Whole Brain Catalog

America's Identity Crisis

Coming to terms with imperial decline.
America's Identity Crisis

In the aftermath of the trauma suffered by the American psyche on 9/11, the United States lashed out blindly and irrationally in fear and anger, deploying its military to the corners of the world and weakening itself in the process. Now, over eight years later, with the economy in shambles and the military overstretched, the sun is setting on the American empire and experts say it’s time for the US public to accept their country’s declining prowess, pressure their government to reduce its global military footprint and prepare for a looming national identity crisis.

Political psychologists believe that the shock and horror of the 9/11 attacks damaged the collective American consciousness, causing the country to stumble forward with a misguided and self-destructive foreign policy intended to destroy an exaggerated enemy.

Dr. Deborah Larson, a political psychologist at UCLA, explains, “9/11 removed a sense of invulnerability that Americans had felt, and fear sprang from the uncertainty. We overreacted and tried to gain control of the world to eliminate even a small probability of being attacked. It was totally irrational.”

Dr. Richard Hermann, Director of the Mershon Center for International Security Studies at Ohio State University, says, “A weird combination of fear, panic, anger and crude patriotism made us obsessed with an exaggerated threat. The administration’s leadership watched this with excitement and believed it was their chance to shape the world.”

Though the United States has maintained a massive military presence around the world since the end of World War II, the reach of US forces expanded quickly after 9/11. Besides the huge undertakings in Iraq and Afghanistan, the military also established US Africa Command, expanded its presence in Latin America, began launching constant drone attacks in Pakistan, recently approved the sale of over 13 billion dollars in arms to Taiwan and is currently setting up missile defense systems in Romania, Poland, the Czech Republic, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Kuwait among other countries.

With upwards of 800 bases in 120 countries, the United States continues to spend almost as much on its military as the rest of the world combined at a time when the economy is plummeting and many Americans are struggling.

Wayne Madsen, an investigative journalist and former Navy intelligence officer, believes that military overreach is eroding American power rather than projecting it: “The extension of US influence abroad is unsustainable and unaffordable and it weakens us politically, militarily and financially. We’re trying to be the Roman Empire and we’re going the way of them.”

Dr. Hermann worries that the money spent on military engagements will hurt America’s competitiveness in the future: “We’re spending 100 billion a year in Iraq alone. You could take the top 20 universities in America and fund them, make them free for everybody every year we’ve been there. It’s a terrible opportunity cost that we’ve paid.”

A psychological shift is underway in the United States as the evidence mounts and there is growing public awareness of the detrimental costs of maintaining such a large military. Dr. Hermann explains that a public suffering through the recession is more concerned about its financial well-being than its physical safety: “If you’re unemployed and you’re getting foreclosed on, you’re a lot less worried about al Qaeda.”

Nevertheless, political psychologists believe that guilt keeps the average person from speaking out against the economic effects of imperial overreach. “Only a small fraction of the public is willing to serve in the military and I think the rest of the people feel guilty that they aren’t enlisted and essentially get a free pass. They might not like it but they feel if they have to pay tax dollars its okay,” explains Dr. Hermann.

It is perhaps ironic that the American public still fears terrorism despite being bled dry maintaining the strongest military in human history. “It’s absolutely ridiculous,” says Madsen, “These are ragtag people living in caves.” Hermann is frustrated by the contradiction in military spending and the threat faced: “There is a big disconnect here. There is huge spending on the military but at the same time an understanding that the military can’t protect us against the most likely attacks.”

Guardian columnist and London School of Economics professor Martin Jacques is an expert on the rise of China. He feels that many Americans hold on to delusions of grandeur to keep their pride afloat, denying the reality of waning US power.

“The decline of American power will entail the progressive reduction of American overseas military commitments,” he says. “But a nation in decline finds it extremely difficult to let go. It’s a reluctant process and a form of retreat.”

Jacques watched his own country go through the painful ordeal. “Britain was very reluctant to let go, not just the political elite but also the people. They lived an imperial role and didn’t like losing it. It gave them status, it gave them power and the knowledge that it was our role and responsibility in the world.”

“The military enjoys a very privileged position in the American mind, and the same experience will be had in the United States.”

Military superiority is very closely tied to the American identity and many believe that continued public support for imperial overreach stems from a desire to maintain prestige rather than from pragmatic security concerns.

