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M A Y 1 9 9 5
The Diversity Myth
The hortatory version of our
history, in which America has long been a land of ethnic tolerance and
multicultural harmony, leaves us with nothing useful to say to the failed
states and riven polities of the post-Cold War world
by Benjamin Schwarz
SOLIPSISM is a perennial American temptation. In a grotesquely comic muddle of
causes and cultures, Lyndon Johnson once sought to buy off the North Vietnamese
with promises of a Great Society--style project along the Mekong. Variants of
the cry "Why can't they be more like us?" have long served as a staple of
American tourists and foreign-policy mandarins alike. We have made ourselves at
home in the world, characteristically, by regarding it as America in the
making.
Thus imbued with ourselves, we often get the world wrong. Mussolini was not an
impetuous New Dealer, nor Ho Chi Minh a Democratic pol. The West Bank is not
the American South, nor is the cause of the Palestinian homeland an exotic
version of the black struggle for civil rights. Similarly, the ethnic tumult
loosed by the end of the Cold War is not to be assessed by pious invocations of
our multi-ethnic, multiracial heritage of tolerance and civic comity. The
bloodlettings in Bosnia, Rwanda, Chechnya, and Haiti have no parallel in the
Parson Weems idea of our past which we trumpet abroad. Not that they are
incommensurably worse than anything in the American experience. Rather, the
history we hold up as a light to nations is a sanctimonious tissue of myth and
self-infatuation. We get the world wrong because we get ourselves wrong. Taken
without illusion, our history gives us no right to preach--but it should
prepare us to understand the brutal realities of nation-building, at home and
abroad.
Over the past few years the American foreign-policy community has discovered
that the world is riddled with ethnic, nationalist, and separatist conflicts
("ENS" wars, in Pentagon-speak). Characterizing the post--Cold War world as a
simmering cauldron, experts in the State Department and on the National
Security Council, in the foundations and the think tanks, point not only to
Bosnia and Rwanda but also to the Baltic republics and Macedonia, to Moldova
and Georgia, and assert that, as the former CIA director James Woolsey put it,
the world is "more dangerous" now than during the Cold War. Sometimes it seems
that such a pronouncement is uttered and met with as much relief as concern,
for this new phenomenon supposedly means that expert advice, and Cold War
bureaucracies, remain indispensable despite the end of the Cold War. Indeed, in
proliferating conferences, workshops, and interagency working groups the
national-security community is greeting ENS wars with the same entrepreneurial
alarm with which it met the specter of Communist insurgency in the 1960s and
"low-intensity conflict" in the 1980s. "The main strategic challenge for the
United States," according to Leslie Gelb, the president of the Council on
Foreign Relations, is to "develop plans . . . to stem civil wars."
The foreign-policy community's anxiety springs from convictions like those
expressed by Warren Zimmermann, the former ambassador to Yugoslavia, when he
declared that the war in Bosnia, for instance, has "baleful implications for .
. . the United States," because what is at stake there is "the values of the
melting pot." America's anxiety over the fragmentation of foreign states and
societies arises from our sense that American society is fragmenting,
culturally and ethnically. We are desperate to repair what the foreign-policy
community terms "failed states" and "divided societies," for such success would
prove to us that the liberal notions of pluralism and tolerance upon which we
would like to believe that American unity was founded remain vital enough to
build communities abroad and, perhaps more important, at home.
The problems with this approach start with a misunderstanding of history. The
foreign-policy community usually describes ENS wars as products of the
post--Cold War era. They are nothing of the sort. Bosnias have, of course, been
occurring with grim regularity for millennia. These wars are also described as
throwbacks to more intolerant and violent eras, and the assumption is made that
if only the combatants could be placed on the path to modernity, the problem
would be solved. It would be comforting to believe that such struggles are
merely a relapse, a bloody detour on mankind's progressive road to tolerance
and pluralism. But from 1945 to 1975, Harold Isaacs has reckoned in Idols of
the Tribe (1975), while the Cold War raged and the world reached unprecedented
levels of prosperity, what are now called ENS conflicts killed some 10 million
people: two million of them in India, another two million in Biafra's civil
war, half a million in Bangladesh, and another half a million in Indonesia,
with the remainder being casualties of tribal civil wars in Nigeria, the Congo,
Chad, and Sudan, or Nagas killed by Indians, Chinese killed by Malays, Tibetans
killed by Chinese, Colombians killed by Colombians, Tutsis and Hutus killed by
one another in Burundi, Catholics and Protestants in Ulster, Turks and Greeks
in Cyprus, and Papuans and Indonesians in New Guinea. Europe's immunity from
this killing spree came at a terrible price: the superpower confrontation that
divided the continent, the energies exhausted in the killing of 70 million
people from 1914 to 1945, and Moscow's sanguinary efforts to subdue separatist
elements in the Soviet republics during the 1920s and 1930s all contributed to
Europe's postwar stability.
