America in Search of a Cause?

Guest Post by Patrick J. Buchanan

“If the Cold War is over, what’s the point of being an American?” said Rabbit Angstrom, the protagonist of the John Updike novels.

A haunting remark, since, for 40 years, America was largely united on the proposition that our survival depended upon our victory over communism in the Cold War.

We had a cause then. By and large, we stood together through the crises in the first decades of that Cold War — the Berlin blockade, Stalin’s atom bomb and the fall of China to Mao, the Korean War, the Hungarian revolution, the Cuban missile crisis, and on into Vietnam.

We accepted the conscription of our young men. We accepted wars in Asia, and, if need be, in Europe, to check the Soviet Empire.

Vietnam sundered that unity.

By 1967, the Gene McCarthy-Robert Kennedy wing of the Democratic Party had broken with the Cold War consensus. “We have gotten over our inordinate fear of communism,” said Jimmy Carter.

The Reagan Republicans and George H. W. Bush would pick up the torch and lead the nation to victory in the last decade of that Cold War that had been a defining cause of the American nation.

But when it was over in 1990, America was suddenly at a loss for a new cause to live for, fight for and, if need be, see its sons die for.

Bush 1, after leading a coalition that drove Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait, declared that America’s cause would be the building of a “New World Order.” But few Americans bought in.

Sixteen months after his victory parade up Constitution Avenue, after Bush had reached 90 percent approval, 62 percent of his country’s electorate voted to replace him with Bill Clinton or Ross Perot.

Clinton pursued liberal interventionism in the Balkans, leading to 78 days of bombing Serbia, and he regretted not intervening in Rwanda to halt the genocide.

George W. Bush promised a “humble” foreign policy. But 9/11 put an end to that. After driving the Taliban from power and Osama Bin Laden out of Afghanistan, he declared that America’s new goal was preventing an “axis of evil” — Iraq, Iran, North Korea — from acquiring nuclear weapons. Then, Bush marched us up to Baghdad.

The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq lasted years longer and cost far more in blood and treasure than Bush had anticipated.

At the peak of his prestige, like Pope Urban II, Bush declared a global crusade for democracy.

This ended like many of the crusades. Democratic elections were won by Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza and, after the Arab Spring, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt.

Barack Obama promised to end the Bush wars and bring the troops home. And he was rewarded with two terms by a country that has shown minimal enthusiasm for more wars in the Middle East.

Obama is now openly mocking the McCainiacs.

“Right now, if I was taking the advice of some of the members of Congress who holler all the time, we’d be in, like, seven wars right now,” he told a group of veterans and Gold Star mothers of slain U.S. soldiers.

This reluctance to begin wars or intervene in wars — be it in Syria, Iraq, Iran, Ukraine — seems to comport with the wishes of the country. And this new reality raises serious questions.

What is America’s cause today? What is our mission in the world? For what end, other than defending our citizens, vital interests and crucial allies, would we be willing to send a great army to fight — as we did in Korea, Vietnam, Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan?

Are all the global causes of Bush I, Clinton, Bush II over?

Where is the coherence, the consistency, of U.S. policy in the Middle East that should cause us to draw red lines, and fight if they are crossed?

If our belief in democracy demands the ouster of the dictator Assad in Damascus, how can we ally with the theocratic monarchy in Riyadh, the Sunni king sitting atop a Shiite majority in Bahrain, and the Egyptian general on his throne in Cairo, who took power in a military coup against a democratically elected Muslim government?

Other than supporting Israel, maintaining access to Gulf oil and resisting ISIS and al-Qaida, upon what do Americans agree?

Henry Kissinger seeks a restoration of the crumbling strategic architecture. Neocons and interventionist liberals want to confront Russia and Iran. Reluctant interventionists like Obama, Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders think we should stay out of other wars there.

“When a people is divided within itself about the conduct of its foreign relations, it is unable to agree on the determination of its true interests,” wrote Walter Lippmann at the climax of World War II:

“Thus, its course in foreign policy depends, in Hamilton’s words, not on reflection and choice but on accident and force.”

