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The National Interest Archives Fall 1985 to
Present
The Jacksonian Tradition by Walter Russell Mead
In the last five months of World War II, American
bombing raids claimed the lives of more than 900,000 Japanese
civilians—not counting the casualties from the atomic strikes against
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This is more than twice the total number of combat
deaths that the United States has suffered in all its foreign wars
combined.
On one night, that of March 9-10, 1945, 234
Superfortresses dropped 1,167 tons of incendiary bombs over downtown
Tokyo; 83,793 Japanese bodies were found in the charred remains—a number
greater than the 80,942 combat fatalities that the United States sustained
in the Korean and Vietnam Wars combined.
Since the Second World
War, the United States has continued to employ devastating force against
both civilian and military targets. Out of a pre-war population of 9.49
million, an estimated 1 million North Korean civilians are believed to
have died as a result of U.S. actions during the 1950-53 conflict. During
the same war, 33,870 American soldiers died in combat, meaning that U.S.
forces killed approximately thirty North Korean civilians for every
American soldier who died in action. The United States dropped almost
three times as much explosive tonnage in the Vietnam War as was used in
the Second World War, and something on the order of 365,000 Vietnamese
civilians are believed to have been killed during the period of American
involvement.
Regardless of Clausewitz’s admonition that "casualty
reports . . . are never accurate, seldom truthful, and in most cases
deliberately falsified", these numbers are too striking to ignore. They do
not, of course, suggest a moral parallel between the behavior of, say,
German and Japanese aggressors and American forces seeking to defeat those
aggressors in the shortest possible time. German and Japanese forces used
the indiscriminate murder of civilians as a routine police tool in
occupied territory, and wholesale massacres of civilians often accompanied
German and Japanese advances into new territory. The behavior of the
German Einsatzgruppen and of the Japanese army during the Rape of Nanking
has no significant parallel on the American side.
In the Cold War,
too, the evils the Americans fought were far worse than those they
inflicted. Tens of millions more innocent civilians in communist nations
were murdered by their own governments in peacetime than ever died as the
result of American attempts to halt communism’s spread. War, even brutal
war, was more merciful than communist rule.
Nevertheless, the
American war record should make us think. An observer who thinks of
American foreign policy only in terms of the commercial realism of the
Hamiltonians, the crusading moralism of Wilsonian transcendentalists, and
the supple pacifism of the principled but slippery Jeffersonians would be
at a loss to account for American ruthlessness at war.
Those who
prefer to believe that the present global hegemony of the United States
emerged through a process of immaculate conception avert their eyes from
many distressing moments in the American ascension. Yet students of
American power cannot ignore one of the chief elements in American
success. The United States over its history has consistently summoned the
will and the means to compel its enemies to yield to its demands.
Through the long sweep of American history, there have been many
occasions when public opinion, or at least an important part of it, got
ahead of politicians in demanding war. Many of the Indian wars were caused
less by Indian aggression than by movements of frontier populations
willing to provoke and fight wars with Indian tribes that were nominally
under Washington’s protection—and contrary both to the policy and the
wishes of the national government. The War of 1812 came about largely
because of a popular movement in the South and Midwest. Abraham Lincoln
barely succeeded in preventing a war with Britain over the Trent Affair
during the Civil War; public opinion made it difficult for him to find an
acceptable, face-saving solution to the problem. More recently, John
Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon were all haunted by fears that a
pullout from the Vietnam War would trigger a popular backlash.
Once
wars begin, a significant element of American public opinion supports
waging them at the highest possible level of intensity. The devastating
tactics of the wars against the Indians, General Sherman’s campaign of
1864-65, and the unprecedented aerial bombardments of World War II were
all broadly popular in the United States. During both the Korean and
Vietnam Wars, presidents came under intense pressure, not only from
military leaders but also from public opinion, to hit the enemy with all
available force in all available places. Throughout the Cold War the path
of least resistance in American politics was generally the more hawkish
stance. Politicians who advocated negotiated compromises with the Soviet
enemy were labeled appeasers and paid a heavy political price. The Korean
and Vietnam Wars lost public support in part because of political
decisions not to risk the consequences of all-out war, not necessarily
stopping short of the use of nuclear weapons. The most costly decision
George Bush took in the Gulf War was not to send ground forces into Iraq,
but to stop short of the occupation of Baghdad and the capture and trial
of Saddam Hussein.
It is often remarked that the American people
are more religious than their allies in Western Europe. But it is equally
true that they are more military-minded. Currently, the American people
support without complaint what is easily the highest military budget in
the world. In 1998 the United States spent as much on defense as its NATO
allies, South Korea, Japan, the Persian Gulf states, Russia and China
combined. In response to widespread public concern about a decline in
military preparedness, the Clinton administration and the Republican
Congress are planning substantial increases in military spending in the
years to come.
Americans do not merely pay for these forces, they
use them. Since the end of the Vietnam War, taken by some as opening a new
era of reluctance in the exercise of American power, the United States has
deployed combat forces in, or used deadly force over, Cambodia, Iran,
Grenada, Panama, Lebanon, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Turkey,
Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, Sudan, Afghanistan, the South China Sea, Liberia,
Macedonia, Albania and Yugoslavia. This is a record that no other country
comes close to matching.
It is also generally conceded that, with
the exception of a handful of elite units in such forces as the British
Army, American troops have a stronger "warrior culture" than do the armies
of other wealthy countries. Indeed, of all the nato countries other than
Turkey and Greece, only Great Britain today has anything like the American
"war lobby" that becomes active in times of national crisis—a political
force that under certain circumstances demands war, supports the decisive
use of force, and urges political leaders to stop wasting time with
negotiations, sanctions and Security Council meetings in order to attack
the enemy with all possible strength.
Why is it that U.S. public
opinion is often so quick—though sometimes so slow—to support armed
intervention abroad? What are the provocations that energize public
opinion (at least some of it) for war—and how, if at all, is this "war
lobby" related to the other elements of that opinion? The key to this
warlike disposition, and to other important features of American foreign
policy, is to be found in what I shall call its Jacksonian tradition, in
honor of the sixth president of the United States.
The School of
Andrew Jackson
It is a tribute to the general historical amnesia
about American politics between the War of 1812 and the Civil War that
Andrew Jackson is not more widely counted among the greatest of American
presidents. Victor in the Battle of New Orleans—perhaps the most decisive
battle in the shaping of the modern world between Trafalgar and
Stalingrad—Andrew Jackson laid the foundation of American politics for
most of the nineteenth century, and his influence is still felt today.
With the ever ready help of the brilliant Martin Van Buren, he took
American politics from the era of silk stockings into the smoke-filled
room. Every political party since his presidency has drawn on the
symbolism, the institutions and the instruments of power that Jackson
pioneered.
More than that, he brought the American people into the
political arena. Restricted state franchises with high property
qualifications meant that in 1820 many American states had higher property
qualifications for voters than did boroughs for the British House of
Commons. With Jackson’s presidency, universal male suffrage became the
basis of American politics and political values.
His political
movement—or, more accurately, the community of political feeling that he
wielded into an instrument of power—remains in many ways the most
important in American politics. Solidly Democratic through the Truman
administration (a tradition commemorated in the annual Jefferson-Jackson
Day dinners that are still the high points on Democratic Party calendars
in many cities and states), Jacksonian America shifted toward the
Republican Party under Richard Nixon—the most important political change
in American life since the Second World War. The future of Jacksonian
political allegiance will be one of the keys to the politics of the
twenty-first century.
Suspicious of untrammeled federal power
(Waco), skeptical about the prospects for domestic and foreign do-gooding
(welfare at home, foreign aid abroad), opposed to federal taxes but
obstinately fond of federal programs seen as primarily helping the middle
class (Social Security and Medicare, mortgage interest subsidies),
Jacksonians constitute a large political interest.
In some ways
Jacksonians resemble the Jeffersonians, with whom their political fortunes
were linked for so many decades. Like Jeffersonians, Jacksonians are
profoundly suspicious of elites. They generally prefer a loose federal
structure with as much power as possible retained by states and local
governments. But the differences between the two movements run very
deep—so deep that during the Cold War they were on dead opposite sides of
most important foreign policy questions. To use the language of the
Vietnam era, a time when Jeffersonians and Jacksonians were fighting in
the streets over foreign policy, the former were the most dovish current
in mainstream political thought during the Cold War, while the latter were
the most consistently hawkish.