Even more ahistorical and naive is the paradigm that the U.S. foreign-policy
community insists on applying to internal conflicts. Guided by faith in the
nostrums of the liberal tradition and by the mechanistic notion, learned in
civics class, that a community is built by balancing competing interests,
American foreign-policy experts urge societies riven by conflict to avoid
"winner takes all" politics and to guarantee that regardless of election
results, the weaker groups, too, will have a voice in national political and
cultural affairs. To accomplish this, coalition governments, the guaranteed
division of key offices, and a system of reciprocal vetoes are recommended.
These devices, so the thinking goes, will ameliorate ethnic, nationalist, and
religious divisions. And the experts agree that those divisions will be less
likely to erupt in violent conflict if divided societies elevate tolerance and
unity above ethnic, nationalist, or religious domination as their organizing
principles.
All these measures may seem reasonable enough. But they depend upon a host of
faulty assumptions, perhaps the most important being that the strongest group
in a divided society will be willing to make major concessions--concessions
that in fact jeopardize its preponderant position. The "solutions," then,
presuppose agreement and stability as much as they secure them, for they can be
implemented only when there is already a strong desire for compromise.
But, as the English historian Lewis Namier wrote in his discussion of
nationalism in nineteenth-century Europe, "states are not created or destroyed,
and frontiers redrawn or obliterated, by argument and majority votes; nations
are freed, united, or broken by blood and iron, and not by a generous
application of liberty." Despite the historical failure of reason and
compromise in such situations, foreign-policy experts and officials continue to
place great stock in reasonable solutions. Their ideas about settling internal
conflicts are fundamentally distorted by their idealized view of America's own
history and development.
Swallowing Up Peoples
WE are all pluralists now; everyone favors "tolerance" and "diversity." We regard these qualities as central to the American creed and central to the "democratic values" the export of which has been the avowed aim of every U.S. President since Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Democracy assures a voice to each disparate group and thus, according to prevailing notions, gives rise to the American community, for from these competing voices come compromise and unity. America, therefore, is regarded as a highly successful model of a multi-ethnic, multicultural, multireligious, and polyglot society. Out of many we are one. With this understanding of their country's cultural and political development, U.S. statesmen and foreign-policy observers ingenuously and smugly ask fragmented societies, Can't you all get along, just as we do over here?
For 200 years Americans have been congratulating themselves on their happy
ability to live together. They have taken as the model for their self-image J.
Hector St. John de Crevecoeur's 1782 account of the United States, Letters From
an American Farmer. Few observations on the American people have been quoted
over the years with such self-satisfaction.
Whence came all these peoples? they are a mixture of English, Scotch, Irish,
French, Dutch, Germans and Swedes. From this promiscuous breed, that race now
called Americans have arisen. . . . What then is the American, this new man? He
is either an European, or the descendant of an European, hence that strange
mixture of blood, which you will find in no other country. . . . Here
individuals of all nations are melted into a new race of men. . . .
Upholders of this ideal of American pluralism, however, must quote Crevecoeur,
for it is hard to find contemporaries who shared his view. Although non-English
people had flocked to America in large numbers, mixed with settlers of English
blood, and thereby lost their genetic and cultural distinctiveness, most
observers painted a picture of this amalgamation very different from
Crevecoeur's; they understood that America was characterized by ethnic
dominance, not ethnic pluralism.
