The Sun (San Bernardino)

America’s foreign policy hubris is on full display

- By Ted Galen Carpenter

A recurring defect in U.S. foreign policy is a refusal by elites to concede when they made a serious policy mistake. This is not a new problem, but it has grown decidedly worse in the past few decades. It characteri­zed the interventi­on in Vietnam years after it should have become evident that Washington’s approach was failing.

Even one of the few worthwhile lessons from the bruising Vietnam experience proved only to be temporary; The

U.S. should not get involved in murky civil wars. A generation later, the United States had embarked on forceable nation building missions in both the Balkans and the Middle East. The subsequent interventi­ons in Libya and Syria were even less defensible because Washington already had the Iraq fiasco as fresh evidence that the Vietnam failure was not unique.

One might have thought that the Vietnam experience would have inoculated U.S. policymake­rs against a repetition in other parts of the world, however, even that benefit appeared to be temporary. Not even the sacrifice of 58,000 American lives and approximat­ely 1,000,000 Vietnamese lives caused U.S. leaders to reconsider a policy of global interventi­onism. Indeed, two decades later the United States was mired in another full-fledged civil war, this time in the Balkans. Another decade later, U.S. leaders once again attempted to forcibly execute a strategy that created a client both democratic and compliant in Iraq. Such conduct strongly indicated that U.S. officials might be incapable of learning appropriat­e foreign policy lessons. The latest adventure of the U.S. and its NATO allies in Ukraine appears to be less rewarding and even more dangerous than the previous examples.

A new generation of policy makers replicated many of the same mistakes a generation later in Afghanista­n, Iraq and elsewhere in the Muslim world. Civilian and military officials in George W. Bush’s administra­tion clung to failing policies even when it became obvious that the strategy being pursued was based on the illusion that Washington’s Iraq clients were winning the struggle.

And once again, the United States and its allies ignored multiple signs early on that the latest interventi­ons would turn out badly. The portrayal of conditions in Afghanista­n, for example, had almost no resemblanc­e of actual battlefiel­d conditions. Media accounts and congressio­nal testimony bore little resemblanc­e to the actual situation on the ground in that country. In the real world, Taliban forces made steady advances. Such spewing of fiction about an ultimate democratic victory continued during the Obama and Trump administra­tions. And when Joe Biden’s administra­tion finally withdrew U.S. forces from Afghanista­n, the withdrawal turned into a fiasco.

Worse, while Biden and his advisors at least belatedly realized that the Afghanista­n mission was a failure, they continued indulging in wishful thinking about the prospects for pro-U.S. factions in Ukraine, a much more dangerous setting, risking a direct military conflict with Russia. Contrary to Washington’s mythology, the Kiev government was not democratic, peace loving, or winning the war.

Weeks into the Ukraine-Russia war, prominent members of the foreign policy establishm­ent insisted that it was just a matter of time until Ukrainian resistance fighters expelled Russian forces from their country. It took until the autumn of 2023 for major Western figures to admit that the battlefiel­d situation was far less optimistic. Calls mounted for the Ukrainian government to negotiate the compromise solution to bring the fighting to an end. Even given the failure of the much-touted offensive in the summer of

2023, the Biden administra­tion did not press Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s government to commence serious peace negotiatio­ns.

Washington’s foreign policy initiative­s in the post-cold war era have been characteri­zed by a series of disappoint­ments and outright failures. Those failures have had common characteri­stics. One is excessive optimism about the prospects for the success of the U.S. proxies, even when conditions on the ground do not warrant optimism. Officials overestima­te pro-U.S. and pro-democracy sentiments; thus U.S. policy goals often are unrealisti­c. This lack of realism has led to disappoint­ment after disappoint­ment.

The United States is the most powerful country, militarily, in the world. But as the refusal of independen­t powers to heed Washington’s call to impose sanctions on Russia has shown, the United States is not nearly as powerful as it used to be.

Ted Galen Carpenter is a senior fellow at the Randolph Bourne Institute. His latest book is “Unreliable Watchdog: The News Media and U.S. Foreign Policy” (2022). This commentary was originally published by Antiwar.com.

 ?? PAUL ELLIS – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden, left, speaks at an event with G7leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during the NATO Summit, in Vilnius, Lithuania, on July 12.
PAUL ELLIS – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden, left, speaks at an event with G7leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during the NATO Summit, in Vilnius, Lithuania, on July 12.

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