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Anti-Americanism

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An anti-American protest against torture at Guantanamo Bay concentration camp, Washington D.C.. The camp is one recent policy that has greatly aggravated of anti-American sentiment.

Anti-American sentiment, often Anti-Americanism, is a term with varying interprerations:

  • Anti-Americanism is international opposition against the United States policies.[1][2][3]
  • Anti-Americanism is a sentiment against the United States.[4]
  • Anti-Americanism is often a propaganda word that is used to label criticism or suggestions as irrational.[5]

Independent from which definition is used, the phenomenon is seen to have increased significantly since, or given birth by, the beginning of the George W. Bush administration[6], with the 2003 invasion of Iraq and events such as discoveries of the Guantanamo Bay concentration camp and CIA torture flights badly affecting global opinions of the U.S.[7].

In countries such as Canada, France, Germany, Sweden and the United Kingdom, surveys indicate that anti-American sentiment is mostly due the U.S. political policies since 2000-2001.[8] In Latin America, anti-American sentiment has deep roots, tracing to traumas of U.S.-supported dictators as well as direct economic and military interventions[9] In Japan and South Korea, much anti-Americanism has focused on the rude behavior of American military personnel, aggravated especially by repeated sexual assaults on locals by U.S. servicemen, and economic or political abuse by the U.S. goverment.[10] In Muslim world, anti-Americanism is mostly related to U.S. policies in the Middle East.

The United States government has expressed concern about the Anti-American sentiment and plans to improve its image.[11]

Use of the term "Anti-Americanism"

Perceptions of anti-Americanism are widespread, yet hard to define and isolate. The term itself does not imply a critical attitude based on rational objections but rather a prejudiced system of thought. Therefore, the term is rarely employed as a self-identifier (i.e. "I am anti-American...") as this inherently implies bias. Instead, it is often used as a pejorative by those who object to another individual or group's stance toward the United States or its policies.

Advocates of the significance of the term argue that Anti-Americanism represents a coherent and dangerous ideological current, comparable to anti-Semitism [12]. While the '-ism' suffix does imply a school of thought, isolating a definitive ideological basis for anti-Americanism is difficult given the variety of criticism of the United States. Other scholars suggest, for instance, that a plural of Anti-Americanisms, specific to country and time period, more accurately describe the phenomenon than any broad generalization [13]. Anti-American sentiment is an alternate, widely-used expression that less explicitly implies an ideology or belief system.

Critics of the term view it as a propagandistic label used to undermine legitimate criticism of U.S. policy insofar as it may conflate legitimate criticism with hateful rhetoric and prejudice. To be against American policy or perhaps anti-America in a particular instance (and to express this peacefully) is different, many argue, than being anti-American in one's fundamental belief system. Finally, it is argued that a consistent anti-American ideology is defensible if based on an economic or political foundation rather than on hatred of American culture or American ethnic or racial composition.

History

Strong feeling against the United States (and at times the North American continent) has persisted since the country's original settlement, with criticisms varying greatly in content and motive.

Degeneracy thesis

Anti-American sentiment in Europe originates with the discovery of America, the study of the Native Americans, and the examination of its flora, fauna, and climate. The first anti-American image ("the degeneracy thesis") saw America as a regressive and culturally bankrupt continent and soon-to-be nation. The theory that the humidity and other atmospheric conditions in America actually weakened its animals and human residents was commonly argued in Europe and debated by early American thinkers Alexander Hamilton, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson. This sentiment was expressed in 1768 when court philosopher to Frederick II, Cornelius de Pauw, a chief proponent of this thesis, described America as a bunch of "degenerate or monstrous" colonies and claimed, "the weakest European could crush them with ease". The thesis was extended into arguing that the natural environment meant that the United States could intrinsically never produce true culture. Paraphrasing Pauw, the Encyclopedist Abbé Raynal famously wrote, "America has not yet produced a good poet, an able mathematician, one man of genius in a single art or a single science."

The degeneracy thesis sometimes described America as a threat to the world and as the novelist Henry de Montherlant put it in the voice of a character: "One nation that manages to lower intelligence, morality, human quality on nearly all the surface of the earth, such a thing has never been seen before in the existence of the planet. I accuse the United States of being in a permanent state of crime against humankind." [citation needed] The degeneracy thesis later slightly shifted, focusing on the cultural qualities of the United States and gradually ignoring other American powers.

