Highlights

  • In the run-up to the 2008 election, Democratic presidential hopefuls pledge to replace the foreign-policy “unilateralism” and “arrogance” of the Bush administration with a multilateral approach that is equally meddlesome. Neither the current leading Democratic nor Republican foreign-policy approaches reflect the vision of America’s founders, who believed the republic should differ from its European counterparts by sending goods and ideas, not soldiers and decrees, to foreign shores. (ch. 1)
  • It is common today to hear World War II called “the Good War,” and American opponents of entry into Europe’s war are often caricatured as ignorant appeasers. Yet the anti-interventionist America First Committee included John F. Kennedy, Gerald Ford, novelists Sinclair Lewis and Gore Vidal, poet e. e. cummings, and other respected figures. Legitimate concerns about allying with Stalin, who had murdered millions more people than Hitler, were often ignored or misrepresented. (ch. 3)
  • Anti-American hostility in the Middle East and elsewhere today is partly a reaction against U.S. support for unpopular regimes. In the late 1940s and early ‘50s, Republican Senator Robert A. Taft warned that Truman’s and Eisenhower’s support for non-democratic regimes that might otherwise fall into the Soviet orbit would produce resentment against America. Labeled ostrich-like by many of his contemporaries, Taft now looks like a cleareyed visionary. (ch. 4)
  • Recent nation-building efforts in Haiti, Afghanistan, and Iraq—countries with traditions of dictatorship, repression, political murder, revolt, and massacre—are also unlikely to result in democracy anytime soon. Instead of fostering democracy, attempts to engage in democratic nation building tend to produce 1) truces with gangs and warlords willing to keep a lower profile and 2) puppet governments that eventually become or give way to dictatorship. From 1850 to 2006, Great Britain and the United States sent military forces abroad 51 times to engage in democratic nation building, but they have left behind a lasting democracy in only 14 of those countries—a success rate of just 27 percent. (ch. 5, 6)
  • Pundits across the spectrum hold post-war Germany as a model of successful democratic nation building by the United States. In reality, from 1945 to 1952, U.S. occupation policy sought not to foster reconstruction or promote democracy, but to wreck Germany’s economy, deny it any war-making potential, and punish ordinary Germans. A 1949 article in Commentary magazine exposed “Why Democracy Is Losing in Germany.” (ch. 7)
  • Not counting war casualties, an estimated 262 million ordinary citizens were murdered by their own governments in the 20th century. Democratic-peace theorists argue that democracies kill far fewer of their own (and perhaps never make war against each other) because democracy diffuses political power. However, a new theory argues that a more effective way to protect citizens from their governments isn’t to promote democratic measures, but rather to strengthen private-property rights. (ch. 12)
  • Although opponents of globalization view themselves as pro-peace progressives, their support for protectionism actually makes wars more likely. International trade not only makes countries wealthier, but it also fosters peace. Trade between Taiwan and China may be the leading reason war between them hasn’t broken out. Activists should take up the cause of promoting stronger commercial ties between countries as a way to promote peace. (ch. 14)


Synopsis

For more than a century U.S. foreign policy, whether conducted by Democrats or Republicans, liberals or conservatives, has been based on the assumption that Americans’ interests are served best by intervening abroad to secure open markets for U.S. exports, fight potential enemies far from American shores, or engage in democratic nation building. Before the 20th century, however, a foreign policy of nonintervention was widely considered more desirable, and Washington’s and Jefferson’s advice that the republic avoid foreign entanglements was largely heeded.

Opposing the Crusader State: Alternatives to Global Interventionism, edited by Robert Higgs and Carl P. Close, examines the history of American noninterventionism and its relevance in today’s world. Arguing that intervention is not an appropriate “default setting” for U.S. foreign policy, the book’s contributors clarify widespread misunderstandings about noninterventionism, question the wisdom of nation building, debate the validity of democratic-peace theory, and make the case for pursuing a peace strategy that emphasizes private-property rights and free trade.

