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March 24,
2003, U.S. Edition
 
The
Arrogant Empire
Americas
unprecedented power scares the world, and the Bush administration has
only made it worse. How we got hereand what we can do about it now
By
Fareed Zakaria
PART I:The
United States will soon be at war with Iraq. It would seem, on the face
of it, a justifiable use of military force. Saddam Hussein runs one of
the most tyrannical regimes in modern history.
For more than 25
years he has sought to acquire chemical, biological and nuclear weapons,
and has, in several documented cases, succeeded. He gassed 60,000 of his
own people in 1986 in Halabja. He has launched two catastrophic wars,
sacrificing nearly a million Iraqis and killing or wounding more than
a million Iranians. He has flouted 16 United Nations resolutions over
12 years that have warned him to disarm or else, including one, four months
ago, giving him a "final opportunity" to do so "fully and
immediately" or face "serious consequences." But in its
campaign against Iraq, America is virtually alone. Never will it have
waged a war in such isolation. Never have so many of its allies been so
firmly opposed to its policies. Never has it provoked so much public opposition,
resentment and mistrust. And all this before the first shot has been fired.
Watching the tumult
around the world, its evident that what is happening goes well beyond
this particular crisis. Many people, both abroad and in America, fear
that we are at some kind of turning point, where well-established mainstays
of the global orderthe Western Alliance, European unity, the United
Nationsseem to be cracking under stress. These strains go well beyond
the matter of Iraq, which is not vital enough to wreak such damage. In
fact, the debate is not about Saddam anymore. It is about America and
its role in the new world. To understand the present crisis, we must first
grasp how the rest of the world now perceives American power.
It is true that the
United States has some allies in its efforts to topple Saddam. It is also
true that some of the governments opposing action in Iraq do so not for
love of peace and international harmony but for more cynical reasons.
France and Russia have a long history of trying to weaken the containment
of Iraq to ensure that they can have good trading relations with it. France,
after all, helped Saddam Hussein build a nuclear reactor that was obviously
a launching pad for a weapons program. (Why would the worlds second
largest oil producer need a nuclear power plant?) And Frances Gaullist
tendencies are, of course, simply its own version of unilateralism.
But how to explain
that the vast majority of the world, with little to gain from it, is in
the Franco-Russian camp? The administration claims that many countries
support the United States but do so quietly. That signals an even deeper
problem. Countries are furtive in their support for the administration
not because they fear Saddam Hussein but because they fear their own people.
To support America today in much of the world is politically dangerous.
Over the past year the United States became a campaign issue in elections
in Germany, South Korea and Pakistan. Being anti-American was a vote-getter
in all three places.
Look at the few countries
that do publicly support us. Tony Blair bravely has forged ahead even
though the vast majority of the British people disagree with him and deride
him as "Americas poodle." The leaders of Spain and Italy
face equally strong public opposition to their stands. Donald Rumsfeld
has proclaimed, with his characteristic tactlessness, that while "old
Europe"France and Germanymight oppose U.S. policy, "new
Europe" embraces them. This is not exactly right. The governments
of Central Europe support Washington, but the people oppose it in almost
the same numbers as in old Europe. Between 70 and 80 percent of Hungarians,
Czechs and Poles are against an American war in Iraq, with or without
U.N. sanction. (The Poles are more supportive in some surveys.) The administration
has made much of the support of Vaclav Havel, the departing Czech president.
But the incoming president, Vaclav Klausa pro-American, Thatcherite
free-marketersaid last week that on Iraq his position is aligned
with that of his people.
Some make the argument
that Europeans are now pacifists, living in a "postmodern paradise,"
shielded from threats and unable to imagine the need for military action.
But then how to explain the sentiment in Turkey, a country that sits on
the Iraqi border? A longtime ally, Turkey has fought with America in conflicts
as distant as the Korean War, and supported every American military action
since then. But opposition to the war now runs more than 90 percent there.
Despite Washingtons offers of billions of dollars in new assistance,
the government cannot get parliamentary support to allow American troops
to move into Iraq from Turkish bases. Or consider Australia, another crucial
ally, and another country where a majority now opposes American policy.
Or Ireland. Or India. In fact, while the United States has the backing
of a dozen or so governments, it has the support of a majority of the
people in only one country in the world, Israel. If that is not isolation,
then the word has no meaning.
It is also too easy
to dismiss the current crisis as one more in a series of transatlantic
family squabbles that stretch back over the decades. Some in Washington
have pointed out that whenever the United States has taken strong military
actionfor example, the deployment of Pershing nuclear missiles in
Europe in the early 1980sthere was popular opposition in Europe.
