Posted: 06 Mar 2014 12:11 PM PST
The international community looked into Putin's eyes and
blinked. Multilateralism has failed as badly as it did in the days of the
League of Nations, but then again it never actually worked.
The
international order that everyone pretends is a real force in world affairs
is really the United States and a few partners doing all the work and letting
the diplomats and bureaucrats of the world pretend that they matter. Without
America, the United Nations would be just as useless as the League of
Nations. With America, the United Nations is only a deterrent when the United
States puts its foot down and the rest of the world doesn't get in the way.
It has become fashionable to denounce the United States as a rogue state. A
military intervention, even with the backing of its Western allies, but
outside the framework of the organizations of the international order, was
deemed unilateralism and cowboy diplomacy.
And then Obama rode in on a three-speed bike and won a Nobel Peace Prize for
his commitment to doing nothing.
The multilateral system is helpless in the face of aggression. That is as
true today as it was eighty years ago. International agreements are worthless
without steel and lead behind them. The United Nations is incapable of acting
when one of its more powerful members is the aggressor or the aggressor's
patron, the foreign policy experts of the left crank out editorials
explaining why we can't do anything about Afghanistan, North Korea, Syria or
Ukraine and the Secretary of State explains that strength is weakness and weakness
is strength.
International law couldn't stop Hitler. It couldn't stop Japan. It took the
United States to do all that. The foreign policy experts will deny it, the
editorials will decry it and the Common Core textbooks will refuse to print
it; but it takes a rogue nation to stop a rogue state.
England and France's diplomatic outreach to Nazi Germany led to the seizure
of the Rhineland, the annexations of Austria and a portion of Czechoslovakia,
followed by the invasions of Czechoslovakia and Poland. American diplomacy
and sanctions on Japan led to Pearl Harbor. The only time that the United
Nations proved to be of any use was during the Korean War and that was before
its doors were thrown open to an army of Third World dictatorships for sale
to the highest bidder.
The issue isn't whether the United States should intervene in Ukraine, but
whether it should have the option to do something more meaningful than draw
faint red lines and threaten worthless sanctions. Every mob throwing things
at soldiers and police isn't necessarily composed of the good guys just
because they have photogenic protesters and colorful flags.
Our instinct to automatically support the underdog is just another dangerous
figment of the multilateral mindset.
The United States has unselectively adopted the human rights agenda of the
internationalists and allowed our foreign affairs priorities to be curated by
the diplomats of the left who know exactly whom to denounce and what not to
do about it. UN Ambassador Samantha Power, wearing a bitter frown, agonizing
over the woes of the world, is the face of our senseless and useless
diplomacy that forces us to play the moral scold without being able to back
it up.
American foreign policy has become indistinguishable from the United Nations
agenda and just as impotent, fixated on the recommendations of human rights
committees instead of national interests, incapable of addressing historical
alliances, and unable to build its responses around anything except the same
Powerian empty shriek of self-righteous human rights outrage.
Obama's America has turned a cold impartial face to its allies, aspiring
instead to become the vessel of international organizations while assigning
its morality to an international committee. American foreign policy is under
international management and that transfers its decision process from D.C. to
an international network of committees incapable of doing anything except
generating worthless reports and denouncing Israel
The United States was the ghost in the machine of the United Nations, but now
that the United States is the United Nations, the United States has become
the puppet of a puppet.
The weakness of multilateral diplomacy is that it strives to negotiate
accommodations to the clashes of the moment without reference to past history
or the trajectory of future conquests. This was a weakness that Hitler
understood and exploited, reducing the issue to the current status of the
Sudetenland or the Rhineland, rather than to past and future war aims. It was
only when the Allies broke out of the diplomatic mindset of considering every
Hitlerian conquest individually and debating the merits of defending
Czechoslovakia, rather than anticipating the conquest of Poland, that real
resistance to the Nazi war machine finally began.
