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- 7iinc5 March 4. 2013
Come Home, America
By ELIZABETH COBBS HOFFMAN
EVERYONE talks about getting out of Iraq and Afghanistan. But what about Germany and
Japan?
The sequester — $85 billion this year in across-the-board budget cuts, about half of which will
come from the Pentagon — gives Americans an opportunity to discuss a question we've put off
too long: Why we are still fighting World War II?
Since 1947, when President Harry S. Truman set forth a policy to stop further Soviet expansion
and "support free peoples" who were "resisting subjugation by armed minorities or by outside
pressures," America has acted as the world's policeman.
For more than a century, Britain had "held the line" against aggression in Eurasia, but by World
War II it was broke. Only two years after the Allies met at Yalta to hammer out the postwar
order, London gave Washington five weeks' notice: It's your turn now. The Greek government
was battling partisans supplied by Communist Yugoslavia. Turkey was under pressure to allow
Soviet troops to patrol its waterways. Stalin was strong-arming governments from Finland to
Iran.
Some historians say Truman scared the American people into a broad, open-ended commitment
to world security. But Americans were already frightened: in 1947, 73 percent told Gallup that
they considered World War III likely.
From the Truman Doctrine emerged a strategy comprising multiple alliances: the Rio Pact of
1947 (Latin America), the NATO Treaty of 1949 (Canada and Northern and Western Europe),
the Anzus Treaty of 1951 (Australia and New Zealand) and the Seato Treaty of 1954 (Southeast
Asia). Seato ended in 1977, but the other treaties remain in force, as do collective-defense
agreements with Japan, South Korea and the Philippines. Meanwhile, we invented the practice of
foreign aid, beginning with the Marshall Plan.
It was a profound turn even from 1940, when Franklin D. Roosevelt won a third term pledging
not to plunge the United States into war. Isolationism has had a rich tradition, from
Washington's 1796 warning against foreign entanglements to the 1919 debate over the Treaty of
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Versailles, in which Henry Cabot Lodge argued, "The less we undertake to play the part of
umpire and thrust ourselves into European conflicts the better for the United States and for the
world."
World War II, and the relative impotence of the United Nations, convinced successive
administrations that America had to fill the breach, and we did so, with great success. The world
was far more secure in the second half of the 20th century than in the disastrous first half. The
percentage of the globe's population killed in conflicts between states fell in each decade after
the Truman Doctrine. America experienced more wars (Korea, Vietnam, the two Iraq wars,
Afghanistan) but the world, as a whole, experienced fewer.
We were not so much an empire — the empire decried by the scholar and veteran Andrew J.
Bacevich and celebrated by the conservative historian Niall Ferguson — as an umpire, one that
stood for equal access by nation-states to political and economic gains; peaceful arbitration of
international conflict; and transparency in trade and business.
But conditions have changed radically since the cold war. When the United States established
major bases in West Germany and Japan, they were considered dangerous renegades that needed
to be watched. Their reconstructed governments also desired protection, particularly from the
Soviet Union and China. NATO's first secretary general, Hastings Ismay, famously said the
alliance existed "to keep the Russians out, the Americans in, and the Germans down."
Today, our largest permanent bases are still in Germany and Japan, which are perfectly capable
of defending themselves and should be trusted to help their neighbors. It's time they foot more of
the bill or operate their own bases. China's authoritarian capitalism hasn't translated into
territorial aggression, while Russia no longer commands central and eastern Europe. That the
military brass still talk of maintaining the capacity to fight a two-front war — presumably on
land in Europe, and at sea in the Pacific — speaks to the irrational endurance of the Truman
Doctrine.
Our wars in the Middle East since 2001 doubled down on that costly, outdated doctrine. The
domino theory behind the Vietnam War revived under a new formulation: but for the American
umpire, the bad guys (Al Qaeda, Iran, North Korea) will win.
Despite his supporters' expectations, President Obama has followed a Middle East policy nearly
identical to his predecessor's. He took us out of Iraq, only to deepen our commitment to
Afghanistan, from which we just now pulling out. He rejected the most odious counterterrorism
techniques of George W. Bush's administration, but otherwise did not change basic policies. Mr.
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Obama's gestures toward multilateralism were not matched by a commensurate commitment
from many of our allies.
Cynics assert that the "military-industrial complex" Dwight D. Eisenhower presciently warned
against has primarily existed to enrich and empower a grasping, imperialist nation. But America
was prosperous long before it was a superpower; by 1890, decades before the two world wars, it
was already the world's largest and richest economy. We do not need a large military to be rich.
Quite the opposite: it drains our resources.
Realists contend that if we quit defending access to the world's natural resources — read, oil —
nobody else would. Really? It's not likely that the Europeans, who depend on energy imports far
more than the nation that owns Texas and Alaska would throw up their hands and bury their
heads in the sand. It's patronizing and naïve to think that America is the only truly "necessary"
country. Good leaders develop new leaders. The Libyan crisis showed that our allies can do a lot.
The United States can and should pressure Iran and North Korea over their nuclear programs. It
must help to reform and strengthen multilateral institutions like the United Nations, the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. It must champion the right of small nations,
including Israel, to "freedom from fear." But there are many ways of achieving these goals, and
they don't all involve more borrowing and spending.
Partisan debates that focus on shaving a percentage point off the Pentagon budget here or there
won't take us where we need to go. Both parties are stuck in a paradigm of costly international
activism while emerging powers like China, India, Brazil and Turkey are accumulating wealth
and raising productivity and living standards, as we did in the 19th century. The long-term
consequences are obvious.
America since 1945 has paid a price in blood, treasure and reputation. Umpires may be
necessary, but they are rarely popular and by definition can't win. Perhaps the other players will
step up only if we threaten to leave the field. Sharing the burden of security with our allies is
more than a fiscal necessity. It's the sine qua non of a return to global normalcy.
Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman, a professor ofAmericanforeign relations at San Diego State University. is the author. most recently.
of "American Umpire."
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