Tag Archives: isolationism

Isolationism Seems to be Working Just Fine for China

As the 100th day approached of a war with Iran President Trump once said the U.S. won “in the first hour” of fighting on February 28, equity markets began to exhibit the kind of fear one would expect with 20% of the world’s oil and fertilizer trapped in the Persian Gulf.

Until today, Trump’s tap dancing between threats of Iran’s catastrophic destruction and last minute postponements due to supposed breakthroughs in negotiations, along with the release of hundreds of millions of barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), had kept the oil price down and equity markets up.

But the president can only dance so long. The reality that there is no good way out of this war without explicitly or tacitly acceding to Iran’s demands may be starting to dawn on investors. That means the Iran War, whether it ends soon via U.S. capitulation or becomes yet another Middle East quagmire that drags on for years, will ultimately yield no benefit to the American people. All they’ll be left with are the costs, which in this case could be considerable and ongoing.

For average Americans, the empire is “all pain no gain.”

Proponents of the empire insist it is vital to “U.S. interests.” They argue that average Americans couldn’t enjoy the prosperity and freedom they do without the global standing army and gargantuan military budget to support it. But when pressed for details, the cause/effect relationships between the constant interventions and whatever freedom and prosperity Americans enjoy always gets vaguer and vaguer the more details one demands.

Regarding the current war, it is argued that Iran is a threat to Israel, a key ally. But when asked, “how does this alliance benefit Americans,” one usually receives replies like, “Israel is the only democracy in the region!” To which one could reasonably ask, “How do Americans benefit from there being a democracy in the region?”

There is usually some reference to oil at this point, which prompts the question, “How does America improve its access to Middle Eastern oil by antagonizing the oil producers?”

The arguments for the proxy war against Russia in Ukraine are similarly vague. And when one tries to pin proponents of the empire down by saying, “Explain, step by step, how Americans would have been adversely affected if this intervention never occurred,” one is met only with platitudes. “American Exceptionalism.” “Indispensable Nation.” “Western values.”

Maybe it’s hard to explain concretely because it’s just bunk.

Even the foreign policy realists like John Mearscheimer and Robert Pape, who have been 100 percent correct in their predictions about how this war would go, warn us that America cannot relapse into “isolationism,” lest other powers like China “fill the vacuum.”

It is important to understand isolationism as both the interventionists and the realists define it. Isolationism is refusing to take responsibility for security issues all over the world. While the neocons advocate kinetic military operations and the realists suggest strategies like containment and offshore balancing, they all agree Americans have to pay for the massive military structure necessary for either strategy.

Anything less is “isolationism,” even if the country in question has robust trade relationships with every existing and emerging power on earth and a military more than capable of enforcing its own security interests. That is still a recipe for disaster because it allows for the emergence of new threats like China and reemergence of old ones like Russia. And we all know no nation could prosper and grow while allowing that to happen.

Except China. It seems to be working just fine for China.

Read the rest on Tom’s Substack…

Tom Mullen is the author of It’s the Fed, Stupidand Where Do Conservatives and Liberals Come From? And What Ever Happened to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness? 

Is every nation on earth besides the United States “isolationist?”

kingTAMPA, September 3, 2013 – Just one day after President Obama requested a debate in Congress on military intervention in Syria, Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.) has already trotted out the usual bludgeon against any call for restraint. Bomb Syria or you are an “isolationist.”

“Right now, I would say, if the vote were today, it would probably be a no vote. I’m hoping by the time next week comes around and hopefully the president can make his case that he will be able to get a majority of the House of Representatives. Right now, it would be very difficult and also we have an increasing isolationist wing in our party, which I think is damaging to the party and to the nation.”

Only in America is the word “isolationist” used to describe reluctance to initiate wars of choice. In every other context, that word has a far different meaning.

China had two major periods of “isolationism,” the first starting in the 14th century. For China, isolationism meant cutting off foreign trade, shipping, immigration and emigration.  China entered another period of isolationism under Mao Zedung, again closing its borders and cutting off all commerce with the outside world, other than the Soviet Union.

Japan also had its isolationist period between the 17th and 19th centuries. Isolationism for Japan meant prohibiting trade, immigration, emigration and correspondence with the outside world. It had nothing to do with a reluctance to go to war, much less with a reluctance to get involved in wars that had nothing to do with Japan.

The isolationist policies of China and Japan were considered repressive and backwards, forcibly isolating their citizens from the benefits of trade and friendship with other nations and cultures.

That’s why noninterventionists’ opponents choose to call them “isolationist;” to smear them as backwards and against “progress.” There is even a connotation of selfishness that attaches itself to those who do not support wars of choice. This is ridiculous, of course, but words can be powerful.

The UK Parliament just voted down military action against Syria. Of the other 190 nations of the world, only France joins the United States in supporting a strike.

When the Bush Administration invaded Iraq, only three other nations contributed troops.

The United States now spends more on its military than the next ten nations combined. They have 900 bases in over 100 countries. No nation on earth or in human history comes close to that military footprint.

Is every nation on earth besides the United States “isolationist?”

Despite not being attacked by another nation’s military in over seventy years, the United States has been almost constantly at war.

The active wars combined with maintenance of the massive overseas military establishment has been the single largest contributor to the federal government’s $12 trillion in public debt.

It has also skewed American manufacturing towards producing weapons and armaments, rather than products that enrich the lives of American citizens.

These are just a few consequences of the decision during the last century to abandon the foreign policy of Washington and Jefferson and “go abroad looking for monsters to destroy.”

As the debate in Congress heats up, Rep. King will certainly not be the last one to call those arguing for restraint isolationist. Hopefully, the American public will be more discerning than most media and recognize that friendship and trade with all nations combined with military restraint is not isolationism. It is the opposite.

Tom Mullen is the author of Where Do Conservatives and Liberals Come From? And What Ever Happened to Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness? Part One and A Return to Common Sense: Reawakening Liberty in the Inhabitants of America.