Unfortunately
the Allies failed to learn from history and accepted Stalin's piecemeal
takeovers at face value only waking up after much of the world had fallen
under the Red Flag. It was President Eisenhower’s "Domino Theory"
that assigned a value to each conquest not based on its own status, but its
place in a chain of conquests in a struggle for regional dominance.
Sarah Palin understood in 2008 what the school of foreign policy
"realists" did not, that Georgia was not significant in isolation
but as a prerequisite to the invasion of Ukraine and likewise Ukraine should
be understood in the context of an imperial territorial ambition that
stretches far beyond its borders.
Whether or not we choose to oppose that ambition we should understand it on
its own terms, rather than the media's obsession with photogenic revolutions,
the agenda of foreign policy experts seeking to turn America into a powerless
multilateral shell and a liberal establishment that treats every
international event as an opportunity to plump the praises of the
inexperienced and incompetent leader that they foisted on the country with
the equivalent of an American Idol audition.
The media gets behind anyone throwing rocks or Molotov cocktails in front of
a camera lens as long as his target isn’t an authoritarian government of the
left. Foreign policy experts who insisted that Putin wouldn’t go this far,
now insist that he won’t go any farther. And the liberal establishment would
cheer Obama’s leadership while an asteroid was colliding with the planet.
The United States should have a strong military, not so that it can use it,
but so that it won’t need to use it. Military budget cuts send the message
that we won't intervene in international conflicts which makes it more likely
that our enemies will start international conflicts and that some of those
conflicts will drag us in anyway no matter how much of the fleet we mothball
and how many transsexual dance troupes and gay weddings we host on what used
to be the army bases of a world power.
Military weakness invites war, whether it was the British trying to face down
Hitler with no bullets or Obama announcing another round of drastic defense
cuts just before Putin rolled into Ukraine.
Diplomacy is only the art of saying "Nice doggie" until you find
the stick if you were stupid enough to throw away the big stick in the first
place. And then you had better hope that you are dealing with a very stupid
dog that won't gnaw your arm off before you can get at that stick.
The multilateralists believe that cutting the military will keep America from
acting unilaterally and then their spokesmen are left with nothing to do
except issue condemnations and draw red lines in the name of what used to be
a world power. Human rights committee nuts like Samantha Power and anti-war
boomers who never grew up like John Kerry end up causing more wars by
combining empty rhetoric and inaction than they would if they either shut up
or actually did something about it.
The United States should have clear commitments and agreements that it keeps,
rather than randomly butting into every single conflict and human rights
violation on the planet. Its leaders should decide whether they really are
serious about Syria or Ukraine or any other place on earth that they issue
press releases about and keep quiet about them if they are not.
And if they are serious, they should be ready to act with the same
decisiveness that Vladimir Putin showed.
Despite
all the accumulated multilateral rubbish in the corner, history isn't made by
nations defending international law, but acting on their own imperatives.
Only a rogue nation that isn't bound by the chains of multilateralism can
take the unilateral action necessary to stop a rogue state.
The world isn't a single state, there is no law that applies to every
country, no independent government and no world police. There is only a wild
frontier and a cowboy who rides into town now and then with a gun at his side
and a law made up of his own moral codes in his heart. The entire structure
of international law looks neat when written on a page, but isn't worth a
single bullet in his gun.
We've seen how it works when the cowboy puts on a three piece suit, locks up
his gun in a safe controlled by a committee and spends all his time attending
committee meetings. The committee gives him awards, but outside the committee
hall there are the screams of men and women being killed and when a man with
a gun comes for him, throwing the award at his head doesn't help.
American cowboy diplomacy is the only defense that the civilized world has
against commissar diplomacy, cossack diplomacy and caliphate diplomacy and
that is something that more of the three piece suit diplomats who claim to
care about human rights and weak nations ought to understand and respect
that.
The United States can't protect anyone when it's functioning as a cog in the
multilateral system. To do something meaningful, it has to go rogue.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment