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INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: Stop-and-Go Isolationism
By Tod Lindberg
Outrage over “the next war”? Not if
it’s about genocide. By Tod Lindberg.
Opposition to the Iraq war has understandably led to
an anti-interventionist climate in Washington. There has long been such a
strain in American public opinion: Walter Russell Mead identified it as the
Jeffersonian strain, more interested in cultivating the American garden
than in going abroad to slay dragons.
A bumper sticker I saw recently captures the spirit:
“I’m already against the next war.” Of course, it’s
unlikely that the experience in Iraq is what led the car’s owner to
that conclusion. It was almost certainly a preexisting conviction. The
opposition to the Iraq war has, however, inflated this sentiment.
Opposition to the Iraq war belongs in three broad
categories: those who were against it from the beginning because of a
principle like that of the bumper sticker; those who were against it not
out of a general anti-interventionist sentiment but because they viewed
Saddam Hussein’s regime as not dangerous enough to justify war; and
those who supported the war at the time but have since decided that it
wasn’t worth the effort. Those three categories together make up the
clear majority in opinion surveys. But the third category, by far the
largest, is actually quite different in outlook from the first two. In
relation to Iraq at the present moment, it is aligned with the others, but
there is little reason to think that this is a permanent alignment.
In December, the Genocide Intervention Network
released a poll on Darfur that illustrates how far American opinion is from
supporting a general disengagement from the troubles of the wider world.
The Darfur case is important in its own right, because of the hundreds of
thousands of people who have died at the bloody hands of the Sudanese
government and its local death squads, the janjaweed militia, and the millions who are living in
displaced-person or refugee camps in Sudan and Chad, unable to return to
what’s left of their homes because of the danger. It’s also
important as a test of American sentiment on humanitarian intervention.
The United States has no “vital interests”
in Sudan or, for that matter, traditionally construed “national
interests” that would lead to any kind of action whatsoever in
support of the people of Darfur. Indeed, the problem runs the other way,
because of an apparent intelligence-community fascination with the supposed
cooperation from the Sudanese government on intelligence matters. China,
meanwhile, which buys 80 percent of Sudanese oil exports, has been
outspoken in defense of the “sovereignty” of Sudan. Insofar as
the U.S. government has a broad range of important issues with China,
Darfur has a lot of competition for a priority slot among them.
Illustration by Taylor Jones for the Hoover Digest.
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In short, one could easily walk away, or avert
one’s gaze, and leave the fate of a couple of million distant people
to themselves. Except that that is not the opinion Americans express on the
subject.
First, they do indeed regard genocide in Darfur as
their business, not an “internal affair” of Sudan into which we
should not meddle. Sixty-two percent of Americans rate dealing with a
humanitarian crisis such as genocide a top priority (19 percent) or a high
one (43 percent), whereas only 14 percent call it a low priority or no
priority at all. (Twenty percent rate it as medium.) Fifty-nine percent of
adults and 65 percent of voters surveyed say they have heard a lot or some
about the situation in Darfur. The realpolitik argument is a loser:
sixty-three percent support “freezing assets of Sudanese leaders even
if they occasionally provide information to the United States on Al-Qaeda
activity.” Fifty-four percent would ban tankers carrying Sudanese oil
from U.S. ports.
The survey asked about a cruise-missile attack to take
down the Sudanese air force, and the answer was no, 59 to 32 percent. But
that’s not a result that indicates only an arm’s length
willingness to respond to the crisis in Darfur: by 50 to 44 percent,
respondents supported “putting U.S. troops on the ground in Darfur,
as a small part of an international peacekeeping force.” And when
Americans are asked whether they would support sending 10,000 U.S. soldiers
to Sudan on an “aggressive peacekeeping mission that may cost more
than 100 U.S. lives” if that’s the only way to halt the
violence, what’s astounding is not the 58 percent who said they would
oppose such unilateral action but the 37 percent who said they would
support it.
Of the 44 percent who oppose U.S. participation in a
multilateral peacekeeping mission, 24 percent say they are strongly as
opposed to somewhat against it. Let’s take that 24 percent as a proxy
for the percentage of Americans who are “already against the next
war.” And then let’s look at that 37 percent who would support
unilateral military action: it looks as if the percentage of those who are
already in favor of the next war is higher, at least if that’s the
only thing that will stop genocide.
This essay appeared in the Washington Times on February 6,
2007.
Copublished by Rowman & Littlefield and the Hoover
Press is Uncertain Shield: The U.S. Intelligence System in the Throes of
Reform, by Richard A. Posner. To order, call 800.462.6420 or visit
www.rowmanlittlefield.com.
Tod Lindberg is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He is editor of Policy Review, Hoover's Washington, D.C.–based journal. He is author of The Political Teachings of Jesus, a philosophical analysis of Jesus’ teaching about worldly affairs (HarperOne). He is a contributing editor to the Weekly Standard and is frequently heard as an analyst on National Public Radio. He is editor of Beyond Paradise and Power: Europe, America and the Future of a Troubled Partnership (Routledge) and coeditor (with Derek Chollet and David Shorr) of Bridging the Foreign Policy Divide (Routledge). Lindberg’s areas of research interest are political theory, international relations, national security policy, and American politics. He is general editor (with Peter Berkowitz) of the book series Hoover Studies in Politics, Economics, and Society, published in association with Rowman and Littlefield. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
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