Peter Beinart and the Policy of Containment

http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2011-02-26/obamas-mideast-policy-the-case-for-sitting-on-our-hands/

“Dear world, sorry about the last 10 years. Peter Beinart on how the new wave of Mideast revolts may finally be ending America’s wasteful war on terror—and why it would have been smarter not to intervene in the first place.

They’re exhilarating, of course. But from an American perspective, the revolutions transforming the Middle East are also deeply sad. They’re sad because they underscore what a terrible waste the last decade of American foreign policy has been. Since September 11, the United States has spent more than $1 trillion in Afghanistan and Iraq. Those wars have cost thousands of young Americans their lives and maimed many more. And for what? We were told (and I, for one, believed) that in jihadist terrorism we faced a threat of epic military and ideological power. We were told that unless we toppled anti-American regimes and imposed American ideals, the military and ideological balance would tip decisively in our enemies’ favor. “I will not wait on events,” vowed George W. Bush in his 2002 State of the Union address. We were told to wage war because time was not on our side.”

Here is the opening paragraph from the column of Mr. Peter Beinart published on The Daily Beast. It is exemplary of what is wrong with the whole of the ‘Foreign Policy Establishment’ in government or in academia, or as a casual observer synonymous with ‘journalism’. American is at the center of that world, as the earth was to the pre-Copernican religious ideologues. But are we the center anymore? Do are military bases that ring the globe or our nuclear weapons stockpile or our crumbling economy inspire fear, awe or even a certain reverence anymore? I know that I will sound like a naïve school child to the ‘strategic thinkers’ and their political allies but we American are murderous world citizens; a menace to republican values and practices. Our leaders make war on republican virtue, on republican practice as a matter of policy both internally and externally-without apology, even with a destructive gusto. In the name of National Security anything can be rationalized. Out of the sheer poverty of his historical/political imagination or an approaching deadline, Mr. Beinart chooses to valorize Containment and The Cold War as our template for political action in the 21st Century. It might to chastening to recall that the author of the Long Telegram, George Frost Kennan quickly became disenchanted with his own set of ideas: He had a change of mind on his seminal ideas articulated at the beginning of the Cold War and left the Diplomatic Service for academia. He had a very long successful career as sage writer, thinker and critic of American Policy.         

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About stephenkmacksd

Rootless cosmopolitan,down at heels intellectual;would be writer. 'Polemic is a discourse of conflict, whose effect depends on a delicate balance between the requirements of truth and the enticements of anger, the duty to argue and the zest to inflame. Its rhetoric allows, even enforces, a certain figurative licence. Like epitaphs in Johnson’s adage, it is not under oath.' https://www.lrb.co.uk/v15/n20/perry-anderson/diary
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