A Foreign Policy Update: Mutually Assured Destruction vs Mutually
Assured Respect
by
Ron Paul
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The Soviet
Union detonated its first nuclear bomb on August 29, 1949, leading
to the doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction, shared by both
the USA and the Soviets. The unwritten agreement by the two superpowers
deterred nuclear war with an implied threat to blow up the world,
if need be, to defend each of their interests.
I well remember
the Cuban missile crises of October 1962, having been drafted into
the military at that time. Mutually Assured Destruction had significant
meaning to the whole world during this period. This crisis, along
with the escalating ill-advised Vietnam War, made me very much aware
of the problems the world faced during the five years I served as
a USAF flight surgeon.
It was with
great pleasure and hope that I observed the collapse of the Soviet
Empire between 1989 and 1991. This breakup verified the early predictions
by the free market economists, like Ludwig von Mises, that communism
would self-destruct because of the deeply flawed economic theories
embedded in socialism. Our nukes were never needed because ideas
are more powerful than the Weapons of War.
Many Americans
at the time were boldly hopeful that we would benefit from a generous
peace dividend. Sadly, it turned out to be a wonderful opportunity
wasted. There was to be no "beating their swords into plowshares,"
even though history shows that without weapons and war there's more
food and prosperity for the people. Unfortunately, our leaders decided
on another course that served the special interests who benefit
from constant wars and the arbitrary rearrangement of national borders
for control of national resources.
Instead of
a peace dividend from ending the policy of Mutually Assured Destruction,
US leaders opted for a foreign policy of American world domination
as its sole superpower. It was all in the spirit of Woodrow Wilson's
idealistic goal of "making the world safe for democracy"
by pursuing a war to end all wars.
The mantra
became that American exceptionalism morally required us to spread
our dominance world-wide by force. US world dominance, by whatever
means, became our new bipartisan foreign policy. There was to be
no peace dividend, though our enemies were virtually non-existent.
In many ways
America had been "exceptional" but in an opposite manner
from the neo-con driven foreign policy of the last 20 years. If
America indeed has something good to offer the cause of peace, prosperity,
and liberty it must be spread through persuasion and by example;
not by intimidation, bribes and war.
Maintaining
world domination is based on an intellectually and financially bankrupt
idea that generates dependency, war, loss of civil liberties, inflation
and debt, all of which contribute to our economic crisis.
Saddest of
all, this policy of American domination and exceptionalism has allowed
us to become an aggressor nation, supporting pre-emptive war, covert
destabilization, foreign occupations, nation building, torture and
assassinations. This policy has generated hatred toward Americans
and provides the incentive for almost all of the suicide attacks
against us and our allies.
To continue
to believe the fiction that the militants hate us for our freedoms
and wealth may even result in more attacks against us that
is, unless our national bankruptcy brings us to our knees and forces
us to bring our troops home.
Expanding our
foreign military intervention overseas as a cure for the attacks
against us, tragically, only guarantees even more attacks. We must
someday wake up, be honest with ourselves, and reject the notion
that we're spreading freedom and America's goodness around the world.
We cannot justify our policy by claiming our mission is to secure
American freedoms and protect our Constitution. That is not believable.
This policy is doomed to fail on all fronts.
The policy
of Mutually Assured Destruction has been gone now for 20 years,
and that is good.
The policy
of American domination of the world, as nation builder-in-chief
and policeman of the world, has failed and must be abandoned
if not as a moral imperative, then certainly out of economic necessity.
My humble suggestion
is to replace it with a policy of Mutually Assured Respect. This
requires no money and no weapons industry, or other special interests
demanding huge war profits or other advantages.
This requires
simply tolerance of others' cultures and their social and religious
values, and the giving up of all use of force to occupy or control
other countries and their national resources. Many who disagree
choose to grossly distort the basic principles shared by the world's
great religions: the Golden Rule, the Ten Commandments, and the
cause of peace. Religions all too often are distorted and used to
justify the violence engaged in for arbitrary power.
A policy of
Mutually Assured Respect would result in the U.S.:
Treating other
nations exactly as we expect others to treat us.
Offering
friendship with all who seek it.
- Participating
in trade with all who are willing.
- Refusing
to threaten, bribe or occupy any other nation.
Seeking an
honest system of commodity money that no single country can manipulate
for a trade advantage. Without this, currency manipulation becomes
a tool of protectionism and prompts retaliation with tariffs and
various regulations. This policy, when it persists, is dangerous
and frequently leads to real wars.
Mutually Assured
Respect offers a policy of respect, trade and friendship and rejects
threats, sanctions and occupations.
This is the
only practical way to promote peace, harmony and economic well-being
to the maximum number of people in the world.
Mutually Assured
Respect may not be perfect but it's far better than Mutually Assured
Destruction or unilateral American dominance.
See
the Ron Paul File

December
13, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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