One way to grasp the difference
between the two schools is to see that both Jeffersonians and Jacksonians
are civil libertarians, passionately attached to the Constitution and
especially to the Bill of Rights, and deeply concerned to preserve the
liberties of ordinary Americans. But while the Jeffersonians are most
profoundly devoted to the First Amendment, protecting the freedom of
speech and prohibiting a federal establishment of religion, Jacksonians
see the Second Amendment, the right to bear arms, as the citadel of
liberty. Jeffersonians join the American Civil Liberties Union;
Jacksonians join the National Rifle Association. In so doing, both are
convinced that they are standing at the barricades of freedom.
For
foreigners and for some Americans, the Jacksonian tradition is the least
impressive in American politics. It is the most deplored abroad, the most
denounced at home. Jacksonian chairs of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee are the despair of high-minded people everywhere, as they hold
up adhesion to the Kyoto Protocol, starve the UN and the IMF, cut foreign
aid, and ban the use of U.S. funds for population control programs abroad.
When spokesmen for other schools of thought speak about the "problems" of
American foreign policy, the persistence and power of the Jacksonian
school are high on their list. While some of this fashionable despair may
be overdone, and is perhaps a reflection of different class interests and
values, it is true that Jacksonians often figure as the most
obstructionist of the schools, as the least likely to support Wilsonian
initiatives for a better world, to understand Jeffersonian calls for
patient diplomacy in difficult situations, or to accept Hamiltonian trade
strategies. Yet without Jacksonians, the United States would be a much
weaker power.
A principal explanation of why Jacksonian politics
are so poorly understood is that Jacksonianism is less an intellectual or
political movement than an expression of the social, cultural and
religious values of a large portion of the American public. And it is
doubly obscure because it happens to be rooted in one of the portions of
the public least represented in the media and the professoriat. Jacksonian
America is a folk community with a strong sense of common values and
common destiny; though periodically led by intellectually brilliant
men—like Andrew Jackson himself—it is neither an ideology nor a
self-conscious movement with a clear historical direction or political
table of organization. Nevertheless, Jacksonian America has produced—and
looks set to continue to produce—one political leader and movement after
another, and it is likely to continue to enjoy major influence over both
foreign and domestic policy in the United States for the foreseeable
future.
The Evolution of a Community
It is not fashionable
today to think of the American nation as a folk community bound together
by deep cultural and ethnic ties. Believers in a multicultural America
attack this idea from one direction, but conservatives too have a tendency
to talk about the United States as a nation based on ideology rather than
ethnicity. Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, among others,
has said that the United States is unlike other nations because it is
based on an idea rather than on a community of national experience. The
continuing and growing vitality of the Jacksonian tradition is, for better
or worse, living proof that she is at least partly wrong.
If
Jeffersonianism is the book-ideology of the United States, Jacksonian
populism is its folk-ideology. Historically, American populism has been
based less on the ideas of the Enlightenment than on the community values
and sense of identity among the British colonizers who first settled this
country. In particular, as David Hackett Fischer has shown, Jacksonian
populism can be originally identified with a subgroup among these
settlers, the so-called "Scots-Irish", who settled the back country
regions of the Carolinas and Virginia, and who went on to settle much of
the Old West—West Virginia, Kentucky, parts of Indiana and Illinois—and
the southern and south central states of Tennessee, Missouri, Alabama,
Mississippi and Texas. Jacksonian populism today has moved beyond its
original ethnic and geographical limits. Like country music, another
product of Jacksonian culture, Jacksonian politics and folk feeling has
become a basic element in American consciousness that can be found from
one end of the country to the other.
The Scots-Irish were a hardy
and warlike people, with a culture and outlook formed by centuries of
bitter warfare before they came to the United States. Fischer shows how,
trapped on the frontiers between England and Scotland, or planted as
Protestant colonies in the hostile soil of Ireland, this culture was
shaped through centuries of constant, bloody war. The Revolutionary
struggle and generations of savage frontier conflict in the United States
reproduced these conditions in the New World; the Civil War—fought with
particular ferocity in the border states—renewed the cultural heritage of
war.
The role of what we are calling Jacksonian America in
nineteenth-century America is clear, but many twentieth-century observers
made what once seemed the reasonable assumption that Jacksonian values and
politics were dying out. These observers were both surprised and
discomfited when Ronald Reagan’s political success showed that Jacksonian
America had done more than survive; it was, and is, thriving.
What
has happened is that Jacksonian culture, values and self-identification
have spread beyond their original ethnic limits. In the 1920s and 1930s
the highland, border tradition in American life was widely thought to be
dying out, ethnically, culturally and politically. Part of this was the
economic and demographic collapse of the traditional home of Jacksonian
America: the family farm. At the same time, mass immigration from southern
and Eastern Europe tilted the ethnic balance of the American population
ever farther from its colonial mix. New England Yankees were a vanishing
species, limited to the hills of New Hampshire and Vermont, while the
cities and plains of Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island filled
with Irishmen, Italians, Portuguese and Greeks. The great cities of the
United States were increasingly filled with Catholics, members of the
Orthodox churches and Jews—all professing in one way or another
communitarian social values very much at odds with the individualism of
traditional Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Celtic culture.
As Hiram W.
Evans, the surprisingly articulate Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan,
wrote in 1926, the old stock American of his time had become
a stranger in large parts of the land his
fathers gave him. Moreover, he is a most unwelcome stranger, one much spit
upon, and one to whom even the right to have his own opinions and to work
for his own interests is now denied with jeers and revilings. ‘We must
Americanize the Americans,’ a distinguished immigrant said
recently.
Protestantism itself was losing its edge. The
modernist critique of traditional Biblical readings found acceptance in
one mainline denomination after another; Episcopal, Presbyterian,
Methodist and Lutheran seminaries accepted critical, post-Darwinian
readings of Scripture; self-described "fundamentalists" fought a slow, but
apparently losing, rearguard action against the modernist forces. The new
mainline Protestantism was a tolerant, even a namby-pamby,
religion.
The old nativist spirit, anti-immigrant, anti-modern art
and apparently anti-twentieth century, still had some bite—Ku Klux crosses
flamed across the Midwest as well as the South during the 1920s—but it all
looked like the death throes of an outdated idea. There weren’t many
mourners: much of H.L. Mencken’s career was based on exposing the
limitations and mocking the death of what we are calling Jacksonian
America.
Most progressive, right thinking intellectuals in
mid-century America believed that the future of American populism lay in a
social democratic movement based on urban immigrants. Social activists
like Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger consciously sought to use cultural
forms like folk songs to ease the transition from the old individualistic
folk world to the collective new one that they believed was the wave of
the future; they celebrated unions and other strange, European ideas in
down home country twangs so that, in the bitter words of Hiram Evans,
"There is a steady flood of alien ideas being spread over the country,
always carefully disguised as American."
What came next surprised
almost everyone. The tables turned, and Evans’ Americans "americanized"
the immigrants rather than the other way around. In what is still a
largely unheralded triumph of the melting pot, Northern immigrants
gradually assimilated the values of Jacksonian individualism. Each
generation of new Americans was less "social" and more individualistic
than the preceding one. American Catholics, once among the world’s most
orthodox, remained Catholic in religious allegiance but were increasingly
individualistic in terms of psychology and behavior ("I respect the Pope,
but I have to follow my own conscience"). Ties to the countries of
emigration steadily weakened, and the tendency to marry outside the group
strengthened.
Outwardly, most immigrant groups completed an
apparent assimilation to American material culture within a couple of
generations of their arrival. A second type of assimilation—an inward
assimilation to and adaptation of the core cultural and psychological
structure of the native population—took longer, but as third, fourth and
fifth-generation immigrant families were exposed to the economic and
social realities of American life, they were increasingly "americanized"
on the inside as well as without.
This immense and complex process
was accelerated by social changes that took place after 1945. Physically,
the old neighborhoods broke up, and the Northern industrial working class,
along with the refugees from the dying American family farm, moved into
the suburbs to form a new populist mix. As increasing numbers of the
descendants of immigrants moved into the Jacksonian Sunbelt, the pace of
assimilation grew. The suburban homeowner with his or her federally
subsidized mortgage replaced the homesteading farmer (on free federal
land) as the central pillar of American populism. Richard Nixon, with his
two-pronged appeal to white Southerners and the "Joe Six-pack" voters of
the North, was the first national politician to recognize the power of
this newly energized current in American life.
