What
Is America’s Role in the World?
The success of the American experiment in self-government
is a result of its founding principles, set forth in the Declaration of
Independence and secured by the United States Constitution. The universal and
permanent truths of human equality and liberty are preserved in America by the
rule of law, and are reflected in its institutions and cherished by its people.
Does America’s dedication to these exceptional principles give it a special
role to play in the world?
From the beginning, the purpose of the United States’
foreign policy has been to defend the American constitutional system and the
common interests of the American people. The U.S. has thus been committed to
providing for its common defense, protecting the freedom of its commerce, and
seeking peaceful relations with other nations. The most important goal of
American foreign policy continues to be defending the independence of the
United States, so that America can govern itself according to its principles
and pursue its national interests.
At the same time, the Founders were keenly aware of the
universal significance of America’s principles, and of America’s unique
responsibility for upholding and advancing these principles. As Thomas Paine
reminded patriots everywhere during the trying times of America’s struggle for
independence, “The cause of America is in a great measure the cause of all
mankind.”[1]
The Founders believed that the idea of human liberty and, therefore, the
inherent right of self-government, were applicable not only to Americans, but
to all people everywhere.
The Declaration of Independence states that all mankind
is endowed with the same unalienable rights, and that to secure those rights
“governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the
consent of the governed.” The American Founders spoke of universal truths and
created a powerful model of liberty for the whole world. They understood that
America’s commitment to its principles—in both domestic and foreign policy—has
profound consequences for the cause of liberty everywhere.
As George Washington observed, “the preservation of the
sacred fire of liberty and the destiny of the republican model of government
are justly considered as deeply, perhaps as finally, staked on
the experiment entrusted to the hands of the American people.”[2]
The American experiment was important partly because it
was an example to oppressed people around the world. After touring the United
States, Alexis de Tocqueville noted in 1835 that the “principal instrument” of
American foreign policy is “freedom.”[3]
He meant that, in the United States, diplomacy is not just something the
government does. When American citizens proclaim their faith in their
principles and live them at home, they are helping to make their nation’s
foreign policy, because their words and actions are a lesson for the world.
If
we remain one people, under an efficient government, the period is not far
off...when we may choose peace or war, as our interest, guided by justice,
shall counsel. – George Washington
September 19, 1796
September 19, 1796
During the Greek Revolution of 1821 against the Ottoman
Empire, U.S. Secretary of State Daniel Webster asked, “What is the soul, the
informing spirit of our own institutions, of our entire system of government?”
His answer: “Public opinion. While this acts with intensity and moves in the
right direction the country must ever be safe—let us direct the force, the vast
moral force, of this engine to the aid of others.”[4]
Even when the U.S. government does not intervene officially, the support of the
American people for those who seek liberty is a valuable aid to their cause.
Throughout our history, American citizens have been
inspired by our political, religious, and economic freedoms to act as
ambassadors of liberty. As missionaries, merchants, and medics our citizen-diplomats
have established schools, orphanages, and hospitals. They have translated
literature, educated children, and inspired political reform in countries
around the world that were oppressed and impoverished. The “greatest enemy of
tyranny,” as Webster said, is this republican spirit of self-government. The
civic engagement of individual American citizens and their commitment to
America’s founding principles are a vital part of the United States’ unique
role in the world.
Yet as one nation in a world of nations, the United
States has also had to practice diplomacy towards other governments. The
Founders understood that America’s principles must be reflected in its
relations with other nations. For them, diplomacy was not merely a means of
negotiating America’s interests. It was also a tool for advancing liberty.
Liberty has always been the defining principle of America—it is not merely a
political preference. The United States thus sent some of its brightest minds
and most ardent patriots—Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy
Adams—abroad as diplomats to represent the American people and the exceptional
ideas of the young republic.
America has a unique understanding of statecraft, because
the United States’ foreign policy has always been accountable to the American
people through their elected representatives. The monarchies and empires of
Europe did not recognize the “unalienable rights” of human liberty. Their
diplomacy served the interests of their rulers, and did not reflect the consent
of the governed.
The Founders believed that America’s role in the world
would be limited by constitutional government. It would also be inspired by a
sense of justice. That was why George Washington recommended a foreign policy
of independence and strength, a policy that would allow America to “choose
peace or war, as our interest, guided by justice, shall counsel.”
Let
every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any
price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe,
in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty. – John F.
Kennedy
January 20, 1961
January 20, 1961
By emphasizing the importance of both interests and
justice, Washington recognized that there are no easy answers to the hard
questions of foreign policy. A policy based only on interests would do violence
to America’s ideals, while a policy based only on ideals would ignore the
realities of the world. Therefore, the Founders sought to apply America’s
principles, which define its sense of justice, to the circumstances of the day.
This prudent approach is essential to securing the blessings of liberty for the
American people in a complex and sometimes hostile world.
In this dangerous world, the United States was not
founded to be a solitary fortress or to remain isolated from world affairs.
When Washington noted America’s “detached and distant position,” he was
acknowledging a geographical reality, not defining a foreign policy principle.
America’s early foreign policies were not inherently isolationist or
non-interventionist; they were prudent actions shaped by the need to preserve
America’s republican self-government.
