July
28, 2023
Foreign policy matters. When progressives neglect to take an
anti-imperialist stance, it allows cynical charlatans like Donald Trump
to outflank them and score easy political points.
The
United States is a declining empire. Yet its military footprint remains one of
appalling scope and magnitude. Foreign Policy reports that “the United States
has more overseas… bases than every other country combined.” And that outsized
presence comes with immense environmental consequences. The Department of
Defense is the “world’s single largest greenhouse gas emitter.” As Mickey Butts
wrote in this magazine in 2022, “The military generates toxic waste in
abundance and in an infinite variety: munitions, explosives, jet fuels,
pesticides, depleted uranium, lead, and countless other hazardous chemicals.”
He concluded: “War not only wastes lives. It also lays waste to the earth.”
American
foreign policy has consistently unleashed death and destruction across the
globe and affected the lives of millions. This commitment to empire and
war-making has largely been bipartisan. Most Senate Democrats and all but one
Republican voted for the invasion of Iraq. The War in Afghanistan enjoyed even
stronger approval. Barack Obama dramatically expanded the drone war started by
George W. Bush. Members of both major parties are also enacting deadly economic
warfare through sanctions to devastate countries like Syria and Iran. And
continued military aid to Israel and Saudi Arabia—as they massacre Palestinians
and Yemenis, respectively—enjoys bipartisan support. The United States’ record
shows that it is a leading threat to world peace.
But
the American public is ready for policy change. In recent years, fewer
Americans say they want the U.S. to take a “leading or major” role in world
affairs. Recent polling shows Democratic voters are increasingly more
sympathetic to Palestinians than Israelis in that conflict. And an AP-NORC poll
from earlier this year shows that public support for U.S. assistance to Ukraine
is lessening.
Besides
public polling, there is a strong moral imperative for our leaders to take a
different approach to foreign policy—to move away from violence and war and a
world order in which the U.S. dominates. The problem is that, because there are
so few principled anti-war lawmakers in office, it’s easy for people in power
or adjacent to power to claim that mantle and receive praise for it. It’s also
one reason why some 2024 presidential candidates might appeal to voters.
Marianne Williamson offers the “politics of love.” Cornel West is running a
campaign for “truth and justice” to “end the wars.” And Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
has long claimed to be anti-war.
It
remains to be seen what kind of leader any of these challengers would be. GOP
candidate Donald Trump, however, is hardly such an unknown. His record shows
that not only is he not an anti-imperialist, but he represents a particularly
crude, raw, throwback form of imperialism. His foreign policy does not come
cloaked in rhetoric about liberating foreigners by bringing them freedom and
democracy. He does not even espouse a civilizing mission. In this sense, he’s
possibly just as dangerous as far-right Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton, who
espouses a disturbing “might makes right” foreign policy. What this all means
is that we need to get our facts straight on foreign policy to see who really
stands against empire and what a principled anti-imperalist politics might look
like on the left.
Trump
is no Anti-Imperialist
There
have been a number of deceptive arguments made to advance the idea that Trump’s
foreign policy is somehow anti-imperialist or preferable to the bipartisan
status quo. It’s no surprise that many of these claims come from Trump himself.
He portrays himself as being bravely opposed to a warmongering political
establishment. In an odd video message from February of this year, he decried
“Washington [officials] who only know how to get us into conflicts.” Here’s
more of what he said:
“World War III has never been closer than
it is right now. We need to clean house of all of the warmongers … and the deep
state, the Pentagon, the State Department, and the national security industrial
complex. … We’re teetering on the brink of World War III, and a lot of people
don’t see it, but I see it. … [W]e need to get rid of the corrupt globalist
establishment that has botched every major foreign policy decision for decades.
… I am the president who delivers peace, and it’s peace through strength. … We
could end the Ukraine conflict in 24 hours with the right leadership.”
Of
course, Trump always runs to the left when it suits him, so we need not be too
impressed by this rhetoric. But let’s take a look at what others are saying
about his foreign policy. Christian Parenti, son of famed anti-imperialist
Michael Parenti, and other contrarians such as Glenn Greenwald, for example,
have taken advantage of dismal bipartisan U.S. foreign policy to praise Trump
as being “against empire” and war. Senator J.D. Vance and journalist Sohrab
Ahmari—founder of Compact magazine—have made similar arguments. In an op-ed for
The Wall Street Journal, Vance lauded Trump for supposedly starting “no wars
despite enormous pressure.” Ahmari proclaimed Trump to be “the one figure who
in my lifetime has meaningfully rolled back the self-righteous imperium.”
Representative Marjorie Taylor-Greene has also praised the former president’s
fictitious opposition to “never-ending wars.” She even claimed it was a major
reason why she “supported President Trump.”
As
explained by Black studies scholar Charisse Burden-Stelly, imperialism is
characterized by an “externalized relationship of domination and exploitation”
on some people for the purpose of “enriching”—often via theft of resources,
labor, or land—some center of power. Imperialism is “always rooted in war.”
With this definition in mind, we can evaluate Trump’s record.
