Johanna_G says: Continuing: The liberals were starry-eyed fools, Niebuhr charged, because they trusted people to be reasonable enough to resolve international conflicts peacefully. They forgot the harsh reality of original sin. Niebuhr wrapped that traditional notion of sin in a new intellectual package and sold it successfully, not only to theologians but to the foreign policy elite. Since the 1940s, foreign policy has largely been reduced to an endless round of debates about how to apply Niebuhr's "realism." Policymakers who still tried to follow the Social Gospel path have been marginalized and stigmatized with the harshest epithet a Niebuhrian can hurl: "unrealistic.” They forgot the harsh reality of original sin? Yeah, that's why liberal politics is unrealistic - according to Niebuhr's theorem. Adam & Eve would have understood that in a jiffy, AL. Niebuhr is, of course, the author of the 'serenity prayer'. Interesting to read directly because he himself marks the transition from pacifist to believer in just war. The roots of the puritanical division of the world into good and evil are, I believe, deeper than religion; having said that it is a pretty important to study Christianity as the historical vehicle for deep human classificatory structures: it is stark and surprising how 'christianised' the values of western culture are. Don't forget Manifest Destiny. A concept steeped in the idea of the United States as the new Promised Land and following closely the conquest of Palestine by the Jews in the old Testament. Great article, still reading it, but I found these parts interesting: On the difference between the neocon (idealist) and the policy realist: First there is the mainstream of the foreign policy elite, made up of Democrats and more moderate Republicans. They complain that the Bush administration is pursuing the right goals but using the wrong tactics. That's because the elite still hold on to some shreds of the old Social Gospel view. They give most of the world a bit more credit for rationality; they fear the impulses of original sin a bit less. So they see military strength as one of several ways to secure America's global hegemony. They are more willing to take a multilateral appr... Cont... The bipartisan elite may not value the display of American strength as an end in itself, the way neoconservatives do. They are willing to risk a short-term appearance of weakness in one place in order to bolster long-term U.S. strength everywhere else. But long-term strength (including a long-term military presence in Iraq) is still crucial, because they feel a sacred calling to enforce "stability" -- their favorite code word for a single global order that protects U.S. interests -- everywhere and forever. |
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