Europe should note America on warpath

Published October 17, 2001

LONDON: I do not think that Europeans, even now, completely understand what has happened to America. They saw the pictures, they know the numbers, they heard the president’s vows to smoke Osama bin Laden out of his cave, and his pledge to end world terrorism. They mostly agree with their leaders’ support for what Bush is doing. They’re aware we are all involved. They can imagine what the anthrax means. All the same, what they still miss, if they do not come here, is the quite awesome hardening of the American soul.

Before September 11 this was a mushy psychic space. Americans felt comfortable with themselves, and wanted no distractions. They were backing away from the world. Notoriously, their leaders didn’t dare challenge the complacency zone by endangering a single American soldier. A body-bag count of zero set an inflexible limit round foreign policy. Bush came to power pledged, if possible, to minus zero.

Now quite suddenly America has become a warrior nation. Domestic politics which for years have been a force for inertia are now a force for action. I’ve spent several days asking people in Washington and New York about the political limits constraining Bush’s ambition to wipe out terrorism. It is, after all, a vast project: another sort of world war, the very model of an interventionist future such as Democrats, let alone Republicans, have rejected for a decade. Yet the limits, for the moment, seem remarkably few.

The military campaign in Afghanistan has virtually total support. So far Americans may know of little more than the bombing. So far the operation is as anaesthetic as Kosovo. But when the special forces go in, there will be no recoiling. The critical mass of outrage will see the struggle through until the capture of Osama. No antsy-fancy squeamishness here. People who’ve travelled round the country say that feelings in the hinterland are even more war-minded — internationalist, you might say — than on the worldly east coast.

So a whole agenda is unfolding. Congress did trim the president’s extreme request for imprisonment without trial for all suspected terrorists. But new surveillance and money-freezing measures are sweeping past. There’s a mood of compliance with whatever needs to be done.

Take the example of missile defence, or NMD. Far from September 11 making the case against this hi-tech extravaganza, it proved that NMD must go ahead. Rogue states that sponsor terrorists are fully crazy enough to sponsor missile attack: every crevice of vulnerability must be closed: QED, the space war must begin, as even the Democrats have stopped trying to deny.

This is not an invented national mood, got up by a handful of spin doctors for the convenience of the government. Nor is it born of anything so shallow as panic. London doesn’t have sole call on the spirit of the Blitz, on which it congratulates itself with such embarrassing frequency, 60 years on, as if no other city is capable of grace under pressure. New York has reinvented and redoubled that grace, waiting for the next anthrax booby trap or lorry-bomb. Americans are capable of just as much human stoicism, faced for the first time with this demand for it. They are fearful, but calmly so — and with a determination history has never quite seen before, for the reason that nothing quite like the present threat has ever faced Americans in their land.

In the end, I got a few answers to my question. All is not perfectly serene for Bush. The public will remain behind him as long as he seems to know what he is doing. They may not demand victories now, but they need to see that Secretary Rumsfeld is measured in his bombing, and Secretary Powell inventive in his diplomacy. So far, which has been the easy bit, these standards have been met. With Congressional elections next year, bipartisanship cannot be relied on if there’s a major blunder.

There are tests also for the military campaign. The united solemnity I describe would not survive, for example, the failure to capture Osama bin Laden in the three remaining years of Bush’s term. Having personalized the enemy, he’s bound to pay if the enemy survives. Another limit is set around the extended presence of an American army in Afghanistan. The American people would see no more sense in that than American generals.

Washington’s desperation, in truth, is limited. It wants to keep its friends, but on its terms. In the old days, ambivalence attended every piece of active American foreign policy. America felt uneasy about her power, Americans anxious about the risks of intervention. That has all gone. Not only will Bush feel weak if terrorism lives on, but his country will say a debt has not been repaid to the dead, and security not bestowed upon the living. America has the power, and now the nerve, to act alone. A new world is born, for friends as well as enemies uneasily to note. —Dawn/The Guardian News Service.

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