Romantic hostility

The French Revolution, seen by some as prompted by the American Revolution, created a new type of anti-American political thought, hostile to the political institutions of the United States and their impact upon Europe. Furthermore, the Romantic strain of European thought and literature, hostile to the Enlightenment view of reason and obsessed with history and national character, disdained the American project. The German poet Nikolaus Lenau encapsulated the Romantic view: "With the expression Bodenlosigkeit (rootlessness) I think I am able to indicate the general character of all American institutions; what we call Fatherland is here only a property insurance scheme."

Racialism

In the middle of the nineteenth century, the racialist theories of Arthur de Gobineau and others spread through Europe. The presence of blacks and "lower quality" immigrant groups made racialist thinkers discount the potential of the United States. The infinite mixing of America would lead to the ultimate degeneracy. Gobineau said that America was creating "greatest mediocrity in all fields: mediocrity of physical strength, mediocrity of beauty, mediocrity of intellectual capacities - we could almost say nothingness."

Anti-technology and consumerism

"Liberators", a classic 1944 Nazi propaganda poster which summarizes many perennially-recurring themes of anti-Americanism

With the rise of American industry in the late nineteenth century, intellectual anti-American discourse entered a new form. Mass production, the Taylor system, and the speed of American life and work became a major threat to some intellectuals' view of European life and tradition. Nietzsche wrote: "The breathless haste with which they (the Americans) work - the distinctive vice of the new world - is already beginning ferociously to infect old Europe and is spreading a spiritual emptiness over the continent."

It has been claimed that this thesis transformed into a Heideggerian critique of technologism. Heidegger wrote in 1935: "Europe lies today in a great pincer, squeezed between Russia on the one side and America on the other. From a metaphysical point of view, Russia and America are the same, with the same dreary technological frenzy and the same unrestricted organization of the average man." A strange derivative of the thesis regarding the soullessness of America and its inherent threat to Europe was also used in Fascist rhetoric and in German and Japanese propaganda during World War II. It has been claimed that the Heideggerian critique, incorporated into existentialist (Sartre) and leftist thought after the war, played a central role in the political rhetoric of many Western European Communist parties.

Political hypocrisy

Samuel Johnson hit upon one theme that, in various and different forms, has long defined some forms of anti-American sentiment: the perceived hypocrisy of a supposed freedom-loving people engaged in less than admirable practices. Americans in his eyes were hypocrites in their relations with Indigenous peoples and African slaves: "How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes?" He famously stated that, "I am willing to love all mankind, except an American." Americans, for their part, mirrored this criticism with claims about the treatment of colonial subjects by European powers.

"The Other"

Just as the United States has defined itself against Monarchical and Communist countries during its history and may now be defining itself against terrorism or radical Islam, the use of anti-American ideologies may represent a way for nations to unify the country and bridge political divisions and/or to cover up evident flaws in its political or economic system. Certain forms of social identity theory argue that the existence of "an other" is crucial to the development of group identity. In the case of a claimed European strand of anti-Americanism, it is possible that it partially exists to assist the creation of a coalescing European identity.

Some critics argue that anti-Americanism ideology often correlates with other forms of perceived extremism, such as virulent nationalist movements, radical Islam, or communism. Self-proclaimed French anti-anti-American, Bernard-Henri Levy, described this view: "Anti-Americanism is a horror. ... It is a magnet of the worst. In the entire world and in France in particular, everything that is the worst in people's heads comes together around anti-Americanism: racism, nationalism, chauvinism, anti-Semitism."[14]

Modern Anti-Americanism

Early Twentieth Century and Cold War

As European immigration to the United States continued and the country's economic potential became more obvious, anti-American stances grew a much more explicit geopolitical dimension. A new strand of anti-American sentiment started to appear as America entered the competition for influence in the Pacific, and anti-Americanism was widespread among the Central Powers after the U.S. entered the First World War. Furthermore, many of the anti-American ideological threads spread to other areas, such as Japan and Latin American, where Continental philosophy was popular and American imperialism was increasingly a possible threat. In political terms, even amongst the United States's allies, Britain and France, there was resentment at the end of the war as they found themselves massively in debt to the United States. These sentiments became even more widespread during the interbellum and Great Depression and sometimes tended toward the anti-Semitic: the belief that America was ruled by a Jewish conspiracy was common in countries ruled by fascists before and during World War II, and in the Middle East after the war. The reverse - the belief that Israel was an American puppet state - also became common in some circles during the last third of the 20th century.

