The end of 21st century isolationism: unilateralism
Chris Adell - Columnist
Issue date: 9/28/09 Section: Opinion
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During the 2000 presidential primaries, I shuddered in fear when then-Gov. George W. Bush was confronted by reporters on his lack of foreign affairs knowledge. I watched in disbelief as he failed foreign affairs quiz after foreign affairs quiz, frequently unable to answer questions that even I could answer, just barely half way through high school.
I think at that point, a more humble person's embarrassment might lead them to question whether they should really be pursuing the most powerful office in the world, but as we all came to learn, Bush isn't really the humble type. I decided during the primaries, when there was still a relatively wide field of candidates, that I would hope for only one thing: that George W. Bush not become president.
Well, that didn't work out so well. I was still consoling myself with the relative stability of global politics when hijacked planes hit the World Trade Center in 2001. A conflict of epic proportions began to emerge that intimately involved leaders like Pervez Musharraf, whose names Bush could not pronounce just a year earlier. The path was predictable. Bush's personal ignorance of foreign affairs yielded self-centered American policies that demonstrated a similar ignorance.
Bush made important foreign policy decisions by talking to God and trusting his gut, which a more scientific person might rightly describe as the amygdala's projections onto the gut (think "fight or flight"). Consequently, his policies used fear to send America's amygdala into overdrive, and for the sake of simplicity and expediency, even people who knew better accepted the flawed perspective of foreign policy challenges existing in a vacuum.
As much as I appreciate that Bush rightly lambasted isolationism, sometimes in disagreement with his own party, he got it terribly wrong. In the days of Chamberlain, Churchill and Hitler, Bush's condemnation of isolationism would have confirmed the courage he saw in the mirror, but what Bush didn't realize was that this wasn't World War II and his detractors weren't present day Neville Chamberlains. Bush was on the wrong side of history, just as Neville Chamberlain was. In today's interconnected world, unilateralism is the new isolationism.


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