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- <text id=91TT0996>
- <title>
- May 06, 1991: Two Centuries Of New World Orders
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 06, 1991 Scientology
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 76
- Two Centuries of New World Orders
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Richard Brookhiser
- </p>
- <p> President George Bush calls it "a responsibility imposed
- by our successes" in the cold war. Columnist Pete Hamill calls
- it the new world odor. Fleeing Kurds, burying their dead in
- mountain tent cities, call it misery.
- </p>
- <p> Welcome to the new world order.
- </p>
- <p> If huddled refugees have become the emblem of his foreign
- policy, Bush has only himself to blame for giving it a sonorous
- title with the word new in it. The principles--and the
- problems--of the new world order have a long history in
- American foreign policy--or better, foreign policies, since
- America has traditionally pursued two. The NWO echoes both.
- </p>
- <p> The first tradition of American foreign policy,
- appropriately, is America first. It was often isolationist, as
- in George Washington's warning in his Farewell Address against
- permanent alliances. But it was not necessarily so. (Washington
- had been interested in westward expansion since colonial days.)
- Our interests might compel us to pick fights; as America
- expanded in the world economy, and as weapons became
- transoceanic, we also came to have interests in such things as
- peace and stability. But we would continue to stay out of fights
- that did not directly concern us, and our concerns did not
- automatically include every instance of injustice in the world.
- </p>
- <p> Over the years this principle of self-interest was
- inflected by an idealistic impulse: America as leader and light
- of the world. We associate this with the crusading spirit of the
- World Wars and the cold war, but it too goes further back. The
- Spanish-American War began not only to remember the Maine but
- to cleanse Cuba of Spanish concentration camps. Earlier still,
- there were Americans who wanted to aid Hungarian rebels against
- the Habsburgs or Greek rebels against the Ottomans.
- </p>
- <p> Both impulses have shared a very American respect for
- legalistic thinking--not surprisingly, since so many American
- diplomats were Wasp lawyers. They searched, as George Kennan put
- it, for "formal criteria of a juridical nature by which the
- permissible behavior of states could be defined." The rest of
- the world was often baffled by our devotion to this search, even
- as it made the rest of the world baffling to us. "To the
- American mind," Kennan added, it was "implausible that people
- should have positive aspirations more important to them than the
- peacefulness and orderliness of international life." Still,
- whether we were being hardheaded or softhearted, we put our
- faith in rules, since both our power and the world's happiness
- seemed to benefit from them.
- </p>
- <p> The gulf war, the first crisis of Bush's NWO, was in fact
- a display case for the weaknesses and the strengths of typical
- American behavior. Our pussyfooting diplomacy before the
- invasion of Kuwait was intended to be a simple lawyerly
- proposition. Because we wanted to be honest brokers, we assured
- Saddam that we had no position on the precise location of the
- Iraq-Kuwait border. The only problem with our offer was that
- Saddam, who is not a Wasp lawyer, took it to mean that we didn't
- care whether there was an Iraq-Kuwait border.
- </p>
- <p> Once he erased it, all the strands of our foreign policies
- knotted together. Self-interest rose to the defense of our oil
- supply. Saddam's treatment of Kuwait and his casual lobbing of
- Scuds into Israel stirred Bush to outrage. Our diplomats had
- rounded up a sheaf of United Nations resolutions to give
- Operation Desert Storm a firm foundation of paper.
- </p>
- <p> Last month, in a speech in Montgomery, Bush outlined four
- principles for the NWO. His hopes for the future were as old
- fashioned as his actions had been. Principles 1 and 2, "peaceful
- settlements of disputes" and "solidarity against aggression,"
- reflect the American obsession with legality. Principle 3,
- "reduced and controlled arsenals," reflects the interests of a
- commercial power, dependent on peaceful world trade, that is
- eager to reduce its military spending. Bush's last principle,
- "just treatment of all peoples," comes out of the idealist
- tradition with, like the first three, a legalistic tinge.
- </p>
- <p> If Americans keep behaving like Americans, we will keep on
- encountering the same problems. One potential problem, as Kennan
- suggested and Saddam demonstrated, is that other countries will
- misunderstand us--although the gulf war should clarify our
- notion of the boundaries of "permissible behavior," at least for
- the time being.
- </p>
- <p> The most serious problems with the old/NWO, however, are
- likely to be of our own devising. They will arise whenever we
- tilt too heavily to one side or the other of our national
- character. Too often, American idealism metastasizes into
- utopianism. Making the world safe from aggression, or even from
- injustice, is not the same thing as making it safe for democracy--an exercise in political evangelism that is an altogether
- more difficult task. Woodrow Wilson approached the peace talks
- ending World War I as the consummation of a democratic crusade.
- Their failure ruined Central Europe for 70 years.
- </p>
- <p> The opposite error is to leave jobs half finished in the
- name of a foolishly consistent prudence. This is the
- impracticality of practical men, and this is clearly what
- controlled the Bush Administration's first response to the
- plight of the Kurds. Not wanting to become bogged down in Iraq's
- internal affairs, we left the Kurdish rebellion to its fate. We
- should have seen that a six-week air war was already a massive
- intervention in Iraq's affairs. If Saddam was dangerous enough
- to be bombed out of Kuwait, then his internal enemies, the Kurds
- and the Shi`ites, ought to have been helped to win themselves
- some breathing room.
- </p>
- <p> The double impulses of our old approach to world order
- make for contradictions. Together they can save the U.S. from
- empty moralizing or mere self-seeking.
- </p>
- <p> It is very American to think that all history begins
- yesterday. Thinking so, we repeat old mistakes or balk at
- burdens that seem brand new. Bush could do a better job with the
- NWO. Americans have been tinkering with it for 200 years.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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