Exporting The American Model: Markets and Democracy
Historian and former CIA official Chalmers Johnson strikes another bullseye with this piece in the TomDispatch about the nature and history of American empire, and its relation to the whole notion of and role of ‘markets’ and ‘democracy.’
There is something absurd and inherently false about one country trying to impose its system of government or its economic institutions on another. Such an enterprise amounts to a dictionary definition of imperialism. When what’s at issue is “democracy,” you have the fallacy of using the end to justify the mean? (making war on those to be democratized), and in the process the leaders of the missionary country are invariably infected with the sins of hubris, racism, and arrogance.
We Americans have long been guilty of these crimes. On the eve of our entry into World War I, William Jennings Bryan, President Woodrow Wilson’s first secretary of state, described the United States as “the supreme moral factor in the world’s progress and the accepted arbiter of the world’s disputes.” If there is one historical generalization that the passage of time has validated, it is that the world could not help being better off if the American president had not believed such nonsense and if the United States had minded its own business in the war between the British and German empires. We might well have avoided Nazism, the Bolshevik Revolution, and another thirty to forty years of the exploitation of India, Indonesia, Indochina, Algeria, Korea, the Philippines, Malaya, and virtually all of Africa by European, American, and Japanese imperialists.
We Americans prattle on endlessly about how our great crusade in the Middle East is about bestowing the blessings of democracy (in this case at the point of a bayonet and the receiving end of a JDAM). But this more on the lines of what Noam Chomsky described as ‘deterring democracy.’ He’s right. Here’s a money shot quote from Johnson’s piece…
We have done everything in our power to see that the Iraqis did not get a “free and fair election,” one in which the Shia majority could come to power and ally Iraq with Iran. As Noah Feldman, the Coalition Provisional Authority’s law advisor, put it in November 2003, “If you move too fast the wrong people could get elected.”
