Country First

After a turbulent decade abroad, the Republican Party turns inward.

BY JAMES TRAUB | JUNE 17, 2011

And of course the wish for less is also a consequence of the economy. The United States had a surplus to play with in the late 1990s; now it has a massive deficit, with prospects of worse. The hegemonic burden has become unaffordable. Why do we need all those bases? How can we keep spending $120 billion a year in Afghanistan? During the other 90 percent of the debate, the candidates described government spending under the Obama administration in apocalyptic terms; few of them said so, but it was plain that a foreign policy of national interests narrowly understood was also a matter of economic necessity.

Back in the 1990s, the larger neoconservative project went under the name "national greatness conservatism." Kristol, along with David Brooks and others, inveighed against the purely negative conservatism of the libertarians and in favor of the muscular activism of a Teddy Roosevelt. But eight years of Bush seems to have depleted that doctrine as well; even centrists like Gov. Mitt Romney talk about the federal government as a necessary evil. If government is a threat to our freedom and economy at home, how can we view it as a benevolent force abroad?

And this, in turn, forces a question: Are Republicans really the heirs to the Reaganite foreign-policy vision? So far, the party line on strong defense has held; that's the one part of government that's good, not bad. But how long can that giant exception last? How long, that is, before conservatives acknowledge the reality that defense spending consumes a massively larger fraction of the budget than welfare spending, foreign aid, and all the other convenient bugbears? If small-government conservatism really has decisively defeated national-greatness conservatism, then its advocates may turn against the whole apparatus of the neo-Reaganite foreign policy.

Today's conservatives seem to want to return to the party's origins -- thus the popularity of the Tea Party label. Thomas Jefferson, the first Republican president, also deeply distrusted what he called the "central" government, and opposed a standing army, a diplomatic service, and, above all, warfare, as instruments for the aggrandizement of the state and thus the diminishment of personal liberty (though he proved quite willing both to threaten and to wage war if the circumstances required it). The Republicans became the party of bellicosity only at the end of the 19th century, under Presidents William McKinley and Roosevelt, when their business base recognized the economic value of foreign conquest -- and when it had forsaken its small-government principles. When the GOP again began to define itself against activist government, as it did in the face of the New Deal, its partisans also turned decisively away from engagement with the world.

Maybe it's too soon to say that the Republican Party has committed itself to genuine small-government conservatism: Certainly Romney and Gov. Tim Pawlenty, the most politically seasoned of the current candidates and the ones most likely to be nominated, favor increasing the defense budget even as they cut everything else to ribbons. Kristol has half-seriously suggested a ticket of Rep. Paul Ryan, the zealous budget-cutter, and Marco Rubio, the freshman Florida senator, who apparently favors "more decisive action in Libya." But the contradiction between seeking the smallest and least active federal government possible, and a muscular foreign policy can't be sustained over time. That's why the GOP has traditionally embraced one or the other, but not both.

Is it the Democrats, then, who are the natural heirs to the doctrine of benevolent global hegemony? Probably not, if only because the hegemonic era is now behind us, presumably forever. In part for that very reason, and partly also in reaction to Bush's unilateralism, this administration is prepared to lead, if not from behind, then at least from the side, giving both authority and responsibility to allies. The Obama national security strategy does not insist upon unrivaled military superiority. And Obama is a cautious figure, acutely aware of the limits of the possible. So no, today's Democratic Party will probably not become the home for disappointed foreign-policy neoconservatives.

But the Democrats do believe in government -- maybe too much. They believe that government serves deeply moral purposes. And they believe that the same government that has an obligation to help people at home has an obligation to do so elsewhere in the world as well.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

 

James Traub is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and author of, most recently, The Freedom Agenda. "Terms of Engagement," his column for ForeignPolicy.com, runs weekly.

AR

2:16 PM ET

June 17, 2011

As long as neocon outlets

As long as neocon outlets like AEI and the Center for Security Policy exist and politicians listen to their ideas, neo-conservativism is not dead.

 

JCKDOORS

3:03 PM ET

June 17, 2011

distrust

I distrust anyone and any group that rants on about "freedom", "liberty",patriot", and "destiny" in their title, or message. The first three means someone down the line will lose theirs, and the four implies having some kind of god on your side. All of it is dangerous thinking.

 

TIRESIAS

5:21 PM ET

June 17, 2011

Jefferson: Republican-Democrat

I believe Jefferson was the first Republican-Democrat Party president, which later became the Democratic Party. He created the party with Monroe to run against the Federalist Party. The original Republican Party presidential candidate and president was Abraham Lincoln.

 

ZATHRAS

1:49 PM ET

June 18, 2011

Surprising Mistake

I don't think I've ever seen that one made before by a widely published author.

