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THEY HATE US, TOO
The hostility of the "anti-war" protestors is not toward war, nor even
toward war with Iraq--but toward America and its philosophy of
individualism.
By Peter Schwartz 17 Mar 2003
The Sept. 11 attacks on America led many to ask, about the terrorists,
"Why do they hate us?" Today, a similar question applies to those who
virulently condemn a U.S. war against Iraq--along with a similar
answer.
It is not actually anti-war views that they are expressing; they mount
no mass demonstrations against the military aggressions of, say,
Bosnia,
or Russia--or Iraq. It is solely America, retaliating against the
threat
of aggression, that evokes such widespread hostility. Why? Because
these
are anti-American protests, prompted only by one factor: this country's
declaration that it has a categorical, moral right to uphold its
self-interest.
An official of the European Union, for example, denounces America for
"setting and imposing the rules . . . in pursuit of its own national
interest." The "Not In Our Name" campaign, headed by such people as
Noam Chomsky and Gloria Steinem, complains contemptuously that America
has "not only attacked Afghanistan but arrogated to itself and its
allies the right to rain down military force anywhere and anytime."
Since the force America is employing in Afghanistan and, imminently
perhaps, in Iraq is against those who have already initiated its use,
this criticism is simply a repudiation of America's right to decide who
its enemies are--the same premise behind the apoplectic reaction to
President Bush's unequivocal description of Iraq, Iran and North Korea
as an "axis of evil."
The "anti-war" rallies are generated not by any love for Iraq, but by a
hatred for America--or, more fundamentally, for the principle America
represents. The protestors oppose the individualism that lies at
America's foundation. They despise the idea of a capitalist system, in
which the individual is sovereign, free to live his own life and pursue
his own values, irrespective of the wishes of "the public." And they
therefore despise the derivative idea that, as a free nation, America
has the sovereign right to defend its self-interest, irrespective of
the
wishes of the international community.
In surveying current attitudes toward Americans abroad, USA Today
offers
an astute observation: "A growing number of foreigners see some of the
United States' political decisions (pulling out of the Kyoto Treaty on
global emissions) and personal choices (Americans' penchant for
gas-loving SUVs) as at best unilateral and at worst selfish. The
confrontation over Iraq is just more fuel on a bonfire." At root, these
issues are indeed the same.
The "anti-war" forces are not against an invasion of Iraq, if
authorized
by the U.N.; they just don't want the decision to be made by the United
States. It is America's deferral to the U.N. that they frantically
seek.
It is American "selfishness"--the tenet that one has the moral right to
uphold one's self-interest--that triggers anger and fear in them. It is
the undercutting of America's sovereignty--the surrender of the
principle of individualism to the principle of collectivism--that
underlies the malicious glee with which U.N. dignitaries hail attacks
on
America, that motivates the spiteful cowardice of the "human-shield"
volunteers in Baghdad and that constitutes the ideological goal of the
"anti-war" movement.
We are smeared as "unilateralists" if we defend our interests by
engaging in military action, or by rejecting a pseudo-scientific
international treaty. We are smeared as "isolationists" if we defend
our
interests by not sending troops on altruistic, "peacekeeping" missions
(or by rejecting an international treaty). Every refusal to sacrifice
ourselves to the demands of others provokes the same essential
response.
The protest leaders are the standard gamut of leftists--from modern
environmentalists to old-line Marxists. They are united, not in the
superficialities of what they support, but in the fundamentals of what
they detest: Americanism, capitalism, individualism. Their one,
overwhelming desire is to cut America down by making it defer to some
higher authority. They want us to submit.
Which is what the Islamic terrorists seek as well. They want us to
renounce individualism and bow to their theocratic dictates. The
"anti-war" activists may invoke a more secular authority, but they want
the same kind of capitulation. They want the individual to subordinate
his freedom to the collective will of his community, and they want the
government of a free people to subordinate the liberty of its citizens
to the collective will of the international community.
The way to prevail against the anti-American protests, therefore, is
not
by mollifying the U.N. or bribing our "allies"--but by resolutely
acting
on our moral right to defend ourselves, regardless of the wishes of any
other nation.
________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
Mr. Schwartz, editor and contributing author of Return of the
Primitive:
The Anti-Industrial Revolution by Ayn Rand, is chairman of the board of
directors of the Ayn Rand Institute (www.aynrand.org) in Irvine,
Calif.
The Institute promotes the philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas
Shrugged and The Fountainhead. Send comments to reaction@aynrand.org.
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