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Is Kerry
Isolationist?
James Holmes
Is Senator John Kerry
an isolationist? Writing in the Washington Post,
Robert Kagan of the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace suggested that Senator Kerry might be the agent of
an isolationist backlash against the unilateralism of
President George W. Bush. "Some Europeans have been
quietly worrying" about that prospect, reported Kagan.
"After hearing Kerry's speech" at last month's
Democratic National Convention, "they may worry a bit
more."
Senator Kerry's
address certainly lent itself to such interpretations.
In Boston and on the stump since then, he has maintained
that the United States, "throughout all of our history,"
has lived up to a "standard," namely that the Republic
"never goes to war because we want to, we only go to war
because we have to." Alluding to Iraq, he has vowed to
return to that standard if elected president.
Leave aside the
Democratic contender's dubious reading of U.S. history.
Kerry now faces a quandary of his own making. President
Bush didn't go against the wishes of the electorate when
he ordered the invasion of Iraq; he took the nation to
war with strong public support and the formal approval
of Congress. To lay claim to foreign-policy leadership,
Kerry somehow needs to absolve voters – voters whose
favor he needs to win the White House – of supporting
Operation Iraqi Freedom and the larger Bush Doctrine.
The isolationists of
the 1930s faced a similar quandary. Like Kerry today,
they insisted that the United States should go to war
only for reasons of self-interest, narrowly construed.
Since America faced no obvious threat in the 1930s, its
proper policy was to insulate itself as best it could
from foreign political entanglements.
The trouble for
isolationists was that their argument applied equally to
the United States of 1914-17, which had entered World
War I on a wave of public support. Thus the challenge
for them was to explain why the American electorate had
supported entry into world war against its obvious – to
isolationists – interest in non-entanglement. In short,
they crafted a version of U.S. history compatible with
isolationist principles.
Senator George Norris
and Senator William Borah accused British propaganda of
duping America into war on false moral pretenses. When
that argument went nowhere, the Wilson Administration
fell under scrutiny. But the Senate erupted when Senator
Gerald Nye accused President Woodrow Wilson and his
Secretary of State, Robert Lansing, of having
"falsified," or lied about their knowledge of secret
pacts among the Allies.
The ensuing furor
almost put an end to Senator Nye's inquiry into the
causes of World War I. It did end the assault on the
reputation of the former president. Senator Carter
Wilson, to name one example among many, allowed that
"any man who would asperse the integrity and veracity of
Woodrow Wilson is a coward" and that the charges leveled
against Wilson were "not only malicious but positively
mendacious."
The isolationists
finally gained traction with what the historian Charles
Beard called "the devil theory of war," namely the
notion that political phenomena, including war, were
ultimately traceable to economic causes. A mainstay of
isolationist thought, the devil theory found receptive
audiences both among liberal and radical isolationists
resentful of Eastern economic elites and among a
populace hit hard by the Great Depression.
For the
conspiratorially-minded, munitions makers were the
archfiends. Unlike "War Hawks," the "Slave Power," and
other factions that had openly prodded the Republic into
past wars, the sinister interests depicted by
isolationists operated in secret, placing self-interest
above patriotism. An influential 1934 article in Fortune
magazine accused arms firms of using their political
influence to prolong wars and disturb world peace for
private gain.
While the Fortune
article focused almost exclusively on European firms
such as Krupp and Vickers-Armstrong, it generated an
outcry at home that found voice in muckraking tomes such
as F. C. Hanighen's "Merchants of Death." Alarmed at the
influence of munitions makers and at mounting tensions
in East Asia, pacifist and veterans' groups pressured
Senator Nye to introduce a resolution calling on the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee to investigate the
arms industry.
Taking the profit
motive out of war was the chief concern of these groups
and of the Nye Committee created at their behest. After
two years of hearings, the committee found, for
instance, that firms such as the Electric Boat Company
had conspired to dominate the world market for submarine
construction. Its report proclaimed that it was "against
the peace of the world for selfishly interested
organizations to be left free to goad and frighten
nations into military activity."
The Nye Committee
didn't stop at finding fault. It proposed constitutional
amendments to "permit the commandeering of plants,
goods, and industrial equipment for public use in war,
without the determination of 'fair compensation' in the
present way," and empower Congress to levy surtaxes on
war profits as lawmakers saw fit. Indeed, the munitions
industry would face de facto nationalization.
The committee thus
gave sustenance to isolationist claims that Americans
had been beguiled into war in 1917 against their own
interests.
This history lesson
shows just how inapt the comparison between John Kerry
and the 1930s' isolationists really is. There are some
superficial similarities. Senator Kerry has accused
President Bush of misleading America into war, toyed
with the notion that U.S. contractors – Halliburton,
anyone? – were the impetus behind the decision to invade
Iraq, and sketched a highly restrictive doctrine for
future military operations.
So Senator Kerry has
flirted with a modern equivalent to Charles Beard's
“devil theory.” Still, the differences between his
vision of American foreign policy and that of Nye & Co.
are even starker. Kerry’s forceful advocacy of
multilateralism and his calls to rebuild America's
military alliances would've discomfited true
isolationists, as would the increasingly hawkish tone of
his campaign pronouncements.
John Kerry is
arguably erratic on foreign and defense policy. You can
quibble with him for espousing an ahistorical and overly
narrow view of the national interest. But he's no
isolationist.
James Holmes is a
senior research associate at the University of Georgia
Center for International Trade and Security.
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