The Hell of Good Intentions
Justin Vaïsse, Le Monde, April 18, 2004
From April 5-11,1968, 356 American soldiers were killed in Vietnam. During
the same week in 2004, 65 American soldiers were killed in simultaneous Shi'a
and Sunni insurrections in Iraq. In February 1968, there were nearly 80 American
deaths per day in Vietnam, compared to a maximum of 8 deaths per day during
the last year in Iraq. All of which is to say that the problems in Iraq are
still far from reaching the level of the Vietnam quagmire.
But to compare is not to equate. The differences between the two conflicts
are numerous, but it is impossible not to find echoes of the Vietnam War
in the present situation. The same odor of unilateralism. The same protests
from foreign public opinion. The same original sin of exaggerating enemy
actions to gain Congressional authorization for war (the undoubtedly imaginary
Gulf of Tonkin aggression in Vietnam; the apparently imaginary possession
of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq). The same domino theory that postulated,
in the first case, that the loss of South Vietnam to communism would cause
a similar collapse among its neighbors, and, in the other, that the establishment
of democracy in Iraq would unleash a wave of freedom throughout the region.
The same logic of escalation whereby the appeal to reinforce American troops
does not seem to be accompanied by progress in getting the "locals" to take
charge of their own political and military affairs. The same notion that
it's necessary to destroy towns and villages in order to save them, or, to
update that aphorism, that the population must be subjugated in order to
be democratized.
Still more troubling is the familiar cocktail of optimism, good intentions,
and ethnocentric blindness that characterized both interventions. As Stanley
Hoffmann wrote during the Vietnam War (Gulliver's Troubles, or the Setting
of American Foreign Policy, 1968), "Americans, whose history is a success
story, have been brought to believe that the values they have drawn from
their own experience have a universal application. They refuse to accept
that these values are linked to the specific conditions that made American
success possible." Hoffmann also highlights the fantasy of consensus and
spontaneous harmony. Those conditions are considered so natural that "any
obstacles to happiness are certainly due to a villain" (e.g. the Vietcong,
the radical Shi'ite, the former Saddam partisans).
As a result of this endemic optimism, Americans never seem to accept that
people may, as in Vietnam or in Iraq, make the wrong choices. They may prefer
nationalism to democracy, sectarian chauvinism to real freedom. They may
decide to attack the soldiers that arrived as liberators or to kidnap the
NGO workers that are there to help them.
This pointless self-destructiveness deeply disturbs the American psyche.
The war in Iraq, originally conceived as eminently moral, marks even more
than September 11 the rediscovery of evil, of insoluble problems, and of
the inescapable immorality of compromise solutions. In short, it reveals
the peculiarly American incapacity, as Stanley Hoffman has also point out,
to comprehend the limits of politics and the historical experience and complexity
of foreign cultures.
This rediscovery could well manifest itself in the coming years as the end
of the confidence, even hubris, that has recently characterized American
foreign policy. That confidence, symbolized by the ascendance of the neoconservatives
and their allies, stemmed from three sources: the disintegration of the Soviet
Empire, the rapid economic growth of the 1990s, and the creation of a formidable
military machine that began with the Reagan defense buildup. Together, these
developments nourished an illusion of omnipotence.
A comparable bubble of confidence captures the American national mood at
the beginning of the 1960s. The United States felt powerful as a result of
its industrial prowess, it military and technological advances, and the economic
recipes of Keynesianism. The federal government felt it could accomplish
anything and everything: the promotion of civil rights, the eradication of
poverty, the containment of Communism, the defense and development of South
Vietnam. Vietnam burst that bubble.
Similarly, the Iraq intervention may well end up producing the reverse of
what its advocates sought: an image of American weakness and irresolution
that emboldens its enemies and a resurgence of the neo-isolationism that
characterized the 1970s. The result would be a surge in terrorist recruitment;
and yet greater difficulties for political reform in the Middle East.
One doesn't get to choose the dominant power in the international system,
and one influences it only rarely. France, a stakeholder in the world order
that is guaranteed by the United States, criticized the Iraq intervention,
as it did the Vietnam War. But France's prescience, if such it proves to
be, will not protect it from the consequences that would flow from an American
defeat. The weakening of the dominant power's hegemony would, as always,
entail the strengthening of hostile regional powers, the resumption of arms
races in trouble spots, and prolonged civil and regional chaos throughout
the world. European integration and multilateral cooperation are but a partial
response to these perils.
Thus, France must hope that Iraq, where its capacity to affect events is
limited, will not be a new Vietnam. Optimally, the experience in Iraq will
serve as a shot across the bow that alerts the United States to the necessity
of cooperation and consultation. American society has natural counterweights
to the extreme impulses of unilateralism and isolationism, but these take
time to produce their effects.
In the meantime, France must support the Iraqi political transition process
that France has long called for, particularly through its influence with
countries in the region. France must also maintain a close relationship with
a changing America. In so doing, it should confirm that French opposition
to intervention in Iraq represented the friendly advice of an ally and was
in no way the expression of a malevolence toward America. Such a stance would
be contrary to France's own long-term interests.
© Copyright 2004 Le Monde