THE RATIONAL ARGUMENTATOR |
War in the Middle East is Inherently Collectivist |
Especially in light of the
looming threat of a wasteful, counterproductive US
military intervention in Syria, it is necessary to offer
a resounding refutation to the recommendations of those
who consider themselves individualists to engage in any
sort of mass military action – commonly known as war,
declared or not – against large numbers of people in the
Middle East. Some such persons, especially those
affiliated with the
Ayn Rand Institute (ARI), advocate a foreign policy
more aggressive and, in its consequences, far more
destructive than even the actual interventionist
measures undertaken by the United States federal
government during the Bush and Obama administrations.
In
a
recent speech at the 2013 Steamboat Institute
Freedom Conference, Yaron Brook, ARI's executive
director, put forth his recommendation for solving the
persistent threat of politicized Islamist regimes and
the terrorism that stems therefrom: completely destroy
either Iran or Saudi Arabia and threaten the surviving
country into submission. Brook also reaffirmed his
consideration of General William Tecumseh Sherman, one
of the first practitioners of modern “total war” and an
instigator of untold damage to the lives and property of
innocent civilians during the American Civil War, as his
personal hero. As an advocate of reason, a person of
conscience, and a staunch individualist, I strongly,
emphatically object to this course of action. As foreign
policy goes, I cannot think of one less productive,
other than perhaps indiscriminately launching nuclear
weapons everywhere.
In March 2012 I made a video, “Refuting
Ayn Rand on War,” where I specifically described my
objections to Rand's and Brook's advocacy of warfare. I
refer there to some of Brook's previously stated views,
including his admiration of William T. Sherman, which he
again articulated during his Steamboat Institute speech.
While most of Brook's speech is sympathetic in its
emphasis on individual freedom and a rolling-back of the
economic burdens imposed by the federal government
domestically, his foreign policy would clearly undermine
this path. Indeed, if one wishes to reduce the scope of
the federal government and its intrusiveness into
individuals' lives, deep cuts on both the
domestic and foreign fronts are needed. US government
debt is already spiraling out of control, and it would
not be practically feasible to balance the budget (avoiding
increased taxation, inflation, or borrowing) without
cutting military spending and eliminating numerous
wasteful and deleterious foreign occupations. As long as
self-proclaimed individualists, libertarians, and fiscal
conservatives resist an enormous reduction in US
military budgets and overseas intervention, at least
one, and probably all, of the three consequences of
continued budget deficits will inevitably occur.
But there is a deeper,
moral case to be made against war in general. Some might
allege that this time it is different. But when was it
ever not different? The regime of the Soviet
Union posed a far greater danger to liberty in the 20th
century than rag-tag groups of fundamentalist Islamist
terrorists and the regimes backing them ever could. Yet
war between the United States and the Soviet Union was
fortunately averted, aside from some admittedly
destructive proxy wars, and billions of innocent people
can live in relative peace and comfort today due to the
avoidance of nuclear Armageddon through a more
restrained foreign policy than the “hawks” of the Cold
War era advocated. I do not oppose targeted strikes
that specifically eliminate violent terrorists and
only such individuals. A good example of this was
the raid that killed Osama bin Laden in 2011. However, a
state of war is completely unnecessary to carry out such
limited actions.
War attacks not just an
armed band of terrorists, not just a regime, but an
entire country and its people. This is especially true
since the shift in the 19th century away from
limited battlefield engagements involving professional
armed servants (and mercenaries) of powerful interests
competing for natural resources and prestige, and toward
“total war” fueled by nationalistic and ideological
animosities – where all of a country's population is
considered “the enemy” or at least an asset to “the
enemy.” Such warfare is inherently collectivistic in its
premise. It fails to recognize that individuals ruled by
hostile regimes or terrorized by armed criminals still
have minds of their own, that they may disagree with and
indeed be oppressed by those regimes and criminals.
Targeted assassinations of dictators and terrorist
leaders are one matter, but indiscriminate “collateral
damage” against peaceful civilians is morally
unacceptable for an individualist. Anyone claiming to
follow the philosophy of Ayn Rand, including Ayn Rand
herself, should know (or, in Rand's case, should have
known) better.
The current case of violent
crime fueled by fundamentalist Islamist ideology is no
exception. The world has over a billion Muslims, who are
overwhelmingly peaceful (like most adherents of all
major religious and ideological systems), even if one
legitimately considers them mistaken in their
theological beliefs. Many prominent Muslims
have condemned the attacks of September 11, 2001,
and other attacks on peaceful civilians in the West.
Some Muslims are secular in their political outlook and,
indeed, have made efforts to maintain secular
governments in the face of threats by Islamist political
parties to implement sharia law and religiously
motivated restrictions on personal freedom. The
revolutions in Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya, despite their
sub-optimal outcomes and the eventual emergence of
dominant factions advocating the politicization of
religion, were initially driven by freedom-respecting,
secular, yet largely Muslim individuals. These
people set the spark for the overthrow of the
long-standing authoritarian tyrannies of Mubarak, Ben
Ali, and Gaddafi. They now contend against political
Islam in their troubled countries, but it is essential
for any individualist to respect them and their plight,
and for any government that even pretends to
respect freedom to leave them alive to have any positive
influence of which they are capable.
