March 10, 2010
COMMENTARY: What Makes America Strong?
By Winslow Myers
An unmanned drone hovers over the house of a suspected leader of a
terrorist cell, the craft’s camera and missiles controlled by a
soldier thousands of miles away on the plains of Kansas. A missile is
launched, and the terrorist is blown apart—but so are innocent
bystanders, among them a dark-eyed eight-year old girl named Aeisha
who dreamed of becoming a doctor.
Can our war on terror justify the death of this child? Or is it a step
down a path not only toward the creation of more terrorists, but also
toward our resembling terrorists more? Are there better ways of
achieving our goals? This is not a liberal or conservative issue; it
is not only an ethical challenge, but also a question of practical
self-interest bearing on the safety of our own children. As we make
greater use of drones, we find it impossible to imagine that similar
technologies might someday be used against us.
In the second decade of the 21st century, the United States continues
to assume that it can most effectively head off potential threats by
deploying, from 800-odd bases around the world, the most powerful
military force in the history of the planet. Have we citizens given
conscious consent to this policy, or have we drifted into it? Will
genuine security be the outcome of continuing in this direction? Or is
our police-the-world conception of power as obsolete as those of past
empires like England, Spain, the Soviet Union—or Rome?
If our imperial project collapses because we relied too much on
military definitions of strength, it will not matter whether our
motivation was the disinterested expansion of freedom, or the
self-interested expansion of markets for our goods, or the control of
remaining sources of fossil fuels.
Why do empires fail? First because they over-extend themselves, second
because the peoples of the world always push back against what they
perceive as unjustified domination, and third because true security
calls for addressing issues that are insoluble by military means—
issues like the global challenge of maintaining sustainable sources of
food, water and energy in the context of growing climate instability.
Over-extension can be seen in what we already ask our volunteer
military to do in our name — repeated tours of duty which put
intolerable pressures on families; nation-building projects beyond the
scope and skills of our troops; and the giving and receiving of brute
violence that resolves nothing. Over-extension also has obvious
implications at home, where economic stresses, including the
ever-rising national debt, challenge our domestic resiliency.
The second reason over-reliance upon military strength will fail is
pushback. What Americans may rationalize as noble aims, people in
other cultures, who are as real as we are in spite of cultural
differences, will be less willing to see in a positive light. War, no
matter who is perceived to have started it, is often embedded in a
cycle of retaliation that continues through generations. This vicious
circle will create more terrorism than it eliminates.
Our belief in American exceptionalism, which at its best posits our
ideals as the hope of the world, has a shadow side: we think we are
exempt from reaping what we sow. We assume we can rationalize torture
or the murder of innocent bystanders without a terminal loss of
integrity. If we do, we will gradually become the very thing we
despise and resist. And then pushback, the violent response to our own
violence, will only increase.
A third reason we need to change the way we think about our strength
is that there are security challenges the military is not presently
designed to address—though this could change, and is already starting
to change, as military leaders understand the need to win hearts and
minds.
But the cost of preparing for and waging even small wars has become so
huge that it becomes much more efficient to prevent wars by meeting
human needs directly. Should we maintain bases to secure the flow of
oil from the Middle East, or should we build windmills in our own
Midwest that not only increase our supply of non-fossil-fuel energy,
but also allow us to lighten our military footprint in places where it
may be fatally resented? Manufacturers of missiles and fighter jets
who are concerned that if peace broke out their bottom line would
suffer, can also make the solar panels and mass transit infrastructure
that are alternative indicators of national well-being.
We can apply similar thinking to the places where extremists are
actively training to do us harm. The reality that 500,000 Soviet
troops could not subdue the tribal chaos of Afghanistan in a decade of
occupation contains a lesson for America about the role of military
force in making a barely functioning state more resilient. In his
school building projects, Greg Mortenson has shown another way,
tapping into a universal yearning for the education that will lead
people beyond the simplistic temptations of extremism.
Finding alternatives to militarism is based in a paradigm shift that
has already occurred. It happened during the fifty-year experience of
the cold war period, including the hot wars in Korea and Vietnam.
Those who possessed nuclear weapons, the ultimate military option,
realized that they could not use them to win wars, because such use
might initiate a world-destroying holocaust.
With the understanding that our planet is too small to sustain another
world war, there is now a global consensus that nuclear weapons are
useless and self-defeating. But because our existing stockpiles of
warheads cannot deter non-state entities from using nuclear or other
means of mass destruction, the way forward to security is blocked
first of all by the weapons themselves — including our own. Nuclear war
itself has become the ultimate enemy. The negotiation of reciprocal
treaties for the reduction of existing warheads and the securing of
loose nuclear materials becomes the only path open to the community of
nations that leads to safety for all.
The United States is strong enough to defend itself not only
militarily, but also to strengthen global security by enlarging its
non-military initiatives toward a world in need. It will help us
arrive more quickly where we wanted to get by the unworkable model of
domination. When you become more secure, autonomous, and resilient, I
become more secure. It is more in my interest to befriend you, to ask
what you really need and try to supply it, than to threaten or bomb
you into submission.
Our country can still decide to awaken from the delusions of empire
and instead lead the world beyond war. If we humans can learn to
resolve our conflicts without the use of nuclear weapons that would
exterminate millions, the way is surely open to resolving our
conflicts without violence on any level — without blowing up Aiesha, the
dark-eyed girl who dreamed of becoming a doctor.
Winslow Myers serves on the Board of Beyond War, a non-political,
non-profit educational foundation, and is the author of “Living Beyond
War: A Citizen’s Guide.” This commentary was distributed by PeaceVoice,
a program of the Oregon Peace Institute, Portland, OR.