In a typical account a Swedish minister visiting what he hoped would be the
settlements of his countrymen along the Delaware River in 1745 was sad to
report,
I found in this country scarcely one genuine Swede left, the most of
them are either in part or in whole on one side or other descended from English
or Dutch parents. . . . The English are evidently swallowing up the people and
the Swedish language is so corrupted that if I did not know the English, it
would be impossible to understand the language of my dear Sweden.
The minister's lament is highly revealing. By crying out that the English are
"swallowing up the people" and pointing to language as evidence, he correctly
defined amalgamation and pluralism in the American context.
Although in 1790 only about 60 percent of the white U.S. population was of
English origin, America was culturally quite homogeneous; most of the
non-English people had lost much of their cultural distinctiveness to the
unsparing dominance of the English language, customs, and institutions, and had
lost much of their original genetic character to English numerical superiority.
The American "nationality" was not a blending of all the peoples that populated
the United States, or even an amalgam of the white Europeans inhabiting the
country. An "American" was a modified Englishman. To become an American was to
subject oneself to a hegemony so powerful that many Americans ignored or denied
existing diversities. John Jay, for instance, was oblivious of the
approximately 40 percent of his fellow white citizens who were of non-English
origin when he wrote in the second Federalist paper,
Providence has been pleased to give this one connected country to one united people; a people descended from the same ancestors, speaking the same language, professing the same religion . . . similar in their manners and customs. . . .
A hundred and twenty-nine years later, in 1916, after wave upon wave of
immigrants had inundated the United States, the liberal critic Randolph Bourne,
in calling for a cosmopolitan, heterogeneous American culture, described an
America that would have been quite familiar to Jay. Bourne bewailed a "melting
pot" under one aegis: "English snobberies, English religion, English literary
styles, English literary reverences and canons, English ethics, English
superiorities." An elite composed of Americans of Anglo-Saxon descent--which,
Bourne acknowledged, included himself--was "guilty of just what every dominant
race is guilty of in every European country: the imposition of its own culture
upon the minority peoples." A popular guide for immigrant Jews at the time put
it another way: to become American, it advised, "forget your past, your
customs, and your ideals."
Thus, long before the United States' founding, and until probably the 1960s,
the "unity" of the American people derived not from their warm welcoming of and
accommodation to nationalist, ethnic, and linguistic differences but from the
ability and willingness of an Anglo elite to stamp its image on other peoples
coming to this country. That elite's religious and political principles, its
customs and social relations, its standards of taste and morality, were for 300
years America's, and in basic ways they still are, despite our celebration of
"diversity." Whatever freedom from ethnic and nationalist conflict this country
has enjoyed (and it has been considerably less than our national mythology
would have us believe) has existed thanks to a cultural and ethnic predominance
that would not tolerate conflict or confusion regarding the national
identity.
Cleansing Ethnics
THIS cultural predominance, which amounted to the repression, not the
celebration, of ethnic diversity, was expressed in the concept of the melting
pot that the pluralist Bourne had so criticized. Today, through an Orwellian
process, that term has acquired a meaning nearly opposite to its original. Now
it is most often used as the former ambassador Warren Zimmermann uses it--to
describe the ideal of what might be called the American tapestry. According to
this ideal, American society is a colorful blending of different ethnic and
national elements, a tapestry that can be woven only in a society tolerant of,
and indeed prizing, diversity. But the melting pot, an idea that governed
American attitudes toward the various national and ethnic groups coming to the
United States from the nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century, was once
recognized as a concept in opposition to tolerance and pluralism. Because
immigrants created a dependent working class favored by industrialists, there
was never a political movement in the United States powerful enough to effect
the complete exclusion of foreigners; however, these groups would not be
permitted to vitiate Anglo-American domination.
"Americanization" was a process of coercive conformity according to which the
United States was a melting pot, not a tapestry. American society wasn't viewed
as the product of a little of Russia, a little of Italy, and a little of Poland
all mixed together. Instead the various nationalities were made into Americans
as ore is refined into gold. Americanization purified them, eliminating the
dross. The Americanization movement's "melting pot" pageants, inspired by
Israel Zangwill's play, celebrated not tolerance but conformity to a narrow
conception of American nationality by depicting strangely attired foreigners
stepping into a huge pot and emerging as immaculate, well-dressed, accent-free
"American-looking" Americans--that is, Anglo-Americans. Sinclair Lewis
recognized the melting pot, in Main Street, as a means by which "the sound
American customs absorbed without one trace of pollution another alien
invasion." Americanization, then, although it did not cleanse America of its ethnic minorities, cleansed its minorities of their ethnicity.
