Fukuyama - After Neoconservatism

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Sueven
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Fukuyama - After Neoconservatism

Post by Sueven »

After Neoconservatism

This was published a few days back. Fukuyama is an absolutely brilliant dude, and this is a pretty interesting look at the world.

A few key claims:
The so-called Bush Doctrine that set the framework for the administration's first term is now in shambles. The doctrine (elaborated, among other places, in the 2002 National Security Strategy of the United States) argued that, in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, America would have to launch periodic preventive wars to defend itself against rogue states and terrorists with weapons of mass destruction; that it would do this alone, if necessary; and that it would work to democratize the greater Middle East as a long-term solution to the terrorist problem. But successful pre-emption depends on the ability to predict the future accurately and on good intelligence, which was not forthcoming, while America's perceived unilateralism has isolated it as never before. It is not surprising that in its second term, the administration has been distancing itself from these policies and is in the process of rewriting the National Security Strategy document.
How did the neoconservatives end up overreaching to such an extent that they risk undermining their own goals? The Bush administration's first-term foreign policy did not flow ineluctably from the views of earlier generations of people who considered themselves neoconservatives, since those views were themselves complex and subject to differing interpretations. Four common principles or threads ran through much of this thought up through the end of the cold war: a concern with democracy, human rights and, more generally, the internal politics of states; a belief that American power can be used for moral purposes; a skepticism about the ability of international law and institutions to solve serious security problems; and finally, a view that ambitious social engineering often leads to unexpected consequences and thereby undermines its own ends.

The problem was that two of these principles were in potential collision. The skeptical stance toward ambitious social engineering — which in earlier years had been applied mostly to domestic policies like affirmative action, busing and welfare — suggested a cautious approach toward remaking the world and an awareness that ambitious initiatives always have unanticipated consequences. The belief in the potential moral uses of American power, on the other hand, implied that American activism could reshape the structure of global politics. By the time of the Iraq war, the belief in the transformational uses of power had prevailed over the doubts about social engineering.
I have numerous affiliations with the different strands of the neoconservative movement. I was a student of Strauss's protégé Allan Bloom, who wrote the bestseller "The Closing of the American Mind"; worked at Rand and with Wohlstetter on Persian Gulf issues; and worked also on two occasions for Wolfowitz. Many people have also interpreted my book "The End of History and the Last Man" (1992) as a neoconservative tract, one that argued in favor of the view that there is a universal hunger for liberty in all people that will inevitably lead them to liberal democracy, and that we are living in the midst of an accelerating, transnational movement in favor of that liberal democracy. This is a misreading of the argument. "The End of History" is in the end an argument about modernization. What is initially universal is not the desire for liberal democracy but rather the desire to live in a modern — that is, technologically advanced and prosperous — society, which, if satisfied, tends to drive demands for political participation. Liberal democracy is one of the byproducts of this modernization process, something that becomes a universal aspiration only in the course of historical time.

"The End of History," in other words, presented a kind of Marxist argument for the existence of a long-term process of social evolution, but one that terminates in liberal democracy rather than communism. In the formulation of the scholar Ken Jowitt, the neoconservative position articulated by people like Kristol and Kagan was, by contrast, Leninist; they believed that history can be pushed along with the right application of power and will. Leninism was a tragedy in its Bolshevik version, and it has returned as farce when practiced by the United States. Neoconservatism, as both a political symbol and a body of thought, has evolved into something I can no longer support.
There were other reasons as well why the world did not accept American benevolent hegemony. In the first place, it was premised on American exceptionalism, the idea that America could use its power in instances where others could not because it was more virtuous than other countries. The doctrine of pre-emption against terrorist threats contained in the 2002 National Security Strategy was one that could not safely be generalized through the international system; America would be the first country to object if Russia, China, India or France declared a similar right of unilateral action. The United States was seeking to pass judgment on others while being unwilling to have its own conduct questioned in places like the International Criminal Court.
The Bush administration has been walking — indeed, sprinting — away from the legacy of its first term, as evidenced by the cautious multilateral approach it has taken toward the nuclear programs of Iran and North Korea. Condoleezza Rice gave a serious speech in January about "transformational diplomacy" and has begun an effort to reorganize the nonmilitary side of the foreign-policy establishment, and the National Security Strategy document is being rewritten. All of these are welcome changes, but the legacy of the Bush first-term foreign policy and its neoconservative supporters has been so polarizing that it is going to be hard to have a reasoned debate about how to appropriately balance American ideals and interests in the coming years. The reaction against a flawed policy can be as damaging as the policy itself, and such a reaction is an indulgence we cannot afford, given the critical moment we have arrived at in global politics.
Brilliant shit. I'm posting this primarily in the hope that a few people will read it. If anyone wants to talk about it, even better.
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Post by Ashur »

The way the cold war ended shaped the thinking of supporters of the Iraq war, including younger neoconservatives like William Kristol and Robert Kagan, in two ways. First, it seems to have created an expectation that all totalitarian regimes were hollow at the core and would crumble with a small push from outside. The model for this was Romania under the Ceausescus: once the wicked witch was dead, the munchkins would rise up and start singing joyously about their liberation. As Kristol and Kagan put it in their 2000 book "Present Dangers": "To many the idea of America using its power to promote changes of regime in nations ruled by dictators rings of utopianism. But in fact, it is eminently realistic. There is something perverse in declaring the impossibility of promoting democratic change abroad in light of the record of the past three decades."
Very interesting read indeed, thanks Sueven.
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Post by vn_Tanc »

That's good shit.