Urban, immigrant
America may have softened some of the rough edges of Jacksonian America,
but the descendants of the great wave of European immigration sound more
like Andrew Jackson from decade to decade. Rugged frontier individualism
has proven to be contagious; each successive generation has been more
Jacksonian than its predecessor. The social and economic solidarity rooted
in European peasant communities has been overmastered by the individualism
of the frontier. The descendants of European working-class Marxists now
quote Adam Smith; Joe Six-pack thinks of the welfare state as an expensive
burden, not part of the natural moral order. Intellectuals have made this
transition as thoroughly as anyone else. The children and grandchildren of
trade unionists and Trotskyites now talk about the importance of liberal
society and free markets; in the intellectual pilgrimage of Irving
Kristol, what is usually a multigenerational process has been compressed
into a single, brilliant career.
The new Jacksonianism is no longer
rural and exclusively nativist. Frontier Jacksonianism may have taken the
homesteading farmer and the log cabin as its emblems, but today’s
Crabgrass Jacksonianism sees the homeowner on his modest suburban lawn as
the hero of the American story. The Crabgrass Jacksonian may wear green on
St. Patrick’s Day; he or she might go to a Catholic Church and never
listen to country music (though, increasingly, he or she probably does);
but the Crabgrass Jacksonian doesn’t just believe, she knows that she is
as good an American as anybody else, that she is entitled to her rights
from Church and State, that she pulls her own weight and expects others to
do the same. That homeowner will be heard from: Ronald Reagan owed much of
his popularity and success to his ability to connect with Jacksonian
values. Ross Perot and Pat Buchanan in different ways have managed to tap
into the power of the populist energy that Old Hickory rode into the White
House. In both domestic and foreign policy, the twenty-first century will
be profoundly influenced by the values and concerns of Jacksonian
America.
The Jacksonian Code
To understand how Crabgrass
Jacksonianism is shaping and will continue to shape American foreign
policy, we must begin with another unfashionable concept: Honor. Although
few Americans today use this anachronistic word, honor remains a core
value for tens of millions of middle-class Americans, women as well as
men. The unacknowledged code of honor that shapes so much of American
behavior and aspiration today is a recognizable descendent of the frontier
codes of honor of early Jacksonian America. The appeal of this code is one
of the reasons that Jacksonian values have spread to so many people
outside the original ethnic and social nexus in which Jacksonian America
was formed.
The first principle of this code is self-reliance.
Real Americans, many Americans feel, are people who make their own way in
the world. They may get a helping hand from friends and family, but they
hold their places in the world through honest work. They don’t slide by on
welfare, and they don’t rely on inherited wealth or connections. Those who
won’t work and are therefore poor, or those who don’t need to work due to
family money, are viewed with suspicion. Those who meet the economic and
moral tests belong to the broad Middle Class, the folk community of
working people that Jacksonians believe to be the heart, soul and spine of
the American nation. Earning and keeping a place in this community on the
basis of honest work is the first principle of Jacksonian honor, and it
remains a serious insult even to imply that a member of the American
middle class is not pulling his or her weight in the
world.
Jacksonian honor must be acknowledged by the outside world.
One is entitled to, and demands, the appropriate respect: recognition of
rights and just claims, acknowledgment of one’s personal dignity. Many
Americans will still fight, sometimes with weapons, when they feel they
have not been treated with the proper respect. But even among the less
violent, Americans stand on their dignity and rights. Respect is also due
age. Those who know Jacksonian America only through its very inexact
representations in the media think of the United States as a
youth-obsessed, age-neglecting society. In fact, Jacksonian America honors
age. Andrew Jackson was sixty-one when he was elected president for the
first time; Ronald Reagan was seventy. Most movie stars lose their appeal
with age; those whose appeal stems from their ability to portray and
embody Jacksonian values—like John Wayne—only become more revered.
The second principle of the code is equality. Among those members
of the folk community who do pull their weight, there is an absolute
equality of dignity and right. No one has a right to tell the self-reliant
Jacksonian what to say, do or think. Any infringement on equality will be
met with defiance and resistance. Male or female, the Jacksonian is, and
insists on remaining, independent of church, state, social hierarchy,
political parties and labor unions. Jacksonians may choose to accept the
authority of a leader or movement or faith, but will never yield to an
imposed authority. The young are independent of the old: "free, white and
twenty-one" is an old Jacksonian expression; the color line has softened,
but otherwise the sentiment is as true as it ever was.
Mrs. Fanny
Trollope (mother of novelist Anthony Trollope) had the misfortune to leave
her native Britain to spend two years in the United States. Next to her
revulsion at the twin American habits of chewing tobacco in public places
and missing spittoons with the finished product, she most despised the
passion for equality she found everywhere she looked. "The theory of
equality", Mrs. Trollope observed,
may be very
daintily discussed by English gentlemen in a London dining-room, when the
servant, having placed a fresh bottle of cool wine on the table,
respectfully shuts the door, and leaves them to their walnuts and their
wisdom; but it will be found less palatable when it presents itself in the
shape of a hard, greasy paw, and is claimed in accents that breathe less
of freedom than of onions and whiskey. Strong, indeed, must be the love of
equality in an English breast if it can survive a tour through the
Union.
The third principle is individualism. The Jacksonian
does not just have the right to self-fulfillment—he or she has a duty to
seek it. In Jacksonian America, everyone must find his or her way: each
individual must choose a faith, or no faith, and code of conduct based on
conscience and reason. The Jacksonian feels perfectly free to strike off
in an entirely new religious direction. "I sincerely believe", wrote poor
Mrs. Trollope, "that if a fire-worshiper, or an Indian Brahmin, were to
come to the United States, prepared to preach and pray in English, he
would not be long without a ‘very respectable congregation.’" She didn’t
know the half of it.
Despite this individualism, the Jacksonian
code also mandates acceptance of certain social mores and principles.
Loyalty to family, raising children "right", sexual decency (heterosexual
monogamy—which can be serial) and honesty within the community are virtues
that commend themselves to the Jacksonian spirit. Children of both sexes
can be wild, but both women and men must be strong. Corporal punishment is
customary and common; Jacksonians find objections to this time-honored and
(they feel) effective method of discipline outlandish and absurd. Although
women should be more discreet, both sexes can sow wild oats before
marriage. After it, to enjoy the esteem of their community a couple must
be seen to put their children’s welfare ahead of personal
gratification. The fourth pillar in the Jacksonian honor code struck
Mrs. Trollope and others as more dishonorable than honorable, yet it
persists nevertheless. Let us call it financial esprit. While the
Jacksonian believes in hard work, he or she also believes that credit is a
right and that money, especially borrowed money, is less a sacred trust
than a means for self-discovery and expression. Although previous
generations lacked the faculties for consumer credit that Americans enjoy
at the end of the twentieth century, many Americans have always assumed
that they have a right to spend money on their appearance, on purchases
that affirm their status. The strict Jacksonian code of honor does not
enjoin what others see as financial probity. What it demands, rather, is a
daring and entrepreneurial spirit. Credit is seen less as an obligation
than as an opportunity. Jacksonians have always supported loose monetary
policy and looser bankruptcy laws.
Finally, courage is the crowning
and indispensable part of the code. Jacksonians must be ready to defend
their honor in great things and small. Americans ought to stick up for
what they believe. In the nineteenth century, Jacksonian Americans fought
duels long after aristocrats in Europe had given them up, and Americans
today remain far more likely than Europeans to settle personal quarrels
with extreme and even deadly violence.
Jacksonian America’s love
affair with weapons is, of course, the despair of the rest of the country.
Jacksonian culture values firearms, and the freedom to own and use them.
The right to bear arms is a mark of civic and social equality, and knowing
how to care for firearms is an important part of life. Jacksonians are
armed for defense: of the home and person against robbers; against
usurpations of the federal government; and of the United States against
its enemies. In one war after another, Jacksonians have flocked to the
colors. Independent and difficult to discipline, they have nevertheless
demonstrated magnificent fighting qualities in every corner of the world.
Jacksonian America views military service as a sacred duty. When
Hamiltonians, Wilsonians and Jeffersonians dodged the draft in Vietnam or
purchased exemptions and substitutes in earlier wars, Jacksonians
soldiered on, if sometimes bitterly and resentfully. An honorable person
is ready to kill or to die for family and flag.
