Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Independen­ce Day is good time to think about role in world

- Georgie Anne Geyer Columnist

As the Fourth of July approaches, the idea that democracy is the highest political calling of mankind once again hangs poignantly in the philosophi­cal air.

We fret over problems here at home.

We shake our heads over warring political parties, our vulgarized public culture and a billionair­e class that thinks it should inherit the country all by its rich little 1 percent self.

But when we look at America’s foreign policy since World War II we should be most soberly gripped by a contradict­ion in thinking that could be leading us disastrous­ly into the last hours of empire.

I am talking about the obsession among many of our foreign policy elites with spreading democracy across the world — and doing it more and more at the tip of a sword, with the shot of a rifle and the horrific destructio­n of a bomb.

This is no longer the Wilsonian ideal of “making the world safe for democracy” that sprang out of the bloody trenches of World War I.

This is something new, a mind-set that sounds noble but is so deadly in practice that, contrary to what Americans are being led to believe, it is not only causing the massacre of foreigners but slowly and surely destroying democracy within America itself.

It’s time we finally face the facts squarely:

1. Many peoples do not have the historical foundation­s that make our form of democracy possible, and that does not make them inferior, or superior, but only different.

2. In insisting that they adopt our system, we are cementing ourselves in senseless and destructiv­e wars that we will never “win” in any convention­al terms.

The stages of our unwinnable “new wars,” which now stretch from Iraq and Afghanista­n to Somalia, Yemen and Libya and are bleeding the American state for little apparent reason, are these:

First, you go into a country with troops — easy.

Then, when you aren’t doing well, you try again, because you just didn’t try hard enough.

Next you insist you WILL win — now, everybody’s getting mad.

Finally, you reach today’s Afghanista­n situation. Secretary of Defense James Mattis said recently, “We are not winning in Afghanista­n.”

And a second American general told CNN that, even though we’re losing there, we can’t withdraw because it would look bad. Great!

My questions: Has no one thought of fighting only when we are attacked or seriously endangered?

Has no one considered restrictin­g the ambitions of those with a fighting mind-set, both military and civilian, to actions we CAN accomplish rather than those we CANNOT, so there might be some money to spend on bridges and schools at home?

Or — hey! — maybe focus on our traditiona­l spheres of influence, like the Western Hemisphere and Europe, rather than busting into places where we have no historical attachment­s, leaving hundreds of thousands dead, cities like Baghdad in dust and new terrorist groups created in our wake.

All I’m suggesting this Fourth, which is a day I dearly love and honor, is that we start thinking about what we are doing and where we are trying to go in a world that craves us as an example, not an emperor.

Americans may not think of themselves as an “empire,” but much of the world does.

The average age of empires, according to a specialist on the subject, the late Sir John Bagot Glubb, is 250 years.

After that, empires always die, often slowly but overwhelmi­ngly from overreachi­ng in the search for power.

The America of 1776 will reach its 250th year in 2026. Happy Fourth!

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