Follow us on social

google cta
carrier group

How to overthrow America's war cartel

A new book calling for retrenchment says the country needs a radical overhaul of domestic politics, including elections and Congress.

Analysis | Washington Politics
google cta
google cta

The U.S. must retrench for the sake of its own security, but there are many domestic political obstacles that make retrenchment practically impossible under current conditions. The status quo strategy of military primacy is too deeply entrenched and there are too many established interests committed to its preservation.

To change that, there needs to be a major overhaul of America’s domestic political system and its foreign policy, and neither can succeed without the other. That is the heart of Peter Harris’ case for reform in his excellent new book, “Why America Can’t Retrench (And How It Might).”

It is essential reading for advocates of foreign policy restraint.

The first half of the book details how the U.S. adopted a strategy of military primacy and how that strategy transformed the country. Harris defines military primacy as “a grand strategy of maintaining and exploiting America’s military advantages over global and regional competitors, with a view to leveraging these structural advantages in service of favorable political and economic outcomes.”

America’s current strategy of primacy is not only ill-suited to an increasingly multipolar world, but it also represents a serious threat to the security of our country by putting the United States on potential collision course with great power rivals. As Harris puts it, “Even if it is accepted that primacy made some sense during the so-called ‘unipolar moment’…it cannot be argued that the same unilateralist policies are suited to a world that can punch back.”

The U.S. needs a less ambitious and dangerous strategy, and to get to it the U.S. needs retrenchment. Retrenchment is simply “the reduction of overseas forces and security obligations.”

While Harris is interested in scaling back America’s military footprint, he makes clear that he believes that U.S. international engagement in every other respect should continue and, in some cases, intensify. The foreign policy agenda he spells out in the final chapter is what he calls “internationalism anew” with an emphasis on increased peaceful American engagement with the rest of the world. Even as the U.S. military pulls back from its forward-deployed positions, the U.S. would remain very much involved in global affairs.

The obstacles to reform and retrenchment are considerable. Any system that has been in place for 80 years would be difficult to alter. The “militarist redoubt,” as Harris sometimes refers to it, is going to be unusually difficult to overcome. Arguments for retrenchment do not get anything like a fair hearing in the current system because, as Harris shows, the “US political system is designed to reject them.”

The institutions of the national security state exist to implement a strategy of primacy, and that has created entrenched interests in Washington and across the country hostile to any major overhauls. Bureaucrats working in the government, local communities benefiting from military spending, and ideologues wishing to use U.S. power to advance their agendas are all likely to resist any significant changes to the existing strategy. As Harris tells us, “Simply put, programmatic attempts at retrenchment are doomed to failure in the present context because there are too many Americans who profit from militarism, who regard primacy as a means of promoting their values abroad, or who would be across-the-board retrenchment as an assault on their sense of national identity.”

Harris’ analysis of the barriers to changing U.S. foreign policy can seem disheartening at first, but he is not counseling despair. He points out that “informed and analytical description can be a clarion call to evaluate the status quo when otherwise it might have gone unchallenged or even unnoticed.” If advocates of restraint are to make any headway in changing how the U.S. operates in the world, it is critical to have a clear view of the steep and treacherous climb ahead of us.

The proposals for domestic renewal in the book may seem overly ambitious, but they will have to be if they are going to produce the kind of sweeping changes to our political system and foreign policy that need to be made. Among other things, Harris suggests significant changes in our elections and our party system, including moving towards a system of proportional representation.

He calls for Congress to reassert itself in matters of war and to claw back powers from the national security state. Harris also recommends expanding both houses of Congress to make elected officials more responsive to their constituents, and he suggests granting statehood to U.S. territories or incorporating them into existing states so that they are fully represented in the government.

A grand strategy of restraint is Harris’ preferred alternative, but it is worth noting that the political and policy reforms that he wants to see would open up American foreign policy debate. As he says, the “goal is not to replace America’s primacist cartel with a restraint-oriented counterpart, but to imagine a more pluralistic environment within which the American people might be exposed to a wider range of ideas about foreign policy.”

Harris envisions a more inclusive and democratic political system that would also make it possible for the U.S. to retrench.

The U.S. is endangered by the current strategy of primacy. Indeed, Harris says that current strategy is a “recipe for conflict with China.” Primacy makes the U.S. less secure by design, and it “heightens the risks of the United States sleepwalking into a disastrous confrontation with a great-power rival.” To avoid that calamity, the U.S. needs to retrench, and in order to retrench it must reform itself at home.


Top image credit: 240809-N-NH911-1219 PACIFIC OCEAN (Aug. 9, 2024) Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group and Cavour Carrier Strike Group sail in formation. ... (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Apprentice Daniel Kimmelman)
google cta
Analysis | Washington Politics
South Africa: Between Iran and a hard place (Donald Trump)
Top photo credit: President Cyril Ramaphosa (Photo: GCIS/Flickr) and Donald Trump (Gage Skidmore/Flickr)

South Africa: Between Iran and a hard place (Donald Trump)

Africa

South Africa is struggling to unfurl its wings as a leading middle power and advance its relations with its fellow BRICS members while keeping out of the cross hairs of the U.S. president. This has been particularly hard considering that one member of the Global South grouping — Iran — is on Donald Trump’s current list of potential military targets.

South Africa joined BRICS in 2006. The organization is supposed to serve as an intergovernmental forum for member countries to connect on issues related to diplomacy, security, and economics. But the bloc has angered President Trump, who sees it as a threat to American leadership, particularly given China’s membership in the group.

keep readingShow less
Trump Khamanei
Top image credit: Bella1105/shutterstock.com

Could Trump bomb Iran before settling on a rationale?

Middle East

Shifting justifications for a war are never a good sign, and they strongly suggest that the war in question was not warranted.

In the Vietnam War, the principal public rationale of saving South Vietnam from communism got replaced in the minds of the warmakers — especially after losing hope of winning the contest in Vietnam — by the belief that the United States had to keep fighting to preserve its credibility. In the Iraq War, when President George W. Bush’s prewar argument about weapons of mass destruction fell apart, he shifted to a rationale centered on bringing freedom and democracy to Iraq.

keep readingShow less
James Holtsnider
Top image credit: James Holtsnider, U.S. President Donald Trump's nominee to be ambassador to Jordan, testifies before a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on nominations on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., September 11, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

New US ambassador's charm offensive is backfiring in Jordan

Middle East

Since arriving in Amman around three months ago to serve as the U.S. Ambassador to Jordan, James Holtsnider quickly became one of the highest-profile envoys in the Hashemite Kingdom. In addition to presenting his credentials to King Abdullah II, Holtsnider has met with Jordanian soccer players, attended weddings, and joined tribal gatherings.

However, a January 14 request by a U.S. Embassy delegation for the ambassador to offer condolences at the family home of former Karak mayor Abdullah Al-Dmour showed that many Jordanians have little interest in participating in Holtsnider’s public relations initiative. Dmour’s relatives rejected the U.S. ambassador’s wish to visit. Dmour’s tribe issued a statement noting Holtsnider’s request “violates Jordanian tribal customs, which separates the sanctity of mourning from any political presence with public implications.”

keep readingShow less
google cta
Want more of our stories on Google?
Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

LATEST

QIOSK

Newsletter

Subscribe now to our weekly round-up and don't miss a beat with your favorite RS contributors and reporters, as well as staff analysis, opinion, and news promoting a positive, non-partisan vision of U.S. foreign policy.