I read some of Kristol and Kagan's stuff in the Iraq war and it was chilling.

(That's right. I sought out and paid for Neoconservative literature. Then I read it to better understand, and expose myself to, a political dogma I don't instincticely subscribe to. And after all that I'm still a leftie).
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Post by Voronwë »

that was really, really interesting. very cool
There were other reasons as well why the world did not accept American benevolent hegemony. In the first place, it was premised on American exceptionalism, the idea that America could use its power in instances where others could not because it was more virtuous than other countries. . . . America would be the first country to object if Russia, China, India or France declared a similar right of unilateral action.
very true, and probably frames the real reason Russia, Germany, china, etc had an issue with our war in Iraq, that many of us probably didnt consider.
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Post by Sirton »

Very good article to read I agree with much and disagree with little. The points Id like to examine are:
The worst legacy that could come from the Iraq war would be an anti-neoconservative backlash that coupled a sharp turn toward isolation with a cynical realist policy aligning the United States with friendly authoritarians.
I agree 100% with this statement there is a possible backlash that makes us not adress situation with say iran the right way. Isolation=worse option atm.

We need in the first instance to understand that promoting democracy and modernization in the Middle East is not a solution to the problem of jihadist terrorism; in all likelihood it will make the short-term problem worse, as we have seen in the case of the Palestinian election bringing Hamas to power. Radical Islamism is a byproduct of modernization itself, arising from the loss of identity that accompanies the transition to a modern, pluralist society. It is no accident that so many recent terrorists, from Sept. 11's Mohamed Atta to the murderer of the Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh to the London subway bombers, were radicalized in democratic Europe and intimately familiar with all of democracy's blessings. More democracy will mean more alienation, radicalization and — yes, unfortunately — terrorism.
Peace might emerge, sometime down the road, from a Palestine run by a formerly radical terrorist group that had been forced to deal with the realities of governing.
I believe the short term will be worse for upto 10 years, but I also think that its time the religious fanatics in the middle east need to get out of the middle ages and that will mainly be done by moderate Islam not by the West. Hopefully if the West has to do it then there will be mass death.

By definition, outsiders can't "impose" ... statement)

This is false and true. In general its true, but then look at WWII.....Japan was just as fanatic as Islam there Emperor was God...we were smart to keep him in power but as a puppet. Maybe this is something simialr we should institute in the middle east except the leaders are mainly the main enemy were as in Japan it was there military. Germany and Much of Europe are reasons why this is false also, most of these places never knew much about democracy.....but that was a major do or die war..this isnt at that point atm and if it isn't then the statment can be true. But my belief is it will be in 25-200 years at the trends we are going.
The Bush administration has been walking — indeed, sprinting — away from the legacy of its first term, as evidenced by the cautious multilateral approach it has taken toward the nuclear programs of Iran and North Korea.
They were taking multilateral approaches to these other situations in the 1st term. Hense why there hasn't been a war there between them and us.

Iraq had enough reasons to use the other layered approaches......The UN was useless in the situation as being 12years and no accountability in WMDs or its resolutions. NATO wasn't willing; therefore, with the excuses and the public opinion after 9/11 happened it was possible and to my opinion should of been done in 1992 at the first violations to the resolutions. Maybe it was the wrong approach maybe it was the right approach...I do not think its possible to know for approximately 20years.

ATM I do not think democracy is compatable with Islam, but I think its a worthy effort to try to get them out of the middle ages. Because what is the alternative??????????

To keep on letting them grow at the rate of 5xthere number in 50years?

That means the United States will be the Islamic States in 100-200 years...Jews will be dead...Most of you that think like on this Board will be dead...only a billion Christians will be left if that, because it is seen they can live together with limited but sometimes genocidal violence.

The fanatics have a mass process of Islam dominating the World as we know it and they have been extremely successful the past 50 years..And I agree with the article that Europe will be the next major battle ground if we fail in the middle east...as Bush said this war will run through many administrations other than his it is a imbetween of the Cold War and WWII...since actual action is taken, but not a all out brawl.

http://www.foreignaffairs.org/19960901f ... broad.html

http://www.jannah.org/popstatistics/muslimpopworld.html

http://geography.about.com/library/cia/blcfrance.htm

Personally I think its time now that we beat them out of the middle ages into the modern world....They must be able to live in it or die to it...or the vice versa will happen in 50-200years if we turn our backs and let them continually supress other thoughts and continaually do mass genocide to others in there domain. There domain is continually growing.
CRY HAVOC...........AND LET SLIP THE DOGS OF WAR!!!!!
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