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Killing With Kindness

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  • Killing With Kindness

    KILLING WITH KINDNESS
    By David Bromwich

    American Conservative Magazine
    http://www.amconmag.com/article/2009/mar/ 09/00029/
    March 4 2009

    The Clinton administration believed in the good of humanitarian
    intervention, and the Kosovo War aimed to set a pattern for such
    efforts. The 11 weeks of bombing and the 12,000 killed on the ground
    seemed to its architects a fair price for so clear a demonstration
    of enlightened resolve. That false rumors of massacre were used to
    incite the war, that the ethnic killings turned out to be mainly
    a consequence and not a cause of the bombing--these were seen as
    side-effects of a humane exuberance.

    By contrast, the Bush administration chose to revert from cold war
    to war, and defined its enemy by analogy with metaphysical evil. The
    "war on terror" was a rubric that could support many tributary wars
    with a minimum of definitional fuss.

    Let us say that the neoliberal wants humanitarian interventions that
    may uneasily shade into wars, while the neoconservative wants wars that
    sooner or later find a justification to satisfy humanitarian goals. How
    great is the difference? Our rival schools of empire have in common
    their commitment to preserve a standing military establishment that
    every year spends almost as much as the rest of the world combined,
    and they agree that violence is permissible against other countries in
    a cause unconnected with national self-preservation. The bare appeal to
    self-preservation is more often made by the neoconservatives, but this
    appeal goes along lines where hyperbolic fear becomes indistinguishable
    from fantasy. As late as 2007, Vice President Cheney warned that any
    withdrawal of troops in the Middle East would plant the green crescent
    flag inside the White House.

    Gary Bass has written Freedom's Battle to defend the idealism of
    humanitarian wars. But rather than speak directly of Kosovo, for
    example, Bass has gone back to three 19th-century interventions by
    Great Powers, and one failure of humane intervention in the early 20th
    century. The episodic narrative is framed by the opening 40 pages
    and the final 50 pages, which argue that there is such a thing as a
    good and generous intervention: a military action by a great against
    a lesser power that is neither brutal nor selfish and that promotes
    the good of humanity.

    Inside that frame are Bass's four case studies. He starts with the
    defense of Greek independence by the London Greek Committee and other
    philhellenic persons and groups in the early 1820s that reached its
    climax in the British destruction of the Ottoman fleet in Navarino Bay
    in 1827. A more acute provocation drove Napoleon III in 1860 to stop
    the Druze massacres of Maronite Christians in Syria. In a parallel
    episode, British popular opinion was rallied by Gladstone in 1876
    to combat the "Bulgarian Horrors," massacres that sprang from the
    Serbian wing of pan-Slavism. Gladstone, in the process, advanced the
    broader cause of liberal internationalism against the conservative
    realism of Disraeli and incidentally "faced down" the Russians in
    Constantinople. Finally, Bass recounts the Turkish slaughter of
    Armenians in the First World War, when Theodore Roosevelt, out of
    office and a decade away from his advocacy of war on the Philippines,
    wrote eloquently to rouse an intervention President Wilson would
    not perform.

    Bass is a journalist turned academic, with a fast and readable style
    that tends toward glibness. He makes Byron the hero of his opening
    section on the Greek-Ottoman war and comes around to Byron again at
    the end--not failing to note that he died in Missolonghi a casualty of
    fever not battle. The later sections of the book are similarly lent a
    high gloss by personalities--most of all by the contest of Disraeli the
    passive realist with Gladstone the active humanitarian (whose Balkan
    policy would become a model for Tony Blair). In the Armenian case,
    Roosevelt emerges as the hero and Wilson as the prudential leader
    whose subsequent internationalism seems a kind of expiation. It is
    perhaps a coincidence of Bass's plotting that the antagonists in
    three of his four chosen interventions are Ottoman Turks.

    Bass writes with judicious irony about the "complications" of
    these episodes, but it is fair to say that he takes a romantic
    view. Practically speaking, he wrote this book to overcome our
    prejudice against the use of force where self-preservation is not at
    stake. He knows that the prejudice comes partly from common prudence
    and partly from revulsion against the war in Iraq---a war Bass thinks
    could have turned out well had it been fought in 1988. (A sure test
    of the interventionist instinct is the belief that Iraq should have
    worked out better: the fault is said to lie in tactics or timing or
    leadership.) More particularly, the function of Freedom's Battle is
    to supply the Kosovo War with an honorable pedigree. Bass thinks it
    fitting that great-souled men of the advanced nations should seek to
    act on behalf of oppressed peoples.

