Just Wars and American Globalism
by Steve Farrell (Nevada)
"A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial
appearance of being right,” wrote Thomas Paine two centuries ago. Fortunately,
for a good portion of our history, America in its conduct with foreign nations,
though not without sin, provided relatively few moments of a conscience seared.
Yes, in so many ways, the United States, did things right, and she did so
without the madness of tradition or self justification, but as a reflection of
faith in settled moral principle.
American rightness in its attitude toward war sprung from her insular
posture. A posture which insured that war sallied forth not as offensive
assaults upon the weak, nor as Holy Crusades upon the less enlightened, but
only, as necessary, in self defense. It had to be so, because the cloak of
national solidarity shielded not Presidents, Congresses and Armies from the
charge of murder, when they inflicted death upon the blameless. “Thou shalt
not shed innocent blood” most all believed, was the charge of the Almighty
both to the individual and the state.
Of course, individuals, and states, could kill, without sin.. “Thou shalt
not kill,” was fittingly joined with “he that killeth any man, shall surely
be put to death,” and “every man's brother shall preserve the life of
man.” Hence, mankind was forbidden to murder, obliged to take the life of the
guilty, and charged to protect the life of the innocent.
Furthermore, the protection of life, was not considered the only just use of
force. Under natural law, the definition of life was strongly attached to
liberty and property. As Bastiat reasoned: “For what are our faculties but the
extension of our individuality? And what is property but an extension of our
faculties?” Consequently, both the individual and the state as his agent,
could protect life, liberty, and property, even unto death, if necessary. To do
so, would not be an act of murder, but an appeal to justice and order - to
neglect this high duty, an endorsement of injustice and anarchy.
Extending the principle to war - “Just War,” then, could be none other
then a collective and commissioned act of self defense, resisting attacks made
on the life, liberty, and property of the citizens of a given nation, or, as an
after-the-fact, administration of justice.
This moral reasoning, was the foundation stone of the American foreign policy
of yesteryear - attack those only who attack you. To which, was added, be strong
enough to discourage attack. A commitment to this philosophy kept America nearly
free of foreign war for 130 years, and free, also, of the moral and political
degeneracy which accompany frequent wars.
But the sound reasoning and the relative peace of 18th and 19th century
America was usurped by the arrival of a new political philosophy, based on the
meddling morality of socialism. It was no longer good enough, they supposed, to
be free and independent; we must, rather, insure that the world is free and
independent. And if it is not, then we must make it so, by canon and ball.
It took a while, but the American psyche has now ascribed reverential status
to the belief, that in a world drawn closer together by technology, it is just
to kill before being killed, to prosecute intent prior to criminal action, to
protect America’s vague “vital interests” rather than her private
property, and to impose “democracy” on the unenlightened, without
invitation.
Our actions in Iraq and Bosnia, bellow the evidence. Desert Storm, we were
told defended “America’s vital interests;” Desert Fox prosecuted criminal
intent (they built weapons of mass destruction) prior to criminal action, the
Bosnian Invasion, imposed “peace,” “democracy,” and “stability, ”
without invitation. None of these U.S. military assaults came in response to
actual attacks upon the life, liberty, and property of the citizens of the
United States; nor did the citizens of Iraq, Kuwait, or Bosnia, delegate to our
government, the right to control their government. All three of these examples,
by definition, constitute acts of offensive war.
This chilling conclusion, is further aggravated by the timing of each
invasion. Desert Storm, was gleefully categorized by President Bush as our
“best chance...to reinvigorate the [then unpopular] United Nations;” Desert
Fox, was in the eyes of most any conscious person, a delay tactic and an
argument against Impeachment; and the Invasion of Bosnia, halted a brave rally
by Muslim forces against their Communist masters. These wars have cost blood,
human blood. In Iraq alone, the death toll is in the hundreds of thousands. And
our troops, donning UN blue, are now on the prowl, not in Iraq and Bosnia only,
but as unsolicited standing armies, throughout the world.
So what can we conclude about the new morality of internationalism? Has
“a long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, given it the superficial
appearance of being right? Is it good and wise to impose, at the point of a
sword, our morality, our way of life on the world? Thomas Paine, had an answer
for that one too. He proclaimed: “Our Independence with God’s blessing we
will maintain against all the world; but as we wish to avoid evil ourselves, we
[must not] inflict it on others.” For, “offensive war” is “murder.”
Could he be right?