Jacksonian society
draws an important distinction between those who belong to the folk
community and those who do not. Within that community, among those bound
by the code and capable of discharging their responsibilities under it,
Jacksonians are united in a social compact. Outside that compact is chaos
and darkness. The criminal who commits what, in the Jacksonian code,
constitute unforgivable sins (cold-blooded murder, rape, the murder or
sexual abuse of a child, murder or attempted murder of a peace officer)
can justly be killed by the victims’ families, colleagues or by society at
large—with or without the formalities of law. In many parts of the United
States, juries will not convict police on almost any charge, nor will they
condemn revenge killers in particularly outrageous cases. The right of the
citizen to defend family and property with deadly force is a sacred one as
well, a legacy from colonial and frontier times.
The absolute and
even brutal distinction drawn between the members of the community and
outsiders has had massive implications in American life. Throughout most
of American history the Jacksonian community was one from which many
Americans were automatically and absolutely excluded: Indians, Mexicans,
Asians, African Americans, obvious sexual deviants and recent immigrants
of non-Protestant heritage have all felt the sting. Historically, the law
has been helpless to protect such people against economic oppression,
social discrimination and mob violence, including widespread lynchings.
Legislators would not enact laws, and if they did, sheriffs would not
arrest, prosecutors would not try, juries would not convict.
This
tells us something very important: throughout most of American history and
to a large extent even today, equal rights emerge from and depend on this
popular culture of equality and honor rather than flow out of abstract
principles or written documents. The many social and legal disabilities
still suffered in practice by unpopular minorities demonstrate that the
courts and the statute books still enjoy only a limited ability to protect
equal rights in the teeth of popular feeling and culture.
Even so,
Jacksonian values play a major role in African-American culture. If
anything, that role has increased with the expanded presence of African
Americans in all military ranks. The often blighted social landscape of
the inner city has in some cases re-created the atmosphere and practices
of American frontier life. In many ways the gang culture of some inner
cities resembles the social atmosphere of the Jacksonian South, as well as
the hard drinking, womanizing, violent male culture of the Mississippi in
the days of Davy Crockett and Mark Twain. Bragging about one’s physical
and sexual prowess, the willingness to avenge disrespect with deadly
force, a touchy insistence that one is as good as anybody else: once over
his shock at the urban landscape and the racial issue, Billy the Kid would
find himself surprisingly at home in such an environment.
The
degree to which African-American society resembles Jacksonian culture
remains one of the crucial and largely overlooked elements in American
life. Despite historical experiences that would have completely alienated
many ethnic minorities around the world, American black popular culture
remains profoundly—and, in times of danger, fiercely—patriotic. From the
Revolution onward, African Americans have sought more to participate in
America’s wars than to abstain from them, and the strength of personal and
military honor codes in African-American culture today remains a critical
factor in assuring the continued strength of American military forces into
the twenty-first century.
The underlying cultural unity between
African Americans and Anglo-Jacksonian America shaped the course and
ensured the success of the modern civil rights movement. Martin Luther
King and his followers exhibited exemplary personal courage, their
rhetoric was deeply rooted in Protestant Christianity, and the rights they
asked for were precisely those that Jacksonian America values most for
itself. Further, they scrupulously avoided the violent tactics that would
have triggered an unstoppable Jacksonian response.
Although
cultures change slowly and many individuals lag behind, the bulk of
American Jacksonian opinion has increasingly moved to recognize the right
of code-honoring members of minority groups to receive the rights and
protections due to members of the folk community. This new and, one hopes,
growing feeling of respect and tolerance emphatically does not extend to
those, minorities or not, who are not seen as code-honoring Americans.
Those who violate or reject the code—criminals, irresponsible parents,
drug addicts—have not benefited from the softening of the Jacksonian color
line.
The Politics of the Culture
Jacksonian foreign policy
is related to Jacksonian values and goals in domestic policy. For
Jacksonians, the prime goal of the American people is not the commercial
and industrial policy sought by Hamiltonians, nor the administrative
excellence in support of moral values that Wilsonians seek, nor
Jeffersonian liberty. Jacksonians believe that the government should do
everything in its power to promote the well-being—political, moral,
economic—of the folk community. Any means are permissible in the service
of this end, as long as they do not violate the moral feelings or infringe
on the freedoms that Jacksonians believe are essential in their daily
lives.
Jacksonians are instinctively democratic and populist.
Hamiltonians mistrust democracy; Wilsonians don’t approve of the political
rough and tumble. And while Jeffersonians support democracy in principle,
they remain concerned that tyrannical majorities can overrule minority
rights. Jacksonians believe that the political and moral instincts of the
American people are sound and can be trusted, and that the simpler and
more direct the process of government is, the better will be the results.
In general, while the other schools welcome the representative character
of our democracy, Jacksonians tend to see representative rather than
direct institutions as necessary evils, and to believe that governments
breed corruption and inefficiency the way picnics breed ants. Every
administration will be corrupt; every Congress and legislature will be, to
some extent, the plaything of lobbyists. Career politicians are inherently
untrustworthy; if it spends its life buzzing around the outhouse, it’s
probably a fly. Jacksonians see corruption as human nature and, within
certain ill-defined boundaries of reason and moderation, an inevitable
by-product of government.
It is perversion rather than corruption
that most troubles Jacksonians: the possibility that the powers of
government will be turned from the natural and proper object of supporting
the well-being of the majority toward oppressing the majority in the
service of an economic or cultural elite—or, worse still, in the interests
of powerful foreigners. Instead of trying, however ineptly, to serve the
people, have the politicians turned the government against the people? Are
they serving large commercial interests with malicious designs on the
common good? Are they either by ineptitude or wickedness serving hostile
foreign interests—giving all our industrial markets to the Japanese, or
allowing communists to steal our secrets and hand them to the Chinese? Are
they fecklessly frittering away huge sums of money on worthless foreign
aid programs that transfer billions to corrupt foreign
dictators?
Jacksonians tolerate a certain amount of government
perversion, but when it becomes unbearable, they look to a popular hero to
restore government to its proper functions. It was in this capacity that
Andrew Jackson was elected to the presidency, and the role has since been
reprised by any number of politicians on both the local and the national
stages. Recent decades have seen Ronald Reagan master the role, and George
Wallace, Ross Perot, Jesse Ventura and Pat Buchanan auditioning for it.
The Jacksonian hero dares to say what the people feel and defies the
entrenched elites. "I welcome their hatred", said the aristocratic
Franklin Roosevelt, in his role of tribune of the people. The hero may
make mistakes, but he will command the unswerving loyalty of Jacksonian
America so long as his heart is perceived to be in the right
place.
When it comes to Big Government, Jeffersonians worry more
about the military than about anything else. But for Jacksonians, spending
money on the military is one of the best things government can do. Yes,
the Pentagon is inefficient and contractors are stealing the government
blind. But by definition the work that the Defense Department
does—defending the nation—is a service to the Jacksonian middle class.
Yes, the Pentagon should spend its money more carefully, but let us not
throw the baby out with the bath water. Stories about welfare abusers in
limousines and foreign aid swindles generate more anger among Jacksonians
than do stories of $600 hammers at the Pentagon.
The profoundly
populist world-view of Jacksonian Americans contributes to one of the most
important elements in their politics: the belief that while problems are
complicated, solutions are simple. False idols are many; the True God is
One. Jacksonians believe that Gordian Knots are there to be cut. In public
controversies, the side that is always giving you reasons why something
can’t be done, and is endlessly telling you that the popular view isn’t
sufficiently "sophisticated" or "nuanced"—that is the side that doesn’t
want you to know what it is doing, and it is not to be trusted. If
politicians have honest intentions, they will tell you straight up what
they plan to do. If it’s a good idea, you will like it as soon as they
explain the whole package. For most of the other schools, "complex" is a
positive term when applied either to policies or to situations; for
Jacksonians it is a negative. Ronald Reagan brilliantly exploited this. As
in the case of Andrew Jackson himself, Reagan’s own intuitive approach to
the world led him to beliefs and policies that appealed to Jacksonian
opinion right from the start.
Instinct, Not Ideology
Those
who like to cast American foreign policy as an unhealthy mix of ignorance,
isolationism and trigger-happy cowboy diplomacy are often thinking about
the Jacksonian populist tradition. That tradition is stronger among the
mass of ordinary people than it is among the elite. It is more strongly
entrenched in the heartland than on either of the two coasts. It has been
historically associated with white Protestant males of the lower and
middle classes—today the least fashionable element in the American
political mix.