During the Cold War, anti-Americanism grew within the sphere of the Soviet Union and spread to some other parts of the world, such as Africa and Asia, that had previously held the United States in higher regard than the major European colonial powers. The Vietnam War boosted anti-American sentiment: here, American critics felt, was naked imperialism at its worst, though supporters were willing to forgive the misadventure given the larger priorities of the Cold War. In addition, the United States' support for right-wing authoritarian regimes and numerous covert operations during this era had been likewise criticized.

Post Cold War era

Paradoxically, the fall of the Soviet Union may have brought an increase in anti-Americanism, because the U.S. was left as the world's only superpower, and people who formerly saw the United States as a bastion against Communism or needed the American security umbrella no longer felt the need to support the United States. Globalization, often portrayed as an American neoliberal project, while improving international contact, has also magnified the visibility of trade conflicts and increased societal insecurity about jobs.

The world at large

Groups currently described as Anti-American are highly diverse, including French intellectuals, Islamist fundamentalists, Latin American populists, through Americans themselves (within the United States the term "unamerican" is as likely to be used). Anti-Americanism in some form has existed across different American presidential administrations, though its severity may wax and wane considerably. George W. Bush's first presidential term, for instance, is widely seen as inducing a major increase in Anti-Americanism [15], with the 2003 invasion of Iraq and controversies such as the Guantanamo Bay concentration camp and CIA torture flights badly affecting global opinions of the U.S.[16].

While the U.S. is not seen universally unfavorably in Europe and other Western countries, feelings of distrust and dislike toward the United States are widespread, particularly in some states in Western Europe. A survey in June 2005 showed that a majority of Europeans have an unfavorable image of America; however, two-thirds of those people opting for the "unfavorable" option declared that this was due to George Bush and his political actions.[17]

In Latin America, anti-American sentiment has deep roots, tracing to traumas of U.S.-supported dictators as well as economic and military interventions[18]. Explicitly anti-American platforms have been adopted by leaders in the region, in part as a populist measure; this has been true in Cuba for decades and in Venezuala more recently.

In Japan and South Korea, much anti-Americanism has focused on the rude behavior of American military personnel, aggravated especially by repeated sexual assaults on locals by U.S. servicemen. The on-going U.S. military presence in Okinawa remains a contentious issue in Japan.[19]

Middle East

The Middle East region has been a focal point of much Anti-American sentiment in the latter decades of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st, often blamed on specific US policies in the region. The term Great Satan, as well as the chant "Death to America" have been in continual use in Iran since at least the Iranian revolution in 1979.

According to a Zogby International poll of Arab men and women in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco and the United Arab Emirates, negative attitudes toward the United States grew from large majorities in 2002 to practical unanimity in 2004 [20]. According to the Zogby poll, Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein were tied in fourth place on a list of most admired world leaders.

Criticisms of the United States

File:Valenciamaydayposter.jpg
A poster in Valencian from the Spanish trade union federation uses anti‐American imagery to encourage citizens of Valencia to attend a demonstration
A graffiti in Rosario, Argentina: "In the U.S. liberty is a statue."

Some of the most common criticisms of the United States involve:

  • U.S. Foreign Policy - Main article: Opposition to U.S. foreign policy.
    • American military interventions and perceived imperialism, especially in connection with 2003 invasion of Iraq and the Vietnam War
    • Selectivism in resolving various global problems (global warming, disease, wars in Africa)
    • Refusal to sign various international treaties including the Kyoto Protocol, the Ottawa Treaty on landmines, and some proposed agreements to limit the weaponization of space
    • Support for military dictatorships and totalitarian governments during and after the Cold War such as Augusto Pinochet.
    • Criticism of American economic sanctions and embargos toward various countries, including Cuba and Iran, while maintaining commercial relations with countries such as China.
    • Not allowing other states to possess nuclear weapons while USA spends the most money on nuclear weapons in the world.
  • U.S. Domestic Policy
  • Economic issues
    • Perceptions that the United States was the key inspiration for globalization and neoliberal free trade policy
    • Criticisms of the ethical behavior of certain American corporations
    • A lack of social welfare and income redistribution policies relative to other industrialized nations
    • Widespread usage of sport utility vehicles wasting petrol and contributing to the high cost of oil, in addition to polluting the environment.
  • Criticisms of national character
    • Claims of excessive nationalism, blind patriotism or chauvinism
    • Claims of widespread ignorance of places and peoples outside of the US, and arrogance toward foreigners, particularly their neighbors to the north, Canada
    • Stereotypes of obesity and fast food diets
    • Criticisms of excessive religiosity and "Puritanism" or conversely, immorality and vulgarity
    • Claims of speaking, writing and customizing the spelling and pronunciation of English in a better way than other countries do, even those in the Commonwealth.
  • Other issues
    • Cultural imperialism through spread of the English language and American popular culture
    • Perceived lack of attention to environmental issues. For example, drilling for oil in Alaska
    • Criticism of a lack of universal gay rights, or, conversely, excessive acceptance of homophobia.
    • Criticisms over the existence of the death penalty in some areas of the United States