For better or worse, the current fragmentation and directionlessness of
American society is the result, above all, of a disintegrating elite's
increasing inability or unwillingness to impose its hegemony on society as a
whole. Nevertheless, that a single group whose proportion of the population has
declined continuously throughout American history could so dominate American
cultural and political life for three centuries--could in fact define what it
meant to be an American--is a remarkable achievement.
The hegemony that has unified America has been at bottom not so much cultural
and linguistic as physical. America didn't simply evolve; it was made by those
who claimed it fiercely and rendered it in their image. Today's foreign-policy
experts, among them Zbigniew Brzezinski, who characterize Russia as
congenitally expansive, driven by an almost evil "imperial impulse" to dominate
or absorb its bordering states, and who assert that as long as Russia does not
respect the sovereignty of other states it cannot be a democracy, would arrive
at a clearer perspective of such an "impulse" if they reflected on their own
country's history and development. At least as much as other countries, the
United States was formed by conquest and force, not by conciliation and
compromise. For America, no less than for Russia, nation-building has been a
ruthless undertaking. America's founders described the United States not as a
country but as an empire, and for reasons of national security, economic
development, and racial chauvinism (the same motivations impelling Russian
"imperialism" today) they embarked on a course of imperial expansion.
This meant, of course, taking land that belonged to others and subjecting
foreign peoples to American rule. Even though the North American continent was
at the time inhabited by various Native American tribes and divided among
Spain, Great Britain, and the United States, John Quincy Adams confidently
declared in 1811 that it was "destined . . . to be peopled by one nation,
speaking one language, professing one general system of religious and political
principles, and accustomed to one general tenor of social usages and customs."
To Adams and his contemporaries there was, of course, no doubt that America
should effect this imperial union. A Kentuckian added a more mercenary gloss to
Adams's prophecy, boasting that Americans were "as greedy after plunder as ever
the old Romans were, Mexico glitters in our Eyes--the word is all we wait for."
By 1846 America was ready to pounce. In a war of conquest--a war that Ulysses
S. Grant judged "one of the most unjust waged by a stronger against a weaker
nation"--a democratic United States swallowed present-day Texas, California,
New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, and parts of Colorado and Wyoming.
Moreover, building America required nearly 300 years of genocidal wars against
Native Americans, a fact that impels today's historians to characterize
American expansion on the continent as "invasion" rather than "settlement."
These wars, one of the longest series of ethnic conflicts in modern history,
were resolved not by power sharing but by obliteration. Although this record
engenders much handwringing today, it is impossible to imagine the United
States existing if a more reasonable course had been pursued. For from the
"American" point of view, a reasonable accommodation would have required that,
in Theodore Roosevelt's blunt phrase, the vast continent be set aside "as a
game preserve." America's great ethnic struggle should have taught Americans
that many conflicts are simply irreconcilable. As Representative Richard Wilde,
of Georgia, asked with resignation in 1830, describing the United States'
destruction of Native Americans as the price of its development, "What is
history but the obituary of nations?"
Yankee Leviathan
OF course, just as the United States entered the final stage of its subjugation
and liquidation of Native Americans, it nearly destroyed itself in the other
central episode of its nation-building--a brutal and irreconcilable
nationalist-separatist conflict in which one vision of America crushed another.
The Civil War--a conflict that, the historian William Appleman Williams wrote,
"undercuts the popular mythology that America is unique," and he added, "Only a
nation that avoided such a conflict could make a serious claim to being
fundamentally different"--is an apt example of how reasonable solutions to
separatist conflicts hardly ever work. When the United States was established,
the North and the South accepted each other as effectively two distinct
economic and ideological entities based on antagonistic systems of property:
the North was industrial, liberal-bourgeois, and capitalist, while the South
was agricultural, aristocratic, paternalistic, and anti-capitalist. To dampen
sectional conflict, the Constitution, through the three-fifths clause and other
devices, guaranteed the South a disproportionate voice in national politics.