America is a nation divided, not only upon the means we should use to attain our ends in the world, but upon the ends themselves.

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10 Comments
John Coster
John Coster
October 23, 2015 8:26 am

WTF! Here’s a goal that could unite us. Drive the neocons out of Washington and the Wall Street Bankers and develop a foreign policy and military strategy that protects the interests of the American people. Maybe if we manufactured some real products and didn’t have a military that uses more fuel than many whole nations, we wouldn’t need “full spectrum dominance.” We still have resources particularly in agriculture. Extortion may work for a while, but it’s not a good long term business strategy, and when the extortionists get their asses kicked abroad (Syria etc,), they turn on their own people.

bb
bb
October 23, 2015 8:53 am

John , there is nothing that could unite me with liberals progressives. We have no common cause.No common cause with neocons or wall street bankers. No common cause with most ….people of color….to use the progressive slogan. I’m thinking God speed secession and segregation nation once again.How about you ?

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 23, 2015 10:33 am

John,

It’s so incredibly easy to get rid of those “Wall Street Bankers”.

Everyone just refuses to do any business with them.

But I’m betting people would far rather gripe about them than see their 401K’s and such go away as Wall Street falls apart,, so I doubt anything other than making them the bogeyman in arguments will take place.,

rhs jr
rhs jr
October 23, 2015 11:15 am

John is right; right now I’d join a bunch of people protesting Politicians, warfare, Banksters, Wall Street Brokers, corporations, Lawyers, MSM, College Administrations etc. Of course I’d avoid the Democrats, homos, thugs, druggies, bums, hippies, feminist, etc; and join with any Conservatives, Patriots, Christians and Vets I could find. I’d tell them we need to do the same about liberal crap like illegal immigration, Affirmative Action, Welfare etc. We all need to get off our asses and show TPTB that they don’t own our country, our hearts and minds, our labor and money, and our souls.

Dutchman
Dutchman
October 23, 2015 11:17 am

The cause should be to have the smallest government possible, and to leave people alone!

Copperhead
Copperhead
October 23, 2015 12:43 pm

Barring another 9/11 type event this country will never be united on anything, the schism is way to strong.
The country should really be split into smaller units that have similar beliefs.

fear & loathing
fear & loathing
October 23, 2015 4:04 pm

centralized governments destroy, i am all in on the succession movement. i would enjoy watching the divisions of the future. northeast liberals eat advertising for dinner, california living by the policies they love. again i utter that if lincoln had left the south alone the world would be a far better place, even for the blacks, since it would not take long for southerners to realize their value for mutual survival.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
October 23, 2015 9:40 pm

The burning question remains: Why did building 7 collapse. I’m reading Jim Marr’s excellent book “The Terror Conspiracy”. Good read.

John Coster
John Coster
October 24, 2015 7:58 am

Well, my morning rant yesterday was a little vague as to how one would accomplish those goals, even if people agreed on them. How did Building 7 collapse, Westcoaster? Blown up in a controlled demolition, just like the towers. At least some questions have obvious answers. I do think you guys are right about the problem of scale. I live in rural New England among my own kind, eat a lot of local food and heat with wood from local forests. I have very little money but lots of resources.Relocalization works for me, but I don’t live in the Bronx.

TE
TE
October 24, 2015 11:28 pm

Why does Pat feel we have to be actively seeking and killing people to “unite” us?

Maybe it is because people with different needs, different beliefs, cannot truly be united without a common enemy?

I know there, currently, is no place for a person such as myself. Maybe that is as it should be.

Peace, love and cooperation cannot ever work when so many are determined that “their” government forces everyone to comply to “their” belief system.

No room in this world for the peaceful that just want to be left alone to love and care for their families without being told what poisons must be ingested. Both physically and emotionally.

The self-righteous will only be happy if EVERY home is filled with people exactly like themselves. What a homogeneous paradise that will be for them all.