Although there are many learned and thoughtful
Jacksonians, including those who have made distinguished careers in public
service, it is certainly true that the Jacksonian philosophy is embraced
by many people who know very little about the wider world. With them it is
an instinct rather than an ideology—a culturally shaped set of beliefs and
emotions rather than a set of ideas. But ideas and policy proposals that
resonate with Jacksonian core values and instincts enjoy wide support and
can usually find influential supporters in the policy process.
So
influential is Jacksonian opinion in the formation of American foreign
policy that anyone lacking a feel for it will find much of American
foreign policy baffling and opaque. Foreigners in particular have
alternately overestimated and underestimated American determination
because they failed to grasp the structure of Jacksonian opinion and
influence. Yet Jacksonian views on foreign affairs are relatively
straightforward, and once they are understood, American foreign policy
becomes much less mysterious.
To begin with, although the other
schools often congratulate themselves on their superior sophistication and
appreciation for complexity, Jacksonianism provides the basis in American
life for what many scholars and practitioners would consider the most
sophisticated of all approaches to foreign affairs: realism. In this it
stands with Jeffersonianism, while being deeply suspicious of the "global
meliorist" elements found, in different forms, in both Wilsonian and
Hamiltonian foreign policy ideas. Often, Jeffersonians and Jacksonians
will stand together in opposition to humanitarian interventions, or
interventions made in support of Wilsonian or Hamiltonian world order
initiatives. However, while Jeffersonians espouse a minimalist realism
under which the United States seeks to define its interests as narrowly as
possible and to defend those interests with an absolute minimum of force,
Jacksonians approach foreign policy in a very different spirit—one in
which honor, concern for reputation, and faith in military institutions
play a much greater role.
Jacksonian realism is based on the very
sharp distinction in popular feeling between the inside of the folk
community and the dark world without. Jacksonian patriotism is not a
doctrine but an emotion, like love of one’s family. The nation is an
extension of the family. Members of the American folk are bound together
by history, culture and a common morality. At a very basic level, a
feeling of kinship exists among Americans: we have one set of rules for
dealing with each other and a very different set for the outside world.
Unlike Wilsonians, who hope ultimately to convert the Hobbesian world of
international relations into a Lockean political community, Jacksonians
believe that it is natural and inevitable that national politics and
national life will work on different principles from international
affairs. For Jacksonians, the world community Wilsonians want to build is
not merely a moral impossibility but a monstrosity. An American foreign
policy that, for example, takes tax money from middle-class Americans to
give to a corrupt and incompetent dictatorship overseas is nonsense; it
hurts Americans and does little for Borrioboola-Gha. Countries, like
families, should take care of their own; if everybody did that we would
all be better off. Charity, meanwhile, should be left to private
initiatives and private funds; Jacksonian America is not ungenerous but it
lacks all confidence in the government’s ability to administer charity,
either at home or abroad.
Given the moral gap between the folk
community and the rest of the world—and given that other countries are
believed to have patriotic and communal feelings of their own, feelings
that similarly harden once the boundary of the folk community is
reached—Jacksonians believe that international life is and will remain
both anarchic and violent. The United States must be vigilant and strongly
armed. Our diplomacy must be cunning, forceful and no more scrupulous than
anybody else’s. At times, we must fight pre-emptive wars. There is
absolutely nothing wrong with subverting foreign governments or
assassinating foreign leaders whose bad intentions are clear. Thus,
Jacksonians are more likely to tax political leaders with a failure to
employ vigorous measures than to worry about the niceties of international
law.
Indeed, of all the major currents in American society,
Jacksonians have the least regard for international law and international
institutions. They prefer the rule of custom to the written law, and that
is as true in the international sphere as it is in personal relations at
home. Jacksonians believe that there is an honor code in international
life—as there was in clan warfare in the borderlands of England—and those
who live by the code will be treated under it. But those who violate the
code—who commit terrorist acts in peacetime, for example—forfeit its
protection and deserve no consideration.
Many students of American
foreign policy, both here and abroad, dismiss Jacksonians as ignorant
isolationists and vulgar patriots, but, again, the reality is more
complex, and their approach to the world and to war is more closely
grounded in classical realism than many recognize. Jacksonians do not
believe that the United States must have an unambiguously moral reason for
fighting. In fact, they tend to separate the issues of morality and war
more clearly than many members of the foreign policy
establishment.
The Gulf War was a popular war in Jacksonian circles
because the defense of the nation’s oil supply struck a chord with
Jacksonian opinion. That opinion—which has not forgotten the oil shortages
and price hikes of the 1970s—clearly considers stability of the oil supply
a vital national interest and is prepared to fight to defend it. The
atrocity propaganda about alleged Iraqi barbarisms in Kuwait did not
inspire Jacksonians to war, and neither did legalistic arguments about
U.S. obligations under the UN Charter to defend a member state from
aggression. Those are useful arguments to screw Wilsonian courage to the
sticking place, but they mean little for Jacksonians. Had there been no UN
Charter and had Kuwait been even more corrupt and repressive that it is,
Jacksonian opinion would still have supported the Gulf War. It would have
supported a full-scale war with Iran over the 1980 hostage crisis, and it
will take an equally hawkish stance toward any future threat to perceived
U.S. interests in the Persian Gulf region.
In the absence of a
clearly defined threat to the national interest, Jacksonian opinion is
much less aggressive. It has not, for example, been enthusiastic about the
U.S. intervention in the case of Bosnia. There the evidence of unspeakable
atrocities was much greater than in Kuwait, and the legal case for
intervention was as strong. Yet Jacksonian opinion saw no threat to the
interests, as it understood them, of the United States, and Wilsonians
were the only segment of the population that was actively eager for war.
In World War I it took the Zimmermann Telegram and the repeated
sinking of American ships to convince Jacksonian opinion that war was
necessary. In World War II, neither the Rape of Nanking nor the atrocities
of Nazi rule in Europe drew the United States into the war. The attack on
Pearl Harbor did.
To engage Jacksonians in support of the Cold War
it was necessary to convince them that Moscow was engaged in a
far-reaching and systematic campaign for world domination, and that this
campaign would succeed unless the United States engaged in a long-term
defensive effort with the help of allies around the world. That involved a
certain overstatement of both Soviet intentions and capabilities, but that
is beside the present point. Once Jacksonian opinion was convinced that
the Soviet threat was real and that the Cold War was necessary, it stayed
convinced. Populist American opinion accepted the burdens it imposed and
worried only that the government would fail to prosecute the Cold War with
the necessary vigor. No one should mistake the importance of this strong
and constant support. Despite the frequent complaints by commentators and
policymakers that the American people are "isolationist" and "uninterested
in foreign affairs", they have made and will make enormous financial and
personal sacrifices if convinced that these are in the nation’s vital
interests.
This mass popular patriotism, and the martial spirit
behind it, gives the United States immense advantages in international
affairs. After two world wars, no European nation has shown the same
willingness to pay the price in blood and treasure for a global presence.
Most of the "developed" nations find it difficult to maintain large,
high-quality fighting forces. Not all of the martial patriotism in the
United States comes out of the world of Jacksonian populism, but without
that tradition, the United States would be hard pressed to maintain the
kind of international military presence it now
has.
Pessimism
While in many respects Jacksonian Americans
have an optimistic outlook, there is a large and important sense in which
they are pessimistic. Whatever the theological views of individual
Jacksonians may be, Jacksonian culture believes in Original Sin and does
not accept the Enlightenment’s belief in the perfectibility of human
nature. As a corollary, Jacksonians are pre-millennialist: they do not
believe that utopia is just around the corner. In fact, they tend to
believe the reverse—the anti-Christ will get here before Jesus does, and
human history will end in catastrophe and flames, followed by the Day of
Judgment.
This is no idle theological concept. Belief in the
approach of the "End Times" and the "Great Tribulation"—concepts rooted in
certain interpretations of Jewish and Christian prophetic texts—has been a
powerful force in American life from colonial times. Jacksonians believe
that neither Wilsonians nor Hamiltonians nor anybody else will ever
succeed in building a peaceful world order, and that the only world order
we are likely to get will be a bad one. No matter how much money we ship
overseas, and no matter how cleverly the development bureaucrats spend it,
it will not create peace on earth. Plans for universal disarmament and
world courts of justice founder on the same rock of historical skepticism.