Yet this guaranteed outcome, so lauded by policy analysts today as a means of
forestalling internal conflict, could not work in the long run for the United
States. As the North's power and ambitions grew, it was unwilling to abide by
arrangements based on a previous and obsolete calculus of relative strength,
while the South was not satisfied with merely a diminishing respect for its
view. It wanted to determine its own future without being subordinate to or
dependent on an opposing, and increasingly threatening, ideology and political
economy.
In the end the North's vision--of a powerful centralized state, a "Yankee
Leviathan," deemed necessary for capitalist development--emerged as the
nation's. This vision, despite a persistent mythology promulgated by the
victors, was triumphant not because it was intellectually or morally superior
but because the North won a test of physical strength. Indeed, it is difficult
to imagine a better proof of the idea that might makes right--a doctrine
supposedly anathema to liberals--than the outcome of our own Civil War. Eugene
Genovese, a clear-eyed historian, has written,
General Sherman, not the indomitable ideology of liberalism, marched through Georgia. The notion that America has always united on liberal principles breaks down here. . . . We should not forget that our liberal, confident, tolerant, and good-natured bourgeoisie, when for once confronted with a determined and powerful internal foe, forgot its commitment to reason together and reached for its revolver.
Our separatist conflict was followed not, as Yankees assert, by national reconciliation but by military occupation to impose a new political and economic order on the defeated land and by a century of regional hostility and estrangement.
White Over Black
AMERICA would have seen more conflicts between white Americans of different
ethnic and religious backgrounds (and classes) if these had not been muted by
whites' common hatred and fear of black Americans. There is an obvious problem
with Crevecoeur's discussion of the new American "race" in the passage quoted
earlier. It excludes the very element of American society that has given
America some of its most distinctive characteristics: the African. Even for
Crevecoeur, supposedly the voice of tolerance, there were severe limits on who
could be included in the American mixture. The American was "either an
European, or the descendant of an European"; the American could not be a black
man or woman.
The struggle to make one nation of America's original two--black and white--is
an enterprise that might never succeed, and that America's founders did not
believe was possible. After all, Thomas Jefferson's pluralist vision, which
established a standard of religious and political tolerance to which Americans
still aspire, didn't extend to the black race. Jefferson's apologists are fond
of quoting his statement, about black men and women, that "nothing is more
certainly written in the book of fate than that these people are to be free."
But they fail to quote his concluding clause: "Nor is it less certain that the
two races, equally free, cannot live in the same government." Jefferson hated
slavery because he knew it to be wrong, but he also hated it because it brought
black people to America. Convinced that blacks were alien, inferior, and
dangerous, Jefferson had a vision for America that required that they be not
only emancipated but also expelled from the country. Advocating a program of
ethnic cleansing, he was determined that blacks be removed "beyond the reach of
mixture." Thus Jefferson's notions of democracy, upon which our ideals of
pluralism are founded, depended not merely on racial supremacy but on racial
homogeneity.
Democracy as the Problem
WHEN considering other countries' internal conflicts, Americans should keep in
mind what their own Civil War and Indian wars have proved: embattled
minorities--nations within nations--don't just want respect; they want not to
be treated as appendages of the majority's state. Israel gives its Arab
minority within its pre-1967 borders the same voting rights it accords its
Jewish citizens. In the interwar period the Sudeten Germans received respect
and a disproportionate political voice from a democratic Czechoslovakia. Today
the Quebecois are given the same treatment in Canadian national politics. Nevertheless, significant numbers within these minorities were or are
unsatisfied with these arrangements, because solutions to civil conflicts which
grant special guarantees to minorities almost always ask those minorities to
accept less than they want. But another oft-touted solution--transforming
nation-states into civil states, in which political power is not determined by
membership in the majority's ethnic, nationalist, or religious group--demands
that the majority accept far less than it wants and, indeed, less than it
already has. To many within the majority, such a solution means sacrificing a
living, breathing national character to the abstract and bloodless notion of a
political community.
