The U.S. has rivals and competitors, not enemies
PHILADELPHIA — “A Gallup poll,” Libby Quaid wrote for The Associated
Press on June 2, “found that two-thirds of (Americans) said they
believe it would be a good idea for the president to meet with the
leaders of enemy countries.”
Who are they referring to? An enemy is a country with whom a nation is
at war. “Enemy countries”? We have enemies (hi, Osama). We have
critics. We even have competitors. But the United States doesn’t have
enemy countries.
September 11 aside, citizens of the United States should feel secure.
We border big oceans and two close allies — more like wholly owned
subsidiaries. As for the rest of the world, well, they’ve been pretty
nice to us.
Not that we deserve it. Since 1941, the U.S. has attacked, among
others, North Korea, North Vietnam, Cuba, Cambodia, Laos, the Dominican
Republic, Guatemala, Grenada, Panama, the Philippines, Libya, Iran,
Somalia, Yugoslavia, Haiti, Sudan, Afghanistan and Iraq. Not once were
we defending ourselves. We were always the aggressor. Over the course
of six decades during which we were the world’s leading instigator of
armed conflict, no one attacked us — not even the people we attacked!
No one declared war upon us.
Yet everywhere you turn, on every channel and in every newspaper,
there’s some politician or journalist using that word to describe
another country: enemy. John McCain bashes Barack Obama for appeasing
“the enemy” (he means Iran). Writing in the Wall Street Journal, also
about Obama and Iran, Joe Lieberman sniped: “Too many Democrats seem to
have become confused about the difference between America’s friends and
America’s enemies.” After 9/11 self-loathing gay neoconservative
blogger Andrew Sullivan called opponents of the Bush administration
“the enemy within the West itself — a paralyzing, pseudo-clever,
morally nihilist fifth column.” The Bush administration even
incorporates the E-word in a term it invented, found nowhere in U.S. or
international law, to describe its political prisoners: “unlawful enemy
combatants.”
Enemies! Enemies! Enemies! Enemies everywhere, but never an attack. Slacker enemies!
Iran isn’t an enemy. It’s a regional rival, a competitor, and a
relatively good-natured one at that. Not only did the Iranians open a
western front against the Taliban during America’s 2001 invasion of
Afghanistan, they offered assistance to downed U.S. pilots. Iran has
requested talks leading to the establishment of full diplomatic
relations. We keep refusing. The British have since backed away from
their claims that new Iranian-made improvised explosive devices were
killing U.S. occupation troops in Iraq. (The story never made sense,
given that they were used by Sunni insurgent groups — who hate Shiite
Iran.)
Occasionally someone tries to point out the obvious: We’re not at war.
No war equals no enemies. It’s the truth. But the truth doesn’t go over
well.
James Rubin, assistant secretary of state under President Clinton, was
interviewed recently by the Journal’s Paul Gigot on Fox News. “I think
it’s quite clear that Iran and North Korea and others are a danger to
the United States,” Rubin said.
Gigot laid into Rubin: “You said a danger, but you didn’t say enemies. Are they enemies?”
Rubin: “Well, I don’t know, you know, enemies — we’re not in a state of
war with Iran. Traditionally, the word ‘enemy’ is for a state of war.
We’re in a state war with the Shiite militias, with al-Qaida, we’re in
a state of war.”
Gigot: “But they’re contributing — ”
Rubin: “Iran has policies that we object to and we reject, and we should confront.”
Gigot: “But they’re contributing to the deaths of Americans, if you
listen to the American military, in Iraq, by supporting some of those
rogue militias. Doesn’t that make them enemies?” (Ted here: These
claims were debunked two years before this exchange.)
Rubin: “That makes them a country that is dangerous to the United
States, and we need to confront that danger directly.” In other words,
a country can supply weapons to your enemy without becoming your enemy.
Which, considering that the U.S. is the world’s largest arms merchant,
is a good thing. The last thing we need is more enemies! (Not that we
have any now.)
Why do we call states with whom we disagree “enemies”? Religion writer
Eboo Patel blames radical Islamists and 9/11 for spooking us.
“Terrorism,” Patel wrote in Slate, “is more than heinous murder and
guerrilla theater. It is a kind of macabre magic intended to create the
illusion of enemies everywhere.”
Trouble is, Americans were freaking out long before 9/11. The reason?
American conservatives, whose views are automatically accepted as
conventional wisdom before eventually getting discredited, constantly
see monsters in closets full of nothing but outdated fashions. “Iran
has been at war with us for 27 years, and we have discussed every
imaginable subject with them,” shrieked The National Review’s Michael
Ledeen during 2006’s Iranian-IEDs-are-killing-American-soldiers
propaganda campaign. “We have gained nothing, because there is nothing
to be gained by talking with an enemy who thinks he is winning. From
(the Iranians’) standpoint, the only thing to be negotiated is the
terms of the American surrender.”
Twenty-seven years — what a war! How on earth did we fail to notice it?
And “surrender”! How exactly would surrendering to Iran work? Wouldn’t
they have to attack us first, you know, just for show? Do snotty
remarks about Israel count as actual attacks with bullets and stuff?
How would the Islamic Republic’s modest military occupy the United
States and beat its 300 million heavily armed citizens into submission?
Enemies? Not yet. But we’re working on it.
Ted Rall is the author of the book “Silk Road to Ruin: Is Central
Asia the New Middle East?,” an in-depth prose and graphic novel
analysis of America’s next big foreign policy challenge.