By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Why America’s Mission Was to Spread
Freedom
The week when the transition
team of President-elect Donald Trump named a TV journalist as defense secretary
and revealed that the world’s richest man would be heading up a new department
of governmental efficiency felt like a harbinger of regime change. Joe Biden
was hailed in 2020 by relieved liberals as a course correction after the first
Trump presidency. He now looks less like the upholder of America’s eternal
mission to spread freedom around the globe, and more like the end of its ancien régime.
Yet today’s ancien régime once promised the world its future. The
French writer and politician François-René de Chateaubriand spoke for many in
1825 when he described the invention of representative republicanism in the US
as “the greatest political discovery” of modern times. “The formation of this
republic,” he wrote, “has resolved a problem that was thought to be insoluble”:
how to allow millions of people to live together under democratic institutions.
The New World presented an ideological alternative to the Old World of bewigged
monarchs and reactionary aristocrats, one that showed Europe’s masses an
alternative and more inclusive path forward.
From the time when
Europe’s Great Power system collapsed in the war in 1914-18, grand claims were
made for the transformative international power of America. Woodrow Wilson pledged to make the world “safe for
democracy”. Hitler warned Europeans that Nazi ideas of racial purity were all
that stood between them and godless transatlantic degeneracy. Cold War America
aspired to forge a Free World of prosperous mass democracies and President
Ronald Reagan famously extolled the US as a shining city on a hill — an open
sanctuary at the center of a world thriving in commercial and cultural
exchange.
From the time when
Europe’s Great Power system collapsed in the
war in 1914-18, grand claims were made for the transformative international
power of America. Woodrow Wilson pledged to make the world “safe for
democracy”. Hitler warned Europeans that Nazi ideas of racial purity were all
that stood between them and godless transatlantic degeneracy. Cold war America
aspired to forge a Free World of prosperous mass democracies and President
Ronald Reagan famously extolled the US as a shining city on a hill — an open
sanctuary at the center of a world thriving in commercial and cultural exchange.
A protest float on a Tesla Cybertruck
in Pennsylvania on November 4
The American century
ended much as it had begun, with Clinton advisers hailing the US as “the
worldwide symbol of opportunity and freedom”. Many believed that the Washington
Consensus would set the new rules of the economic game
and that liberal democracy would flourish even in the birthplace of Bolshevism.
Today that looks like hubris. Since the 2007-08 financial crisis, the number of
democracies around the world has fallen, and the backlash to globalization has
gathered pace. American voters themselves this time round welcomed a program
based around trade protectionism, immigration controls, and opposition to
multiculturalism.
Yet even in these
very changed circumstances, it is hard to break the habit of seeing the US as a
kind of precursor. If the US was once a beacon of liberty and hope to the
world’s “huddled masses yearning to breathe free” (in the words engraved on the
Statue of Liberty), does the 2024 election imply that a different, perhaps more
authoritarian future lies ahead for everyone? Naturally, people interrogate the
past to try to figure such questions out and ask history to help them make
sense of what is happening. In particular, they look
for analogies.
The analogy of choice
these days is fascism, not surprisingly perhaps in an era of strongmen in
countries such as India, Russia, Turkey, and Hungary. Some see fascist
dictators between the two world wars as their forerunners. Historian Timothy
Snyder posits much more than mere resemblance, asserting that Trump is “the
presence of fascism”. Former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly has said
that his ex-boss falls under “the general definition of fascist”. The prospect
may be alarming, but it has the merit of familiarity.
Or perhaps
overfamiliarity. Analogies are a mixed blessing because they can close down the hard but essential business of trying to
identify the salient differences between then and now. The fascist label, for
instance, skates over the fact that the world has changed enormously since 90 years ago when centuries-old European empires had
vanished in the blink of an eye, mass politics was new, and an entire
generation of ex-servicemen emerged scarred and radicalized from the trenches
of the first world war.
Moreover, Europe’s
interwar drift to the authoritarian right threw up not only fascists such as
Hitler and Mussolini but other kinds of dictators too: ex-military men,
clerics, professors, and even kings who oversaw jerry-rigged elections. All of
them opposed liberal democracy but not all were fascist. Some lasted decades, others only months. What their
contemporaries asked was not who fitted some textbook definition of fascism but
why democracy was in crisis and whether the institutions they had inherited were capable of withstanding the strain.