“It’s very disorienting to lose your national identity. Part of being an American means knowing that you are part of the most powerful military state,” explains Dr. Larson, “If the US were to withdraw from various parts of the world, people would fear that we were declining and were no longer a hegemon. We would lose a lot of our national pride and prestige.”

It is time for the US public to accept that the military cannot maintain a global monopoly on violence and that rather than protecting and enriching them, imperial endeavors invariably become costly, never-ending counterinsurgency campaigns against dedicated, dug-in enemies.

In order for the American psyche to forge a new identity in the face of shifting realities, the US public must demand the change that their president promised, must urge leaders to scale back overseas military commitments, focus on education, technology and innovation and embrace a global leadership role rooted in soft power and diplomacy.

–Blake Sifton

34 comments on the article “America's Identity Crisis”

Displaying 1 - 10 of 34

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Larry Piltz

Nice try and partially correct, but your primary premise skews your whole piece.

The American people as a whole were indeed scarred by 9/11, but the American people as a whole have NOT "overreacted and tried to gain control of the world...".

The American people as a whole follow the elected leadership's direction in crises in almost all instances, minor and major, and in this case the country's leadership was an unelected and illegitimate entity determined to take the country to war at any cost for any or no reason.

If a president not in bed with Big Oil and Big Military-Industrial Complex - someone other than the illegitimate Bush or any other Republican and many Democrats - had been inaugurated (ahem, possibly Gore; we'll never know) and led the country to a rational response right away, the American people would have largely followed the rational approach.

As you may not be aware, Clinton was bullied ceaselessly and maneuvered into invading Iraq during his entire two terms in office, but he refused to do so and I think would have refrained from invasion after a 9/11 had it happened. Unfortunately, the creep did starve the Iraqi people and especially children of basic foods and medicines, as well as bombed power plants and water treatment plants; that was his tradeoff with the early Neo-Con powers left over from the Reagan and Bush I administrations.

So to support your otherwise good and accurate points that are made further along in your article, you should find writers who understand the overall situation better and can make clear that political realities determine national initiatives, not some amorphous "We overreacted" nonsense. Clarity makes the crucial difference. Otherwise you leave yourselves short of making sense.

As it is - and this is true with many of your articles - the assertion of your ideals is sabotaged by immature short-circuited reasoning such as above, as well as by lapses in understanding. I don't know how you're going to find smart-enough and experienced-enough writers, but you're not going to be taken as seriously as you need to be until you do. This is important, because you're trying to make some important points. Somehow your artwork is more intelligent than your writing. They need to be better balanced in that way.

Larry Piltz

Nice try and partially correct, but your primary premise skews your whole piece.

The American people as a whole were indeed scarred by 9/11, but the American people as a whole have NOT "overreacted and tried to gain control of the world...".

The American people as a whole follow the elected leadership's direction in crises in almost all instances, minor and major, and in this case the country's leadership was an unelected and illegitimate entity determined to take the country to war at any cost for any or no reason.

If a president not in bed with Big Oil and Big Military-Industrial Complex - someone other than the illegitimate Bush or any other Republican and many Democrats - had been inaugurated (ahem, possibly Gore; we'll never know) and led the country to a rational response right away, the American people would have largely followed the rational approach.

As you may not be aware, Clinton was bullied ceaselessly and maneuvered into invading Iraq during his entire two terms in office, but he refused to do so and I think would have refrained from invasion after a 9/11 had it happened. Unfortunately, the creep did starve the Iraqi people and especially children of basic foods and medicines, as well as bombed power plants and water treatment plants; that was his tradeoff with the early Neo-Con powers left over from the Reagan and Bush I administrations.

So to support your otherwise good and accurate points that are made further along in your article, you should find writers who understand the overall situation better and can make clear that political realities determine national initiatives, not some amorphous "We overreacted" nonsense. Clarity makes the crucial difference. Otherwise you leave yourselves short of making sense.

As it is - and this is true with many of your articles - the assertion of your ideals is sabotaged by immature short-circuited reasoning such as above, as well as by lapses in understanding. I don't know how you're going to find smart-enough and experienced-enough writers, but you're not going to be taken as seriously as you need to be until you do. This is important, because you're trying to make some important points. Somehow your artwork is more intelligent than your writing. They need to be better balanced in that way.

