Originally published in the
Financial Times, on February
24th, 2003
There is murderous anti-Americanism and there is anti-Americanism "light".
The first is the anti-Americanism of fanatical terrorists who hate the US
- its power, its values and its policies - and are willing to kill and to
die in order to hurt it. The second is the anti-Americanism of those who take
to the streets and the media to rant against it but do not seek its destruction.
Both light anti-Americans and Americans in government share
the illusion that anti-Americanism that falls short of terrorism is costless.
Light anti-Americans will tell you that they love the country but despise
its policies, and that criticising its government is healthy.
They are correct that the global pushback against US initiatives
helps to limit the unilateral excesses, mistakes, and double standards of
a superpower often driven by overly narrow calculations rooted in domestic
politics. But they are wrong when they assume that there is no cost to their
broad denunciations, especially when vocal attacks against US policy help
stoke far deeper and more pervasive animosities and suspicions against the
US, its government, and its people.
Those who partake and spread light anti-Americanism even while
sharing the principles and values that the US stands for undermine its ability
to defend such principles abroad. After all, international influence requires
power but it also depends on legitimacy. Such legitimacy flows from the acceptance
of others that not only consent to but even welcome the use of that influence.
US legitimacy abroad was undermined by George W. Bush's propensity
to talk tough and threaten to act alone and impose the will of his administration
on others. But such actions were interpreted by much of the world through
the lens of deep suspicions about the US that existed well before the Bush
presidency. Ultimately, the automatic rejection of US international actions
rooted in light anti- Americanism may be as bad for the world as granting
the US a blank cheque to exert its power without the constraints imposed by
the inter- national community.
For example, the instinctive reactions stoked by light anti-Americanism
surely had some role in undermining and perhaps permanently altering the Nato
alliance. The relevance and effectiveness of many UN agencies are also eroded
by their subtle and sometimes not so subtle anti-Americanism. Moreover, the
stridency of this global anti-American chorus also undermines the support
of the US public for their country's international engagement.
While active US engagement may not always be the best recipe
for international problems, it is often the only one available. Average Americans
already have a hard time understanding why they should bear the burden of
being the world's sheriff and receive no respect in return. Indeed, the light
anti-Americanism that prevails in many countries helped by the US may eventually
boost the fortunes of American isolationists by making such understanding
impossible.
But such perilous carelessness is not only the province of light
anti-Americans. US politicians and government leaders have long been disdainful
and careless about the ill effects of light anti-Americanism. Among Washington's
heavies, the common wisdom is that murderous, fanatical, anti-Americans cannot
be swayed and must be dealt with by security and law enforcement agencies
while the faddish actions of light anti-Americans are largely inconsequential.
Several months ago a bi-partisan group of highly respected US
foreign policy experts outside the government held several discreet meetings
to discuss their concern about the growing tide of anti-Americanism worldwide.
The group eventually drafted a private letter to Mr Bush calling his attention
to the urgent need to do something about it. The cabinet member they asked
to deliver the letter responded that it would not have much impact unless
it spelled out the concrete costs of anti-Americanism.
Today, Tony Blair, José Mara Aznar, Silvio Berlusconi
and Vicente Fox among others can clearly spell out the costs of the light
anti-Americanism that pervades their societies. It has made it increasingly
costly for them at home to support Mr Bush, who in turn has learned that acting
alone entails huge costs and risks. Many of the problems the US faces will
only get worse if it tries to solve them unilaterally.
Yes, it can attack Iraq without the blessing of the UN. But
its military needs bases in other countries, its terrorist fighters need the
help of other intelligence services (even those of France), its financial
regulators need to work closely with regulators abroad, and its nation builders
in Afghanistan and soon in Iraq need the help and the money of other countries.
The US has discovered that it depends as much on the good will
of other governments as it does on the lethal efficacy of its military to
achieve its international goals. In turn that good will is dependent on the
mood and attitudes of domestic constituencies. That is why the ascendancy
of light anti-Americanism is a dangerous trend - and not only for Americans.
The writer is editor of Foreign Policy magazine