Their answers varied
from place to place depending on the legacies of the past they had each
inherited. This is surely why novelist Sinclair Lewis in his 1935 satire It
Can’t Happen Here recasts Europe’s slide away from freedom as a distinctively
American story that rooted authoritarian impulses in the Rotary Club culture of
small-town life. To assess what the 2024 US election means requires fewer
historical analogies or general observations about fascism, and more
attentiveness to the specificities of the American political experience,
distinctive in crucial ways that help us understand both why the election this
month turned out the way it did, and why this is not necessarily the path that
others will follow.
A pro-Israel and pro-Trump protester argues with a
Harris supporter at Madison Square Garden in October
It is telling, for
instance, that fascism itself does not seem to have mattered very much to
Trump’s voters. Not because they liked the idea but because it did not really
register. Some have argued in the election’s aftermath that claiming that Trump
is a fascist came across to many people as extreme and
implausible and perhaps damaged the Democrats because they suggested voters did
not know what they were voting for. For the election was not generally felt to
be a referendum on the events of January 6 2021,
despite occasional efforts to present it as such, and if Democratic invocations
of fascism in the run-up to voting functioned as a kind of warning, it was one
that many Americans ignored. In the end, the health of the constitution turned
out to matter less than the pocketbook issues they were concerned about.
#Unten &recognize is the Holocaust& zu: world-news-research.com/Poland1941.html--#
This should not have come
as a surprise since most people in the US know little about Europe’s violent
mid-century. The one historical event they are likely to recognize is the
Holocaust, which they associate not with fascism in general but with Hitler,
the Nazis, and the mass murder of Jews. Since next to no one seriously expects
a repeat under President Trump, the impact on voting patterns was small. And
because the Holocaust is frequently presented in terms of extreme antisemitism
and not racial prejudice in general, it does not offer most Americans an
opening to larger questions of scapegoating, anti-migrant sentiment, or
political violence.
There is a
significant divergence here with Europe. Unlike the US, most European nations
have had direct experience in living memory of warfare, coups, juntas or
forcible seizures of power that have helped forge a consciousness of the
fragility of democracy. Several current European heads of state grew up under
rightwing dictatorships that ended only in 1974-75; others under Soviet rule
that ended in 1989. The elderly may even remember the Nazi occupation, which
was a catalyst for submerged civil war across much of the continent. In Vichy
France, collaborators and resistance squared off in a struggle fueled by
ideological animosities that had built up for decades. Something similar
happened in Italy and Greece while across eastern Europe, ethnic struggles erupted
under the gaze of the Germans.
French Vichy forces with resistance prisoners in July
1944
The end of the second
world war thus brought not merely the collapse of the Nazis but a painfully won
reaffirmation of national unity and a repudiation of the political extremes. It
was for that reason that many cross-party coalition governments were formed
across Europe after 1945, and even if they soon gave way to more partisan
successors the memory that produced them has not disappeared. In distinction to
the US, the spread of Holocaust memory in reunified Europe in the past 30 years
has served to spread precisely this kind of pro-democratic message, which
explicitly encompasses recent immigrants.
In short, the fact
that fascism was first and foremost a European phenomenon means that Europe
inhabits a post-fascist universe. This has not prevented the rise of parties
that would once have been considered far-right. Several of those who are
descended from outright neo-fascist movements in the past are now in power or
close to it. But in no case have their leaders been able to act as if fascism
and the war did not happen: the common historical memory is an inhibitor, if a
waning one.
In the US, this kind of historical legacy does not
exist.
The national experience
of civil war lies further back in the past, and the conflicts of recent times
have left it relatively unscathed and with its territories almost entirely
unaffected. It is easy to forget, reading about the shock wrought by Pearl Harbor or by
9/11, just how extraordinarily peaceful the tenor of American life has
mostly been.
If the country has
been fairly consistently at war in one part of the
world or another since 1945, it is rare that the impact has been felt at home
except via its returning veterans. Of the major combatants in the Second World War itself, none had fewer civilian
casualties: the US tally lies under 20,000, whereas in China, Poland, and the
USSR the total ran into the millions. The country’s historical memories are
unshaped by the bitter tang of enemy rule or indeed of dictatorship.
The obvious chief
exception to this — slavery and its legacy — continues to lie at the heart of
American political debate; but it remains more of a divisive issue than a
unifying one precisely because it marks out a trauma that was not shared by the
whole population. In contrast, the mass mobilization of European societies in
the wars of the 20th century helped produce national institutions — in media,
education, or health — that foster a sense of a public
commons: anti-elitism has obtained less purchase as a result.