First,
it’s worth taking a closer look at Christian Parenti’s arguments. On multiple
occasions this year, Christian has argued that Donald Trump is “against
empire.” It started with a piece he wrote for The Grayzone, a blog that has
published anti-public health propaganda. Parenti mused that intelligence agents
suppressed the Hunter Biden laptop story—“thereby putting their thumbs on the
scale during the 2020 election”—as retaliation against Trump for undermining
U.S. imperialism. These security officials allegedly hated Trump for authoring
“the most momentous rollback of American military … power since … World War
II.”
Parenti
concedes that Trump’s supposed anti-imperialism lacked coherence. For example,
the former president ostensibly “hated NATO but… loved Israel.” And he
“increased pressure in Cuba” while doing “the opposite in North Korea.” But
Parenti’s conciliatory framing actually obscures more than it reveals. It is a
gross oversimplification to say Trump “hated NATO.” Yes, he railed against its
members for supposedly not financially contributing enough to the defense pact.
But Trump also ordered an immense buildup of NATO troops on Russia’s border.
This was undoubtedly a catalyst for the current Russo-Ukrainian conflict.
Similarly,
Trump hardly decreased pressure in North Korea. Some may believe that the 2018
North Korea-United States summit was a step toward peace. But it was little
more than a glorified photo op which ended with a vague joint statement and no
perceptible change in bilateral relations. Remember that Trump threatened to
“totally destroy” North Korea during a United Nations speech in 2017. He also
regularly spoke openly about waging nuclear war against them. These fighting
words triggered an understandable verbal backlash from North Korea, such as
when their foreign ministry labeled Trump a
“dotard.” A second summit in 2019 ended early due to disagreements between
the two leaders.
What
about the troop withdrawals that happened under Trump’s rule? In the Grayzone
piece, Parenti lauds the former president for “winding down America’s ‘forever
wars’ by simply packing up and leaving.” But there are a couple of problems
with this. First, Trump ended exactly zero wars. Second, Trump’s troop
withdrawals were largely of troops he himself had deployed. Moreover,
oftentimes, Trump added more soldiers than he removed. As diplomat Brett McGurk
noted in 2019, Trump “can’t tell his political rallies that he’s getting troops
out of endless wars when he’s sending 14 times the amount back into the
region.” Rather than “packing up and leaving,” then, Trump increased America’s
military footprint. It’s also no surprise that the Afghanistan War—America’s
longest and, according to one 2013 poll, most unpopular—only ended after Trump
begrudgingly left office.
Despite
these facts, after publishing his piece in The Grayzone, Parenti continued to
defend Trump’s foreign policy. In April, following Trump’s arrest for corrupt
business dealings, Parenti wrote a piece for Compact magazine. It argued that
the indictment happened because Trump challenged “U.S. imperium” as president.
But this is false for at least two reasons. First, the charges against Trump
are, of course, unrelated to foreign policy. They instead have to do with
falsifying business records in his attempts to pay a mistress hush money. More
importantly, Trump expanded military spending, proposing the “largest [budgets]
since World War II (even adjusted for inflation)”. And the line items embedded
within these proposals were nothing short of terrifying. As Slate reported,
Trump sought “more nuclear weapons,” “exotic flavors of warfare” such as
hypersonic weapons, and a larger “global military presence.”
At
times, Trump even directly opposed the more non-interventionist elements of his
own party. During 2019, a measure to end American support for Saudi Arabia’s
war in Yemen got through both houses of Congress. The bill was bipartisan,
gaining the votes of seven Republican senators and 16 representatives along the
way. But Trump vetoed it. His public reasoning? The bill would supposedly
weaken his war-making powers too much.
When
Trump wasn’t abetting Saudi war crimes, he was busy committing them himself. Trump
increased drone strikes relative to Obama by over 400 percent. Civilian
casualties unsurprisingly skyrocketed, and the administration stopped counting
those outside of conventional warzones. (To Trump, the lives of Black and brown
people abroad are not even worthy of a footnote.) Parenti minimizes the harm
here. In his Compact article, he euphemistically writes that Trump “ordered a
few missile and drone strikes here and there.”
Then
there was the assassination of Iranian general Qassem Soleimani, which was
“unlawful” according to Agnes Callamard, the U.N. special rapporteur on
extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions.
Trump
sees developing nations as objects to plunder and their people as mere
obstacles to that plunder. Kill them—often by indiscriminately airstriking
civilian areas. Destroy their homes—through unprecedented support for Israeli
expansion, which always seems to entail leveling Palestinian domiciles. Trump
even fantasized to crowds about torture, vowing to “bring back a hell of a lot
worse than waterboarding.” Whatever it takes to secure imperial interests.
Trump’s
biggest ‘critique’ of American wars in the Middle East is that we didn’t steal
(enough of) their petroleum. At an Iowa campaign rally in 2015, Trump vowed to
take Iraq and Syria’s oil. This became a consistent theme of his foreign policy
rhetoric. He repeated the sentiment while campaigning and acted upon it after
taking office. In 2019, Trump admitted to leaving troops in Syria to commandeer
the country’s fossil fuels.