It is, for example, an unspoken rule of Israeli politics, applying as much to
Labor as to Likud, that no Arab or Arab-dominated party shall be invited to
participate in a political coalition. No matter how much Israel might want to
ameliorate internal conflict, it won't jettison its national character and
dismantle that which defines its statehood. The promotion of the civil state
and the weakening of the nation-state would be unacceptable not only to Israel
but also to wholly secular states in the advanced industrialized community as
well--to Germany and Japan, for example, which both tend to define citizens as
those who belong to the dominant national group.
Divided societies face a conundrum: dissatisfied minorities want, at a minimum,
a real voice in determining their future--but a real voice for the minority
means real sacrifice for the majority. Canada's proposed 1992 Charlottetown
Accord, for instance, was a model of reasonable techniques for forestalling
internal conflict:predominantly Francophone Quebec was assured 25 percent of
the seats in the House of Commons; three judges on the Supreme Court, out of
nine, were to be drawn from Quebec; and bills affecting the French language and
culture would have required a majority of the Senate as a whole and a majority
of Francophone senators, too. These solutions, which might have assuaged the
Francophone minority, were roundly rejected by Anglophone Canada, which was
unwilling to relinquish the political power and the cultural dominance it
maintained by virtue of being the majority. If such compromises are unworkable
in a Western democracy, there is little reason to assume that they will work in
the emerging and failed states that now concern the American national-security
community.
The Clinton Administration, along with many Republican foreign-policy leaders,
looks to a global democratic makeover to tame the seemingly intractable ethnic,
nationalist, and separatist passions that have destabilized the post--Cold War
world. "Democratic enlargement" has, in fact, emerged as the central tenet of
the Administration's foreign policy. But for the reasons discussed above, it
is, as John Stuart Mill observed, "next to impossible" to build a true
democracy--as opposed to a system of majority tyranny--in a multi-ethnic
society. Moreover, democracy hardly immunizes a society against internal
conflict and separatism, as the 620,000 dead in America's Civil War attest.
Democracy, which permits--in fact, encourages--competition for power and
benefits among contesting groups, actually exacerbates internal tensions and
conflicts.
Many of those policymakers who advocate democratic enlargement argue that
before violence erupts in states divided by internal differences, America
should urge those states to adopt democratic or, more accurately, power-sharing
solutions. But in the past whenever such efforts have not been backed by U.S.
force, they have failed, because those groups with power are disinclined to
relinquish it voluntarily. Such blandishments amount, whatever the motivation,
to crass interference in another state's internal affairs. How would Americans
feel if Japan, out of a sincere desire to stabilize a dangerously divided
United States, tried to pressure it to adopt the radical power-sharing
solutions of Lani Guinier (the law professor whose nomination for a Justice
Department post was withdrawn by the Clinton Administration)to effect a
political order in which minorities were assured a more powerful voice in the
U.S. political process?
Policymakers seek benign, if ineffective, democratic and power-sharing
solutions to internal conflicts around the world, because historically workable
solutions are unpalatable. In 1914 Prince Bernhard von Bulow, then a former
German Chancellor, starkly summarized those solutions when he wrote that "in
the struggle between nationalities one nation is the hammer, the other the
anvil, one is the victor and one is the vanquished." Stability within divided
societies is normally based on some form of domination, and once internal
differences become violent, usually only the logic of force can lay them to
rest.
Lamentably, the most stable and lasting solution to ethnic and nationalist
conflicts has been ethnic cleansing and partition. The Czech Republic and
Poland are today far more stable and more likely to remain democratic than they
would otherwise be because of their ruthless decisions, following the Second
World War, to expel forcibly the German minorities that had caused them so much
trouble in the interwar years. Cyprus, too, became considerably more stable
after the Turkish army partitioned it, forcing the relocation of 200,000
people, mostly Greek Cypriots, in 1974.
