Although America is hailed as the oldest democracy in the world, it is drawing ever increasing criticism due to its policies on how to perpetuate its ideals and values to the rest of the world. It is now widely agreed that American foreign policy in Afghanistan and Iraq has failed miserably and the world is definitely not a safer place to live in. Among a rising tide of Terrorism and global anti-Americanism, it has become imperative that America re-evaluate its foreign policy and support the same ideals of democracy abroad as it does at home if it is ever to realize its dream of exporting democracy and freedom to the rest of the world.
There are many reasons why American policy has met with such disaster in places like Afghanistan and Iraq. One cannot help but notice a certain double standard when it comes to American interests and the interests of other sovereign nations. Too often, the greater ideals of freedom and justice that the American nation was founded upon are set aside in the name of strategic interests and politics when it comes to foreign policy. The current situation in Afghanistan and indeed the problem of global Terrorism that America faces are in part a consequence of these double standards. While it is unthinkable that any other country might try to interfere in American politics and support a dictatorship in the United States, it is considered perfectly acceptable for the U.S to support regime change and to influence the democratic process in other countries like Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan among others. As one writer notes
“Global distrust of American leadership is reflected in increasing disapproval of the cornerstones of U.S. foreign policy. Not only is there worldwide support for a withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, but there also is considerable opposition to U.S. and NATO operations in Afghanistan. Western European publics are at best divided about keeping troops there. In nearly every predominantly Muslim country, overwhelming majorities want U.S. and NATO troops withdrawn from Afghanistan as soon as possible. In addition, global support for the U.S.-led war on terrorism ebbs ever lower. And the United States is the nation blamed most often for hurting the world's environment, at a time of rising global concern about environmental issues.”(Manicarver 1)
Sadly this failure of foreign policy and growing tide of anti-Americanism has served to lower the image of the U.S as the leading superpower in the international arena. While the policy of containment during the Cold War era may have served U.S strategic interests, there was a tremendous cost of implementing that policy. One such disaster was the Soviet Afghan war in which America, still reeling from its defeat in Vietnam, decided to use the situation to support the Islamic Mujahideen in a proxy war that later resulted in the capitulation of the soviet army and its withdrawal from Afghanistan. Another much less publicized consequence of this war was the arming and training of Islamic extremists that afterwards went on to form groups like Taliban, Al-Qaeda, The Northern Alliance and sowed more than a decade of bloody civil war in the memories of Afghans to come. The U.S had an opportunity to support a democratic solution in Afghanistan that would have allowed for power sharing between the different factions in Afghanistan and given the Afghan people their much deserved chance at a peaceful existence but instead the U.S, after training and arming the Extremists to the teeth decided to cut and run once the Soviets were defeated. The current culture of terrorism stemmed, in part from this feeling of betrayal and a ready supply of American provided arms, ammunition, funding and military training that has allowed these people to wreak havoc in the decades to come.
Americas support for Israel is another such sore point that has turned the tide of global public opinion against the U.S. Most Muslims the world over see the creation and the continuation of the state of Israel as a theft of Muslim land previously controlled by the sovereign state of Palestine. The Overwhelming amount of foreign financial and military aid that Israel receives from the United States has allowed it to engage in the genocide of the Palestinian people. While freedom of speech is a fundamental right of every American, that same right usually not afforded to the international media if it tries to go against America’s policy on the middle-east and the atrocities of the state of Israel. As witnessed by one report,
“A monstrous war crime that Israel has tried to cover up for a fortnight has finally been exposed. Its troops have caused devastation in the center of the Jenin refugee camp, reached yesterday by The Independent, where thousands of people are still living amid the ruins. A residential area roughly 160,000 square yards about a third of a mile wide has been reduced to dust. Rubble has been shoveled by bulldozers into 30ft piles. The sweet and ghastly reek of rotting human bodies is everywhere, evidence that it is a human tomb. The people, who spent days hiding in basements crowded into single rooms as the rockets pounded in, say there are hundreds of corpses, entombed beneath the dust, under a field of debris, criss-crossed with tank and bulldozer treadmarks.”(Hoffman 2)
While the United States may condemn ethnic cleansing in places like Bosnia and Rwanda, It turns a blind eye to the events in Israel due to its need to have a friendly government in the middle-east in order to keep “anti-American” states in check.
