In
1987, Paul Kennedy, a British professor of history at Yale University,
unleashed a political and intellectual firestorm with the publication of his
great (677-page) book, “The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers.”
Kennedy produced a magisterial overview of the competition for global power
over the past 500 years from 1500 AD to the present.
Kennedy proposed the thesis that any power that achieved, imagined it
had achieved or sought to achieve and maintain a dominant hyper-power role of
global dominance was doomed to lose it and then rapidly decline in overall
power, wealth, prosperity and influence.
Kennedy argued – with a
wealth of detail drawn from different nations over his vast period of half a
millennium – that the very attempt to achieve and maintain such power forced
every nation that attempted it into a ruinous pattern of strategic overstretch.
This
demanded every major global empire in their turn to devote ruinously far too
many economic resources to unproductive military power and ever more costly
global commitments and conflicts.
The more ambitious the commitments, the quicker came military
defeat, economic ruin and national collapse, Kennedy documented.
Kennedy published his book however at exactly the wrong moment for its
abundantly documented conclusions and arguments to be taken seriously in the
United States. The Cold War was just ending. The heroic actions of the Russian
people in rejecting communism and leading in the dismantling of the Soviet
Union were being misinterpreted as an eternal and lasting victory for the
United States and for the forces of free market capitalism and minimum
government regulation.
Kennedy was therefore
subjected to a furious firestorm of abuse, especially from the emerging
neoconservatives who under President George W Bush succeeded in imposing their
reckless policies on nations across the Middle East and Eurasia. Kennedy,
unlike his enraged critics was a gracious and tolerant gentleman as well as
great scholar and took the firestorm in his stride.
Now more than 30 years after
Kennedy published his great work, we can see how prescient, wise and visionary
it truly was.
In 2016 President Donald
Trump was elected on a platform of dealing with domestic crises raging from
economic ruin and impoverishment to an out of control drug and opioid abuse
epidemic and the collapse of law and order across the long US land border with
Mexico.
That outcome provided telling testimony to the previous US policies of
wasting at least $2 trillion on entirely unsuccessful nation-building and
government-toppling projects ranging from Iraq to Afghanistan and since
extended into such nations as Ukraine, Syria, and Libya
All the national pathologies
of bankruptcy, exhaustion, decline and ever spreading human misery that Kennedy
in his book traced in previous empires can now be clearly delineated in the
policies of the post-Cold War United States.
Instead, the very attempt to
maintain a unipolar moment of apparent global supremacy by any power The
bottom line lesson to be drawn from Kennedy’s great book that so outraged
neoconservatives at the time was a simple and stunning clear one: Unipolar
Moments are just that and nothing more. They last for moments not ages.
automatically instead will
raise up a host of challenges to that power that will rapidly exhaust and then
doom it.
Kennedy
traced this process of inexorable over – commitment and decline in 17th century
Habsburg Spain. He followed it again in 18th century
Bourbon France. He documented it once more in the rise, pride and inevitable
fall of the British Empire and in the rash German attempts to create dominant
global empires in both world wars of the 20th century.
A
generation before Kennedy published his great work, British historian Correlli
Barnett, focusing only on the British Empire, published in 1972 his own classic
“The Collapse of British Power.”
Barnett focused on a one, single unipolar moment – the 1920s and 1930s when the
British ruling class, like their American successors today imagined that they
were the divinely-appointed global policeman charged by Providence with
maintaining their own conceptions of right and wrong over the whole world.
The British at least were
reluctantly forced to cede independence to their vast global territories. It is
doubtful whether the American people will be so lucky: The US Deep State
establishment and their tame, unthinking media puppets remain blindly committed
to inflexible expansion, conflict and strategic gambling with the peace and
even survival of the world.
Thirty years after his magnum opus was published, Paul Kennedy’s
message of warning remains unheeded. America’s Unipolar Moment is long since
dead and gone. America’s pretensions to rule supreme as the world’s
unchallenged hyper-power have become a dangerous and unsustainable fantasy.
A wakening to sanity is long overdue and the hour is late: National catastrophe
can be the only other outcome.
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https://www.lewrockwell.com/2018/11/no_author/written-in-history-the-death-of-americas-hyper-power-fantasy/