U.S.: The power that loses wars
and gains strength
Carlos Alberto Montaner
(FIRMAS PRESS, Madrid) George Friedman, a
renowned political analyst, affirms that the United States has lost, or
failed to win, most of the political and military conflicts in which it has
engaged in recent decades. He has just made that recount apropos of the
Iraqi disaster.
In Korea in the early 1950s, the cost of
reaching a truce and returning to the starting point was tens of thousands
of lives. After the Missile Crisis in 1962, the Cuban dictatorship managed
to consolidate and Moscow put a dagger to America's neck. With the USSR gone,
Washington lost its will to eliminate a regime in whose uncomfortable
presence it was accustomed to live.
Vietnam, as we all know, was an adventure
that ended in the precipitate withdrawal of American troops and the
absorption of South Vietnam by communist Vietnam. In Iran, it was impossible
to prop up the Shah and the ayatollahs installed a religious madhouse intent
on exterminating Israel and the United States, the great western Satan.
How can the United States be the only power
on the planet if it has lost almost all the battles waged after World War
II? One of the hypotheses examined by Friedman seems convincing: because the
United States' strength does not depend on its military might, which was
utilized in all those episodes with many limitations, scant conviction, and
generally amid a great many divided opinions.
The United States is the great engine of the
planet because of its industrial power, its creativity, the drive of its
economic system and the strength of its institutions. What has prevailed is
General Motors and the Chase Manhattan Bank, not the Pentagon or the State
Department.
To Friedman's reflections we might add a
repertoire of Latin American examples. In 1898, the U.S. defeated Spain in a
“splendid little war,” as Teddy Roosevelt phrased it, and the country seized
Puerto Rico and the Philippines and converted Cuba into a protectorate for
the duration of the Platt Amendment, which was abolished in 1934.
What happened beginning in 1898? In the
Philippines, there was ferocious resistence to the American occupation,
quashed with the lives of 6,000 Americans and innumerable crimes committed
by the new colonial power in an effort to “pacify” the country. Later, for
half a century, the United States controlled the remote archipelago, which
provided no benefit to the nation, until it granted Manila its independence
after WWII.
For its part, Puerto Rico -- which in two
referendums has refused to fully integrate into the United States and has
managed to eliminate from its territory all U.S. military bases -- has been
for decades the largest recipient of American aid in history ($17 billion
last year) and one of the principal sources of Hispanic emigration to the
mainland.
And Cuba? Cuba became the most tenacious
enemy the U.S. ever had in Latin America, until the recent appear of the
colorful Hugo Chávez. Honestly: Did the United States win the war of 1898?
This tale of frustration very much resembles
the record of unexpected consequences created by U.S. military adventures in
Central America and the Caribbean. Pershing's “punitive expedition” against
Pancho Villa in Mexico, and the landings of Marines in Nicaragua, Haiti and
the Dominican Republic did not bring democratic stability or prosperity to
those nations, as the State Department had intended.
That was probably because it is almost
impossible to impose from abroad a type of behavior that does not adhere to
the traditions, values and beliefs of the society being led along “the good
path,” as the Americans are bitterly learning in Iraq today.
Are there any exceptions to this string of
U.S. failures in Latin America? From Washington's perspective, only three
and not very important: the coup against Jacobo Arbenz organized by the CIA
in Guatemala in 1954, and the U.S. invasions of the Dominican Republic in
1965 and Grenada in 1983.
In those three actions, launched with Cold
War logic, the U.S. was able to avoid or contain the advance of communists
and their sympathizers; but perhaps its wisest move was not to occupy those
territories permanently and not to attempt to replicate in them the American
institutions. That objective is simply beyond reach. It's pure wishful
thinking. [©FIRMAS PRESS]
March 22, 2007
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