Trump’s
oil obsession also includes the Persian Gulf. During a 2017 meeting, he
complained that the United States was not receiving free petroleum for its
troop presence there. This outburst led him to infamously ask “Where is the
fucking oil?” Ironically, Parenti includes this quote in both of his
aforementioned pro-Trump pieces.
As
the record shows, Donald Trump is no anti-imperialist. If people naively buy
Trump’s empty posturing that he is against empire, it could be a real boon to
Trump’s 2024 candidacy.
Democrats
have supported many of the disastrous and horribly immoral military actions
that make Trump and his Republican Party so odious. But there are a number of
Democrats who have emerged as principled opponents of American empire. Ilhan
Omar grilled Elliott Abrams on his involvement in war crimes in Central America
when Trump’s administration appointed him envoy to Venezuela. That exchange
made the differences between progressive and conservative foreign policies
clear as can be.
Similarly,
as Trump blessed Israel’s illegal annexation of Syria’s Golan Heights, Rashida
Tlaib steadfastly opposed him. She bravely denounced Israeli apartheid and
settler colonialism while vigorously denouncing American support of it. Tlaib
also partnered with Bernie Sanders to call for the conditioning of U.S. aid to
Israel on commonsense human rights demands.
Again,
the contrast in visions could not have been clearer. The real pro-peace,
anti-imperialist advocates are on the left. And they represent the ethical conscience
of an empire whose reckless actions abroad have exacted untold suffering on
innocents.
There
is a strong moral imperative to move U.S. foreign policy away from the violence
of imperialism. Adherence to an anti-imperialist vision should therefore be a
litmus test for any candidate for office coming from the left. Using the
framework of “restraint” outlined by historian Michael Brenes, as explained in
Jacobin, we can envision a leftist foreign policy that is characterized by the
following pillars (in no particular order):
- .“International collaboration to reprioritize national security threats (around issues such as climate change, migration and refugee policy, poverty, and global health)”
- “Deter imperial adventures by great powers”
- “Demilitarize the landscape of foreign policy”
President
Biden, the incumbent Democratic president, is a notorious war hawk whose
administration has flouted the most basic tenets of progressive
internationalism. He clearly falls well short on all three counts of our litmus
test. His record on international collaboration to confront security threats
has been woeful. Biden’s administration, for example, has refused to adequately
address the greatest public health crisis of our time, the COVID pandemic. At a
2021 TRIPS Council meeting, the U.S. “declined to take robust action to approve
an intellectual property waiver” for coronavirus vaccines, without which
countries in the Global South cannot access affordable versions of these
pharmaceuticals.
His
climate record has been similarly abysmal. On the domestic front, Biden has
expanded oil drilling and auctioned an Italy-sized swath of the Gulf of Mexico
for extractive projects. Internationally, the president has hardly collaborated
with foreign nations to combat ecological breakdown—what he admits is
“literally an existential threat.” Overall, the administration managed to
secure just $1 billion of climate finance for developing nations in 2022. And
it had committed to allocating over 11 times that, which—according to climate
experts—is also “inadequate.”
Compare
that to the nearly $70 billion the U.S. sent for defense purposes to Ukraine.
And this shows that Biden has also failed on the second point of deterring
“imperial adventures by great powers.” After ratcheting tensions with Russia by
imposing sanctions early in his term, Biden is now, as Noam Chomsky puts it,
“fighting to the last Ukrainian.” His aggressive posture, which eschews
diplomacy, will only prolong this tragic conflict and provoke Russia into
further violence.
Third
and lastly, Biden has not “demilitarized the landscape of foreign policy.” He
has increased military spending and has continued military funding to Israel,
which receives by far the largest amount of American foreign military funding
of any nation. Nearly all of this assistance goes to the Israeli military,
which regularly commits atrocities across the Middle East.
Foreign
policy has also been weak point for officeholders otherwise toward the left on
the political spectrum. For example, despite saying he supports progressive
policies at home such as universal healthcare and marijuana legalization,
Senator John Fetterman favors more unconditional military assistance to
apartheid Israel. Even Bernie Sanders, who is overwhelmingly responsible for
popularizing social democracy in America, has a checkered foreign policy
record. In 2001, he voted to give the Bush administration unprecedented
discretion to execute the so-called War on Terror. Five years earlier, Sanders
supported waging economic warfare on Libya and Iran, and later voted to extend
those sanctions.
Heading
into the 2024 election, Biden’s foreign policy record will likely face critique
once again, as it did in 2020. Much of the criticism is bound to be either
disingenuous, totally off base, or a mix of both. This only further underscores
the need for leftist candidates to adopt and promote a comprehensive,
progressive vision of international justice. That means connecting the values
that undergird their domestic positions—economic, racial, and environmental
justice, for instance—to a global critique of imperialist capitalism.
Foreign
policy matters. Democratic and progressive candidates should not neglect it.
Doing so is not only immoral but also allows cynical charlatans like Donald
Trump to outflank them and score easy political points.
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