True, but this time its different. The street demonstrations and
public protests of the early 1980s made for good television images. But
the reality was that in most polls, 30 to 40 percent of Europeans supported
American policies. In Germany, where pacifist feelings ran sky high, 53
percent of Germans supported the Pershing deployments, according to a
1981 poll in Der Spiegel. In France, a majority supported American policy
through much of Ronald Reagans two terms, even prefer-ring him to
the Democratic candidate, Walter Mondale, in 1984.
Josef Joffe, one
of Germanys leading commentators, observes that during the cold
war anti-Americanism was a left-wing phenomenon. "In contrast to
it, there was always a center-right that was anti-communist and thus pro-American,"
he explains. "The numbers waxed and waned, but you always had a solid
base of support for the United States." The cold war kept Europe
pro-American. For example, 1968 was a time of mass protests against American
policies in Vietnam, but it was also the year of the Soviet invasion of
Czechoslovakia. Europeans (and Asians) could oppose America, but their
views were balanced by wariness of the Soviet threat and communist behavior.
Again, the polls bear this out. European opposition even to the Vietnam
War never approached the level of the current opposition to Iraq. This
was true outside Europe as well. In Australia, for example, a majority
of the public supported that countrys participation in the Vietnam
War through 1971, when it withdrew its forces.
But today no such
common threat exists, and support for America is far more fluid. Center-right
parties might still support Washington, but many do so almost out of inertia
and without much popular support for their stand. During the recent German
election, Gerhard Schroder campaigned openly against Americas Iraq
policy. Less noted was that his conservative opponent, Edmund Stoiber,
did so as well, at one point (briefly) outflanking Schroder by saying
he would not even allow American bases in Germany to participate in the
war.
In one respect, I
believe that the Bush administration is right: this war will look better
when it is over. The military campaign will probably be less difficult
than many of Washingtons opponents think. Most important, it will
reveal the nature of Saddams barbarous regime. Prisoners and political
dissidents will tell stories of atrocities. Horrific documents will come
to light. Weapons of mass destruction will be found. If done right, years
from now people will remember above all that America helped rid Iraq of
a totalitarian dictator.
But the administration
is wrong if it believes that a successful war will make the world snap
out of a deep and widening mistrust and resentment of American foreign
policy. A war with Iraq, even if successful, might solve the Iraq problem.
It doesnt solve the America problem. What worries people around
the world above all else is living in a world shaped and dominated by
one countrythe United States. And they have come to be deeply suspicious
and fearful of us.
PART II: THE AGE
OF GENEROSITY
Most Americans have
never felt more vulnerable. September 11 was not only the first attack
on the American mainland in 150 years, but it was also sudden and unexpected.
Three thousand civilians were brutally killed without any warning. In
the months that followed, Americans worried about anthrax attacks, biological
terror, dirty bombs and new suicide squads. Even now, the day-to-day rhythms
of American life are frequently interrupted by terror alerts and warnings.
The average American feels a threat to his physical security unknown since
the early years of the republic.
Yet after 9-11, the
rest of the world saw something quite different. They saw a country that
was hit by terrorism, as some of them had been, but that was able to respond
on a scale that was almost unimaginable. Suddenly terrorism was the worlds
chief priority, and every country had to reorient its foreign policy accordingly.
Pakistan had actively supported the Taliban for years; within months it
became that regimes sworn enemy. Washington announced that it would
increase its defense budget by almost $50 billion, a sum greater than
the total annual defense budget of Britain or Germany. A few months later
it toppled a regime 6,000 miles awayalmost entirely from the airin
Afghanistan, a country where the British and Soviet empires were bogged
down at the peak of their power. It is now clear that the current era
can really have only one name, the unipolar worldan age with only
one global power. Americas position today is unprecedented. A hundred
years ago, Britain was a superpower, ruling a quarter of the globes
population. But it was still only the second or third richest country
in the world and one among many strong military powers. The crucial measure
of military might in the early 20th century was naval power, and Britain
ruled the waves with a fleet as large as the next two navies put together.
By contrast, the United States will spend as much next year on defense
as the rest of the world put together (yes, all 191 countries). And it
will do so devoting 4 percent of its GDP, a low level by postwar standards.
