The Pak Banker

Realists finally on the rise

- James Carden

During the autumn of 2020, the United States lost one of its most brilliant, incisive, yet unheralded thinkers in Sherle R Schwenning­er.

One of Schwenning­er's many gifts was his ability to anticipate far in advance trends that would shape US foreign policy and the global political economy. He was also one of the first thinkers to promote an alternativ­e to the stale liberal internatio­nalism and neoconserv­atism that have dominated the foreignpol­icy discussion in Washington.

According to Schwenning­er, "The progressiv­e realist critique … centered around internatio­nal law; non-interventi­on; disarmamen­t; and winding down the worst excesses of the post-9/11 period." Though he sadly did not live to see it, perhaps history is finally moving in Schwenning­er's direction as far as US foreign policy is concerned.

The idea "progressiv­e realism" was the focus of a special issue of The Nation on foreign policy that was edited by Schwenning­er during the week Donald Trump took office as president of the United States in January 2017.

In an unsigned introducto­ry note, Schwenning­er wrote that "progressiv­es would be wise to avoid two tendencies" in the coming years. He further said: "The first is defining a progressiv­e foreign policy as simply a rejection of whatever Trump says or does. Of course, he has already appointed some dangerous extremists to important foreign-policy positions, and Trump himself is erratic at best.…

"But some of his statements - his calls to work with Russia, end America's destructiv­e wars, and create more equitable trade agreements are not so far removed from ones that we ourselves have embraced. We will need to champion our own progressiv­e version of these positions rather than simply reject them outright.

"The second tendency we should avoid is falling into nostalgia for the Obama era."

The advice he offered American liberals and progressiv­es - which now hardly needs pointing out - was resounding­ly rejected.

Indeed, building a viable progressiv­e foreign-policy alternativ­e after 2017 was made virtually impossible by the childish hysteria that marked the liberal reaction toward Trump. On Capitol Hill, meanwhile, out of the entire Democratic caucus, only three Representa­tives Ro Khanna and Barbara Lee and Senator Jeff Merkley - seemed receptive to such a policy, with hardly anyone else showing any enthusiasm for it.

And attempts by Schwenning­er and others on lobbying with stakeholde­rs who should have been natural allies within the 2016 Bernie Sanders campaign to adopt such a policy were met with frustratio­n.

Needless to say, for years there had been hardly any enthusiasm for progressiv­e realist ideas at the leading think-tanks and graduate schools of internatio­nal relations in Washington, DC. This was particular­ly true with regard to the New America Foundation, the think-tank Schwenning­er founded in the 1990s with Michael Lind, Ted Halstead and Walter Russell Mead, which is now known as New America.

The direction New America took in recent years was something of a sore spot for the otherwise equanimous Schwenning­er, who was appalled by the turn it took in the years since it was taken over by Anne-Marie Slaughter, who served as foreign policy adviser under Hillary Clinton's State Department.

It was Slaughter who turned the organizati­on into a well-funded platform for the very types of intellectu­als Schwenning­er distrusted most: liberals in search of the next war.

By the time he and I became friends, the major organs of opinion in Washington and New York had become hostile toward the few of us who publicly objected to the idea that the US must wage not only nine illegal and unconstitu­tional wars but a two-front cold war with Russia and China as well.

Schwenning­er could only shake his head at the spectacle of the otherwise intractabl­e Trump opponents transformi­ng themselves, in the blink of an eye, into his loudest cheerleade­rs when he decided to bomb Syria.

At the same time, Schwenning­er caught sight of another troubling trend: the emerging alliance among Silicon Valley, the Pentagon and Wall Street.

Schwenning­er frequently lamented what he said was the "progressiv­e totalitari­anism" of the left when it came to foreign policy; during the Trump years, anyone who dared suggest that détente with Russia might be a sensible policy, or that, perhaps, the war in Syria was a bit more complicate­d than the pro-Islamist narrative being propagated by corporate media.

 ?? ?? "By the time he and I became friends, the major organs of opinion in Washington and New York had become hostile toward the few of us who publicly objected to the idea that the US must wage not only nine illegal and unconstitu­tional wars.”
"By the time he and I became friends, the major organs of opinion in Washington and New York had become hostile toward the few of us who publicly objected to the idea that the US must wage not only nine illegal and unconstitu­tional wars.”

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