The signing of the US Constitution at Independence
Hall in Philadelphia in 1787
The absence of
extreme conflict on American soil in recent times has had another consequence:
the US is the only nation in the world currently governed by a document drawn
up in the Age of the Enlightenment. Since the Americans acquired their
constitution, the French have tried out no fewer than 15, and Spain 13. In the
whole of Europe and South America, there are few countries that have not
revised their constitution more than once.
Some other states —
Belgium, the Netherlands, and Norway among them — have ones that date back to
the time of Napoleon’s defeat. But the American case is unique not least
because in no other country is a constitution of such antiquity reinforced and
upheld by a Supreme Court that believes it should decipher and follow the
literal wishes of its drafters.
The same upheavals
and conflicts that have provided the opportunity to re-evaluate political
institutions and norms in the light of historical experience have also
encouraged the reassessment of social and cultural attitudes more broadly. Take
the now strikingly divergent impact of gender on politics on either side of the
Atlantic. Unlike in the US, the issue of abortion has been settled across much
of the EU, even in fervently Catholic countries. Strong women leaders have led
Britain and Germany in recent times and there are currently several female
heads of state or prime ministers in the Union: the EU Commission itself is led
by a woman.
In this respect,
European rightwing parties too reflect European
norms: Italy’s prime minister is Giorgia Meloni, leader of the rightwing Brothers of Italy; Marine Le Pen even toppled her father to
head the French National Rally. The leadership cult
of Maga in contrast values virility and a reaffirmation of masculinity that
has few if any parallels west of Russia.
Divergence in
historical experiences and memory is perhaps the key difference now
between the US and other democracies around the world. Although electorates
have swung to the right in many parts of Europe in recent years, and although
the center-left is suffering from fragmentation, Europe has not become divided
to the same degree as in America. Brexit notwithstanding, a recent analysis of
the period from 1980 to 2020 shows that the longer-term trend in Britain has
been towards a less polarized public opinion; the same was found to hold for
other countries as well. Australia, New Zealand, and Japan saw little change at
all in the degree of polarization over four decades while Canada, Denmark, and
France saw a modest increase only. Of all the countries investigated, only
Switzerland compared with America moved away from the middle.
Some of this reflects
the influence of political institutions such as the US Congress, which has
become increasingly polarized, especially on the Republican side, since the
advent of the Tea Party Caucus. The combination of a first-past-the-post
system, the party primary model, and the fact that the two major parties are
generally so closely matched electorally in modern times across most of the
country has helped push political elites away from the center. The capture of
one of the two major parties by an extremist movement has no European parallel.
Trump supporters confront immigration rights
protesters in New York last week
But the politicians
themselves are only part of the problem. Despite considerable overlap on a
surprising range of policy issues, ordinary American voters have been
separating emotionally too and feelings across the party divide have become
embittered and heightened. At least one of the causes is clear: the retreat
into information bubbles caused by the lack of a single trusted national news
source — a problem much more acute in the US than
elsewhere. Another is more or less spontaneous physical segregation —
ideological rather than racial — as significant numbers of people relocate to
areas and neighborhoods they believe will be
politically congenial to avoid argument. These are features of society not
found in other democracies to the same degree.
In short, historical
memories that serve to buttress democracy elsewhere are lacking in the US
today, while the forces of polarization are unchecked. The right is on the rise
in Europe but still operates within a broadly accepted institutional setting shaped
by common recent experiences. These are contested but not fundamentally thrown into question.
European nations are
made conscious by history and geography of their geopolitical vulnerability,
which not only inhibits internal dissension but also makes for really heated
arguments about the limits to cooperation and integration between states. Lacking
a sense of geopolitical threat, and with a very different and almost uniquely
benign set of historical memories, the American electorate appears to be poorly
positioned to fight against internal polarization and discord.
The world’s view of
the US will probably have been altered forever in this election. But perhaps
this is merely the ending of an illusion. The US was always a society with its
own charmed geographical and historical specificities as well as a darker side
that was easily neglected by those who took its liberalism at face value.
In the past, it
combined the language of freedom with the reality of slavery. It spoke of
modernity and the future while clinging to its own increasingly archaic
institutions. Decades of international leadership have left it relatively
little touched by the wars and conflicts that have raged around the world.
Fascism may not be what awaits it, because fascism was a product of European
circumstances in a now bygone era of history. But fascism is not the only test
and the sooner this is understood, the better we will be able to orient
ourselves in the uncharted territory that lies ahead.
For updates click hompage here