    In all the stories he recounts, selfish motives preceded intervention,
    and unintended consequences followed the violence of the war. French
    support for Maronite Christians in the forming of modern Lebanon
    is only the most obvious instance. Often, too, unselfish motives
    were mixed with selfish or ordinary motives in a way that Bass,
    though he does not suppress, consistently pushes to the side. Thus
    Freedom's Battle tells of the attack in October 1827 by the "Allied
    squadron"--the British navy under Admiral Codrington accompanied
    by a few Russian and French ships--on Ottoman and Egyptian forces
    massed in Navarino Bay. The Allies did not lose a ship, while every
    Ottoman and Egyptian ship was "either burned, sunk, or driven on shore
    [and] totally annihilated" (in the words of Codrington as quoted by
    Bass). The Allies lost 174 sailors, the Ottoman forces 6,000. Bass
    writes, "The battle of Navarino spelled Greek independence." Compare
    Ã~Ilie Halévy in the second volume of his History of the English
    People in the Nineteenth Century, who remarks that "at first sight the
    student might be tempted to regard" Navarino as "the crowning victory
    of that policy of national liberation to which Canning had willingly
    seen his name attached." Yet the battle in reality, says Halévy,
    was "a defeat of the policy which Canning had secretly pursued--the
    policy of the Balance of Power--for it provoked the Russian war which,
    ever since 1822, he had endeavoured to prevent by every means at
    his disposal."

    Passing, then, from interested journalism to serious history,
    we find that in the wake of the good war lay a war less good and
    less desired. This is a fact about humanitarian interventions
    generally. Party advantage enters the calculations in a democratic
    system; charismatic aggrandizement may play a part elsewhere;
    "a successful humanitarian mission in Syria," Bass concedes, was a
    "welcome opportunity" for Napoleon III and a decision that "suited
    French imperial interests." Why reserve this sort of detail for
    subordinate clauses and parenthetical sentences?

    Gladstone, who denounced in writing and campaigned against the
    "Bulgarian Horrors," felt chagrin that the Russians came first to
    liberate the Balkans from the Ottoman yoke. Here is another clue that
    Bass does not follow but might have. Competitive humanitarianism may
    simply augment the ordinary rivalry of great powers. Gladstone, too,
    was keen to outbid Disraeli for the honor of inheriting the mantle of
    Lord Byron. It is hard to know quite what to make of such a motive. It
    may be more high-minded but is scarcely more moral than the realism
    of Metternich. Yet Bass makes much of the Byronic succession: he
    enjoys the surface poetry of politics, as he enjoys the occasional
    politics of poetry. His own prose ought to have concerned itself more
    with surface. He speaks of "vociferous voices," and people who are
    "vocally shocked." We catch a glimpse of Byron before his conversion to
    politics, "mooning about in Italy." Disraeli is described as "Byron's
    fan" and a "flashy imperialist," and Gladstone as "a very weird man."

    Freedom's Battle aims to contribute to a tendency more than to
    impress by the close articulations of an argument. Central to
    that tendency is the need to sustain the distinction between good
    "hegemonic" influence and bad "imperialist" domination. Yet where,
    in both cases, it is violent force that is justified, one's view of
    the distinction will depend on the nature of one's sympathy and not
    on a weighing of the facts. Does a democracy that kills more than
    a million in its mission to crush an internationally nonthreatening
    tyranny deserve more admiration than, say, a dictatorship that kills
    10,000 and imprisons political enemies to evict the foreign investors
    that have subsidized a guerrilla opposition? Does the greater become
    the lesser crime when the criminal is a democracy? This is a question
    Bass does not bring himself to ask, but it lies at the heart of the
    doubts that entangle his subject. And it seems closely linked to the
    more compelling question: is a military state compatible with justice?

    The big democracies, which Bass looks on as natural bringers of
    political justice to victim countries, must, in order to perform such
    services, first have been thoroughly militarized. On Bass's view,
    it is their duty to stay militarized until they have made the world
    a place where democratic justice is at home. Yet the most candid
    sentence in his book strikes an oddly discordant note: "the strength
    of democracies today has made the violation of weaker dictatorships
    an opportunity too great to resist."

    This book jauntily and entertainingly asks us to yield to the
    temptation. What it does not consider is the cost to the morale of
    democracy of giving in to the temptation repeatedly. It is possible
    for selfless vindicators of the rights of the oppressed to become
    brutal overseers who happen to speak the language of natural rights.

    In a characteristic touch, Bass tells us that the "scariest" risk of
    humanitarian intervention is not the mass destruction of civilian lives
    but rather, "that two great powers will clash." Maybe he has not come
    such a long way from Metternich after all. A peculiarity of Freedom's
    Battle, indeed, is that it scatters, among its facts and fancies, so
    rational a quantum of realistic knowledge and psychological insight
    (though the latter is too sparingly used). Bass knows that the form
    of intervention he desires can only stay free of the imperialist
    poison if placed in the hands of an international body. Yet he does
    not propose reliance on an existing body or the devising of a new
    one. Rather he worries that "multilateralism can be paralyzing." Fast,
    clean results are what he wants--a very American point of view. Or
    as he says, in a more judicial tone: "The challenge is finding the
    right middle ground: a mission big and lengthy enough to be effective,
    but small and swift enough not to be mistaken for imperialism."

    Gary Bass means well. He is young and eager for a fight, provided it
    is a good fight. But to justify the violence of the state in any cause
    besides self-preservation is an intricate and troubling enterprise. He
    has not thought it through.

    ________________________________________ __

    David Bromwich is the editor of a selection of Edmund Burke's speeches
    and letters, On Empire, Liberty, and Reform (Yale University Press).
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