A Citizen's Response to the National Security Strategy of the United States of America
09/02/2003
- Opinión
THE NEW NATIONAL SECURITY STRATEGY published by the White House in
September 2002, if carried out, would amount to a radical revision of
the political character of our nation. Its central and most
significant statement is this:
While the United States will constantly strive to enlist the support
of the international community, we will not hesitate to act alone, if
necessary, to exercise our right of self defense by acting pre-
emptively against such terrorists... (p. 6)
A democratic citizen must deal here first of all with the question,
Who is this "we"? It is not the "we" of the Declaration of
Independence, which referred to a small group of signatories bound by
the conviction that "governments [derive] their just powers from the
consent of the governed. "And it is not the "we" of the
Constitution, which refers to "the people [my emphasis] of the United
States."
This "we" of the new strategy can refer only to the president. It is
a royal "we". A head of state, preparing to act alone in starting a
preemptive war, will need to justify his intention by secret
information, and will need to plan in secret and execute his plan
without forewarning. The idea of a government acting alone in
preemptive war is inherently undemocratic, for it does not require or
even permit the president to obtain the consent of the governed. As
a policy, this new strategy depends on the acquiescence of a public
kept fearful and ignorant, subject to manipulation by the executive
power, and on the compliance of an intimidated and office dependent
legislature. To the extent that a government is secret, it cannot be
democratic or its people free. By this new doctrine, the president
alone may start a war against any nation at any time, and with no
more forewarning than preceded the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
Would be participating citizens of a democratic nation, unwilling to
have their consent coerced or taken for granted, therefore have no
choice but to remove themselves from the illegitimate constraints of
this "we" in as immediate and public a way as possible.
THE ALLEGED JUSTIFICATION for this new strategy is the recent
emergence in the United States of international terrorism. But why
the events of September 11, 2001, horrifying as they were, should
have called for a radical new investiture of power in the executive
branch is not clear.
The National Security Strategy defines terrorism as "premeditated,
politically motivated violence perpetrated against innocents" (p.
5). This is truly a distinct kind of violence, but to imply by the
word "terrorism" that this sort of terror is the work exclusively of
"terrorists" is misleading. The "legitimate" warfare of
technologically advanced nations likewise is premeditated,
politically motivated violence perpetrated against innocents. The
distinction between the intention to perpetrate violence against
innocents, as in "terrorism," and the willingness to do so, as in
"war," is not a source of comfort.
Supposedly, if a nation perpetrates violence officially -- whether to
bomb an enemy airfield or a hospital -- it is not guilty of
"terrorism." But there is no need to hesitate over the difference
between "terrorism" and any violence or threat of violence that is
terrifying. The National Security Strategy wishes to cause
"terrorism" to be seen "in the same light as slavery, piracy, or
genocide" (p. 6) but not in the same light as war. It accepts and
affirms the legitimacy of war.
THE WAR AGAINST TERRORISM is not, strictly speaking, a war against
nations, even though it has already involved international war in
Afghanistan and presidential threats against other nations. This is
a war against "the embittered few" "thousands of trained terrorists"
-- who are "at large" (p. 5) among many millions of others who are,
in the language of this document, "innocents," and thus are deserving
of our protection.
Unless we are willing to kill innocents in order to kill the guilty,
the need to be lethal will be impeded constantly by the need to be
careful. Because we must suppose a new supply of villains to be
always in the making, we can expect the war on terrorism to be more
or less endless, endlessly costly and endlessly supportive of a
thriving bureaucracy.
Unless, that is, we should become willing to ask why, and to do
something about the causes. Why do people become terrorists? Such
questions arise from the recognition that problems have causes.
There is, however, no acknowledgement in The National Security
Strategy that terrorism might have a cause that could possibly be
discovered and possibly remedied. "The embittered few," it seems,
are merely "evil."
II.
MUCH OF THE OBSCURITY of our effort so far against terrorism
originates in this now official idea that the enemy is evil and that
we are (therefore) good, which is the precise mirror image of the
official idea of the terrorists.
The epigraph of Part III of The National Security Strategy contains
this sentence from President Bush's speech at the National Cathedral
on September 14, 2001: "But our responsibility to history is already
clear: to answer these attacks and rid the world of evil." A
government, committing its nation to rid the world of evil, is
assuming necessarily that it and its nation are good.
But the proposition that anything so multiple and large as a nation
can be "good" is an insult to common sense. It is also dangerous,
because it precludes any attempt at self criticism or self
correction; it precludes public dialogue. It leads us far indeed
from the traditions of religion and democracy that are intended to
measure and so to sustain our efforts to be good. Christ said. "He
that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her."
And Thomas Jefferson justified general education by the obligation of
citizens to be critical of their government: "for nothing can keep it
right but their own vigilant and distrustful [my emphasis]
superintendence." An inescapable requirement of true patriotism, love
for one's land, is a vigilant distrust of any determinative power,
elected or unelected, that may preside over it.