Jacksonians just tend not to believe that any of these things will do much
good.
In fact, they think they may do harm. Linked to the
skepticism about man-made imitations of the Kingdom of God is a deep
apprehension about the rise of an evil world order. In theological terms,
this is a reference to the fear of the anti-Christ, who, many commentators
affirm, is predicted in Scripture to come with the appearance of an angel
of light—a charismatic political figure who offers what looks like a plan
for world peace and order, but which is actually a Satanic snare intended
to deceive.
For most of its history, Jacksonian America believed
that the Roman Catholic Church was the chief emissary of Satan on earth, a
belief that had accompanied the first Americans on their journey from
Britain. Fear of Catholicism gradually subsided, but during the Cold War
the Kremlin replaced the Vatican as the center for American popular fears
about the forces of evil in the world. The international communist
conspiracy captured the old stock American popular imagination because it
fit cultural templates established in the days of the Long Parliament and
the English Civil War. Descendants of immigrants from Eastern Europe had
their own cultural dispositions toward conspiracy thinking, plus, in many
cases, a deep hatred and fear of Russia.
The fear of a ruthless,
formidable enemy abroad who enjoys a powerful fifth column in the United
States—including high-ranking officials who serve it either for greed or
out of misguided ideological zeal—is older than the Republic. During the
Cold War, this "paranoid tradition" in American life stayed mostly focused
on the Kremlin—though organizations like the John Birch Society saw
ominous links between the Kremlin and the American Establishment. The
paranoid streak was, if anything, helpful in sustaining popular support
for Cold War strategy. After the Cold War, it is proving more difficult to
integrate into effective American policy. To some degree, the chief object
of popular concern in post-Cold War America is the Hamiltonian dream of a
fully integrated global economy, combined with the Wilsonian dream of
global political order that ends the nightmare of warring nation-states.
George Bush’s call for a "New World Order" had a distinctly Orwellian
connotation to the Jacksonian ear. Christian Coalition founder Pat
Robertson, in his book The New World Order (1991), traces the call for
that Order to a Satanic conspiracy consciously implemented by the pillars
of the American Establishment.
The fear that the Establishment,
linked to its counterpart in Britain and, through Britain, to all the
corrupt movements and elites of the Old World, is relentlessly plotting to
destroy American liberty is an old but still potent one. The Trilateral
Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Bilderbergers, the
Bavarian Illuminati, the Rothschilds, the Rockefellers: these names and
others echo through a large and shadowy world of conspiracy theories and
class resentment. Should seriously bad economic times come, there is
always the potential that, with effective leadership, the paranoid element
in the Jacksonian world could ride popular anger and panic into
power.
Honor
Another aspect of Jacksonian foreign policy is
the aforementioned deep sense of national honor and a corresponding need
to live up to—in actuality and in the eyes of others—the demands of an
honor code. The political importance of this code should not be
underestimated; Americans are capable of going to war over issues of
national honor. The War of 1812 is an example of Jacksonian sentiment
forcing a war out of resentment over continual national humiliations at
the hand of Britain. (Those who suffered directly from British
interference with American shipping, the merchants, were totally against
the war.) At the end of the twentieth century, it is national honor, more
than any vital strategic interest, that would require the United States to
fulfill its promises to protect Taiwan from invasion.
The
perception of national honor as a vital interest has always been a wedge
issue driving Jacksonians and Jeffersonians apart. The Jeffersonian peace
policy in the Napoleonic Wars became impossible as the War Hawks grew
stronger. The same pattern recurred in the Carter administration, during
which gathering Jacksonian fury and impatience at Carter’s Jeffersonian
approaches to the Soviet Union, Panama, Iran and Nicaragua ignited a
reaction that forced the President to reverse his basic policy orientation
and ended by driving him from office. What Jeffersonian diplomacy welcomes
as measures to head off war often look to Jacksonians like pusillanimous
weakness.
Once the United States extends a security guarantee or
makes a promise, we are required to honor that promise come what may.
Jacksonian opinion, which in the nature of things had little faith that
South Vietnam could build democracy or that there was anything concrete
there of interest to the average American, was steadfast in support of the
war—though not of the strategy—because we had given our word to defend
South Vietnam. During this year’s war in Kosovo, Jacksonian opinion was
resolutely against it to begin with. However, once U.S. honor was engaged,
Jacksonians began to urge a stronger warfighting strategy including the
use of ground troops. It is a bad thing to fight an unnecessary war, but
it is inexcusable and dishonorable to lose one once it has begun.
Reputation is as important in international life as it is to the
individual honor of Jacksonians. Honor in the Jacksonian imagination is
not simply what one feels oneself to be on the inside; it is also a
question of the respect and dignity one commands in the world at large.
Jacksonian opinion is sympathetic to the idea that our reputation—whether
for fair dealing or cheating, toughness or weakness—will shape the way
that others treat us. Therefore, at stake in a given crisis is not simply
whether we satisfy our own ideas of what is due our honor. Our behavior
and the resolution that we obtain must enhance our reputation—our
prestige—in the world at large.
Warfighting
Jacksonian
America has clear ideas about how wars should be fought, how enemies
should be treated, and what should happen when the wars are over. It
recognizes two kinds of enemies and two kinds of fighting: honorable
enemies fight a clean fight and are entitled to be opposed in the same
way; dishonorable enemies fight dirty wars and in that case all rules are
off.
An honorable enemy is one who declares war before beginning
combat; fights according to recognized rules of war, honoring such
traditions as the flag of truce; treats civilians in occupied territory
with due consideration; and—a crucial point—refrains from the mistreatment
of prisoners of war. Those who surrender should be treated with
generosity. Adversaries who honor the code will benefit from its
protections, while those who want a dirty fight will get one.
This
pattern was very clearly illustrated in the Civil War. The Army of the
Potomac and the Army of Northern Virginia faced one another throughout the
war, and fought some of the bloodiest battles of the nineteenth century,
including long bouts of trench warfare. Yet Robert E. Lee and his men were
permitted an honorable surrender and returned unmolested to their homes
with their horses and personal side arms. One Confederate, however, was
executed after the war: Captain Henry Wirz, who was convicted of
mistreating Union prisoners of war at Camp Sumter,
Georgia.
Although American Indians often won respect for their
extraordinary personal courage, Jacksonian opinion generally considered
Indians to be dishonorable opponents. American-Indian warrior codes (also
honor based) permitted surprise attacks on civilians and the torture of
prisoners of war. This was all part of a complex system of limited warfare
among the tribal nations, but Jacksonian frontier dwellers were not
students of multicultural diversity. In their view, Indian war tactics
were the sign of a dishonorable, unscrupulous and cowardly form of war.
Anger at such tactics led Jacksonians to abandon the restraints imposed by
their own war codes, and the ugly skirmishes along the frontier spiraled
into a series of genocidal conflicts in which each side felt the other was
violating every standard of humane conduct.
The Japanese, another
people with a highly developed war code based on personal honor, had the
misfortune to create the same kind of impression on American Jacksonians.
The sneak attack on Pearl Harbor, the gross mistreatment of American pows
(the Bataan Death March), and Japanese fighting tactics all served to
enrage American Jacksonians and led them to see the Pacific enemy as
ruthless, dishonorable and inhuman. All contributed to the vitriolic
intensity of combat in the Pacific theater. By the summer of 1945,
American popular opinion was fully prepared to countenance invasion of the
Japanese home islands, even if they were defended with the tenacity (and
indifference to civilian lives) that marked the fighting on
Okinawa.
Given this background, the Americans who decided to use
the atomic bomb may have been correct that the use of the weapon saved
lives, and not only of American soldiers. In any case, Jacksonians had no
compunction about using the bomb. General Curtis LeMay (subsequently the
1968 running mate of Jacksonian populist third-party candidate George
Wallace) succinctly summed up this attitude toward fighting a dishonorable
opponent: "I’ll tell you what war is about", said Lemay in an interview,
"You’ve got to kill people, and when you’ve killed enough they stop
fighting."
By contrast, although the Germans committed bestial
crimes against civilians and pows (especially Soviet pows), their behavior
toward the armed forces of the United States was more in accordance with
American ideas about military honor. Indeed, General Erwin Rommel is
considered something of a military hero among American Jacksonians: an
honorable enemy. Still, if the Germans avoided exposure to the utmost fury
of an aroused American people at war, they were nevertheless subjected to
the full, ferocious scope of the violence that a fully aroused American
public opinion will sustain—and even insist upon.
