The US these days seems to be engaged in any number of failed diplomatic and military initiatives, and it is clear that these are failed initiatives.
This raises an obvious question; why we continue on this path?
The answer is that there are powerful elements of our foreign policy and military-industrial complexes that profit from these failures:
Certain themes of critical importance have been constants in my writing here, in some cases for more than a decade. (See the two collections of Alice Miller essays discussed in this post, for many examples.) One of those themes is captured very accurately in the title of an essay from five years ago that I once again draw to your attention: “The Infinite Human Capacity to Deny the Obvious.”
I was reminded of that article because I recently read still another piece by a well-known “antiwar” writer bemoaning the fact that U.S. policy in Afghanistan has been a miserable failure. Not only that: it’s been a miserable failure for 16 years! (The particular article and the specific writer are of no consequence, but I’ll probably address a few aspects of this category of analysis in the next few weeks, using that and other examples.)
To call U.S. policy in Afghanistan a failure is, of course, unutterably wrong. Whenever you hear someone peddling this line, you can quickly and safely move along to find an analyst who actually knows what he’s talking about. In my article from five years ago linked above, I discuss Robert Higgs and what I call The Higgs Principle. Here is that Principle, direct from Mr. Higgs himself:As a general rule for understanding public policies, I insist that there are no persistent “failed” policies. Policies that do not achieve their desired outcomes for the actual powers-that-be are quickly changed. If you want to know why the U.S. policies have been what they have been for the past sixty years, you need only comply with that invaluable rule of inquiry in politics: follow the money.
If U.S. policy in Afghanistan were truly a failure — a failure, that is, to the actual powers-that-be — it would have been changed in five years at the outside, and probably sooner. The fact that it has not changed, certainly not in terms of essentials, means that the powers-that-be are achieving precisely what they want. In addition to the benefits identified by Higgs, there is one additional over-arching goal that the damnable powers-that-be share, and believe in to the core of their putrid, twisted little hearts: that the United States is entitled to and must have geopolitical dominance.
(emphasis original)
I would also argue that maintaining geopolitical dominance, even while ruinous for most of us, DOES serve the self interest of the elites who benefit from either the cost of maintaining such hegemony, (defense contractors) or those who benefit from the US’s unique status in the world. (Finance, IP, Pharma, etc.)
The question therefore is how to break the power of these elites.