The first Presidential candidate of the Republican Party was actually John Fremont, in 1956. Lincoln won the Presidential election four years after that. Moreover, the early Republican Party sought to broaden its appeal beyond anti-slavery Americans by championing internal improvements, as Alexander Hamilton and the great Whig Henry Clay had done. Its ideological roots ran to Clay and Hamilton far more than they did to Thomas Jefferson.

 

GALVESTON TEA

8:43 PM ET

June 17, 2011

ISOLATIONIST

The term "Isolationist" does not mean what it did to the 50's generation.
The new generation thinks the word means bring the troops home and mind our own business and they are all for "isolationism",
As long as we can tweet and facebook, travel and trade, I think that is good enough. Isolationism sounds like a refreshing change. Wait till the warmongers and hawks find out there is no word to describe what they want to paint the movement because the kids have all ready changed the meaning of the isolationist word and it doesnt scare them!lol Nice try though!

And as far as foreign aid goes, The amount is not whats at play when the new/traditional republicans speak of cutting foreign aid.
We are speaking of cutting ALL aid to EVETYONE so we can have one foreign policy and we can follow the founders advice of trading with all nations but entangling alliances with NONE. That means we let them protect themselves and become an example of liberty to them.
Trade, be friends but dont bomb=isolationism.

woo hoo.
Im an isolationist now!
lol

 

GALVESTON TEA

8:54 PM ET

June 17, 2011

Forgot, one more thing

Democrats, Constitutionalists, Libertarians, Progressives, Green...
HIDE YOUR YOUNG!
The NEO's are looking for a home and are hungry, they've been booted from the skirt of the Republican party that they clinged to, and havent started an all out war since Iraq....They are hungry and are looking for a poor unsuspecting third world country or a young democrat to devour!lol

Neoconservatism was a sneak attack on the American people and will be the darkest stain on our short history for years and years to come.
Bill Kristol and the others will go down in history as a disgrace to the state and the part mentor of a foreign policy blunder that almost broke America's back.

 

THE EUROPEAN

9:55 PM ET

June 18, 2011

Isolationism?

Let's ask a string of hypothetical questions: do you think that our main adversaries like China and Russia are conducting an "isolationist" policy or they are rather actively pursuing an aggressive, expansionist, influence promoting drive?
Don't they spawn their own idiosyncratic ideological agendas everywhere?

Nature abhors a vacuum and as soon as the US withdraws from the world other powers will fill the void;- only naive dreamers or political ignoramuses can think otherwise.

Sarko of Fr. and Cameron started to bomb Libya under fake pretexts and Obama jointed the fray: are they neocons too?

"Neocon" - is this a code word to describe a particular group of people or a policy which must not be named using straightforward diction?

Did Americans adopt the Orwellian "Newspeak" by which oblique expression is the way to go or the PolCorr thought police will knock on the door?
Seeing from afar the US is marching backward in history: one party is longing for the Marx-Engels-Lenin's Utopia while the other seeking solace in the bygone era of the 18th. Century when America was protected by two oceans...
Both approach is obsolete.

 

GALVESTON TEA

5:59 PM ET

June 19, 2011

China and Russia

Let's ask a string of hypothetical questions: do you think that our main adversaries like China and Russia are conducting an "isolationist" policy or they are rather actively pursuing an aggressive, expansionist, influence promoting drive?
Don't they spawn their own idiosyncratic ideological agendas everywhere?

China and Russia are practicing a form of isolationism. They seldom get involved and allow America to do the grunt work, then go around with the money they save, and buy up Gold, minerals and land with interest from our money we borrow from them to pay for the rebuilding of the middle east and the destruction of this country

 

RANDALLPI

2:09 AM ET

July 16, 2011

Country First

After a turbulent decade abroad, the Republican Party turns inward. Let's ask a string of hypothetical questions: do you think that our main adversaries like China and Russia are conducting an "isolationist" policy or they are rather actively pursuing an aggressive, expansionist, influence promoting drive? Don't they spawn their own idiosyncratic ideological agendas everywhere? Nature abhors a vacuum and as soon as the US withdraws from the world other powers will check out Democrats, Constitutionalists, Libertarians, Progressives, Green... HIDE YOUR YOUNG! The NEO's are looking for a home and are hungry, they've been booted from the skirt of the Republican party that they clinged to, and havent started an all out war since Iraq....They are hungry and are looking for a poor unsuspecting third world country or a young democrat to devour!lol Neoconservatism was a sneak

 

JOHNEY_BOY

8:03 AM ET

July 17, 2011

Nature abhors a vacuum and as

Nature abhors a vacuum and as soon as the US withdraws from the world other powers will fill the void;- only naive dreamers or political ignoramuses can think otherwise AdjustableDumbbells.Don't they spawn their own idiosyncratic ideological agendas everywhere?