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American As Global Hegemon
Robert Kagan
The
United States is neither an empire nor should it become
one. Rather-this is no simple semantic distinction-it is
the most successful global hegemon, the most successful
global power in history.
Niall Ferguson and I share enormous common ground in
looking at America's role in the world. America does
have the critical role to play in maintaining
world order, both for its own interests and those of
humanity. The United States is, and has been for quite
some time, the sole pillar upholding a liberal world
order that is conducive to the principles we believe in,
as well as our own basic interests.
On the other hand, I am acutely aware of the problems
that the United States has had in playing that role, the
inconstancy of our foreign policy, our short attention
span, and the inefficiency of the way we have conducted
our foreign policy. My adversaries are the same as those
of Mr. Ferguson: those Americans who would shirk or deny
the existence of this responsibility; those who are, in
fact, hostile to American power and suspicious of
American influence; those on both left and
right, who still cling to a myth about America at the
Founding. This is the notion that the United States had
no interest in foreign involvement, that America was a
country that was essentially
isolationist.
In
truth, Americans have an imperial past. Americans were
very enthusiastic imperialists before they became
Americans. As members of the British Empire, the leading
men and women of the colonies were advocates of the
British Empire. Benjamin Franklin, for example, hoped
that the seat of the empire would eventually move from
Great Britain to the American continent.
Now, the Revolution itself was an anti-imperial act, but
if you look at the behavior of the United States in its
early years, I would say that the best case for America
having been an empire occurs in those years, in the
tremendous acquisition of territory, some by purchase,
mostly by force or persuasion or blackmail. America
moved across the continent in fairly classic imperial
fashion. Here you have a similarity with Rome, which
also made those whom it conquered citizens.
The United States, when it was a slave republic, when it
was in fact dominated, to a very large extent by slave
interests, very much acted as an imperial power. It was
the goal of the slave states to expand in imperial
fashion so that they might enslave other peoples in
other
territories. The phrase "manifest destiny" arises in
this context. It was a declaration by the slave-owning
part of the nation that the manifest destiny was, in
fact, to create a Western Empire that would be dominated
by slavery.
As the United States moved through the 19th century and
into to the 20th, it became less imperialist, not more
imperialist. Here the key event seems to be the Civil
War, which had as a foreign policy consequence the
turning away from the imperialist idea.
1898 was not an imperialist upsurge. The acquisition of
the Philippines was incidental to what was then believed
to be the liberation of Cuba. The men who are commonly
called imperialists today were not, in fact,
imperialists. What they were were classic Americans
believing that the
expansion of American power was a good thing for America
and for the world. Then as now, this remains the essence
of American foreign policy.
The irony is that as American imperialism diminished,
American power grew. There is, of course, enormous
common ground between a very powerful country and an
imperial country. But the fact that America has
garrisons overseas, that it exercises enormous influence
in the world,
that it exports its culture-none of this makes it an
imperial power. There is a difference between a
great power-even the world's greatest power-and a
country that seeks to exercise dominion over others,
which is what the true definition of empire is.
The expansion of the free market does not constitute
imperialism-unless you're a Marxist. America is not an
empire even though it has exercised more influence, in
some respects, than has any empire. Certainly, it has
always been the American tendency to say that anyplace
where the
United States intervened was soon to be departed. In
many cases, this has led to great difficulties and
failures. But, ultimately, if one examines the great
successes of American foreign policy, the fact that it
has always been known that America did not intend to
exercise
imperial control was the reason that America's rising
hegemony in the world was so widely accepted and so
little feared. The rest of the world knows, even today,
that America is not a grasping and ambitious country in
the way that empires have been.
It is the genius of American power, of our foreign
policy and our economic policy, that we have been able
to follow what I call the Hyman Roth principle, who was
a character in the Godfather movies. He always made
money for his partners-as has America. It did not turn
countries
that it got involved, intervened and associated with
into deserts. Rather, it enriched them. America's
relationship with even the weak nations that it is
involved with is one of continuing voluntary
association. Voluntary association, not empire, has been
and will
continue to be the basis for what is, on balance, a very
successful foreign policy.
I believe that Mr. Ferguson and other friends who use
the term "empire" are hopeful that by using this term
they can get Americans to understand and accept their
responsibilities more effectively.
But in any real sense, does that seem to be plausible?
Does anyone think that the American people would rally
behind the banner of empire? You might as well tell the
Americans that they should be the Middle Kingdom as to
tell them that they should be an empire. And if you add
to that the effect on the rest of the world of declaring
the United States wrongly an empire, I think it would be
catastrophic, in addition to being wrong.
The age of empire is past. Neither the American people
nor the rest of the world accept empire as the purpose
of foreign policy. And this evasion-this use of
"empire"-this effort to find an easy answer to the
problems that we face needs to be avoided. The truth is
we must
continue to engage in the difficult task of constantly
arguing the case for why the United States must remain
engaged in the world, why it must have more constancy.
We cannot simply declare that we are an empire and
therefore it flows mechanically. We must all continue to
work to make our fellow Americans understand the
important role that the United States has to play. And
we also have the task of convincing the rest of the
world that America's actions are not purely selfish but
are in the interests of many others who share its views.
Robert Kagan is Senior Associate at the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace. His most recent book
is Of
Paradise and Power: America and Europe in the New World
Order (Knopf, 2003). This essay is adapted from remarks
given at the American Enterprise Institute on 17
July 2003, sponsored by the New Atlantic Initiative.
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