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Culture » March 6, 2007

Americas Own Worst Enemy

By Mark Engler

In March 1999, President Clinton toured several Latin American countries, surveying areas devastated by Hurricane Mitch and meeting with governmental delegations to promote his vision of globalized trade and cooperative regional diplomacy. In each country, he received a warm welcome. When Clinton spoke before the National Assembly of El Salvador, members of the leftist FMLN party, former guerilla leaders who had become elected representatives, responded with a standing ovation.

Given that the United States had worked diligently throughout the ’80s to destroy the rebel movement, this was an astonishing sight. Yet, in spite of the United States’ long interventionist history, Bill Clinton was popular in Latin America. He had a way of charming would-be critics. Gabriel García Márquez shared dinner with Clinton, listened to the president spontaneously recite long passages of Faulkner and subsequently wrote an admiring profile.

These days, the world’s Nobel Laureates are more likely to turn acid pens against the White House. The Bush administration shocked the international community with its aggressive militarism, its belief in unitary executive power, its use of torture and its good-versus-evil understanding of global affairs.

These same troubling traits have commanded the attention of Chalmers Johnson, who believes they have brought us to the “last days of the American republic.” Johnson, a retired professor of Asian Studies at the University of California, San Diego, and current president of the Japan Policy Research Institute, popularized the CIA-originated term “blowback” with his 2000 book of that title. That volume warned that America’s covert interventions abroad would come back to haunt us, and it became a bestseller after the attacks of 9/11 seemed to fulfill the author’s prophesy.

Since then, according to Johnson, our country’s predicament has only worsened. His new book, Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic, takes its name from the Greek “goddess of retribution and vengeance … punisher of pride and hubris.” Put secularly, Johnson is arguing that the United States is its own worst enemy. Sooner rather than later, he contends, U.S. arrogance will be its downfall.

Johnson’s book is made up of largely autonomous chapters on a range of loosely-related subjects: how the Bush administration’s executive power grab undermines the U.S. Constitution as well as international law, how the CIA functions as the president’s private army, the extent to which America’s extensive global network of military bases provides an infrastructure for imperial power projection, why space may be the final frontier for military expansion, and what lessons might be learned from the defunct British and Roman empires. Together these topics indicate the end is near. “The time to head off financial and moral bankruptcy is short,” he writes. “We are on the cusp of losing our democracy for the sake of keeping our empire.”

Johnson’s writing is often described as “polemic,” but that doesn’t capture the heartfelt concern that underlies his distress about our country. Whereas many of us have grown numb to White House outrages, Johnson’s indignation at the administration—its torture memos, its contempt for the freedom of public information, its defacing of established treaties—is vivid. This might be due to his conservative background: A Navy lieutenant in the early ’50s, consultant for the CIA from 1967 to 1973, and long-time defender of the Vietnam War, Johnson became horrified at American militarism and interventionism only later in life. He writes like he is making up for lost time.

Johnson’s most distinctive contribution to the debate about U.S. empire is his documentation of America’s vast network of overseas military bases, a project he began in his 2004 book, The Sorrows of Empire. “Once upon a time, you could trace the spread of imperialism by counting up colonies,” he writes in Nemesis. “America’s version of the colony is the military base.” The United States maintains 737 bases worldwide, costing more than $127 billion and covering at least 687,347 acres in some 130 foreign countries. For local populations exposed to the pollution, bar fights and brothels that surround such encampments, they are wounds that fester daily. At home, Johnson argues, Americans suffer from the bloated military budgets required to maintain this “baseworld.”

Each of Johnson’s erudite chapters both enlightens and disturbs. But his underlying jeremiad about democracy’s death lacks analytical force. Johnson looks incredulously upon “those who believe that the structure of government in Washington today bears some resemblance to that outlined in the Constitution of 1787.” And it seems that there is no going back: “The legislative branch of our government is broken, and it is hard to imagine how it could repair itself, given the massive interests that feed off it.” Likewise, a grassroots movement to reclaim democracy “is unlikely given the conglomerate control of the mass media and the difficulties of mobilizing.” Johnson has essentially thrown up his hands.

Such pessimism is overblown. The republic has survived Richard Nixon and J. Edgar Hoover, and democracy, however battered, will outlast Bush as well. The president has lost his deferential Congress; his approval ratings have sunk to all-time lows. Bush is less an omnipotent tyrant than a lame duck.

In terms of geopolitics, the Bush legacy is also ambiguous. Nemesis is a book about hard power. Likening America’s far-flung bases to Rome’s garrisons, Johnson posits that not much has changed since the days of Caesar and Octavian. But, with nuclear weapons scattered amongst major and minor global powers, hard power has its limits.

To judge the strength of a nation, then, one must also gauge its talent for softer persuasion. And here the Bush administration militarists have become their own worst enemies. Acting out visions of global dominance, they have inflamed world resentment and spawned ever more challenges to American power. Our troops are embattled. Bush’s state visits attract street protests. Discourteous politicians hover at every podium. It all makes you wonder: How much more dangerous was it when our president was both commanding and esteemed, lauded by laureates, touring our imperial backyard to standing ovations?

Mark Engler, a writer based in New York City, can be reached here.

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  • Reader Comments

    This is going to be full-crank mode here, but if Chalmers Johnson read this review that fell off the cliff, I would like him to know that a younger person feels that, if anything, he is not “pessimistic” enough. Engler starts out well enough, lauding Johnson and then describing his knowledge, but before I could hold onto the paper, he went off into Weekly Standard territory, or New Republic at its most lickspittle.
    Charge #1. Nemesis “lacks analytical force.” Yet the next sentence describes it as a “jeremiad.” A jeremiad, by definition, has force. Force it’s got, even if, in your Kerry-for-President flag-waving you disagree with what the force states. You lack “analytical force” if you say you like Twinkies. The quotes Enlger summons up have, even on the truncated own, have the “force” of hurricanes.
    Charge #2: Every one of Johnson’s quotes is incontrovertible, yet in junior intern style, Engler ripsotes that he “has essentially thrown up his hands.” Well, take a look a around, and if you don’t “throw up your hands,” you’re naive, at best, bought off and willingly obtuse more like it.
    Charge #3: These quotes are incendiary and correct, yet Enlger states:  “Such pessimism is overblown.” Right. Things are fine, the supersystem is fine, go shopping, take a course, yay for us. “The republic has survived Richard Nixon and J. Edgar Hoover, and democracy, however battered, will outlast Bush as well.” You with the terminal cancer: look, you’ve survived so far, no reason to think you won’t continue, you’re fine, what’s a few near-death moments, gee whiz, it’s a wonderful world. We “survived” those two tyrants? Did the Cambodians? Did those whose lives we wrecked? Can you look at the destruction we Americans have caused, and most especially the right-wing Christian Republican elites have caused, and not appreciate a little cynicism? “Democaracy” is a concept that worked for a few Greek city-states, but it is not a term that describes our corporate-dominated, focus-group, multi-trillion dollar political mess.
    Charge #4. “Bush is less an omnipotent tyrant than a lame duck.” Engler should have the right to take those terrible words back right now. The neo-cons are in control, my friend, with daily devastation being wrought, here at home, next in Iran, though the bases Johnson so tellingly cites - He is a “lame duck” in the sense that the bombs about to fall and the pollution continuing to be engendered are illusions. Yet this is what a “progressive” paper issues?

    Posted by notabilia on Mar 17, 2007 at 8:22 AM
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Appeared in the March 2007 Issue
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