For a more detailed breakdown of anti-American rhetoric and sentiment by country, see anti-American sentiment in various countries.

Criticisms of anti-Americanism

Due to the variety of motives for anti-American sentiment, criticism of this sentiment varies with context. Similarly, some motives are viewed as more legitimate by both Americans and non-Americans. Some common points of criticism:

  • Some charge that anti-Americanism stems from jealousy, especially from rival powers. This is the traditional argument used to qualify Anti-Americanism in France. [4]
  • Conversely, other forms may be attributed to up-and-coming would-be superpowers who wish to unseat the US in status. This is a view of anti-Americanism in China, and the former Soviet Union.
  • Some attribute anti-Americanism to radical Islam. By this view, the critics are viewed as objecting to women's rights and human rights, and therefore viewed as regressive or religiously fanatic. This style of anti-Americanism is considered a common motivation for countries such as Iran, and radical Islamists like Osama Bin Laden.
  • Some view much anti-Americanism as a left-over effect from Marxism or Communism, and anti-capitalist sentiment in general. Because the United States is a prominent capitalist country (which can be viewed as either a virtue or a fault), it is assumed to logicially follow that many anti-American critics will be motivated by economic philosophies in their arguments. This is often the argument leveled against anti-globalization protesters.
  • Some critics hold consistent criticism against American policies, by the Left as well as by foreign critics. The claim often made is "damned if we do, damned if we don't". Thus American intervention in 1999 in Kosovo led to popular protests in Europe, while the UN has criticized America's non-intervention in the 1994 Rwandan genocide. According to this view, no policy by the United States can ever hope to satisfy everyone and all US actions will inevitably be interpreted and presented in a negative way.
  • Other critics of anti-Americanism claim that it is a simplistic view or over-generalization, sometimes bordering on discrimination. However, the objection often raised is that since Americans are not a race, it cannot technically be called "racism". It should be noted that early forms of anti-Americanism indeed had racist overtones, such as French naturalists' view that North American flora and fauna were biologically inferior.[21] Stereotypes that Americans are somehow more "fat" or "stupid" than other people are sometimes criticized as prejudiced, and are often center around an assumed image of Americans as a universally WASP people.
  • Some critics draw parallels between modern anti-Americanism and the defamation campaign against European Jews during the 1930s and 40s. Recent examples include a controversy in Germany whereby American capitalists were depicted as "bloodsuckers",[22] a tactic which was used in Nazi propaganda during the 1930s.
  • Some critics point out that anti-Americanism is often allied with other forms of extremism, such as virulent nationalist movements, radical Islam, or totalitarian communism. They charge that well-meaning critics are unwittingly aiding causes that are not considered "progressive". One example would be in Japan, where anti-American right wing groups ('uyoku') agitate against both American military bases and for a rearmament of Japan with nuclear weapons.

