Is the current refugee crisis gripping the European Union "all America's fault"?
That is how my critique of US foreign policy was characterized in a recent
interview on the Fox Business Channel. I do not blame the host for making this
claim, but I think it is important to clarify the point.
It has become common to discount any criticism of US foreign policy as "blaming
America first." It is a convenient way of avoiding a real discussion. If aggressive
US policy in the Middle East - for example in Iraq - results in the creation
of terrorist organizations like al-Qaeda in Iraq, is pointing out the unintended
consequences of bad policy blaming America? Is it "blaming America" to point
out that blowback - like we saw on 9/11 - can be the result of unwise US foreign
policy actions like stationing US troops in Saudi Arabia?
In the Fox interview I pointed out that the current refugee crisis is largely
caused by bad US foreign policy actions. The US government decides on regime
change for a particular country - in this case, Syria - destabilizes the government,
causes social chaos, and destroys the economy, and we are supposed to be surprised
that so many people are desperate to leave? Is pointing this out blaming America,
or is it blaming that part of the US government that makes such foolish policies?
Accusing those who criticize US foreign policy of "blaming America" is pretty
selective, however. Such accusations are never leveled at those who criticize
a US pullback. For example, most neocons argue that the current crisis in Iraq
is all Obama's fault for pulling US troops out of the country. Are they "blaming
America first" for the mess? No one ever says that. Just like they never explain
why the troops were removed from Iraq: the US demanded complete immunity for
troops and contractors and the Iraqi government refused.
Iraq was not a stable country when the US withdrew its troops anyway. As soon
as the US stopped paying the Sunnis not to attack the Iraqi government, they
started attacking the Iraqi government. Why? Because the US attack on Iraq
led to a government that was closely allied to Iran and the Sunnis could not
live with that! It was not the US withdrawal from Iraq that created the current
instability but the invasion. The same is true with US regime change policy
toward Syria. How many Syrians were streaming out of Syria before US support
for Islamist rebels there made the country unlivable? Is pointing out this
consequence of bad US policy also blaming America first?
Last year I was asked by another Fox program whether I was not "blaming America" when
I criticized the increasingly confrontational US stand toward Russia. Here's
how I put it then:
I don't blame America. I am America, you are America. I don't blame you. I
blame bad policy. I blame the interventionists. I blame the neoconservatives
who preach this stuff, who believe in it like a religion -- that they have
to promote American goodness even if you have to bomb and kill people.
In short, I don't blame America; I blame neocons.