Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
that there are some occasions—and Iraq may be one of them—when
war is the only remedy for regimes that live by terror.”10 He cited
declarations by Iraqi exiles that Iraqis would accept civilian casualties
as the price of overthrowing Saddam, thereby leaving unspoken the
question of why these American allies had the privilege of determining who would actually make such a sacrifi ce. Moreover, Ignatieff’s
indictment of the Iraqi regime for warmongering and human rights
violations raises questions as to whether a western power such as
the United States should have to answer for the decimation of New
World peoples, slavery, the Mexican-American War, and the monopolization of global resources. Imperial balance sheets are inevitably
subjective and selective in deciding what constitutes the greater good
and what does not.
The critics of Operation Iraqi Freedom often overlooked these
realities. To be sure, scholars of empire such as Nicholas Dirks did
their part by linking the theorists, politicians, and military contractors that profi ted from the invasion of Iraqi with the conquistadors,
nabobs, and other specialist groups behind earlier imperial projects. In
chronicling the scandals of British East India Company rule, he found
himself “writing the history not just of the eighteenth century, but of
the present as well.”11 However, most opponents of President Bush’s
preemptive war made the mistake of equating empire and imperialism solely with the unjust use of hard power. In doing so, they failed
Conclusion 427
to point out that it is simply no longer feasible to reorder another
society through military force alone. Empires are indeed immoral,
but it would have been more convincing to argue against the Iraq
invasion by using historical precedents to show why it was doomed
to fail. Instead, the Bush administration’s leftist critics assumed that
empire was still practical; they just differed from the neoconservatives and imperial apologists in branding it a sin.
Some well-meaning scholars and policy makers were also ensnared
by the temptation to leverage military power for philanthropic purposes. Noah Feldman, a Harvard law professor who helped the American-appointed Iraqi Governing Council draft an interim constitution,
assured himself that the invasion of Iraq was an act of “trusteeship”
rather than empire building. Acknowledging that this notion of paternalistic stewardship had imperial origins, he nonetheless argued that
it was moral to deprive a defeated people of their sovereignty temporarily if the “trustee” abandoned its assumption of moral superiority
and governed as an “ordinary” democratically elected government.12
In other words, the American occupiers knew what was best for the
Iraqis. Left unsaid was the reality that common Iraqis never asked to
be a ward of a victorious power, even if that power promised to rule
humanely and altruistically. Like all forms of imperial rule, trusteeship ultimately springs from the barrel of a gun, not the consent of
the conquered.
The central mistake running through much of the debate over the
Iraqi occupation was the assumption that imperial methods were still
effective and could be put to legitimate uses. The Bush administration’s adventure in Iraq was actually doomed from the outset because
its planners made the fundamental mistake of believing their own
legitimizing rhetoric. Most common Iraqis were happy to be rid of
Saddam Hussein, but this did not mean that they wanted to be ruled
by well-intentioned foreigners. In the immediate aftermath of the
invasion, a Sunni Imam sermonized: “Do you know of anyone who
can accept this humiliation? Do you just let them occupy your land
while you sit and do nothing?” A university student turned insurgent echoed this anger by asking: “How would you feel if French
soldiers or Arab soldiers invaded your city and killed your friends,
your family?”13 President Bush’s promises that the United States had
no imperial ambitions in Iraq carried little weight, and most Iraqis
believed he wanted their oil and to defend Israel, stage attacks on Iran
428 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
and Syria, and create opportunities for American businessmen. True
or not, the Iraqis’ nearly universal rejection of subjecthood taught
the Americans a painful lesson in the limits of empire.
Operation Iraqi Freedom was an attempt to use imperial methods in an age when formal empires are no longer practical, viable, or
defensible. By the 1970s, there were no major powers left in the world
that admitted to being empires. Imperial nomenclature occasionally
crops up in Britain, but as Doris Lessing put it in turning down the
invitation to become a dame of the British Empire: “Well, fi rst of all
there is no British empire, no one seems to notice this.”14 Certainly
Basques, Northern Irish, Kurds, Tamils, East Timorese, Tibetans, and
many other peoples seeking national homelands continue to endure
a form of subjecthood. However, their struggles are with nations, not
self-described empires.
Over the past half century, the emergence of former African
and Asian imperial territories as independent nation-states holding
a commanding presence in the United Nations General Assembly,
coupled with the excesses of the Nazis, rendered empire illegitimate
in the court of world opinion. Conservatives and western chauvinists never ceased to imagine the empires of the new imperial era as
humane and civilizing, but former subject peoples held them in contempt. Consequently, imperialism became a synonym for aggression
and exploitation that the United States and the Soviet Union both
used in Cold War propaganda. Each cast itself as the champion of
oppressed peoples while depicting its rival as an imperial power. But
of course this did not prevent them from occasionally giving in to the
temptation to use imperial methods in seeking to dominate strategic
territories and secure resources.
Of the two Cold War powers, the Soviet Union certainly came
closest to the conventional defi nition of an empire. It was heir to
tsarist Russia, which had so many non-Russian subjects under the
Romanovs that nationalists referred to it as “the prison of peoples.”
The Soviet Union never called itself an empire and condemned the
western excesses of the new imperialism, but in reality Lenin’s regime
ruled millions of unwilling and disenfranchised subject peoples. This
made the USSR a de facto empire. Ever the pragmatist, Joseph Stalin reacquired the last missing pieces of the Romanovs’ empire by
annexing eastern Poland and the Baltic states under the terms of
the Nazi-Soviet Pact. In the 1950s, Nikita Khrushchev sponsored a
Conclusion 429
colonial endeavor to settle hundreds of thousands of Russians and
Ukrainians on untilled “virgin lands” in Central Asia.
