Commencement Address -- A Constructive Vision for America's Role in the World by George Soros
Published on Tuesday, May 18, 2004 by CommonDreams.org
Commencement Address, delivered at the Columbia School
of International & Public Affairs, Monday, May 17, 2004. Cathedral
of St. John the Divine, New York City
Today, you are graduating from the School of International
& Public Affairs. This ought to be an occasion for celebration. You
have successfully completed your studies and you are about to enter the
real world. But the real world is a very troubled place and international
relations are at the core of our troubles. So it may be appropriate to
pause for a moment and reflect on the world you are about to face.
Why are we in trouble? Let me focus on the feature
that looms so large in the current landscape - the war on terror. September
11 was a traumatic event that shook the nation to its core. But it could
not have changed the course of history for the worse if President Bush
had not responded the way he did. Declaring war on terrorism was understandable,
perhaps even appropriate, as a figure of speech. But the President meant
it literally and that is when things started going seriously wrong.
Recently the nation has been shaken by another event:
pictures of our soldiers abusing prisoners in Saddam's notorious prison.
I believe there is a direct connection between the two events. It is the
war on terror that has led to the torture scenes in Iraq.
What happened in Abu Ghraib was not a case of a few
bad apples but a pattern tolerated and even encouraged by the authorities.
Just to give one example, the Judge Advocate General Corps routinely observes
military interrogations from behind a two-way mirror; that practice was
discontinued in Afghanistan and Iraq. The International Red Cross and others
started complaining about abuses as early as December 2002.
It is easy to see how terrorism can lead to torture.
Last summer I took an informal poll at a meeting of eminent Wall Street
investors to find out whether they would condone the use of torture to
prevent a terrorist attack. The consensus was that they hoped somebody
would do it without their knowing about it.
It is not a popular thing to say, but the fact is
that we are victims who have turned into perpetrators. The terrorist attacks
on September 11 claimed nearly 3,000 innocent lives and the whole world
felt sympathy for us as the victims of an atrocity. Then the President
declared war on terrorism, and pursued it first in Afghanistan and then
in Iraq. Since then the war on terror has claimed more innocent victims
than the terrorist attacks on September 11. This fact is not recognized
at home because the victims of the war on terror are not Americans. But
the rest of the world does not draw the same distinction and world opinion
has turned against us. So a tremendous gap in perceptions has opened up
between us and the rest of the world. The majority of the American public
does not realize that we have turned from victims into perpetrators. That
is why those gruesome pictures were so shocking. Even today most people
don't recognize their full import.
By contrast, the Bush administration knew what it
was doing when it declared war on terror and used that pretext for invading
Iraq. That may not hold true for President Bush personally but it is certainly
true for Vice President Cheney and a group of extremists within the Bush
administration concentrated in and around the Pentagon. These people are
guided by an ideology. They believe that international relations are relations
of power not law and since America is the most powerful nation on earth,
it ought to use that power more assertively than under previous presidents.
They advocated the overthrow of Saddam Hussein even before President Bush
was elected and they managed to win him over to their cause after September
11.
The invasion of Afghanistan could be justified on
the grounds that the Taliban provided Bin Laden and Al Qaeda with a home
and a training ground. The invasion of Iraq could not be similarly justified.
Nevertheless, the ideologues in the administration were determined to pursue
it because, in the words of Paul Wolfowitz, "it was doable." President
Bush managed to convince the nation that Saddam Hussein had some connection
with the suicide bombers of September 11 and that he was in possession
of weapons of mass-destruction. When both claims turned out to be false,
he argued that we invaded Iraq in order to liberate the Iraqi people.
That claim was even more far-fetched than the other
two. If we had really cared for the Iraqi people we would have sent in
more troops and we would have provided protection not only for the Ministry
of Oil but for the other Ministries and the museums and hospitals. As it
is, the country was devastated by looting.
I find the excuse that we went into Iraq in order
to liberate it particularly galling. It is true that Saddam Hussein was
a tyrant and it is good to be rid of him. But the way we went about it
will make it more difficult to get rid of the likes of Saddam in the future.
The world is full of tyrants and we cannot topple them all by military
action. How to deal with Kim Jong-il in North Korea or Mugabe in Zimbabwe
or the Turkmenbashi of Turkmenistan is the great unsolved problem of the
prevailing world order. By taking unilateral and arbitrary action, the
United States has made it more difficult to solve that problem.
I am actively engaged in promoting democracy and open
society in many parts of the world and I can testify from personal experience
that it cannot be done by military means. In any case, the argument has
become unsustainable after the revelations about the torture of prisoners.