American dominance
is not simply military. The U.S. economy is as large as the next threeJapan,
Germany and Britainput together. With 5 percent of the worlds
population, this one country accounts for 43 percent of the worlds
economic production, 40 percent of its high-technology production and
50 percent of its research and development. If you look at the indicators
of future growth, all are favorable for America. It is more dynamic economically,
more youthful demographically and more flexible culturally than any other
part of the world. It is conceivable that Americas lead, especially
over an aging and sclerotic Europe, will actually increase over the next
two decades.
Given this situation,
perhaps what is most surprising is that the world has not ganged up on
America already. Since the beginnings of the state system in the 16th
century, international politics has seen one clear patternthe formation
of balances of power against the strong. Countries with immense military
and economic might arouse fear and suspicion, and soon others coalesce
against them. It happened to the Hapsburg Empire in the 17th century,
France in the late 18th and early 19th century, Germany twice in the early
20th century, and the Soviet Union in the latter half of the 20th century.
At this point, most Americans will surely protest: "But were
different!" Americansthis writer includedthink of themselves
as a nation that has never sought to occupy others, and that through the
years has been a progressive and liberating force. But historians tell
us that all dominant powers thought they were special. Their very success
confirmed for them that they were blessed. But as they became ever more
powerful, the world saw them differently. The English satirist John Dryden
described this phenomenon in a poem set during the Biblical King Davids
reign. "When the chosen people grew too strong," he wrote, "The
rightful cause at length became the wrong."
Has American power
made its rightful cause turn into wrong? Will America simply have to learn
to live in splendid isolation from the resentments of the world? This
is certainly how some Americans see things. And its true that some
of the opposition to the United States is thinly veiled envy. "Scratch
an anti-American in Europe, and very often all he wants is a guest professorship
at Harvard or to have an article published in The New York Times,"
says Denis MacShane, Britains minister for Europe.
But there lies a
deep historical fallacy in the view that "they hate us because we
are strong." After all, U.S. supremacy is hardly a recent phenomenon.
America has been the leading world power for almost a century now. By
1900 the United States was the richest country in the world. By 1919 it
had decisively intervened to help win the largest war in history. By 1945
it had led the Allies to victory in World War II. For 10 years thereafter
America accounted for 50 percent of world GDP, a much larger share than
it holds today.
Yet for five decades
after World War II, there was no general rush to gang up against the United
States. Instead countries joined with Washington to confront the Soviet
Union, a much poorer country (at best comprising 12 percent of world GDP,
or a quarter the size of the American economy). What explains this? Howuntil
nowdid America buck the biggest trend in international history?
To answer this question,
go back to 1945. When America had the world at its feet, Franklin Delano
Roosevelt and Harry Truman chose not to create an American imperium, but
to build a world of alliances and multilateral institutions. They formed
the United Nations, the Bretton Woods system of economic cooperation and
dozens of other international organizations. America helped get the rest
of the world back on its feet by pumping out vast amounts of aid and private
investment. The centerpiece of this effort, the Marshall Plan, amounted
to $120 billion in todays dollars.
Not least of these
efforts was the special attention given to diplomacy. Consider what it
must have meant for Franklin Rooseveltat the pinnacle of powerto
go halfway across the world to Tehran and Yalta to meet with Churchill
and Stalin in 1943 and 1945. Roosevelt was a sick man, paralyzed from
the waist down, hauling 10 pounds of steel braces on his legs. Traveling
for 40 hours by sea and air took the life out of him. He did not have
to go. He had plenty of deputiesMarshall, Eisenhowerwho could
have done the job. And he certainly could have summoned the others closer
to him. But FDR understood that American power had to be coupled with
a generosity of spirit. He insisted that British commanders like Montgomery
be given their fair share of glory in the war. He brought China into the
United Nations Security Council, even though it was a poor peasant society,
because he believed that it was important to have the largest Asian country
properly represented within a world body.
The standard set
by Roosevelt and his generation endured. When George Marshall devised
the Marshall Plan, he insisted that America should not dictate how its
money be spent, but rather that the initiatives and control should lie
with Europeans. For decades thereafter, the United States has provided
aid, technical know-how and assistance across the world. It has built
dams, funded magazines and sent scholars and students abroad so that people
got to know America and Americans. It has paid great deference to its
allies who were in no sense equals. It has conducted joint military exercises,
even when they added little to U.S. readiness. For half a century, American
presidents and secretaries of State have circled the globe and hosted
their counterparts in a never-ending cycle of diplomacy.