“Readers will come away from this book with a richer understanding of the noninterventionist movements in U.S. history,” write Higgs and Close in the book’s introduction. “More important, they will better understand the complexities surrounding democratic nation building and democratic-peace theory, which will enable them to evaluate better not only recent U.S. foreign interventions, but also legislative efforts to promote freedom abroad, such as the Advance Democracy Act of 2005. Most important, perhaps, they will have a firmer understanding of why many classical liberals embrace the strengthening of commercial ties between all countries as a means of avoiding war.”

AMERICAN NONINTERVENTIONISM

American noninterventionists have often argued that meddling in the affairs of other countries and committing U.S. troops overseas runs counter to the republic’s founding principles and weakens economic and civil liberties at home. Joseph R. Stromberg develops this theme in chapter 2, “Imperialism, Noninterventionism, and Revolution: Opponents of the Modern American Empire.” Despite such deviations as James Madison’s theory of territorial expansion and the Monroe Doctrine, a noninterventionist foreign policy largely prevailed until the Spanish- American War. William Graham Sumner and other classical liberals predicted that the U.S. military occupation of Spain’s former possessions would erode republican government and weaken individual liberty at home.

Similarly, the diverse group of public figures who opposed U.S. entry into World War II feared that the country had been led down a path that would result in the loss of freedom, not only domestically, but also in the lands that would likely fall under Soviet control, explains Sheldon Richman in chapter 2, “New Deal Nemesis: The ‘Old Right’ Jeffersonians.” Ralph Raico delves further into this critical period, explaining how long-forgotten events of 1939-41 shaped the public debate over U.S. entry into the war in chapter 3, “On the Brink of World War II: Justus Doenecke’s Storm on the Horizon.”

Michael T. Hayes examines the ideas of one of the leading noninterventionists in American politics in chapter 4, “The Republican Road Not Taken: The Foreign-Policy Vision of Robert A. Taft.” Pursuing “regime stability” abroad, as Truman and Eisenhower did, Taft argued, exposed Americans to a backlash of resentment from people suffering under the yoke of harsh U.S.-backed governments.

THE CASE AGAINST NATION BUILDING

Many analysts argue that several economic and social conditions must first be met before liberal democracy can take root, but they often neglect the fundamental prerequisite: political elites, and the culture at large, must eschew political violence, argues James L. Payne in chapter 5, “The Prospects for Democracy in High-Violence Societies.” This neglected truth sheds light on the poor results of efforts to export democracy. Payne examines the lackluster record of U.S. and British attempts to engage in democratic nation building since the mid-19th century in chapter 6, “Does Nation Building Work?” Politicians and pundits have often cited West Germany as a success story of American nation building, but Payne argues against this claim in chapter 7, “Did the United States Create Democracy in Germany?” It should not be surprising that U.S. policy during the occupation of 1945 to 1952 did not promote democracy, because the policy did not seek to promote a democratic political culture, but rather to eliminate Germany’s war-making potential, de-Nazify German society, and penalize ordinary Germans.

In many cases, democratic nation building has conflicted with other U.S. foreign policy goals. For example, U.S. support for Indonesian President Suharto collided with democratic aspirations in newly independent East Timor in the 1970s, Jerry K. Sweeney argues in chapter 8, “A Matter of Small Consequence: U.S. Foreign Policy and the Tragedy in East Timor.”

DEBATING THE DEMOCRATIC PEACE

Some analysts argue that democracies rarely, if ever, go to war with each other because democracies are inherently much less warlike with each other. If the theory of democratic peace is correct, it buttresses the case for democratic nation building. How valid and robust is the theory? This question is contentious even among classical liberals, as this section of the book demonstrates.

In chapter 9, “Democracy and War,” Ted Galen Carpenter criticizes the version of democratic-peace theory found in R. J. Rummel’s 1997 book Power Kills: Democracy as a Method of Nonviolence, a synthesis of decades of empirical research by Rummel and other democratic-peace theorists. According to Carpenter, Rummel minimizes or ignores alternative explanations for the peace observed among democracies and discounts cases that cast doubt on the peaceful democracies thesis.

