----- 
From: BD 
To: *Deepest 
Sent: Friday, April 10, 2009 2:39 PM
Subject: America: a superpower no more | csmonitor.com





Even politically conservative journals such as The National Interest recognize 
something has gone wrong. In a recent issue, Robert Pape opined: "The 
self-inflicted wounds of the Iraq war, growing government debt, increasingly 
negative current-accounts balance, and other economic weaknesses have cost the 
United States real power in today's world.. If present trends continue, we will 
look back at the Bush administration's years as the death knell of American 
hegemony."
http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0408/p09s01-coop.html 



America: a superpower no more
Decline is occurring more rapidly than we think. 
It's time to embrace a new agenda.
By Walter Rodgers
from the April 8, 2009 edition





Oakton, Va. - Two American icons, General Electric and Berkshire Hathaway, 
lost their triple-A credit ratings. Then China, America's largest creditor, 
called for a new global currency to replace the dollar just weeks after it 
demanded Washington guarantee the safety of Beijing's nearly $1 trillion 
debt holdings. And that was just in March.

These events are the latest warnings that our world is changing far more 
rapidly and profoundly than we - or our politicians - will admit. America's 
own triple-A rating, its superpower status, is being downgraded as rapidly 
as its economy.

President Obama's recent acknowledgement that the US is not winning in 
Afghanistan is but the most obvious recognition of this jarring new reality. 
What was the president telling Americans? As Milton Bearden, a former top 
CIA analyst on Afghanistan, recently put it, "If you aren't winning, you're 
losing."

The global landscape is littered with evidence that America's superpower 
status is fraying.

Nuclear-armed Pakistan - arguably the world's most dangerous country - is 
falling apart, despite billions in US aid and support.

In Iraq, despite efforts in Washington to make "the surge" appear to be a 
stunning US victory, analysts most familiar with the region have already 
declared Iran the strategic winner of the Bush administration's war against 
Saddam Hussein. The Iraq war has greatly empowered Iran, nurturing a new 
regional superpower that now seems likely to be the major architect of the 
new Iraq.

Sadly, what was forgotten amid the Bush-era hubris was that America's edge 
always has been as much moral and economic as military. Officially 
sanctioned torture, the Abu Ghraib scandal, US invasion of a sovereign 
country without provocation, along with foolishly allowing radical Islamists 
to successfully portray the US as the enemy of the world's 1.5 billion 
Muslims, shattered whatever moral edge America enjoyed before 2003.

Washington's uncritical support of Israel at the expense of Palestinians is 
perceived by much of the world as egregiously hypocritical. Consequently, 
America's collision course with Islam may be irreversible. Muslims believe 
Islam never lost the moral high ground - and they won't readily relinquish 
it for Western secularism.

Even politically conservative journals such as The National Interest 
recognize something has gone wrong. In a recent issue, Robert Pape opined: 
"The self-inflicted wounds of the Iraq war, growing government debt, 
increasingly negative current-accounts balance, and other economic 
weaknesses have cost the United States real power in today's world.. If 
present trends continue, we will look back at the Bush administration's 
years as the death knell of American hegemony."

Now, as a massive retrenchment of the US economy is under way, it is time to 
shake the mental shackles of the superpower legacy and embrace a more 
peripheralist agenda. That need not mean isolationism or retreat. It would 
still require maintaining substantial armed forces with a qualitative edge, 
but using them only when there is an affordable and persuasive American 
national interest. Iraq never fitted that description.

The price tag for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan wars is in the trillions. 
Sun Tzu, the ancient Chinese military commentator, prophetically observed 
2,500 years ago, "[W]hen the army marches abroad, the treasury will be 
emptied at home."

It remains a lingering American myth that US troops and warships can go 
anywhere and pay any price. Not so. The modern Chinese have discovered a 
better way. The Washington Post reports that the Chinese went on a shopping 
spree recently, taking advantage of fire-sale prices to lock up global 
supplies of oil, minerals, and other strategic resources for their economy. 
That amounts to a major economic conquest - without using a single soldier. 
By contrast, American efforts to secure oil have looked clumsy.

Iran also is achieving serious regional hegemony, without armadas, using 
proxy guerrilla armies to dominate its near neighbors. Its rebuffs to 
President Obama's recent outreach speaks to Tehran's growing confidence in 
its ability to manipulate its home-field advantage - stage-managing events 
from Afghanistan to Lebanon, all the while thumbing its nose at both the 
American and Israeli "superpowers."

Last August's Russian invasion of Georgia was a painful reminder that Russia 
has what its leadership calls "privileged interests" on its periphery. 
Yesterday's superpowers have been replaced by regional hegemons, as the 
globe is being carved up into more-defensible spheres of interest.

Americans need to acknowledge that war, like politics, is the art of the 
possible, and both have their limits. The Bush administration was unable to 
deliver its promised democratic remake of the Muslim Middle East.

Thus, another unpleasant truth: The Western democratic model has no appeal 
to much of the Arab world. Nor is democracy an attractive model for huge 
swaths of the rest of the world, such as Russia and China.

It's time to lower our geopolitical sights and end America's unrealistic 
crusade. We shouldn't expect "them" to want to be like "us."

It took years for the US to recover its moral authority after Vietnam. It 
will be an even harder comeback this time.

Walter Rodgers is a former senior international correspondent for CNN.



http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0408/p09s01-coop.html


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