Domestic Insecurities
MORE-REASONABLE power-sharing solutions sometimes do emerge in divided
societies, but usually only after the opposing sides have exhausted themselves
in a bloody contest. The struggle in the 1940s and 1950s between Colombia's
liberals and conservatives, for instance, finally resulted in a textbook
resolution of civil differences. Both factions were assured a voice in national
politics, and the presidency alternated between the two parties. But the two
sides were willing to compromise only after more than a quarter of a million
Colombians had been killed in civil war. For both, compromise was the
second-best solution, to which they agreed only after they had done their best
to eradicate their opponents. Arriving at solutions--"reasonable" or not--can
take centuries and will often be bloody. So, although the Pentagon, the State
Department, and the Carnegie Endowment have spent enormous energy of late
generating ideas and strategies for how America can prevent, tame, or end ENS
conflicts, the United States really has only two options in these situations. Adopting a passive role once violence has erupted in a failed state, Washington
can await the time when mutual exhaustion or the triumph of one group over
another will create an opening for intervention in a purely peacekeeping
capacity. Alternatively, the United States can effectively intervene, not by
building civil societies or pacifying such conflicts but by helping one side
impose its will on the other, as Turkey did in Cyprus. This sort of
intervention, of course, can hardly be called "peacekeeping" or "peacemaking";
it is, however, what great-power intervention usually amounts to, as the United
States has shown in, among other places, the Philippines (1898--1913), Haiti
(1915--1934), Nicaragua (1912-- 1925; 1926--1933), and Vietnam (1961--1973).
Such intervention, which is nothing more than the naked exercise of power,
should be an option only when specific, vital U.S. interests are threatened.
They are not threatened in any actual or in most potential ethnic and
separatist conflicts. Because "humane" solutions are ineffective, and because
effective solutions are too inhumane for the United States to consider in any
but the most threatening situations, America is largely impotent in the face of
ENS wars.
Why, then, has the foreign-policy community made such conflicts the focus of so
much of its post--Cold War strategizing? What, for instance, does Leslie Gelb
mean when he insists that foreign civil wars are "the new core problem in
post--Cold War politics" and that "democracies have a large practical as well
as moral stake in finding reasonable responses" to them?
The motivation behind this latest summons to a foreign-policy crusade, as with
earlier summonses, lies not in external threats but in our own insecurities.
These conflicts scare us because we see in them an image of ourselves. After
four centuries we are nagged by the facts that we do not "all get along" and
that the apparent success of our own multi-ethnic and multicultural experiment
might have been engendered not by tolerance but by hegemony. Without the
dominance that once dictated, however ethnocentrically, what it meant to be an
American, we are left with only tolerance and pluralism to hold us together. Unfortunately, the evidence from Los Angeles to New York, from Miami to
Milwaukee, shows that such principles are not so powerful as we had believed
and hoped. Afraid to face our own problems directly, we look elsewhere, and
encourage other countries to prove to us that more pluralism and more tolerance
are all that are needed to reunite divided societies. Thus for the past three
years Los Angeles Times editorials have often shifted focus from racial
divisions in the city and the debate over the changing ethnic and linguistic
makeup of California to warn of what they define as the broad American interest
at stake in the former Yugoslavia. In urging U.S. intervention there the Times
argues, for instance, that the United States is a "citizen-based, multiethnic
state," and that "it is safe only in a world where, in principle, all states
are comparably organized," since "if ethnicity begins to replace citizenship as
the basis for statehood, chaos would ensue, a chaos that would not leave
America untouched." Or, as Warren Zimmermann solipsistically claims, "What
happens in Bosnia matters to Americans." Externalizing our problems, he
bizarrely sees a threat to the United States from the Bosnian Serbs because if
their ideas prevailed here at home, our tolerant, multi-ethnic society would be
jeopardized. Zimmermann uses Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s critique of American
"ethnic ideologues"--who, according to Schlesinger, "have set themselves
against the old American ideal of assimilation"--to indict the Bosnian Serbs
for the same crime. In fact, however, the Bosnian Serbs' ideas are much closer
to the "old American ideal of assimilation" than we would like to think.
A crusade in support of multinational, multicultural tolerance abroad really
seeks to validate it at home. But attempting to validate a myth is futile.
Before we export our myth, we had best recognize that we have not yet found a
"reasonable" solution here, and that perhaps such a solution cannot be found.
Copyright © 1995 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights
reserved.
The Atlantic Monthly; May, 1995; The Diversity Myth; Volume 275, No. 5;
pages 57-67.
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