For the first
Jacksonian rule of war is that wars must be fought with all available
force. The use of limited force is deeply repugnant. Jacksonians see war
as a switch that is either "on" or "off." They do not like the idea of
violence on a dimmer switch. Either the stakes are important enough to
fight for—in which case you should fight with everything you have—or they
are not, in which case you should mind your own business and stay home. To
engage in a limited war is one of the costliest political decisions an
American president can make—neither Truman nor Johnson survived it.
The second key concept in Jacksonian thought about war is that the
strategic and tactical objective of American forces is to impose our will
on the enemy with as few American casualties as possible. The Jacksonian
code of military honor does not turn war into sport. It is a deadly and
earnest business. This is not the chivalry of a medieval joust, or of the
orderly battlefields of eighteenth-century Europe. One does not take risks
with soldiers’ lives to give a "fair fight." Some sectors of opinion in
the United States and abroad were both shocked and appalled during the
Gulf and Kosovo wars over the way in which American forces attacked the
enemy from the air without engaging in much ground combat. The "turkey
shoot" quality of the closing moments of the war against Iraq created a
particularly painful impression. Jacksonians dismiss such thoughts out of
hand. It is the obvious duty of American leaders to crush the forces
arrayed against us as quickly, thoroughly and professionally as
possible.
Jacksonian opinion takes a broad view of the permissible
targets in war. Again reflecting a very old cultural heritage, Jacksonians
believe that the enemy’s will to fight is a legitimate target of war, even
if this involves American forces in attacks on civilian lives,
establishments and property. The colonial wars, the Revolution and the
Indian wars all give ample evidence of this view, and General William
Tecumseh Sherman’s March to the Sea showed the degree to which the
targeting of civilian morale through systematic violence and destruction
could, to widespread popular applause, become an acknowledged warfighting
strategy, even when fighting one’s own rebellious kindred.
Probably as a result of frontier warfare, Jacksonian opinion came
to believe that it was breaking the spirit of the enemy nation, rather
than the fighting power of the enemy’s armies, that was the chief object
of warfare. It was not enough to defeat a tribe in battle; one had to
"pacify" the tribe, to convince it utterly that resistance was and always
would be futile and destructive. For this to happen, the war had to go to
the enemy’s home. The villages had to be burned, food supplies destroyed,
civilians had to be killed. From the tiniest child to the most revered of
the elderly sages, everyone in the enemy nation had to understand that
further armed resistance to the will of the American people—whatever that
might be—was simply not an option.
With the development of air
power and, later, of nuclear weapons, this long-standing cultural
acceptance of civilian targeting assumed new importance. Wilsonians and
Jeffersonians protested even at the time against the deliberate terror
bombing of civilian targets in the Second World War. Since 1945 there has
been much agonized review of the American decision to use atomic bombs
against Hiroshima and Nagasaki. None of this hand wringing has made the
slightest impression on the Jacksonian view that the bombings were
self-evidently justified and right. During both the Vietnam and Korean
conflicts, there were serious proposals in Jacksonian quarters to use
nuclear weapons—why else have them? The only reason Jacksonian opinion has
ever accepted not to use nuclear weapons is the prospect of
retaliation.
Jacksonians also have strong ideas about how wars
should end. "There is no substitute for victory", as General MacArthur
said, and the only sure sign of victory is the "unconditional surrender"
of enemy forces. Just as Jacksonian opinion resents limits on American
weapons and tactics, it also resents stopping short of victory.
Unconditional surrender is not always a literal and absolute demand. The
Confederate surrenders in 1865 included generous provisions for the losing
armies. The Japanese were assured after the Potsdam Declaration that,
while the United States insisted on unconditional surrender and acceptance
of the terms, they could keep the "emperor system" after the war. However,
there is only so much give in the idea: all resistance must cease; U.S.
forces must make an unopposed entry into and occupation of the
surrendering country; the political objectives of the war must be conceded
in toto.
When in the later stages of World War II the Joint Chiefs
of Staff discussed the prospect of an invasion of Kyushu, the southernmost
of the major Japanese home islands, Admiral William Leahy projected
268,000 Americans would be killed or wounded out of an invasion force of
766,000. The invasion of the chief island of Honshu, tentatively planned
for the spring of 1946, would have been significantly worse. While
projected casualty figures like these led a number of American officials
to argue for modification of the unconditional surrender formula,
Secretary of State James M. Byrnes told Truman that he would be
"crucified" if he retreated from this formula—one that received a standing
ovation when Truman repeated it to Congress in his first address as
president. Truman agreed—wisely. His efforts to wage limited war in Korea
cost him re-election in 1952. Similarly, Lyndon Johnson’s inability to
fight unlimited war for unconditional surrender in Vietnam cost him the
presidency in 1968; Jimmy Carter’s inability to resolve the Iranian
hostage crisis with a clear-cut victory destroyed any hope he had of
winning the 1980 election; and George Bush’s refusal to insist on an
unconditional surrender in Iraq may have contributed to his defeat in the
1992 presidential election. For American presidents, MacArthur is right:
there is no substitute for victory.
In Victory,
Magnanimity
Once the enemy has made an unconditional surrender, the
honor code demands that he be treated magnanimously. Grant fed Lee’s men
from his army supplies, while Sherman’s initial agreement with General
Johnston was so generous that it was overruled in Washington. American
occupation troops in both Germany and Japan very quickly lost their rancor
against the defeated foes. Not always disinterestedly, GIs in Europe were
passing out chocolate bars, cigarettes and nylon stockings before the guns
fell silent. The bitter racial antagonism that colored the Pacific War
rapidly faded after it. Neither in Japan nor in Germany did American
occupiers behave like the Soviet occupation forces in eastern Germany,
where looting, rape and murder were still widespread months after the
surrender.
In both Germany and Japan, the United States had
originally envisioned a harsh occupation strategy with masses of war
crimes trials and strict economic controls—somewhat akin to the original
Radical Republican program in the post-Civil War South. But in all three
cases, the victorious Americans quickly lost the appetite for vengeance
against all but the most egregious offenders against the code. Whatever
was said in the heat of battle, even the most Radical Reconstructionists
envisioned the South’s ultimate return to its old political status and
rights. In the same way, soon after the shooting stopped in World War II,
American public opinion simply assumed that the ultimate goal was for
Germany and Japan to resume their places in the community of nations.
Not everybody qualifies for such lenient treatment under the code.
In particular, repeat offenders will suffer increasingly severe penalties.
Although many Americans were revolted by the harsh and greedy peace forced
on Mexico (Grant felt that the Civil War was in part God’s punishment for
American crimes against Mexico), Santa Anna’s long record of perfidy and
cruelty built popular support both for the Mexican War and the peace. The
pattern of frontier warfare, in which factions in a particular tribe might
renew hostilities in violation of an agreement, helped solidify the
Jacksonian belief that there was no point in making or keeping treaties
with "savages."
In the international conflicts of the twentieth
century, it is noteworthy that there have been no major populist
backlashes calling for harsher treatment of defeated enemies. But when
foreign enemies lack the good taste to surrender, Jacksonian opinion
carries grudges that last for decades. Some of the roots of anti-China
feeling in the United States today date back to mistreatment of American
prisoners during the Korean War. U.S. food and energy aid to North Korea,
indeed any engagement at all with that defiant regime, remains profoundly
unpopular for the same reason. The mullahs of Iran, the assassins of Libya
and Fidel Castro have never been forgiven by Jacksonian opinion for their
crimes against and defiance of the United States. Neither will they be,
until they acknowledge their sins.
In the case of the Cold War, the
failure of the Soviet Union to make a formal surrender, or for the
conflict to end in any way that could be marked as V-USSR Day, has greatly
complicated American policy toward post-Cold War Russia. The Soviet Union
lost the Cold War absolutely and unconditionally, and Russia has suffered
economic and social devastation comparable to that sustained by any losing
power in the great wars of the century. But because it never surrendered,
Jacksonian opinion never quite shifted into magnanimity mode. Wilsonians,
Hamiltonians and Jeffersonians all favored reconstruction support and
aid; but without Jacksonian concurrence the American effort was sharply
limited. Advice was doled out with a free and generous hand, but aid was
extended more grudgingly.