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“Ayn Rand recognized and appreciated the
power of free-market capitalism to bring not just peace
and prosperity, but moral elevation, to vast
numbers of people. This should be the path embraced by
decision-makers in the West, echoing the sage advice of
Thomas Jefferson: 'peace, commerce, and honest
friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with
none.'” |
Often, the
infighting within the turmoil-ridden Middle East results
in tragedy on all sides; surely, this ought to be the
glaring lesson of the current Syrian situation. However,
American bombs, missiles, and drones are surely not the
answer. These weapons kill indiscriminately. Even drone
attacks allegedly “targeted” toward terror suspects (still
often without due process or convincing evidence of
their criminal intent) end up killing far more innocent
bystanders, including children, than actual would-be
terrorists. Are the relatives, friends, and
acquaintances of the victims going to acknowledge the
“moral legitimacy” of their deaths by the brutal
calculus of Yaron Brook and those who think like him?
Or, more realistically, are they going to experience a
justified outrage and forever despise the
government – and, if they are themselves collectivists
in mindset – the entire country and people whom they
blame for these terrible killings?
There is no quick, easy
solution to the turmoil in the Middle East, nor to the
violent threats that such turmoil sometimes poses to the
lives of people in the Western world. However, there are
some clear changes of direction that can gradually
curtail the major risks. First, it is essential for
governments in the Western world to refrain from actions
that curtail the liberties of their own citizens,
allegedly to respond to this threat. In fact, the
terrorists and political Islamist regimes have won a
greater victory than they could ever have achieved by
force of arms, as a result of the pervasive civil-liberties
violations instigated by Western governments since
September 11, 2001. The omnipresent surveillance, the
bodily violations at airports, the increasing
militarization of the police force surely have more in
common with a totalitarian regime than with the freedom
that the fundamentalist terrorists allegedly hate.
The
more aggressive American military interventions become,
the more animosity and blowback they generate, the more
inclined Western governments will be to crack down on
their own citizens' freedoms further. Thus, militarism
abroad directly causes unfreedom at home – as it
has during every major war in American History, from
Lincoln's imprisonment of dissident newspaper editors
during the Civil War, to Woodrow Wilson's World War I
propaganda machine and imprisonment of opponents of the
military draft, to Franklin Roosevelt's internment of
110,000 Japanese-Americans during World War II. The
present period of the never-ending “War on Terror” is no
exception. There is no way for a government to respect
individualism and the rights of its own citizens while
it turns civilians abroad into fodder for bombs and
drone strikes.
Second, it is essential to
treat “acts of terror” no differently from “ordinary”
crimes – attacks on human lives and property. The
criminal-justice system has various ways of dealing with
gangsters, murderers, street muggers, arsonists, and
common vandals. Domestically, the same standards should
apply toward the same acts, no matter whether or not
they were motivated by Islamist ideology. A person who
bombs a building or a public event is a criminal
murderer and should be dealt with accordingly. It is
time to dismantle the exceptional category of “terrorist
acts” as distinct from ordinary crime. That category is
the linchpin by which all of our Constitutional freedoms
have been rendered moot. As regards armed military-style
groups operating abroad, it is acceptable to use truly
targeted strikes limited to neutralizing members of
those groups (and not “signature strikes” that attack an
entire area, irrespective of the known presence of
militants). But this is not war against an entire people
or even a government; it is more akin to a targeted
action. As former Representative Ron Paul has
recommended since the September 11 attacks, issuing
Letters of Marque and Reprisal specifically against such
militants is a desirable, Constitutionally authorized
remedy quite distinct from war.
Finally, to end the threat
of militant attacks on Westerners, it is essential for
the Middle East itself to become transformed over time,
both economically and culturally, into a place where
individual rights and intellectual progress are
fundamentally respected and appreciated. Bombs could
never effectuate such transformation; they only
breed hatred and backlash. Instead, individuals and
companies in the West should entice the Middle
East to join them on a more enlightened trajectory.
Commerce and cultural diffusion can bring economic
opportunity and prosperity to millions who are currently
in dire poverty. Ayn Rand recognized and appreciated the
power of free-market capitalism to bring not just peace
and prosperity, but moral elevation, to vast
numbers of people. This should be the path embraced by
decision-makers in the West, echoing the sage advice of
Thomas Jefferson: “peace, commerce, and honest
friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with
none.”
Over the coming decades, a steady application of
this approach will diminish the militant threat, though
not overnight. Still, it is a far preferable alternative
to the recommendations of those whose policy of mass
destruction would only fuel the fires of militant
attacks and reduce Western governments, militaries, and
their supporters to the same level of inhuman barbarism
against which they are allegedly defending us. True
individualism – indeed, true humanism – would demand no
less than a complete rejection of the killing of
innocent civilians as a solution to any problem.
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From the same author |
▪
Against Monsanto, For GMOs
(no
313 – August 15, 2013)
▪
In the Face of Universal Surveillance: PRISM and the
Litmus Test for Liberty
(no
312 – June 15, 2013)
▪
Fragile Reasoning in Nassim Taleb’s Antifragile:
An Enlightenment Transhumanist Critique
(no
311 – May 15, 2013)
▪
Liberty Through Long Life
(no
310 – April 15, 2013)
▪
Open Badges and Proficiency-Based Education: A Path
to a New Age of Enlightenment
(no
309 – March 15, 2013)
▪
More...
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First written appearance of the
word 'liberty,' circa 2300 B.C. |
Le Québécois Libre
Promoting individual liberty, free markets and voluntary
cooperation since 1998.
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