Ian Ford

Larry,

What a wonderful job you've done of crystallizing the vague misgivings I feel whenever I read an article in AdBusters. I appreciate the distinctions you've drawn attention to, particularly between the imagined notion of the agency of the American People as a whole and the reality of the larger political forces that guide the nation.

Ian Ford

Larry,

What a wonderful job you've done of crystallizing the vague misgivings I feel whenever I read an article in AdBusters. I appreciate the distinctions you've drawn attention to, particularly between the imagined notion of the agency of the American People as a whole and the reality of the larger political forces that guide the nation.

Anonymous

I agree with Mr. Piltz. The narrative of the average american keeping his nationnal pride fueled by expantionnistic and imperial military overreach across the world is out of place. I can easily imagine a plump member of the elite swelling his own personnal pride with the military argument when everything else about the country (education, health care, consummer and environmental protection) is in the shits and he/she knows it too well to outright ignore it. The story of america`s downfall is what will happen when the robber barons have nothing left to rob.

As for the real american people, after having spoken to a lot of them, they are the sad, pitiful by-product of decades of indoctrination in loopy neo-liberal economic diatribe, mccarthyism and its evolved forms, very poor public education and some foreign policy double-think where somehow might makes right when it comes to america but anyone else trying that trick is a facist that deserves to be carpet-bombed. Like mistreated patients of a mental hospital walking out on their own the day no nurses showed up for work, it will take a great deal more than a little time and money for them to adjust once the government goes bankrupt for good.

Anonymous

I agree with Mr. Piltz. The narrative of the average american keeping his nationnal pride fueled by expantionnistic and imperial military overreach across the world is out of place. I can easily imagine a plump member of the elite swelling his own personnal pride with the military argument when everything else about the country (education, health care, consummer and environmental protection) is in the shits and he/she knows it too well to outright ignore it. The story of america`s downfall is what will happen when the robber barons have nothing left to rob.

As for the real american people, after having spoken to a lot of them, they are the sad, pitiful by-product of decades of indoctrination in loopy neo-liberal economic diatribe, mccarthyism and its evolved forms, very poor public education and some foreign policy double-think where somehow might makes right when it comes to america but anyone else trying that trick is a facist that deserves to be carpet-bombed. Like mistreated patients of a mental hospital walking out on their own the day no nurses showed up for work, it will take a great deal more than a little time and money for them to adjust once the government goes bankrupt for good.

Anonymous

I love this comment, not just because it agrees with me. It's a profound vision of what is and what will be, if some kind of dogged intelligent pushback against the ruling oligarchy and its functionaries doesn't succeed in leveling the playing field between labor and capital.

The whole comment is good, but this line almost made me slip out of my chair: "The story of America`s downfall is what will happen when the robber barons have nothing left to rob."

Anonymous

I love this comment, not just because it agrees with me. It's a profound vision of what is and what will be, if some kind of dogged intelligent pushback against the ruling oligarchy and its functionaries doesn't succeed in leveling the playing field between labor and capital.

The whole comment is good, but this line almost made me slip out of my chair: "The story of America`s downfall is what will happen when the robber barons have nothing left to rob."

Anonymous

" American people as a whole have NOT "overreacted "

Uhmm ... oh yes they did ,and have ... put your self back in the days after 9/11 - you could not question anything ... anything ! The reaction was completely blinding with bizare facist overtones.
The overreaction by the governemnt was entirely supported by the population. A few years later, questions where permitted but only if you stood beside a flag. And it wasn't a serious question ... and you didn't expect a truthful answer . The insane , 'patriotism' was freightening and disturbing . We should kill them all !!!
America and Americans have always been arrogant , and instead of giving pause to what happened and thinking it through .. it did what arrogant people do ... overreact . Both the government and the people .

Article is correct...

Anonymous

" American people as a whole have NOT "overreacted "

Uhmm ... oh yes they did ,and have ... put your self back in the days after 9/11 - you could not question anything ... anything ! The reaction was completely blinding with bizare facist overtones.
The overreaction by the governemnt was entirely supported by the population. A few years later, questions where permitted but only if you stood beside a flag. And it wasn't a serious question ... and you didn't expect a truthful answer . The insane , 'patriotism' was freightening and disturbing . We should kill them all !!!
America and Americans have always been arrogant , and instead of giving pause to what happened and thinking it through .. it did what arrogant people do ... overreact . Both the government and the people .

Article is correct...

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