Of course, all these
exertions served our interests, too. They produced a pro-American world
that was rich and secure. They laid the foundations for a booming global
economy in which America thrives. But it was an enlightened self-interest
that took into account the interests of others. Above all, it reassured
countriesthrough word and deed, style and substancethat Americas
mammoth power need not be feared.
PART III: WHERE
BUSH WENT WRONG
George W. Bush came
into office with few developed ideas about foreign policy. He didnt
seem much interested in the world. During the years that his father was
envoy to China, ambassador to the United Nations, director of the CIA
and vice president, Bush traveled two or three times outside the country.
Candidate Bushs vision amounted mostly to carving out positions
different from his predecessor. Many conservatives thought the Clinton
administration was over-involved in the world, especially in nation-building,
and hectoring in its diplomacy. So Bush argued that America should be
"a humble nation," scale back its commitments abroad and not
involve itself in rebuilding other countries.
Yet other conservatives,
a number of whom became powerful within the administration, had a more
sweeping agenda. Since the early 90s, they had argued that the global
landscape was marked by two realities. One was American power. The post-cold-war
world was overwhelmingly unipolar. The other was the spread of new international
treaties and laws. The end of the cold war had given a boost to efforts
to create a global consensus on topics like war crimes, land mines and
biological weapons. Both observations were accurate. From them, however,
these Bush officials drew the strange conclusion that America had little
freedom to move in this new world. "The picture it painted in its
early months was of a behemoth thrashing about against constraints that
only it could see," notes the neoconservative writer Robert Kagan.
For much of the world, it was mystifying to hear the most powerful country
in the history of the world speak as though it were a besieged nation,
boxed in on all sides.
In its first year
the administration withdrew from five international treatiesand
did so as brusquely as it could. It reneged on virtually every diplomatic
effort that the Clinton administration had engaged in, from North Korea
to the Middle East, often overturning public statements from Colin Powell
supporting these efforts. It developed a language and diplomatic style
that seemed calculated to offend the world. (President Bush has placed
a portrait of Theodore Roosevelt in the White House. TRs most famous
words of advice are worth recalling: "Speak softly and carry a big
stick.") Key figures in the administration rarely traveled, foreign
visitors were treated to perfunctory office visits, and state dinners
were unheard of. On an annual basis, George W. Bush has visited fewer
foreign countries than any president in 40 years. Still, he does better
than Dick Cheney, who has been abroad only once since becoming vice president.
September 11 only
added a new layer of assertiveness to Bushs foreign policy. Understandably
shocked and searching for responses, the administration decided that it
needed total freedom of action. When NATO, for the first time in its history,
invoked the self-defense clause and offered America carte-blanche assistance,
the administration essentially ignored it. It similarly marginalized NATO
in the Afghan war. NATO has its limitations, which were powerfully revealed
during the Kosovo campaign, but the signal this sent to our closest allies
was that America didnt need them. Thus as seen by the rest of the
world, 9-11 had a distressingly paradoxical effect. It produced a mobilization
of American power and yet a narrowing of American interests. Suddenly,
Washington was more powerful and determined to act. But it would act only
for its own core security and even pre-emptively when it needed to. Bush
later announced an expansive, vague Wilsonian visionwhich has meritbut
his style and methods overshadowed its potential promise.
The Bush administration
could reasonably point out that it doesnt get enough credit for
reaching out to the rest of the world. President Bush has, after all,
worked with the United Nations on Iraq, increased foreign aid by 50 percent,
announced a $15 billion AIDS program and formally endorsed a Palestinian
state. Yet none of these actions seems to earn him any good will. The
reason for this is plain. In almost every case, the administration comes
to multilateralism grudgingly, reluctantly, and with a transparent lack
of sincerity. For a year now, President Bush has dismissed the notion
that he should make any effort toward a Middle East peace process, even
though it would have defused some of the anti-Americanism in the region
as he sought to confront Iraq. Suddenly last week, to gain allies on Iraq
and at the insistence of Tony Blair, Bush made a belated gesture toward
the peace process. Is it surprising that people are not hailing this last-minute
conversion?
Nowhere has this
appearance of diplomatic hypocrisy been more striking than on Iraq. The
president got high marks for his superb speech at the Security Council
last September, urging the United Nations to get serious about enforcing
its resolutions on Iraq and to try inspections one last time. Unfortunately,
that appeal had been preceded by speeches by Cheney and comments by Rumsfeld
calling inspections a shamstatements that actually contradicted
American policyand making clear that the administration had decided
to go to war. The only debate was whether to have the United Nations rubber-stamp
this policy. To make matters worse, weeks after the new U.S.-sponsored
U.N. resolution calling for fresh inspections, the administration began
large-scale deployments on Iraqs border. Diplomatically, it had
promised a good-faith effort to watch how the inspections were going;
militarily, it was gearing up for war with troops that could not stay
ready in the desert forever. Is it any wonder that other countries, even
those that would be willing to endorse a war with Iraq, have felt that
the diplomacy was a charade, pursued simply to allow time for military
preparations?
