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- <text id=93TT0066>
- <link 93XP0517>
- <link 93TO0109>
- <title>
- Oct 18, 1993: The Trouble With Good Intentions
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 18, 1993 What in The World Are We Doing?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 36
- The Trouble With Good Intentions
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>IN FEEDING SOMALIA AND BACKING YELTSIN, AMERICA DISCOVERS THE
- LIMITS OF IDEALISM
- </p>
- <p>THE COLD WAR IS OVER. CAN AMERICA MANAGE THE PEACE?
- </p>
- <p>By LANCE MORROW
- </p>
- <p> Complexity theory holds that even the wildest disorder may
- eventually cohere into a pattern--as when the teeming molecules
- of the young earth united in the arrangement that became life.
- </p>
- <p> If complexity theory is valid, there may be hope someday for
- Somalia. There may even be hope for the Clinton Administration's
- foreign policy.
- </p>
- <p> It is wrong to expect too much coherence from any quarter, writers
- on foreign policy warn: with the end of the cold war, the world
- is formless--no longer Manichaean, no longer organized around
- two neat poles of ideology. America's conception of its national
- interests and its moral role abroad, to say nothing of its idea
- of itself at home, is disheveled. It is therefore natural that
- in trying to find its way through problems like, say, Bosnia
- and Somalia, the Administration can see no farther than the
- range of its low-beam headlights.
- </p>
- <p> Maybe so. But it is misleading to blame the diversity of the
- new world for the confusion in Somalia. The chaos has been there
- a long time. And it is also a very old story when the most wholesome
- moral intentions (such as the American desire to feed starving
- Somali children) lead down a road into nightmares of entanglement
- and unintended consequences. The best, brightest American policy
- thinking went off a cliff in Vietnam, for example.
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton Administration has tried to do good by helping Boris
- Yeltsin. But by supporting him so unreservedly, the U.S. risks
- collaborating in the creation of a democratic authoritarianism.
- It is impossible to accomplish moral and political fine-tuning
- amid turmoil. American policy toward Haiti, a place almost as
- poignantly miserable as Somalia, is also smudged by uncertainty
- just at the moment when the Administration is sending military
- trainers and engineers to join a U.N. force.
- </p>
- <p> The aid effort in Somalia displays an attractive American tendency:
- the impulse to construct idealistic policy out of generous feelings.
- The danger is that such international idealism may be shallow
- and short-lived, a sort of sentimentality of the privileged.
- </p>
- <p> These feelings-behind-policy, this Great Power subjectivism,
- often arises spontaneously from pictures, either still photographs
- or television clips, that are mainlined directly into the democracy's
- emotional bloodstream without the mediation of conscious thought.
- America got into Somalia because it felt a sane and generous
- outrage at the spectacle of thousands of children and other
- innocent people starving while gangs of thugs stole the food
- from their bowls. Now the majority of Americans want to withdraw
- from Somalia because they have felt a converse outrage at pictures
- of an American soldier's body gruesomely dragged through the
- dust, and of grinning Somalis dancing on the corpse of a helicopter.
- </p>
- <p> In both instances, the feelings aroused by the pictures have
- their passion and validity--as feelings. But not as solid
- thoughts on which to form American policy when that policy may
- put American lives, and many others, at risk.
- </p>
- <p> The eye, fastened to CNN, makes a valuable witness. But it has
- a tendency to stir people to bursts of indignation that flare
- briefly, spectacularly and ineffectually, like a fire splashed
- with a cup of gasoline.
- </p>
- <p> An advertent and sustained foreign policy uses a different part
- of the brain from the one engaged by horrifying images. If Americans
- had seen the battles of the Wilderness and Cold Harbor on TV
- screens in 1864, if they had witnessed the meat-grinding carnage
- of Ulysses Grant's warmaking, then public opinion would have
- demanded an end to the Civil War, and the Union might well have
- split into two countries, one of them farmed by black slaves.
- </p>
- <p> It is obviously futile to march Americans into the midst of
- long-standing Somali blood feuds. To do so creates an explosive
- dynamic in which the Americans are the new villains and targets:
- more Americans die, more Somali civilians die as Americans grow
- frustrated and retaliate with bigger gunships, hatreds grow
- deeper, and the tragedy is compounded.
- </p>
- <p> It is strange how many ghosts hover around Somalia. There is,
- of course, the big dark ghost of Vietnam, that formative evil
- myth of Clinton's generation. That war, like the Somalia conflict,
- was dominated by images injected into the American psyche--the Viet Cong in a plaid shirt being shot in the head point-blank
- by Saigon's police chief during the Tet offensive, for example.
- The experience of Vietnam issues its warnings ("quagmire" and
- so on), but strangely, Bill Clinton the old war resister last
- week used much the same rhetoric of steadfastness and honor
- that Lyndon Johnson used when explaining another escalation
- in Vietnam.
- </p>
- <p> The Americans have ventured into Somalia in a sort of surreal
- confusion, first impersonating Mother Teresa and now John Wayne.
- It would help to clarify that self-image, for to do so would
- clarify the mission, and then to recast the rhetoric of the
- enterprise.
- </p>
- <p> Above all to simplify. To say, We came here to feed starving
- people. With its bloodshed and starvation, Somalia has been
- a tragedy. But there are many tragedies in the world. The U.S.
- will help the U.N. peacekeepers as it can, but the U.S. will
- not allow itself to become another fighter-killer among factions
- in the streets and alleys of Mogadishu. Americans have better
- things to do, in places where they can help.
- </p>
- <p> American policy does not need more feelings. It needs, as George
- Meredith said, "More brain, O Lord!"
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-