This is far from a complete account of
Jacksonian values and beliefs as they affect the United States. In
economic as well as defense policy, for example, Jacksonian ideas are both
influential and unique. Convinced that the prime purpose of government is
to defend the living standards of the middle class, Jacksonian opinion is
instinctively protectionist, seeking trade privileges for U.S. goods
abroad and hoping to withhold those privileges from foreign exports.
Jacksonians were once farmers; today they tend to be service and
industrial workers. They see the preservation of American jobs, even at
the cost of some unspecified degree of "economic efficiency", as the
natural and obvious task of the federal government’s trade policy.
Jacksonians can be convinced that a particular trade agreement operates to
the benefit of American workers, but they need to be convinced over and
over again. They are also skeptical, on both cultural and economic
grounds, of the benefits of immigration, which is seen as endangering the
cohesion of the folk community and introducing new, low-wage competition
for jobs. Neither result strikes Jacksonian opinion as a suitable outcome
for a desirable government policy.
The Indispensable
Element
Jacksonian influence in American history has been—and
remains—enormous. The United States cannot wage a major international war
without Jacksonian support; once engaged, politicians cannot safely end
the war except on Jacksonian terms. From the perspective of members of
other schools and many foreign observers, when Jacksonian sentiment favors
a given course of action, the United States will move too far, too fast
and too unilaterally in pursuit of its goals. When Jacksonian sentiment is
strongly opposed, the United States will be seen to move too slowly or not
at all. For anyone wishing to anticipate the course of American policy, an
understanding of the structure of Jacksonian beliefs and values is
essential.
It would be an understatement to say that the Jacksonian
approach to foreign policy is controversial. It is an approach that has
certainly contributed its share to the headaches of American policymakers
throughout history. It has also played a role in creating a constituency
abroad for the idea that the United States is addicted to a crude cowboy
diplomacy—an idea that, by reducing international faith in the judgment
and predictability of the United States, represents a real liability for
American foreign policy.
Despite its undoubted limitations and
liabilities, however, Jacksonian policy and politics are indispensable
elements of American strength. Although Wilsonians, Jeffersonians and the
more delicately constructed Hamiltonians do not like to admit it, every
American school needs Jacksonians to get what it wants. If the American
people had exhibited the fighting qualities of, say, the French in World
War II, neither Hamiltonians, nor Jeffersonians nor Wilsonians would have
had the opportunity to have much to do with shaping the postwar
international order.
Moreover, as folk cultures go, Jacksonian
America is actually open and liberal. Non-Jacksonians at home and abroad
are fond of sneering at what must be acknowledged to be the deeply
regrettable Jacksonian record of racism, or its commitment to forms of
Christian belief that strike many as both unorthodox and bigoted.
Certainly, Jacksonian America has not been in the forefront of the fight
for minority rights, nor is it necessarily the place to go searching for
avant garde artistic styles or cutting-edge philosophical reflections on
the death of God.
But folk cultural change is measured in decades
and generations, not electoral cycles, and on this clock, Jacksonian
America is moving very rapidly. The military institutions have moved from
strict segregation to a concerted attack on racism in fifty years. In
civilian life, the belief that color is no bar to membership in the
Jacksonian community of honor is rapidly replacing earlier beliefs. Just
as Southerners whose grandfathers burned crosses against the Catholic
Church now work very well with Catholics on all kinds of social, cultural
and even religious endeavors, so we are seeing a steady erosion of the
racial barriers. Even on issues of modernist art, Jacksonian America is
moving. The Vietnam Memorial in Washington, once widely denounced by
Jacksonians for its failure to include figurative sculptures, has now
become one of the most visited and revered sites in the capital. On
Memorial Day, thousands of leather-clad representatives of the Jacksonian
culture visit it on their Harley-Davidsons, many of them accompanied by
their wives riding pillion.
Jacksonian America performs an
additional service: it makes a major, if unheralded, contribution to
America’s vaunted "soft power." It is not simply the Jeffersonian
commitment to liberty and equality, the Wilsonian record of benevolence,
anti-colonialism and support for democracy, or even the commercial success
resulting from Hamiltonian policies that attracts people to the United
States. Perhaps beyond all these it is the spectacle of a country that is
good for average people to live in: where ordinary people can and do
express themselves culturally, economically and spiritually without any
inhibition. The consumer lifestyle of the United States—and the
consequences of federal policy to enrich the middle class and make it a
class of homeowners and automobile drivers—wins the country many admirers
abroad. For the first time in human history, millions of ordinary people
have enough money in their pockets and time on their hands to support a
popular culture that has more resources than the high culture of the
aristocracy and elite. This culture is what hundreds of millions of
foreigners love most about the United States, and its dissemination makes
scores of millions of foreigners feel somehow connected to or even part of
the United States. The cultural, social and religious vibrancy and
unorthodoxy of Jacksonian America—not excluding such pastimes as
professional wrestling—are among the country’s most important foreign
policy assets.
It may also be worth noting that the images of
American propensities to violence, and of the capabilities of American
military forces and intelligence operatives, are so widely distributed in
the media that they may actually heighten international respect for
American strength and discourage attempts to test it.
This
basically positive assessment would be incomplete without a description of
the two most serious problems that the Jacksonian school perennially poses
for American policymakers. Both of them spring from the wide ideological
and cultural differences that divide the Jacksonian outlook from the other
schools.
The first problem is the gap between Hamiltonian and
Wilsonian promises and Jacksonian performance. The globally oriented,
order-building schools of thought see American power as a resource to be
expended in pursuit of their far-reaching goals. Many of the commitments
they wish to make, the institutions they wish to build, and the social and
economic policies they wish to promote do not enjoy Jacksonian support; in
some cases, they elicit violent Jacksonian disagreement. This puts
Hamiltonians and Wilsonians over and over again in an awkward position. At
best they are trying to push treaties, laws and appropriations through a
sulky and reluctant Congress. At worst they find themselves committed to
military confrontations without Jacksonian support. More often than not,
the military activities they wish to pursue are multilateral, limited
warfare or peacekeeping operations. These are often unpopular both inside
the military and in the country at large. Caught between their commitments
(and the well-organized Hamiltonian or Wilsonian lobbies and pressure
groups whose political clout is often at least partially responsible for
these commitments) and the manifest unpopularity of the actions required
to fulfill them, American policymakers dither, tack from side to side, and
generally make an unimpressive show. This is one of the structural
problems of American foreign policy, and it is exacerbated by the divided
structure of the American government and Senate customs and rules that
give a determined opposition many opportunities to block action of which
it disapproves.
The second problem has a similar origin, but a
different structure. Jacksonian opinion is slow to focus on a particular
foreign policy issue, and slower still to make a commitment to pursue an
end vigorously and for the long term. Once that commitment has been made,
it is even harder to build Jacksonian sentiment for a change. This is
particularly true when change involves overcoming one of the ingrained
preferences in Jacksonian culture; it is, for example, much harder to
shift a settled hawkish consensus in a dovish direction than vice versa.
The hardest task of all is to maintain support for a policy that eschews
oversimplification in favor of complexity. Having gotten Jacksonian
opinion into a war in Vietnam or the Persian Gulf, it was very hard to get
it out again without achieving total victory. Once China or Vietnam has
been established as an enemy nation, it is very difficult to build support
for normalizing relations or, worse still, extending foreign
aid.
These problems, which are responsible for many of the
recurring system crashes and unhappy stalemates in American foreign
policy, can never be fully solved. They reflect profound differences in
outlook and interest in American society, and it is the job of our
institutions to adjudicate these disputes and force compromise rather than
to eliminate them.
Efforts by policymakers to finesse these
disputes often exacerbate the basic problem, which is the cultural,
political and class distance between Jacksonian America and the
representatives of the other schools. Attempts to mask Hamiltonian or
Wilsonian policies in Jacksonian rhetoric, or to otherwise misrepresent or
hide unpopular policies, may succeed in the short run, but ultimately they
can lead to a collapse of popular confidence and the stiffening of
resistance to any and all policies deemed suspect. When misguided
political advisers persuaded the distinctively unmilitary Massachusetts
Governor Michael Dukakis to put on a helmet and get in a tank for a
television commercial, they only advertised how far out of touch with
Jacksonian America they were.
From The National Interest
No. 58, Winter 1999/2000. |