AND SO IT IS NOT WITHOUT REASON or precedent that a citizen should
point out that, in addition to evils originating abroad and
supposedly correctable by catastrophic technologies in "legitimate"
hands, we have an agenda of domestic evils, not only those that
properly self aware humans can find in their own hearts, but also
several that are indigenous to our history as a nation: issues of
economic and social justice, and issues related to the continuing and
worsening maladjustment between our economy and our land.
There are kinds of violence that have nothing directly to do with
unofficial or official warfare. I mean such things as toxic
pollution, land destruction, soil erosion, the destruction of
biological diversity and of the ecological supports of agriculture.
To anybody with a normal concern for health and sanity, these
"externalized costs" are terrible and are terrifying.
I don't wish to make light of the threats and dangers that now
confront us. But frightening as these are, they do not relieve us of
the responsibility to be as intelligent, principled, and practical as
we can be. To rouse the public's anxiety about foreign terror while
ignoring domestic terror, and to fail to ask if these terrors are in
any way related, is wrong.
IT IS UNDERSTANDABLE that we should have reacted to the attacks of
September 11, 2001, by curtailment of civil rights, by defiance of
laws, and by resort to overwhelming force, for those things are the
ready products of fear and hasty thought. But they cannot protect us
against the destruction of our own land by ourselves. They cannot
protect us against the selfishness, wastefulness, and greed that we
have legitimized here as economic virtues, and have taught to the
world. They cannot protect us against our government's long-standing
disdain for any form of self sufficiency or thrift, or against the
consequent dependence, which for the present at least is inescapable,
on foreign supplies, such as oil from the Middle East.
IT IS NO WONDER that the National Security Strategy, growing as it
does out of unresolved contradictions in our domestic life, should
attempt to compound a foreign policy out of contradictory principles.
There is, first of all, the contradiction of peace and war, or of war
as the means of achieving and preserving peace This document affirms
peace; it also affirms peace as the justification of war and war as
the means of peace and thus perpetuates a hallowed absurdity. But
implicit in its assertion of this (and, by implication, any other)
nation's right to act alone in its own interest is an acceptance of
war as a permanent condition. Either way, it is cynical to invoke
the ideas of cooperation, community, peace, freedom, justice,
dignity, and the rule of law (as this document repeatedly does), and
then proceed to assert one's intention to act alone in making war.
One cannot reduce terror by holding over the world the threat of what
it most fears.
This is a contradiction not reconcilable except by a self
righteousness almost inconceivably naive. The authors of the
strategy seem now and then to be glimmeringly conscious of the
difficulty. Their implicit definition of "rogue state," for example,
is any nation pursuing national greatness by advanced military
capabilities that can threaten its neighbors -- except our nation.
If you think our displeasure with "rogue states" might have any
underpinning in international law, then you will be disappointed to
learn on page 31 that: "We will take the actions necessary to ensure
that our efforts to meet our global security commitments and protect
Americans are not impaired by the potential for investigations,
inquiry, or prosecution by the International Criminal Court (ICC),
whose jurisdiction does not extend to Americans and which we do not
accept. "
The rule of law in the world, then, is to be upheld by a nation that
has declared itself to be above the law. A childish hypocrisy here
assumes the dignity of a nation's foreign policy.
III.
FURTHER CONTRADICTION is that between war and commerce. This issue
arises first of all in the war economy, which unsurprisingly regards
war as a business and weapons as merchandise. However nationalistic
may be the doctrine of the National Security Strategy, the fact is
that the internationalization of the weapons trade is a result
inherent in international trade itself. It is a part of
globalization. Mr. Bush's addition of this Security Strategy to the
previous bipartisan commitment to globalization exposes an American
dementia that has not been so plainly displayed before.
The America Whose Business is Business has been internationalizing
its economy in haste (for bad reasons, and with little foresight),
looking everywhere for "trading partners," cheap labor, and tax
shelters. Meanwhile, the America Whose Business is National Defense
is withdrawing from the world in haste (for bad reasons, with little
foresight), threatening left and right, repudiating agreements, and
angering friends. The problem of participating in the Global Economy
for the benefit of Washington's corporate sponsors while maintaining
a nationalist belligerence and an isolationist morality calls for
superhuman intelligence in the secretary of commerce. The problem of
"acting alone" in an international war while maintaining
simultaneously our ability to import the foreign goods (for instance,
oil) on which we have become dependent even militarily will call,
likewise, for overtopping genius in the secretary of defense.
After World War II, we hoped the world might be united for the sake
of peacemaking. Now the world is being "globalized" for the sake of
trade and the so-called free market -- for the sake, that is, of
plundering the world for cheap labor, cheap energy, and cheap
materials. How nations, let alone regions and communities, are to
shape and protect themselves within this "global economy" is far from
clear. Nor is it clear how the global economy can hope to survive
the wars of nations.