To say that the American government only fails to support democracy abroad by not intervening would also be a mistruth. Indeed there have been instances when supporting democracy has produced such unexpected results that America has had to completely rethink its position. As David Makovsky points out in “Democracy: A Journal Of Ideas”
“It seems a very long time ago that President George W. Bush gave his second inaugural address. In January 2005, he proclaimed that "the best hope for peace in our world is the expansion of freedom in all the world." With this soaring idea, deeply rooted in America's Wilsonian political tradition, Bush defined the organizing foreign policy principle for his second term in office. However, exactly a year after uttering those words, Bush's Middle East democracy initiative came to a halt when Hamas won a parliamentary victory in the West Bank and Gaza in January 2006. Suddenly, it became clear that the United States had erred by equating democracy with one election and by not forming policy around the establishment of liberal institutions, which would ensure that liberal means would not lead to an illiberal end.”(3)
The U.S realizing its mistake in equating democracy with pro-Americanism quickly moved to impose heavy sanctions on the new Palestinian government. Whatever the reason may have been, it was certainly not to promote democracy or the Palestinians right to choose their own leaders. As Ismail Haiyeh reporting for the Voice of America observed
“Israel has cut off $50 million in monthly tax payments to the Palestinians, and the United States and Europe are re-assessing donations of nearly $1 billion a year because they consider Hamas a terrorist organization.
Arab states have promised Hamas $55 million a month, but they have rarely met their commitments in the past, and so far, they have not delivered….
…In the meantime, the economic noose is growing tighter, and Hamas cannot find a bank to handle its finances. Hamas officials say the Jordan-based Arab Bank is no longer willing to handle Palestinian Authority accounts because of international pressure.” (4)
The Attacks on 9/11 only served to worsen the situation, ushering in a new era of American foreign policy that bordered on paranoia. Preemptive strikes against Afghanistan and Iraq set a new precedent in strong arm politics and warfare. What the U.S then failed to realize is that it is not always possible to impose your will just by military might alone, the current situation in Iraq is testament to this fact. Using the Threat of WMD’s and casting Saddam Hussein as the foremost threat to American security further deteriorated America’s credibility on the international stage. The War that followed and the current quagmire that is Iraq have further weakened the United States ability to influence other nations, as was evident by the Iranian nuclear situation.
The real threat to international nuclear proliferation due to India and Pakistan manufacturing their own bombs was ignored as both countries were in some part allied with the U.S and central to U.S strategic interests. This again turned out to be a mistake when Abdul Qadeer Khan, the self titled “Father of the Pakistani Bomb” was later implicated in an international nuclear proliferation scandal that may indeed have been responsible for handing over nuclear technology to North Korea and Iran among other anti-American nations.
All these instances underline a failing American policy and a lack of understanding of the international situation. America needs to decide once and for all if its role is to be the protector of American ideal of democracy or to become an imperial power. The Secretary of Defense Robert Gates raised the same question in his address to the world forum on the future of democracy
“ Still, we Americans continue to wrestle with the appropriate role this country should play in advancing freedom and democracy in the world. It was a source of friction through the entire Cold War. In truth, it has been a persistent question for this country throughout our history: How should we incorporate America’s democratic ideals and aspirations into our relations with the rest of the world? And in particular, when to, and whether to try to change the way other nations govern themselves? Should America’s mission be to make the world “safe for democracy,” as Woodrow Wilson said, or, in the words of John Quincy Adams, should America be “the well-wisher of freedom and independence of all” but the “champion and vindicator only of our own”? ”(5)
It is sad that while America itself continues to pursue the ideals of justice and freedom within its own borders, its policy somehow dramatically changes once it considers situations outside these borders. The only real way to rectify the situation is to uphold the same ideals of democracy and freedom abroad, as are upheld so dearly within Americas own borders. It has indeed become Imperative for the U.S to discard its attitude of realism and militarism in exchange for a more idealistic perspective. Its not a certainty that “If you do not fight them abroad, you’ll fight them at home.” The roots of terrorism are based in poverty and injustice, as long as these fertile grounds for dissention remain, there will be Anti-Americanism and there will most certainly be Terrorism.