Washington’s Proclamation of Neutrality in 1793 enabled
the young nation to avoid the war raging between France and England. The U.S.
was militarily weak and fighting a war would have endangered the very existence
of the American experiment. The Monroe Doctrine of 1823 protected America’s
interests while presenting to the world the principles of self-government and
political liberty. The Doctrine was not isolationist: it sought to defend the
independence of the young republics of Latin America that had just thrown off
Spanish rule.
“The flames kindled on the 4th of July 1776, have spread
over too much of the globe to be extinguished by the feeble engines of
despotism,” Thomas Jefferson remarked upon observing the independence of these
new republics. “[O]n the contrary, they will consume these engines and all who
work them.”[5]
In keeping with the Founders’ example, American statesmen in the nineteenth
century spoke up for those around the world who were attempting to gain their
political liberty and establish a government based on the consent of the
people.
For example, the American government provided moral
support to the Hungarian Revolution of 1848, which sought to found a state
based on the principle of self-government. After the Austrian and Russian
Empires crushed Hungarian independence, the United States sought to protect
Hungarian refugees. The United States did not declare war, but it did use
diplomacy to stand for freedom.
America is a defender of liberty at home. Abroad, the
U.S. maintains its independence and prudently pursues its interests, while
standing for the idea of political freedom across the globe. The American
people are not required to risk their blood and treasure in defense of
the liberty of others. But the United States cannot have a foreign policy that
fails to reflect the political truths that define it. America stands for the
principles of liberty, independence, and self-government, and its interests are
defined and shaped by those principles.
America does have a special role in the world—one
that is morally and philosophically grounded in the principles of human
liberty, and in its sense of justice. This means that the true consistency of
American foreign policy is to be found not in its policies, which prudently
change and adapt, but in its guiding principles, which are unchanging and
permanent.
America’s perpetual purpose in the world was exemplified
and best articulated by America’s Founders. John Quincy Adams, the principal
author of the Monroe Doctrine, observed that America’s “glory is not dominion, but
liberty. Her march is the march of the mind.”[6]
While America “goes not abroad in search of monsters to
destroy,” Adams continued, we must remember that the United States holds both
“a spear and a shield.” The motto etched upon America’s shield is “Freedom,
Independence, Peace.” It is this
motto, Adams concludes, that “has been her declaration: this has been, as far as her necessary intercourse with the rest of mankind would permit, her practice.”[7]
motto, Adams concludes, that “has been her declaration: this has been, as far as her necessary intercourse with the rest of mankind would permit, her practice.”[7]
America’s independence and its commitment to civil and
religious freedom has made the United States a prosperous nation, and that
prosperity has made it strong. America’s principles have also made it a just
nation. In order to safeguard these blessings of liberty, the United States
will maintain its national independence, but it will not shy away from
identifying and, if necessary, fighting the monsters of despotism in order to
protect its interests, defend freedom, and preserve peace.
From Bunker Hill to the Berlin Wall, the American love of
liberty has inspired a commitment to see the cause of liberty triumph abroad.
As long as America is guided by its principles, the United States will not only
continue to enjoy the blessings of liberty at home, but will also maintain its
stand for freedom in the world.
Marion Smith is a graduate fellow in the B. Kenneth Simon
Center for American Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
Enduring Truths
- George
Washington’s Farewell Address
In his final message to his fellow citizens, George Washington urged all Americans to remember the value of the Union, to respect and uphold the Constitution, to resist the spirit of party, to value religion, and to practice enlightened and independent patriotism in their policy towards foreign nations. - Matthew
Spalding, “America’s
Founders and the Principles of Foreign Policy: Sovereign Independence,
National Interests, and the Cause of Liberty in the World”
Matthew Spalding explains what America’s founding principles mean for understanding America’s place in the world today. In order to protect its constitutional system of government and pursue its national interests, the United States must continue to maintain its independence in world affairs. - Marion
Smith, “The
Myth of Isolationism (Part I): American Leadership and the Cause of
Liberty”
Were the Founders isolationists? Marion Smith sheds light on one of the most common myths about early U.S. foreign policy. The words and examples of the Founders make it clear that America was never intended to be isolated from the world. Indeed, America was to be a defender of freedom in the world.
Current Issues
- LEADERSHIP.
Kim R. Holmes, Liberty’s Best Hope, The Heritage Foundation, 2008.
Since the early days of the American Republic, the United States has been a beacon of liberty in the world. Kim Holmes argues that America must continue this tradition of leadership in the 21st century. - PUBLIC
DIPLOMACY. Carnes Lord and Helle C. Dale, “Public
Diplomacy and the Cold War: Lessons Learned,” September 18, 2007.
During the Cold War, the principles of human liberty were confronted by the ideology of Communism. In this struggle of ideas, the United States played an indispensible role in standing for liberty, not merely against the threat of tyranny. - INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATIONS. Kim R. Holmes, “Smart
Multilateralism: When and When Not to Rely on the United Nations,” September 21, 2010.
Kim Holmes argues that, if the United States is to advance its many interests in the world, it needs to pursue multilateral diplomacy in a smarter, more pragmatic manner. The U.S. should act multilaterally only when it would be in America’s interests, and when it will serve to advance liberty.
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