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98 Foreign Aff. 84 (2019)
The Nonintervention Delusion

handle is hein.journals/fora98 and id is 1186 raw text is: 





The Nonintervention

Delusion


What War Is Good For

Richard Fontaine
As the casualties and financial   costs of the United States' Mid-
        die Eastern wars have mounted, Americans' appetite for new
        interventions-and their commitment to existing ones-has
understandably diminished. The conventional wisdom now holds that
the next phase in the United States' global life should be marked by
military restraint, allowing Washington to focus on other pressing
issues. This position seems to be one of the few principles uniting
actors as diverse as foreign policy realists, progressives, nearly all of
the presidential candidates in the 2020 Democratic primary, and
President Donald Trump.
   It's not hard to see why Americans would look at U.S. military
involvement in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya and conclude that such
interventions should never be repeated. The costs of these wars have
been extraordinary: at a rally in Ohio in April 2018, Trump estimated
them  at $7 trillion over 17 years and concluded that the country has
nothing to show for the effort except death and destruction. Al-
though the precise financial cost depends on how one counts, what is
certain is that more than 4,500 U.S. military personnel have been
killed in Iraq and nearly 2,500 in Afghanistan, plus tens of thousands
injured in both wars-to say nothing of the casualties among allied
forces, military contractors, and local civilians. Critics of these resource-
intensive operations blame them for bogging down the United States
in a region of second-tier importance and distracting Washington
from the greater threats of China and Russia, as well as from pressing
domestic issues.

RICHARD FONTAINE is CEO of the Center for a New American Security. He has worked
at the U.S. State Department, at the National Security Council, and as a foreign policy
adviser for U.S. Senator John McCain.


84   FOREIGN   AFFAIRS

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