Libertarians are often accused of being utopians. Well, Reason Magazine devoted its January
2015 issue to realism – in this case, realism regarding foreign policy and non-intervention. “In
Search of Libertarian Realism: How should anti-interventionism apply in the
real world?” Contributors include Sheldon
Richman, Christopher Preble, William Ruger and Fernando Tesón.
I will frame my review as a minarchist, although regular
readers know that I believe such a position to be not only contradictory to
libertarian theory (after all, non-aggression means non-aggression), but not
realistic or reasonable in a world populated with human beings.
The Case for Realism
and Restraint, Will Ruger
Right off the bat, you will see why I must approach this as
a minarchist (else there would be little point):
The U.S. should adopt a foreign
policy that is both consistent with a free society and aimed at securing
America's interests in the world-in other words, libertarian realism.
So, I will stick to the minarchist fallacy that only a
government monopoly can provide such services.
The primary goal of the state
should be to protect the territorial integrity of the United States and the
property rights—broadly understood, including throughout the global commons—of
the people residing within it.
Why “broadly understood”?
Such open doors are sufficient for interventionists to cause all manner
of havoc.
Why “throughout the global commons”? I assume this means the oceans and the
airspace above same. Why not outer space
as well? Can you envision a government
powerful enough to effectively patrol and secure three-quarters of the world’s
surface area, the skies above this same area, and the entire universe beyond
the atmosphere of earth?
Can you envision such a government in any way consistent
with a free society? The US government
cannot effectively exercise this control today, yet look at the size and reach
of the current leviathan.
Why “throughout the global commons”? Why should a US resident expect protection
via the US government in the “global commons”?
…a libertarian realist foreign
policy will have positive benefits for Americans and people of other countries
beyond achieving these fairly limited ends.
Of what business is it to the US government to concern
itself with benefitting citizens of other countries?
In the military realm, the
watchword of U.S. policy should be restraint.
The restraint approach harkens back to the traditional American thinking about
defense that dominated from George Washington's Farewell Address to the
beginning of the Spanish-American War in 1898.
With the ability to effectively secure the peace on and over
the world’s oceans, as well as throughout space, can restraint be envisioned,
realistically? Who are the generals and
CIA directors that will command this restrained omnipotent power? Jesus and the Twelve?
Defense and deterrence will be the
primary methods of meeting U.S. security needs. However, this is not the
absolute noninterventionism or the functional pacifism often advocated by
left-liberals and libertarians.
Get ready for wise and considered pragmatism, as opposed to
anything unrealistic, like principle:
Aggressive military action should
be on the table where and when warranted, such as what might have been
necessary had the French, in the early 1800s, been unwilling to sell New
Orleans and threatened to forcibly close off our trade down the Mississippi.
Get this? A
libertarian that doesn’t believe in property rights. What is “libertarian” if not being for
property rights?
Restraint, rooted in realism,
requires the maintenance of a very strong—but smaller and more
focused—military, with the Navy and the Air Force having the most important
roles and the Army sustaining the deepest cuts.
The “global commons” cannot be protected via a smaller and
more focused Navy and Air Force. These
branches cannot protect the “global commons” today. How can these branches of the military be
made smaller and still succeed at this surrealistic defense policy?
Restraint also requires a capable
intelligence community, though one focused abroad and respectful of American
civil liberties at home.
On what planet? I
cannot think of one instance where a country that developed significant
surveillance capabilities did not turn these against their own citizens. OK, there might be one – but I can put up ten for every one that anyone might
discover.
The U.S. is exceptionally safe
today…The country has an extremely favorable geographic position, with two huge
"moats" separating us from strong or threatening powers.
A minarchist might build a good case with this as the
starting point, if he didn’t include the global commons in the discussion. Why not build on this reality? Instead, Ruger introduces the justification,
chanted as a mantra, for every intervention in the last decade:
Appropriately, then, restraint does
not a priori rule out the use of
military force against terrorist groups and their state supporters when
necessary. Afghanistan in 2001 was one such case where war was justified even
within a restraint framework, since the regime in Kabul provided a safe-haven
for the notorious terrorist group which carried out the deadly attacks of 9/11.
911…911…911…911. The justification for every violation. We now come to the author’s criteria for
restraint: the US government should only act aggressively when it has
absolutely no evidence to support its justification; for example, 911.
Americans should not have to spend
their own blood and treasure policing the globe, even assuming that we could do
so successfully (which recent history has demonstrated otherwise).
Somehow a military and intelligence capability powerful
enough to secure the property rights of Americans in the “global commons” will
also restrain itself from any other mission.
That is surreal.
Libertarianism Means
Noninterventionism, Sheldon Richman
A noninterventionist foreign policy
is the natural complement to a noninterventionist domestic policy.
The upshot is that even if a
well-intended, risk-free interventionist foreign policy could be conceived in
the abstract (leaving aside the problem of taxation), its chances of being
carried out correctly by any real-world government are virtually nonexistent.
I could stop here (but I won’t), as I agree with Richman’s post;
Richman is a realist on this subject.
He appropriately notes, for example, that a government
powerful enough to reach globally will not limit itself domestically:
U.S. government policies and
technologies developed to efficiently carry out the occupation of foreign
societies eventually "boomerang" on Americans at home…
Richman also notes that aggression is justified only against
those who have aggressed:
On the foreign side, wars and
occupations immorally threaten noncombatants...
Enough said about Richman.
Bravo!
Don't Underestimate
the Costs of Inaction, Fernando R. Tesón
Current events in Syria and Iraq
have rekindled talk about humanitarian intervention. The amply documented
atrocities perpetrated by the Islamic State (ISIS) range from public beheading
to rape, forced conversion, and expulsion. The United States and a few other
countries are already attacking ISIS from the sky and giving some aid to
resistors on the ground. But these bombings will not be sufficient to stop
ISIS' crimes. By all appearances, only a full invasion with ground troops could
get the job done. And Americans are weary of invasions.
I am already done with Tesón after his opening
paragraph. Was it intervention or
non-intervention that birthed ISIS?
In any case, the rest of his essay poses questions for which
no one can know the answers – even assuming the analysis was done by and
decisions were made by men of goodwill. Even
Tesón admits the questions are often unanswerable, yet concludes that this
should not preclude intervention.
So why bother asking the questions in the first place? Why does he bother suggesting these questions
should be asked if he also believes they are unanswerable? What value has Tesón even added to the
dialogue? In other words, Tesón advocates
pretty much a continuation of the status quo.
Thank you, John McCain.
Toward a Prudent
Foreign Policy, Christopher Preble
Preble delivers a pretty good, minarchist evaluation of war
and foreign policy. As I stated up
front, I approach this analysis from the minarchist viewpoint despite my
anarchist-libertarian views. So I have
not much to say regarding Preble’s comments.
Conclusion
From “For a New
Liberty,” by Murray Rothbard:
The true utopian is one who
advocates a system that is contrary to the natural law of human beings and of
the real world. A utopian system is one
that could not work even if everyone were persuaded to try to put it into
practice. The utopian system could not
work, i.e., could not sustain itself in operation.
Realism requires accepting the world as it is, not as one
wishes it to be. Realism requires
accepting political and military leaders as they are; there is no realism in ascribing
to these leaders the characteristic of “what would Jesus do.” Realism requires understanding and accepting
that those who reach the highest levels of government do not make decisions in
the same way market participants do.
The only realistic conclusion to draw from this – even for a
minarchist – is non-intervention.
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