FOR A NATION TO BE, in the truest sense, patriotic, its citizens must
love their land with a knowing, intelligent, sustaining, and
protective love. They must not, for any price, destroy its health,
its beauty, or its productivity. And they must not allow their
patriotism to be degraded to a mere loyalty to symbols or any present
set of officials.
One might reasonably assume, therefore, that a policy of national
security would advocate from the start various practical measures to
conserve and to use frugally the nation's resources, the objects of
this husbandry being a reduction in the nation's dependence on
imports and a reduction in the competition between nations for
necessary goods.
Agriculture, which is the economic activity most clearly and directly
related to national security -- if one grants that we all must eat --
receives such scant and superficial treatment as to amount to a
dismissal. The document proposes only:
1. "a global effort to address new technology, science, and health
regulations that needlessly impede farm exports and improved
agriculture" (p. 19). This refers, without saying so, to the
growing consumer resistance to genetically modified food. A global
effort to overcome this resistance would help not farmers and not
consumers, but global agribusiness corporations.
2. "transitional safeguards which we have used in the agricultural
sector " (p. 19). This refers to government subsidies, which
ultimately help the agribusiness corporations, not farmers.
3. Promotion of "new technologies, including biotechnology, [which]
have enormous potential to improve crop yields in developing
countries while using fewer pesticides and less water" (p. 23).
This is offered (as usual and questionably) as the solution to
hunger, but its immediate benefit would be to the corporate
suppliers.
This is not an agriculture policy, let alone a national security
strategy. It has the blindness, arrogance, and foolishness that are
characteristic of top-down thinking by politicians and academic
experts, assuming that "improved agriculture" would inevitably be the
result of catering to the agribusiness corporations, and that
national food security can be achieved merely by going on as before.
It does not address any agricultural problem as such, and it ignores
the vulnerability of our present food system dependent as it is on
genetically impoverished monocultures, cheap petroleum, cheap long-
distance transportation, and cheap farm labor to many kinds of
disruption by "the embittered few," who, in the event of such
disruption, would quickly become the embittered many. On eroding,
ecologically degraded, increasingly toxic landscapes, worked by
failing or subsidy dependent farmers and by the cheap labor of
migrants, we have erected the tottering tower of "agribusiness,"
which prospers and "feeds the world" (incompletely and temporarily)
by undermining its own foundations.
IV.
SINCE THE END of World War II, when the terrors of industrial warfare
had been fully revealed, many people and, by fits and starts, many
governments have recognized that peace is not just a desirable
condition, as was thought before, but a practical necessity. But we
have not yet learned to think of peace apart from war. We wait,
still, until we face terrifying dangers and the necessity to choose
among bad alternatives, and then we think again of peace, and again
we fight a war to secure it.
At the end of the war, if we have won it, we declare peace; we
congratulate ourselves on our victory; we marvel at the newly-proved
efficiency of our latest weapons; we ignore the cost in lives,
materials, and property, in suffering and disease, in damage to the
natural world; we ignore the inevitable residue of resentment and
hatred; and we go on as before, having, as we think, successfully
defended our way of life.
That is pretty much the story of our victory in the Gulf War of 1991.
In the years between that victory and September 11, 2001, we did not
alter our thinking about peace and war -- that is, we thought much
about war and little about peace; we continued to punish the defeated
people of Iraq and their children; we made no effort to reduce our
dependence on the oil we import from other, potentially belligerent
countries; we made no improvement in our charity toward the rest of
the world; we made no motion toward greater economic self-reliance;
and we continued our extensive and often irreversible damages to our
own land. We appear to have assumed merely that our victory
confirmed our manifest destiny to be the richest, most powerful, most
wasteful nation in the world. After the catastrophe of September 11,
it again became clear to us how good it would be to be at peace, to
have no enemies, to have no more needless deaths to mourn. And then,
our need for war following with the customary swift and deadly logic
our need for peace, we took up the customary obsession with the evil
of other people.
It is useless to try to adjudicate a long-standing animosity by
asking who started it or who is the most wrong. The only sufficient
answer is to give up the animosity and try forgiveness, to try to
love our enemies and to talk to them and (if we pray) to pray for
them. If we can't do any of that, then we must begin again by trying
to imagine our enemies' children who, like our children, are in
mortal danger because of enmity that they did not cause.
We can no longer afford to confuse peaceability with passivity.
Authentic peace is no more passive than war. Like war, it calls for
discipline and intelligence and strength of character, though it
calls also for higher principles and aims. If we are serious about
peace, then we must work for it as ardently, seriously, continuously,
carefully, and bravely as we now prepare for war.
* Kentucky farmer Wendell Berry is the author of more than thirty
books including, most recently, In the Presence of Fear: Three Essays
for a Changed World.
Published on Sunday, February 9, 2003 by the New York Times as a full
page advertisement.
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