By James David Dickson on 5.28.08 @ 12:07AM
A new film explores what might happen if America threw in the towel.
Senator William Turner wants to make his vision of the American
Dream a reality. The costs of his program are high. He pledges to
pay for them by completely withdrawing the U.S. military from
foreign soil.
"If we slashed our military budget in half we'd have funds for
fuel-cell plants, homeland defense, and universal healthcare,"
Turner tells reporters while announcing he's running for president.
"Germany, Japan, South Korea -- three of the wealthiest nations on
earth. Why is our military defending them?"
Turner, a lightly fictionalized combination of Ron Paul and
Barack Obama, then wins and implements his plan. This serves as a
vehicle for documentary director Mitch Anderson to explore the
question: Just what would the world look like if America
withdrew?
To find out, Anderson seeks out the opinions of scholars and
journalists from Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. Here's a
rundown of what he finds out, as related by his new docudrama
The World Without Us:
Europe: Since World War II, Europe has let the
line go slack on security. During the Cold War it was understood
that America would deter and if necessary defend against Soviet
aggression.
Today, as the European Union boasts the largest economy in the
world, America is still defending Europe. The European community,
in its various incarnations, has always seen itself as an economic
arrangement, not a military one.
So when the Balkans exploded in the 1990s, European national
parliaments vainly debated taking action. When France and the
Netherlands actually did send troops, they weren't allowed to
initiate firefights or defend civilians, thus defeating their role
as "peacekeepers." Says Martin Hutterbrink, a German journalist:
"Without America, the killing would have gone on."
The Middle East: Critics like Senator Turner
say that America's special relationship with Saudi Arabia
undermines every word of U.S. diplomats' "democratization" talk.
Further, they point out, Kuwait -- the nation America saved in the
first Gulf War -- offers universal free education and land to its
citizens, all paid for from oil revenues, even as Americans face
skyrocketing tuition and high prices at the pump.
America's Middle East policy is certainly flawed, the film
admits. The repressive Saudis tarnish America's commitment to
democratization in the region. Europe and Asia rely far more
heavily upon Middle Eastern oil, yet those commerce lanes are kept
open by U.S. naval installations. But September 11 showed that our
two-ocean buffer is no fortress. And as bad as things are now,
allowing the Iranians carte blanche in the Middle East would be
utterly disastrous.
Asia: America's allies in Asia are wealthy and
technologically advanced, but threatened by geography.
South Korea, the twelfth richest nation on earth, has twice as
many people as its neighbor to the north, and twenty times the
money. But with Seoul a mere 40 miles to the North Korean border,
the ancient capital city is especially vulnerable to a massive
Northern attack. Thirty thousand American troops man the
demilitarized zone between the two nations. If they left the
peninsula would be up for grabs -- and the North would be
determined to win.
Japan is a pacifist nation with a militarist past, a nation
whose neighbors haven't forgotten its past atrocities. Having felt
the wrath of nuclear weapons, Japan refuses to procure them,
either, leaving its defense largely to America. Japan is like a
tiger that's been de-fanged, and given its behavior in the 20th
century, the world can sleep easier for it.
THE WORLD WITHOUT US ends with Japan being savaged by a
nuclear attack from one of its neighbors. Three survivors remain,
seeking out others braving the Nuclear Winter. Back in America,
President Turner, campaigning for re-election, crows about how
America's withdrawal from the world made his country safer and more
prosperous.
Juxtaposed against the destruction in Japan, Turner's rhetoric
seems triumphal and even heartless. But the real issue, one which
Anderson's film does not address, is that foreign critics want it
both ways. When America intervenes, it's "interfering." When
America doesn't intervene, it is "letting people die," as critics
accused after the Tsunami of 2005.
Anderson's film is thought-provoking and well timed. But whether
you'll ever get to see it is another matter. Documentaries and
docudramas aren't usually commercially viable. Name the last five
documentaries you saw that weren't from Michael Moore or about cute
penguins.
"They know they'll never see their money back," Anderson said at
the premiere screening when asked about courting investors. So he's
shifted his focus to television networks. Having spent half his
life savings making the film, he wants to reach the largest
audience possible.
Ironically, Anderson has found audiences easier to reach
internationally than in America. Satellites have broadcast his film
all over the Middle East. Two networks in Israel have shown it, and
even one in Poland. Save for its premiere at the 2008 GI Film Festival, no one
in America has yet had that opportunity.
topics:
Education, Barack Obama, Television, Law, Military, Iran, Israel, European Union, NATO, North Korea, Nuclear Weapons, Oil