As in the western empires, this oppression and extraction eventually provoked an anti-imperial backlash. The resistance began in the
Ukraine in the 1960s, but over the next two decades it spread to most of
the Soviet republics. Seeking relief from Russian settlers, limits on central demands for resources, and greater autonomy, subject elites, who
were mostly products of the Soviet system, mobilized their communities along ethnic lines. In time, they demanded their own nation-states,
particularly after the Soviet Union gave its eastern European satellites greater independence in the 1970s. Ideologies of Marxist-Leninist
brotherhood were poor fi rebreaks against this spreading nationalism.
Matters came to a head in the late 1980s when the disastrous
Afghan War, the Polish Solidarity movement, and Mikhail Gorbachev’s glasnost reforms weakened the Soviet Union’s hold on its
imperial periphery. But as was the case in most empires, subject
rebellions did not bring down the Soviet Union. Instead, the Russians themselves decided that it was no longer worthwhile to hold the
Soviet empire together by force. Taking a page from the nationalists’
book, Boris Yeltsin destroyed the USSR in 1991 by declaring that
the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic was a nation-state.
He did this to strengthen Russia by jettisoning imperial territories
that stood in the way of its development as a liberal democratic society. Having survived an attempted coup by Soviet hard-liners, Yeltsin
concluded treaties with the other Soviet republics acknowledging
them as sovereign independent nations. Thus, the last true empire in
the world dissolved into fi fteen independent successor states.
By comparison, if the USSR was an old-style empire in denial,
the United States was a hegemonic global power that its friends and
critics frequently mistook for an empire. To be sure, Americans often
resorted to colonial and imperial methods in pursuing personal and
national goals. The founding fathers framed the War of Independence
as a just revolution against the tyrannical British Empire, but this did
not prevent the new nation from acquiring enormous swaths of additional territory by either purchase or conquest. The 1846 MexicanAmerican War, for example, was a largely imperial enterprise that
brought the United States most of its southwestern states.
More signifi cant, America’s westward expansion entailed the defeat
and near total destruction of New World peoples. In this sense it was
430 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
more colonial than imperial. In pursuing its “Manifest Destiny,” the
United States did not seek to turn Amerindians into tribute-paying
subjects; it wanted their land. This did not mean that the settlers had
a specifi c genocidal agenda in the west. Rather, most nineteenth-century Americans believed that the Amerindians were a lower order of
humanity who were dying out because they could not survive in the
modern world. Thomas Hart Benton put these sentiments into words
on the Senate fl oor in 1846 when he said, “Civilization or extinction
has been the fate of all people who have found themselves in the track
of the advancing Whites.”15 Americans thus assured themselves that
the United States’ transformation into a continental nation was neither imperial nor immoral.
Modern debates over whether the United States was an empire
or not overlook the fact that successive administrations in the nineteenth century followed an inherently nonimperial assimilationist policy in gradually recognizing surviving Native Americans as
citizens, albeit inferior ones. Similarly, emancipation turned former
slaves into Americans of African descent rather than imperial subjects. Alaskans and Hawaiians eventually won the same status, but
these concessions were not particularly grand or magnanimous. Nevertheless, America’s treatment of nonwestern peoples living within
its borders was not, by strict defi nition, imperial. Although they suffered institutionalized racism and discrimination, by the twentieth
century Native Americans, indigenous Hawaiians and Alaskans, and
African Americans were citizens, not subjects. This reality stands in
contrast to the national minorities in the Soviet Union who acquired
their own separate nation-states when the Soviet empire collapsed.
The United States’ assimilationist policies reinforced its egalitarian self-image, but the ingrained American antipathy toward empire
did not prevent the nation from falling victim to the new imperial
mania of the late nineteenth century. Although the United States did
not take part in the scramble for Africa, President William McKinley’s administration could not resist the temptation to take over most
of Spain’s remaining empire after its victory in the 1898 SpanishAmerican War. An unabashedly proimperial lobby failed to secure
the annexation of Cuba, but McKinley obligingly claimed Guam,
Puerto Rico, and the Philippines.
The United States proved a surprisingly ambivalent imperial master. Struggling to reconcile their democratic values with the realities
Conclusion 431
of ruling millions of unwilling and seemingly inassimilable subjects, Americans questioned the price of empire. The Supreme Court
ruled that the Bill of Rights applied to the former Spanish territories,
and the United States governed the Philippines through an elected
national assembly and senate that was largely free to legislate as it
saw fi t, subject to the veto of an American governor general. In the
1930s, Franklin Roosevelt sought to shed an expensive imperial white
elephant by setting the Filipinos on the path to formal independence.
Acting over the objections of some Filipino elites who did not want to
lose access to American markets, he declared that the territory would
become independent after a ten-year transitional period of internal
self-government. The Second World War interrupted these plans, but
on July 4, 1946, Harry Truman held to Roosevelt’s original timetable
and transferred power to the Filipinos.
After the Allied victory, the United States also refused to bankroll
the resuscitation of the British Empire, but Cold War pragmatism led
Truman to underwrite France’s return to Indochina. For the most part,
the Truman and Eisenhower administrations tolerated the tottering
postwar European empires as long as they did not become a liability
in the struggle with the Soviet Union for infl uence in Africa and Asia.