The symbolism of Saddam's notorious prison is just too strong. We claimed
to be liberators but we turned into oppressors.
Now that our position has become unsustainable, we
are handing over to local militias in Falluja and elsewhere. This prepares
the ground for religious and ethnic divisions and possible civil war à
la Bosnia, rather than Western style democracy after we transfer sovereignty.
The big difference between us and Saddam is that we
are an open society with free speech and free elections. If we don't like
the Bush administration's policies, we can reject him at the next elections.
Since President Bush had originally been elected on the platform of a "humble"
foreign policy, we could then claim that the war on terror and the invasion
of Iraq constitute a temporary aberration induced by the trauma of September
11.
I would dearly love to pin all the blame on President
Bush and his team. But that would be too easy. It would ignore the fact
that he was playing to a receptive audience and even today, after all that
has happened, a majority of the electorate continues to have confidence
in President Bush on national security matters. If this continues and President
Bush gets reelected, we must ask ourselves the question: "What is wrong
with us?" The question needs to be asked even if he is defeated because
we cannot simply ignore what we have done since September 11.
We need to engage in some serious soul-searching. The terrorists seem to have hit upon a weak point in our collective psyche. They have made us fearful. And they have found a willing partner in the Bush administration. For reasons of its own, the Bush administration has found it advantageous to foster the fear that September 11 engendered. By declaring war on terror, the President could unite the country behind him. But fear is a bad counselor. A fearful giant that lashes out against unseen enemies is the very definition of a bully, and that is what we are in danger of becoming. Lashing out indiscriminately, we are creating innocent victims and innocent victims generate the resentment and rage on which terrorism feeds. If there is a Single lesson to be learned from our experience since September 11, it is that you mustn't fight terror by creating new victims.
By succumbing to fear we are doing the terrorists'
bidding: we are unleashing a vicious circle of violence. If we go on like
this, we may find ourselves in a permanent state of war. The war on terror
need never end because the terrorists are invisible, therefore they will
never disappear. And if we are in a permanent state of war we cannot remain
an open society.
The war on terror polarizes the world between us and
them. If it becomes a matter of survival, nobody has any choice but to
stick with his own tribe or nation whether its policies are right or wrong.
That is what happened to the Serbs and Croats and Bosnians in Yugoslavia,
that is what happened to Israel, and that is the state of mind that President
Bush sought to foster when he said that those who are not with us are with
the terrorists.
That attitude cannot be reconciled with the basic
principles of an open society. The concept of open society is based on
the recognition that nobody is in possession of the ultimate truth. Might
is not necessarily right. However powerful we are, we may be wrong. We
need checks and balances and other safeguards to prevent us from going
off the rails. After September 11, President Bush succeeded in convincing
us that any criticism of the war on terror would be unpatriotic and the
spell was broken only 18 months later when the Iraqi invasion did get us
off the rails.
Now it is not enough to reject the Bush administration's
policies; we must reaffirm the values and principles of an open society.
The war on terror is indeed an aberration. We must defend ourselves against
terrorist attacks but we cannot make that the overarching objective of
our existence.
We are undoubtedly the most powerful nation on earth
today. No single country or combination of countries could stand up to
our military might. The main threat to our dominant position comes not
from the outside but from ourselves. If we fail to recognize that we may
be wrong, we may undermine our dominant position through our own mistakes.
We seem to have made considerable progress along those lines since September
11.
Being the most powerful nation gives us certain privileges
but it also imposes on us certain obligations. We are the beneficiaries
of a lopsided, not to say unjust, world order. The agenda for the world
is set in Washington but only the citizens of the United States have a
vote in Congress. A similar situation, when we were on the disadvantaged
side, gave rise to the Boston Tea Party and the birth of the United States.
If we want to preserve our privileged position, we must use it not to lord it over the rest of the world but to concern ourselves with the well-being of others. Globalization has rendered the world increasingly interdependent and there are many problems that require collective action. Maintaining peace, law and order, protecting the environment, reducing poverty and fighting terrorism
are among them. We cannot do anything we want, but
very little can be done without our leadership or at least active participation.
Instead of undermining and demeaning our international institutions because
they do not necessarily follow our will, we ought to strengthen them and
improve them. Instead of engaging in preemptive actions of a military nature,
we ought to pursue preventive actions of a constructive nature, creating
a better balance between carrots and sticks in the prevailing world order.
As graduates of a school of international affairs,
I hope you will have an opportunity to implement this constructive vision
of America's role in the world.
Thank you.
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