R. J. Rummel responds in chapter 10, “Democracy and War: Reply,” arguing that Carpenter’s alleged counterexamples to democratic-peace theory are not valid counterexamples. Rummel also claims he has tested and ruled out more alternative explanations for the democratic peace than Carpenter had proposed. Finally, in chapter 11, “Democracy and War: Rejoinder,” Carpenter challenges the validity of Rummel’s designation of which countries are truly democratic, arguing that Rummel’s distinction between hot and cold wars enables him to downplay democracies’ many proxy wars, covert operations, and close calls with open warfare.

Rummel has argued not only that liberal democracy is the cure for war, but also that it will end the mass murder of civilians by their own government (“democide”). An alternative theory, which emphasizes violations of private-property rights, better explains democide’s causes, its oscillations within a given country, and its cures, Stephen W. Carson argues in chapter 12, “Stealing and Killing: A Property-Rights Theory of Mass Murder.”

FREE TRADE AS A PEACE STRATEGY

Some advocates of market economies passionately support a large military, whereas many who oppose a large military also oppose free markets. These two camps, however, are not the only alternatives. Historically, classical liberals were both supporters of free markets and critics of military adventurism. British parliamentarian and writer Richard Cobden (1804–65), for example, held that more military entails less market, explains Edward P. Stringham in chapter 13, “Commerce, Markets, and Peace: Richard Cobden’s Enduring Lessons.” Productive British citizens did not benefit from military interventionism, according to Cobden, because it required levels of taxation that hampered the civilian economy. Cobden’s views—prosperity requires peace; peace is more secure when countries have strong trade ties; and liberty is spread more effectively by education and persuasion than by intimidation and coercion—are as relevant today as in his day.

Although the economic benefits of trade are widely understood, the international security benefits are not, despite many studies firmly establishing that trade promotes peace. If these studies were better known, many critics of globalization might become supporters. Erich Weede discusses the literature supporting the “peace by trade” claim in chapter 14, “The Diffusion of Prosperity and Peace by Globalization.” Weede cautions that the trade-peace link may not prevent wars every time, especially if a country has weak property rights and democratic institutions. Nevertheless, the trade-peace link is very strong. Trade between China and Taiwan, for example, seems to have pacified what otherwise might be an extremely hostile relationship.

“The policy implications of the capitalist-peace strategy are simple: promote economic freedom and globalization,” writes Weede. “If the policy succeeds, one gets more prosperity, more democracy, less civil war, and less interstate war.” The political challenges of implementing this approach are daunting, especially in poor and conflictridden countries, Weede notes, but it is more likely to be adopted if Western countries practice it consistently and thus become models for others to emulate.


About the Editors

Robert Higgs is Senior Fellow in Political Economy for the Independent Institute and editor of The Independent Review. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the Johns Hopkins University, and he has been a member of the faculty at the University of Washington, Lafayette College, and Seattle University, and a visiting professor at the University of Economics in Prague. He is the author of eight books, the most recent of which are Depression, War, and Cold War and Neither Liberty nor Safety, and the editor or co-editor of five books. A contributor to many scholarly volumes, he is also the author of more than 100 articles and reviews in the professional journals of economics, demography, history, and public policy and the author of many articles in the popular press. He was named to the Templeton Foundations Honor Roll for Colleges and Universities in 1989. He received the Distinguished Scholar Award from the Association of Private Enterprise Education in 1993; the Friedrich von Wieser Memorial Prize for Excellence in Economic Education from the Prague Conference on Political Economy in 2006; the Thomas S. Szasz Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Cause of Civil Liberties from the Center for Independent Thought in 2006; and the Gary G. Schlarbaum Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Liberty from the Ludwig von Mises Institute in 2007.

Carl P. Close is Research Fellow and Academic Affairs Director at the Independent Institute and Assistant Editor of The Independent Review. He is co-editor (with Robert Higgs) of The Challenge of Liberty (2006) and Re-Thinking Green (2005). His research interests include environmental policy, the history of economic and political thought, and the political economy of propaganda. He received his master’s degree in economics from the University of California, Santa Barbara.


Product Details

• 256 Pages, Trade Paper, $15.95
• Index, 3 figures, 1 table
• ISBN: 978-1-59813-015-7