President Bushs
favorite verb is "expect." He announces peremptorily that he
"expects" the Palestinians to dump Yasir Arafat, "expects"
countries to be with him or against him, "expects" Turkey to
cooperate. It is all part of the administrations basic approach
toward foreign policy, which is best described by the phrase used for
its war plan"shock and awe." The notion is that the United
States needs to intimidate countries with its power and assertiveness,
always threatening, always denouncing, never showing weakness. Donald
Rumsfeld often quotes a line from Al Capone: "You will get more with
a kind word and a gun than with a kind word alone."
But should the guiding
philosophy of the worlds leading democracy really be the tough talk
of a Chicago mobster? In terms of effectiveness, this strategy has been
a disaster. It has alienated friends and delighted enemies. Having traveled
around the world and met with senior government officials in dozens of
countries over the past year, I can report that with the exception of
Britain and Israel, every country the administration has dealt with feels
humiliated by it. "Most officials in Latin American countries today
are not anti-American types," says Jorge Castaneda, the reformist
foreign minister of Mexico, who resigned two months ago. "We have
studied in the United States or worked there. We like and understand America.
But we find it extremely irritating to be treated with utter contempt."
Last fall, a senior ambassador to the United Nations, in a speech supporting
Americas position on Iraq, added an innocuous phrase that could
have been seen as deviating from that support. The Bush administration
called up his foreign minister and demanded that he be formally reprimanded
within an hour. The ambassador now seethes when he talks about U.S. arrogance.
Does this really help Americas cause in the world? There are dozens
of stories like this from every part of the world.
In diplomacy, style
is often substance. Consider this fact: the Clinton administration used
force on three important occasionsBosnia, Haiti and Kosovo. In none
of them did it take the matter to the United Nations Security Council,
and there was little discussion that it needed to do so. Indeed, Kofi
Annan later made statements that seemed to justify the action in Kosovo,
explaining that state sovereignty should not be used as a cover for humanitarian
abuses. Today Annan has (wrongly) announced that American action in Iraq
outside the United Nations will be "illegal." While the Clinton
administrationor the first Bush administrationwas assertive
in many ways, people did not seek assurances about its intentions. The
Bush administration does not bear all the blame for this dramatic change
in attitudes. Because of 9-11, it has had to act forcefully on the world
stage and assert American power. But that should have been all the more
reason to adopt a posture of consultation and cooperation while doing
what needed to be done. The point is to scare our enemies, not terrify
the rest of the world.
PART IV: THE WAY
TO BUCK HISTORY
In 1992, Paul Wolfowitz,
then a senior official in the first Bush administration, authored a Pentagon
document that argued that in an era of overwhelming American dominance,
U.S. foreign policy should be geared toward maintaining our advantage
and discouraging the rise of other great powers. The premise behind this
strategy is perfectly sensible. The United States should attempt to lengthen
its era of supremacy for as long as it can. Any country would try to do
the same (though a wise one would not be foolish enough to announce it).
For that reason, the elder Bush ordered the Pentagon to water down the
document so that it was not quite so arrogant.
In principle, American
power is not simply good for America; it is good for the world. Most of
the problems the world faces todayfrom terrorism to AIDS to nuclear
proliferationwill be solved not with less U.S. engagement
but with more. The lesson of the 1990sof Bosnia, Kosovo,
East Timor, Rwandais surely that American action, with all its flaws,
is better than inaction. Other countries are simply not ready or able,
at this point, to take on the challenges and burdens of leadership. Around
the world, people understand this. In a global survey taken last year,
the most intriguingand unreportedfinding was that large majorities
of people in most countries thought that the world would be a more dangerous
place if there were a rival to the American superpower. Sixty-four percent
of the French, 70 percent of Mexicans, 63 percent of Jordanians felt this
way. (Ironically, old Europe was more pro-American on this issue than
new Europe. Only 27 percent of Bulgarians agreed.)
