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US’ Long Search for Mr. Right

What’s wrong with central casting? It’s a virtual truism: The United States always seems to pick the wrong guy to star as George Washington in some faraway civil war.

We sell him weapons for self-defense against his despicable foes, and then, sometimes before the end of the first battle, we find we are committed to a bad actor who bears an uncanny resemblance to Genghis Khan.
President Barack Obama just approved the sale of 24 Apache helicopters to the Iraqi government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, despite well-founded concerns that Maliki may use them against people we do like as well as those we don’t.
Helicopters aren’t the only munitions on Maliki’s shopping list. Washington has negotiated the sale of 480 Hellfire air-to-ground missiles, along with reconnaissance drones and F-16 fighter jets.
To hear Maliki tell it, he needs these weapons to stop terrorists from destroying his democratically-elected government. To hear his opponents, the divisive Maliki creates his own problems by hounding legitimate rivals, favoring Shiites over Sunnis and fueling sectarian grudges. To hear Obama, Maliki is America’s only option: Support him, or see Iraq spiral into civil war.
All three scenarios are correct. They almost always are.

Out of Business
Desperate leaders of unstable countries are problematic partners. They’re controversial with their own people. Backing them typically involves deep moral compromises. And, boy, we’ve picked some doozies in the past: from Vietnam’s Ngo Dinh Diem, to Taiwan’s Chiang Kai-shek (and the notorious Madame Chiang Kai-shek), to Haiti’s Jean-Bertrand Aristide, to Iran’s Reza Shah Pahlavi, to Afghanistan’s Hamid Karzai.
Yet the problem isn’t about picking well. It’s about picking at all. The United States needs to get out of that business.
Holding a nation-state together is hard work. When economies or political systems fail, it’s best if local people know their own choices are to blame — not someone else’s — and that it’s on their shoulders to find a solution. No matter how long that takes.
Otherwise, moral hazard is the result. A local leader with the sponsorship of a world power has less reason to compromise with domestic rivals, and possesses a perfect scapegoat when things don’t work out.
This may sound callous and irresponsible. Isn’t it America’s duty to stop the shedding of innocent blood when we can? Shouldn’t the US make every effort to staunch conflict in places like Iraq and Syria? Isn’t stability in Washington’s interest?
Not necessarily. History is instructive here. Not every civil war can be prevented. In our own, President Abraham Lincoln rejected mediation by Britain, which was unable to stop killing that eventually took 700,000 lives. Or consider what happened the one time a foreign power tried to jimmy America’s electoral process. It backfired spectacularly. The sitting government became more reactionary and the opposition more extremist. Relations with the meddling foreign power worsened.

The “Great Rule”
In 1796, revolutionary France became convinced that the weakling American republic had been captured by vested interests poised to sell out democracy and reinstate monarchy. The French heard this from disgruntled Americans who called their political rivals “Anglomen” and “monocrats.”
French diplomats did their best to subvert President George Washington’s foreign policy. When that didn’t work, they decided that Americans ought to elect “good” Thomas Jefferson, deeply tied to France, over “bad” John Adams.
Certain that Americans would welcome intervention by a revolutionary big brother, the French did all they could to influence the vote. They even threatened war if Americans followed the path of perdition and chose Adams.
Adams, thin-skinned to start with, was not amused. When he defeated Jefferson in a close election, he built new warships, raised an army and passed the most tyrannical anti-foreign, anti-free speech laws in American history: the Alien and Sedition Acts.
Jefferson claimed that the federal government had forged a “rod of iron” over the states, which ought not to submit. He and James Madison secretly wrote the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, proposing that states annul federal law. The new nation confronted the possibility of dissolution. Well-meaning French intervention in the name of global republicanism shook the American republic.
So, throughout the 19th century, the United States adhered to George Washington’s long-standing “Great Rule” to have “as little political connection as possible” with foreign countries. This policy continued under presidents of both parties.
In 1947, however, President Harry S. Truman proposed a drastic modification. Non-entanglement was no longer safe, he believed. The United States must “support free people who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures.”
At the time, Nazi Germany was newly defeated, and the Soviet Union had all of Eastern Europe under its thumb. The stakes during the Cold War seemed incredibly high. West European countries might be overwhelmed, as they had been in 1940. Their former colonies might ally with Russia against the “racist, capitalist West.” And so, for seven decades, Washington played the Cold War game of shoring up deficient governments vulnerable to collapse.

The Next 70-years Course
The policy mostly succeeded. But the collateral damage lives on in anti-Americanism. Resentments linger that the United States picked the wrong side in numerous domestic conflicts. Even in Greece, where the Truman Doctrine began, some leftist critics still demonize the US for appointing “stooges,” enslaving the nation, and “not allowing Greece to become a Soviet satellite in the 1940s,” according to Evanthis Hatzivassiliou of the University of Athens.
The Cold War is now long over. Middle East terrorists may bedevil Western governments, but are not poised to take them over. The global community is more firmly united on the sanctity of international borders than in all preceding history. The United States took the lead in building a stable world order — which has materialized.
Now is the time to consider the best course for the next 70 years.
The cardinal principle of the system of nation-states since the 1648 Peace of Westphalia is that sovereign countries must not intervene in one another’s internal affairs. This principle is often observed in the breach, but it is the oldest, most stable dictum of international relations. It’s based on the idea that minding one’s own business is usually safer, and sometimes more virtuous, than being one’s brother’s keeper.
Obama’s decision to arm the Iraqi government against its multifarious opponents continues the Truman Doctrine, which violates the Westphalian principle.
The Truman Doctrine’s inherent liabilities now outweigh its once undeniable benefits. The chance of Washington — or any outside government — sorting out the Byzantine Middle East is zero to none. Outsiders cannot pick the “right” leader in complex internal disputes.
Many now insist that Maliki’s enemies are our enemies. America’s hubristic policy ensures that they will become so. Iraqis can best save Iraq.

By Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman
Source: OnIslam