If America pursues the same ideals of democracy abroad instead of supporting militarism and totalitarianism, it would meet with much greater success in eliminating injustice and promoting liberal societies abroad. The answer lies in alleviating poverty in third world countries, promoting education, social equality, providing freedom and security for the exploited populations living under oppressive regimes and supporting the people’s right to choose their own destinies and their own leadership rather than carpet bombing entire nations into submission. Ultimately it is up to the American people to decide that it is time for a change in policy and perspective, and to elect representatives that would bring that mentality of idealism that’s much needed in American politics right now. One can only hope that in the future, a more idealistic American foreign policy would usher in a new era of peace and prosperity, for Americans and non-Americans alike.
Works Cited
1. Manicarver. “Global Unease With Major World Powers” 19 Sep 2007.
Yahoo 360 http://blog.360.yahoo.com/blog-4ysGxcs7equsuMqoe51pfmli.2Aw?p=2234
2. Hoffman, Michael. “The Israeli Holocaust Against the Palestinians” 16 April 2002
<http://www.revisionisthistory.org/palestine52.html>
3. Makovsky, David. “Promote Liberal Democracy” Fall 07
The Washington Institute http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/templateC06.php?CID=1088
4. Haniyeh, Islmail. “Economic Sanctions Empty Coffers of New Hamas Government”
6 April 2006. Voice of America http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2006-04/Economic-Sanctions-Empty-Coffers-of-New-Hamas-Government.cfm?CFID=129499194&CFTOKEN=69255450
5. Gates, Robert. “World Forum on the Future of Democracy” 17 Sep 2007
U.S Department of Defense http://www.defenselink.mil/speeches/speech.aspx?speechid=1175
6. “US is the No 1 risk to world economy: US prof” 19 Sep 2007
<http://sgpropertypress.wordpress.com/2007/09/19/us-is-the-no-1-risk-to-world-economy-us-prof/>
7. Sactodan. “Bush Doctrine- Changes in American Foreign Policy” 28 June 2005
Blogcritics Magazine http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/06/28/233127.php#comment-632766
4 comments:
If you're going to post such controversial opinions such as "The Overwhelming amount of foreign financial and military aid that Israel receives from the United States has allowed it to engage in the genocide of the Palestinian people" why don't you find more support for your opinion other than some website few people have heard of such as "reveionisthistory.org" as you used? If you want to legitimate your opinion, I would expect to find more mainstream news media links backing your assertion.
Thank you very much for your comment, I really do appreciate people dropping by and communicating their feedback to me.
Now as you so eloquently put it "If you want to legitimate your opinion" that I should post more mainstream sources. I think you may have missed reading the part where I mentioned the more mainstream western media has been strangled and prevented from openly reporting on this issue(That would be the part that says something about the ideal of "Freedom of Speech") I regret that I couldn't quote something Fox news which i suspect may have been more to your liking, but being mainstream doesnt make them a credible source.
I used the source listed for a very good reason. Its an independent website that takes articles and evidence from multiple different sources. The piece I linked came originally from The Independent (U.K.), other sources that revisionisthistory.org uses include; The Times (London), transcripts of the UN Commission on Human Rights, The L.A. Times, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune and The N.Y. Times. I hope these sources are familiar enough to you although the news they report wouldnt be because most americans are shielded from such inconvenient truth by their crippled "mainstream" media. Another reason I chose this website as my source are the scores of other articles present there (and the images, I hope those werent lost on you) that althoguh not mentioned in my piece, illustrate a multitude of issues related to the Palestinian genocide.
I hope that answers all your queries. I do appreciate you stopping by to post your comment but id like to request that you at least read the material and the sources thoroughly before commenting instead of picking a random stone to throw at an idea that you might find contrary to your own beliefs.
I like where you highlight the point that America needs to chose whether to protect or be an imperial power. Sometimes I think America tries to do both and it just doesn't end up working out.
Sometimes when a tragic events happen and a country tries to come to the rescue, they bite off more than they can choose. America cannot fix all of the problems that exist overseas.
I completely agree with you ketch13.
The way to hell is paved with good intentions.
I dont see an equal amount of International sentiment against say Mongolia, because Mongolia doesent interfere in other countries affairs for better or for worse. William F. Buckley, according to his theory of "International Disinterest" might argue that that is "disinterest" on the part of Mongolia in making a better world but I would disagree with him. Im more inclined towards the Naom Chomsky school of thought, sending food to a famine stricken region is helping, sending an invading army is Imperialism, no matter what you might want to call it.
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