The real question
is how America should wield its power. For the past half century it has
done so through alliances and global institutions and in a consensual
manner. Now it faces new challengesand not simply because of what
the Bush administration has done. The old order is changing. The alliances
forged during the cold war are weakening. Institutions built to reflect
the realities of 1945such as the U.N. Security Councilrisk
becoming anachronistic. But if the administration wishes to further weaken
and indeed destroy these institutions and traditionsby dismissing
or neglecting themit must ask itself: What will take their place?
By what means will America maintain its hegemony?
For some in the administration,
the answer is obvious: America will act as it chooses, using what allies
it can find in any given situation. As a statement of fact this is sometimes
the only approach Washington will be able to employ. But it is not a durable
long-term strategy. It would require America to build new alliances and
arrangements every time it faced a crisis. More important, operating in
a conspicuously unconstrained way, in service of a strategy to maintain
primacy, will paradoxically produce the very competition it hopes to avoid.
The last two years are surely instructive. The Bush administrations
swagger has generated international opposition and active measures to
thwart its will. Though countries like France and Russia cannot become
great-power competitors simply because they want tothey need economic
and military strengththey can use what influence they have to disrupt
American policy, as they are doing over Iraq. In fact, the less responsibility
we give them, the more freedom smaller powers have to make American goals
difficult to achieve.
In many cases the
United States simply cant "go it alone." The current crises
over North Korea, Irans nuclear program and the leakage of fissile
materials from Russia are all good examples. And while the United States
can act largely by itself in certain special circumstances, such as Iraq,
the fewer allies, bases and air rights it has, the higher the costs will
be in American lives and treasure. And those costs will become unbearable
if the United States has to both wage war and pay for postwar reconstruction
on its own.
The war on terror
has given the United States a core security interest in the stability
of societies. Failed states can become terrorist havens. That means we
must focus attention and expenditures on nation-building. For all its
flaws, the United Nations is doing on-the-ground work to create stable
societies in Afghanistan, Kosovo, Cambodia and Mozambiqueand for
the most part, its succeeding. The European Union and Japan pay
most of these bills. Were Washington to move to an entirely ad hoc approach,
why would the rest of the world agree to clean up its messes?
Fighting terror also
requires constant cooperation with countries across the globe. America
could not have captured Qaeda strategist Khalid Shaikh Mohammed without
the active partnership of Pakistan. And yet if you ask Pakistanis what
they have gotten for this, they will point out that American tariffs continue
to strangle their textile industry and U.S. aid remains meager. Having
asked for help in de-Islamizing their education systema matter of
crucial concern to Americathey have received little. Meanwhile the
overall tone of Bush administration foreign policy has made General Musharraf
embarrassed to be pro-American.
The last point is
perhaps the most crucial one. Being pro-American should not be a political
liability for our allies. The diplomatic fiasco over Turkey is an excellent
example. For well over a year now it has been obvious to anyone watching
that the Turkish people were deeply opposed to a war in Iraq. Yet the
administration assumed that it could bully or bribe Turkey into giving
it basing rights. But Turkey over the last year has become more democratic.
The military is less willing to overrule politicians. The new ruling party,
AK, is more open to internal debate than Turkeys other parties.
It allowed its members to vote freely on the motion to allow America basing
rights, only to have it defeated. Since more than 90 percent of the Turks
oppose giving America basing rights, this should not have been surprising.
The administration wants democracy in the Middle East. Well, it got it.
As usual, diplomatic
style played a role. "The way the U.S. has been conducting the negotiations
has been, in general, humiliating," says a retired senior diplomat,
Ozdem Sanberk.
The costs of this
mishap are real. If Turkey allowed America to open a second front, we
could end the war more quickly and with fewer casualties, and the thorny
issues relating to Turkish-Kurdish relations could be more easily handled.
But the larger lesson is surely that in an increasingly democratic world
American power must be seen as legitimate not only by other governments
but by their people. Does America really want a world in which it gets
its way in the face of constant public anger only by twisting arms, offering
bribes and allying with dictators?
There are many specific
ways for the United States to rebuild its relations with the world. It
can match its military buildup with diplomatic efforts that demonstrate
its interest and engagement in the worlds problems. It can stop
oversubsidizing American steelworkers, farmers and textile-mill owners,
and open its borders to goods from poorer countries. But above all, it
must make the world comfortable with its power by leading through consensus.
Americas special role in the worldits ability to buck historyis
based not simply on its great strength, but on a global faith that this
power is legitimate. If America squanders that, the loss will outweigh
any gains in domestic security. And this next American century could prove
to be lonely, brutish and short.
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