| Whether
to Be Loved or Feared
By
Mark Engler, AlterNet
On this Fourth of July the news,
simply put, is that the world hates
us. Less than two years ago, following
the attacks of 9/11, outpourings of
sympathy for the Untied States flowed
from around the globe. Yet those in
power in Washington have swiftly
converted that goodwill into distrust
and contempt.
Poll
results released by the Pew Research
Center in the first week of June
verified the fears that critics of
President Bush's military adventurism
voiced all along.
"Anti-Americanism has deepened,
but it has also widened," said
Pew director Andrew Kohut. Not only
has negative sentiment about our
country intensified in places like
Turkey, Indonesia, and the Middle
East, "you now find it in the far
reaches of Africa ... People see
America as a real threat."
Among
our traditional allies, 85 percent of
the French and 70 percent of Germans,
Spanish, Australians, South Koreans
and Canadians feel that the U.S. does
not take the interests of other
countries into consideration.
That
this qualifies as a new low for
American diplomacy is hard to dispute.
But another question remains: Does it
really matter? Given the United
States' overwhelming military might,
what difference do opinion polls make?
Global
power is not premised on a taste test,
nor, as Bush himself put it, a
"focus group." Some
nationalists may feel content with the
idea that, confronted with
Machiavelli's famous question
concerning "whether it is better
to be loved than feared or feared than
loved," our President simply
opted for the latter.
There
are reasons why this view is
short-sighted, however, and why
patriotism must be founded on
different premises.
At a
minimum, most people recognize that
global resentment threatens our
safety. Looking at the world and
asking, "Why do they hate
us?" does little good if the next
question is "Who cares what they
think?" Alienating our allies
precludes the type of cooperative
police work needed to track down
terrorists. And while our investments
in tanks and missiles may intimidate
rival states, they do little to quell
fanaticism.
Yet
this self-interested concern for our
own security produces only the most
limited, the most fearful reason for
why the people of the United States
should pay attention to world opinion.
It should not be too much to hope that
a regard for the views of others can
grow from a sense of fellowship and
solidarity, more than our fear of
attack from abroad.
Aren't
we against terrorism everywhere? Isn't
the peace that we seek a global one?
If the events of 9/11 do not inspire a
sense of sympathy for those in the
world who are regularly confronted
with their vulnerability, then we have
failed to absorb a vital lesson.
Maybe
it is moralistic to hope for this type
of solidarity. Maybe such sentiments
have no place in diplomatic affairs.
But this is not the point of
contention in current U. S. foreign
policy. The peculiar fact is that on
today's world stage, everyone claims
to stand in the interest of the world
community, to act on behalf of the
poor.
President
Bush, for example, despite
protestations to the contrary, seems
to want to be loved. The White House's
vision of the world is highly
moralistic. Most fundamentally, it
invokes the idea of freedom to justify
its actions. In a New York Times op-ed
written for the anniversary of
September 11th, the President
announced that "securing
freedom's triumph" is
"America's great mission."
Freedom is what separates us from the
"evil-doers." It demands
that we "liberate" foreign
nations.
There
is no need to speculate about what
this freedom will entail. A very
particular view of the concept resides
openly within the rhetoric. There is
"a single sustainable model for
national success," announced the
Bush Administration's National
Security Strategy. It requires
"free enterprise" and
"free trade" in "every
corner of the world."
"If
you can make something that others
value," the White House says,
"you should be able to sell it to
them. If others make something that
you value, you should be able to buy
it. This is real freedom."
Autonomy
and self-determination – or the
freedom to dissent that is protected
by our first Amendment – appear to
lie outside this "single
model," outside of "real
freedom." European peoples are
not free to decide, as a precautionary
measure, to instate a ban on
genetically modified foods. Rather,
the U.S. upholds the freedom of
agribusiness to access foreign
markets. (In this case, another of
Bush's moral arguments contends that
Europe stands guilty of "hinder[ing]
the great cause of ending hunger in
Africa," a cause that CEOs
apparently hold dear.)
The
type of freedom offered by military
"liberation" can also prove
circumscribed. The media watchdogs at
Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting
noted a March 19 slip by Tom Brokaw,
in which the NBC anchor voiced a
sentiment that lies only slightly
beneath the surface of Washington's
neoconservative foreign policy:
"We don't want to destroy the
infrastructure of Iraq," he said,
"because in a few days we're
gonna own that country."
International
public opinion puts the lie to our
President's do-good crusade. Those who
make up the majority of the world say,
“No, we don’t want that.” They
tell the White House to stop doing
them any favors. They assert that real
freedom does not permit imperial
ambition.
There
is also a hopeful message, though; it
suggests that perhaps they do not hate
us after all. When asked to
distinguish between the American
people and the government, large
majorities in France, Germany, Britain
and Italy held a favorable view of the
American people. Elsewhere, too – in
Indonesia, Morocco, Pakistan, Nigeria
– those who spoke negatively of our
country referred to the government
holding power in Washington, rather
than its citizens.
Rejecting
the "liberation" of
pre-emptive strike and the
"freedom" of corporate
expansion should not mean shrinking
into isolationism. Americans are
inextricably linked to those who speak
through opinion polls and
international protest. Their
distinction, between our people and
our government, should guide a moral
vision for the world. And it should
form the basis of our patriotism.
Mark
Engler, a writer based in New York
City, is a former analyst with the
Arias Foundation for Peace and Human
Progress in San José, Costa Rica. He
can be reached via the website
www.DemocracyUprising.com. Research
assistance for this article provided
by Katie Griffiths
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