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- <text id=92TT2821>
- <title>
- Dec. 21, 1992: Sometimes, Right Makes Might
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Dec. 21, 1992 Restoring Hope
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 82
- Sometimes, Right Makes Might
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Walter Isaacson
- </p>
- <p> Throughout history, going back at least to the
- Peloponnesian War, nations have ascribed idealistic purposes to
- their military struggles. But as with Sparta's classic
- balance-of-power contest with Athens, discernible national
- interests have always been at stake. What makes America's
- intervention into Somalia seem so inspiring--and also so
- dangerously slippery--is that it may be the first time since
- the Crusades an invasion has been launched for a purely moral
- rationale.
- </p>
- <p> A logical place to look for a modern precedent would be
- the days of Woodrow Wilson, that professor of Presbyterian
- rectitude who draped foreign policy with a mantle of idealism.
- His amphibious forays into Latin America were designed, he said,
- to foster "constitutional liberty." And his rationale for
- bringing the U.S. into World War I was that "the world must be
- made safe for democracy." Criticized for being too Wilsonian,
- he replied, "Sometimes people call me an idealist. Well, that
- is the way I know I'm an American. America is the only
- idealistic nation in the world."
- </p>
- <p> Wilson's interventions were in fact not purely idealistic;
- they involved realistic appraisals of his nation's economic and
- strategic interests. But he was correct in claiming that
- Americans prefer such assertions of national interest to be
- accompanied by moral ideals, each helping to cloak the other.
- From the Monroe Doctrine to Manifest Destiny, idealism and
- realism were the warp and woof of U.S. foreign policy. In a
- nation that views its economic and political system as
- righteous, the distinction between interests and ideals tends
- to blur.
- </p>
- <p> This was especially true during the cold war, which was
- both a moral crusade and a strategic balance-of-power struggle.
- This combination justified a procession of interventions, from
- Korea to Vietnam to Grenada. Having triumphed in its global
- struggle with the Soviets, the U.S. gained the opportunity to
- put more emphasis on its ideals than on its interests. But so
- far, it has mainly focused on the latter. American troops went
- into Panama to stem the flow of drugs and into Kuwait to
- protect the flow of oil--vital national interests indeed. In
- both cases, President Bush stressed America's moral
- motivations. But James Baker made the gaffe (defined as a
- politician's accidentally telling the truth) of admitting that
- the reason for going into the Persian Gulf was "jobs, jobs,
- jobs."
- </p>
- <p> The closest that the U.S. came to giving primacy to moral
- concerns was the postscript to the Persian Gulf War, when Saddam
- Hussein was prevented from slaughtering the Kurds. Two decades
- earlier, after secretly encouraging the Kurds to rebel, the U.S.
- had callously cut them off when they no longer served its
- interests; in explaining this decision to a closed hearing,
- Kissinger gave a classic exposition of realpolitik: "Covert
- action should not be confused with missionary work." Given
- America's moral streak, such an approach tends to require
- secrecy. Bush did not have that option: a barrage of pictures
- of suffering Kurds finally compelled him to step in.
- </p>
- <p> Therein lies a dilemma. In a democracy, policy (unless
- pursued in secret) must reflect public sentiment. But sentiment
- can ooze into sentimentality, especially in the age of global
- information, when networks and newsmagazines can sear the vision
- of a suffering Somalian child or Bosnian orphan into the soft
- hearts of millions. Random bursts of compassion provoked by
- compelling pictures may be a suitable basis for Christmas
- charity drives, but are they the proper foundation for a foreign
- policy? Will the world end up rescuing Somalia while ignoring
- the Sudan mainly because the former proves more photogenic?
- </p>
- <p> In a world beset by ceaseless woes, donning the mantle of
- global cavalryman can become like installing a 911 number
- equipped with call waiting. The United Nations can serve as a
- screen. A crusade that can garner multilateral support is not
- necessarily worthy and wise, but that's not a bad litmus test.
- Requiring some international consensus can also serve as a
- safety check: idealistic crusaders make dangerous statesmen when
- the morality they seek to impose is self-defined.
- </p>
- <p> America cannot right every wrong in the world. But that
- does not logically imply that it should refrain from righting
- any of them. Colin Powell and Dick Cheney have devised a simple
- first principle for choosing which to undertake: do only the
- doable. We don't do hills. To that can be added the
- common-sense standard intuitively applied to street-corner
- muggings: some are easy to break up, others are too dangerous,
- and intervening in the former does not necessarily create a
- slippery slope that leads to intervention in the latter. Any set
- of guidelines that produces the conclusion that involvement in
- Somalia also requires the U.S. to apply the same moral
- principles in Bosnia or Liberia is missing this important
- distinction.
- </p>
- <p> The practicality principle, however, must be balanced
- against the nature of the outrage. Certain situations, no matter
- how abhorrent, are primarily local or internal matters. Others
- involve "ethnic cleansings," genocidal murders or mass
- starvation, and thus rise to the level of a crime against all
- humanity. The case for intervening in Bosnia requires showing
- that it has edged into the second category.
- </p>
- <p> Like any nation in history, America derives its influence
- in the world largely from its capacity and willingness to
- defend its national interests. But another source of its global
- influence is the perception, at least during certain eras, that
- its foreign policy is also based on moral values. By taking the
- unprecedented step of embarking on a military operation for
- altruistic reasons, the U.S. may once again show how idealism
- can go hand in hand with realism.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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