Current Policy 769 (December
1985); President Bill Clinton, address to the U.N.,
1993; Secretary of Defense William Cohen, Annual
Report, 1999. 

4 Thomas Ferguson and Joel Rogers, Right Turn (Hill
and Wang, 1986). On Clinton’s contribution see Michael
Meeropol, Surrender: How the Clinton Administration
Completed the Reagan Revolution (University of
Michigan Press, 2000; updated 2003). 

5 Peter Slevin, Washington Post, 19 September 2002. 

6 Air Force Space Command “Strategic Master Plan (SMP)
FY04 and Beyond,” 5 November 2002. 

7 William Arkin, Los Angeles Times, 14 July 2002;
Michael Sniffen, Associated Press, 1 July 2003. 

8Los Angeles Times, 23 March 2003. 

9 Thomas Friedman, New York Times, 7 June 1991. Alan
Cowell, New York Times, 11 April 1991. 

10 Thomas Friedman, New York Times, 4 June 2003. 

11 Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA),
University of Maryland, 18–22 April 2003. 

12 Dana Milbank, Washington Post, 1 June 2003. Guy
Dinmore and James Harding, Financial Times, 3–4 May
2003. 

13 Lee Michael Katz, National Journal, 8 February
2003. Friedman, New York Times, 9 February 2003. 

14 Frank Costigliola, Political Science Quarterly
(Spring 1995). 

© 2003 by Noam Chomsky. All rights reserved. Portions
of this essay appeared in Le Monde diplomatique,
August 2003. 

Originally published in the October/November 2003
issue of Boston Review



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