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Why America Is Attacked Abroad

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Jonathan Clarke, a former member of the British diplomatic service, is with the Cato Institute in Washington. E-mail: jcahi@mindspring.com

The two bombs in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam brutally remind Americans of the implicit costs of what President Clinton called “America’s unique leadership responsibilities.” Clinton’s words highlight a melancholy paradox. This is that assertions that the world stands on the threshold of a “new American century,” such as those proffered in recent issues of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Policy, are not greeted with enthusiasm overseas, but have provoked--literally in the case of these outrages--a deadly counterblast.

Leadership is a quintessentially American idea, but it has recently suffered multiple challenges. China has just completed a home and away sweep, leaving U.S. ideals in tatters; Saddam Hussein is once again breaking out the flag of defiance, India and then Pakistan overrode intense pressure from a phalanx of Washington emissaries to join the nuclear club. Lowly villains like Libya’s Moammar Kadafi and the Burmese junta scent that the lion is wounded.

Even America’s allies have doubts. France is openly obstructionist over Iraq and Iran, Germany has questioned NATO’s right to use force in Kosovo without prior U.N. authority, Japan is resisting U.S. pressure to reflate its economy. Saudi Arabia has offered, at best, halfhearted cooperation on terrorism.

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These leadership problems present a considerable puzzle. At a moment of unrivaled domestic prosperity, when people around the world are clamoring to immigrate to the U.S., why must American embassies be constructed like medieval castles and why must American tourists fear for their lives?

Simple-minded explanations abound. Clinton-bashers argue that the administration has denuded the military, is in thrall to the U.N. and is gun-shy. More sympathetic observers charge that congressional grandstanding and refusal to appropriate the necessary resources are responsible for the America’s lackluster overseas performance.

The real explanation is more profound. This is that, seen from overseas, U.S. foreign policy is deeply schizophrenic. At the rhetorical level it operates on the basis of universalist principles such as democracy, the rule of law and human rights. Actual policy, however, deviates far from these ideals.

Take a few current examples. On Iraq, the administration makes common cause with Saddam’s Kurdish opponents, yet overlooks Turkey’s anti-Kurdish pogroms using U.S. provided weapons. On Iran, the U.S. criticizes France and Germany for allowing commercial calculations to outweigh the fight against terrorism. On China, however, the U.S. focus on human rights and high-tech proliferation has similarly succumbed to the lure of huge profits.

Domestic priorities frequently undermine the application of principle. On India and Pakistan, the U.S. initially applied stiff sanctions in the name of the universalist goal of nonproliferation but, in the face of pressure from Midwestern farmers, has already softened this approach. The U.S. has applied sanctions against Sudan on global freedom from religious persecution grounds. In doing so, it exempted gum arabic from the sanctions regime for the very unglobalist reason that this is a key raw material for America’s beverage manufacturers. On the Middle East, the U.S. refuses to recognize what is obvious to the rest of the world, namely that its anti-terrorist attitudes derive as much from domestically driven attachment to Israel as from global principles. This fact may cause the bombing investigation to run into official obfuscation if, as many speculate, the trail leads back to the Middle East.

Perfect consistency in a great power’s foreign policy is neither expected nor desirable. But these and other accommodations undermine foreigners’ faith in America’s willingness to pay a price for its rhetorical principles. They conclude that America’s big talk is mostly bluff. Adversaries calculate that deals based on American self-interest can normally be struck, while allies hesitate to commit themselves for fear of being sold out.

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The hard fact is that American leadership will continue to be challenged until the U.S. recaptures a “big idea” to replace the earlier ideas of anti-fascism and anti-communism that worked so well. Sadly, no new ideal has taken their place. Instead, the new proponents of American hegemony believe that America’s military and commercial muscle are enough to keep the world in line.

This crude notion betrays America’s best traditions. It is also, as the recent evidence shows, increasingly untenable. A more subtle understanding of the dynamics between material riches and moral influence is needed. Two and a half millenniums ago, the Athenian statesman Pericles observed that “wealth to us is not mere material for vainglory but an opportunity for achievement.” Until today’s policymakers bring the contemporary variables of power and virtue into proper balance, U.S. leadership will be endangered and Americans overseas will remain personally at risk.

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