See also

References

  1. ^ Professor Alan McPherson: Yankee No! Anti-Americanism in U.S.-Latin American Relations (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003)
  2. ^ Parker, Richard B.: Anti-Americanism in the Arab World, in: Thornton, Thomas Perry (ed.): Anti-Americanism: origins and context, in: The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Newbury Park 1988, Vol. 497, p. 52 and p. 56-57.
  3. ^ Peter W. Rodman: The world’s resentment, in: The National Interest, Washington D.C., Vol. 601, Summer 2001
  4. ^ Rubinstein, Alvin and Donald Smith. "Anti-Americanism in the Third World." Annals (AAPSS) vol. 497, May 1988, pg. 35.
  5. ^ O'Connor, Brendan, op. cit., p 78: "... Cold War (1945-1989) ... In this period the false and disingenuous labelling of objections to American policies as ‘anti-Americanism’ became more prominent."
  6. ^ Speulda, Nicole.Documenting the Phenomenon of Anti-Americanism, The Princeton Project on National Security, Princeton University, 2005
  7. ^ CNN: Anti-Americanism in Europe deepens, February 14, 2003
  8. ^ Documenting the Phenomenon of Anti-Americanism By Nicole Speulda, The Princeton Project on National Security, Princeton University, 2005
  9. ^ Tracing the Root of Anti-Americanism in Latin America, Review by Michael Shifter
  10. ^ Nicole Risse, Yonsei University: [The Evolution in anti-Americanism in South Korea: From Ideologically Embedded to Socially Constructed]; [1]
  11. ^ [2]
  12. ^ Foot, Rob. "The New Anti-Semitism?", Quadrant Magazine, vol, XLVIII n 4, April 2004.
  13. ^ Katzenstein, Peter and Robert Keohane. "Conclusion: Anti-Americanisms and the Polyvalence of America", in Anti-Americanisms in World Politics, Katzenstein and Keohane, eds, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2006 (forthcoming).
  14. ^ Alexander, Beth R. (2004). "Commentary: Bernard Henri-Levy takes heat". UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL. Retrieved 2006-03-14. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  15. ^ Speulda, Nicole.Documenting the Phenomenon of Anti-Americanism, The Princeton Project on National Security, Princeton University, 2005
  16. ^ CNN: Anti-Americanism in Europe deepens, February 14, 2003
  17. ^ "The requested article was not found". Retrieved 2006-03-14.
  18. ^ Tracing the Root of Anti-Americanism in Latin America, Review by Michael Shifter
  19. ^ Nicole Risse, Yonsei University: [The Evolution in anti-Americanism in South Korea: From Ideologically Embedded to Socially Constructed]; [3]
  20. ^ Linzer, Dafna (2004). "Poll Shows Growing Arab Rancor at U.S." The Washington Post: A26. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  21. ^ Faulks, Sebastian (2005). "The American Enemy by Philippe Roger". The Sunday Times. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  22. ^ D., Ray. "Germany's Largest Trade Union: Portraying Americans as Blood Suckers "A Good Caricature"". Retrieved 2006-03-14.
  • Julia Sweig, Friendly Fire: Losing Friends and Making Enemies in the Anti-American Century, PublicAffairs, 2006 ISBN 1586483005
  • Brendon O’Connor, "A Brief History Of Anti-Americanism: From Cultural Criticism to Terrorism", Australasian Journal of American Studies, Vol. 23, No. 1, July 2004, p. 82.
  • Gerrit-Jan Berendse; "German Anti-Americanism in Context" Journal of European Studies, Vol. 33, 2003
  • Ian Buruma and Avishai Margalit, Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes of Its Enemies
  • Richard Z. Chesnoff, The Arrogance of the French : Why They Can't Stand Us--and Why the Feeling Is Mutual, Sentinel, April, 2005 ISBN 1595230106
  • John Dean and Jean-Paul Gabilliet; European Readings of American Popular Culture Greenwood Press, 1996
  • J. L. Granatstein, Yankee Go Home? Canadians and Anti-Americanism. (1996)
  • Paul Hollander, Anti-Americanism
  • Chalmers Johnson, Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire
  • Eric V. Larson, Norman D. Levin, Seonhae Baik, Bogdan Savych; Ambivalent Allies? A Study of South Korean Attitudes toward the U.S Rand, 2004
  • Richard Pells; Not like Us: How Europeans Have Loved, Hated, and Transformed American Culture since World War II Basic Books, (1997)
  • Jean-Francois Revel, Anti-Americanism, 2002
  • Philipe Roger, The American Enemy: The History of French Anti-Americanism
  • David Strauss; Menace in the West: The Rise of French Anti-Americanism in Modern Times Greenwood Press, 1978
  • Charles J. Swindells; "Anti-Americanism and Its Discontents" New Zealand International Review. Volume: 30. Issue: 1. 2005. pp 8+.
  • Frank Trommler and Joseph McVeigh; America and the Germans: An Assessment of a Three-Hundred-Year History - Vol. 2 University of Pennsylvania Press, 1990

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