Republished on VDARE.COM on March 28, 2003
By Peter Brimelow
National Review, August 6,
1990 v42 n15 p41(2)
CHRISTOPHER HITCHENS is perhaps the
most notable contemporary specimen of what has been
called the
Bollinger Bolshevik. An English leftist now
immigrated to Washington, D.C., he nevertheless has his
work published in the most fashionable American
glossies, and his new survey of the Anglo-American
relationship sports a dust-jacket biography (invariably
author-supplied) carefully pointing out that he was
educated not merely at Oxford but at Balliol, perhaps
the most patrician college there. As with Alexander
Cockburn, this combination of socialism and
snobbery-backed, it must be said, by talent and a
Protestant work ethic both would affect to despise-has
quickly established him at the top of American
liberaldom.
Much of the peculiar structure of
this book appears to be the result of a determination to
recycle freelance articles. One such recycling provides
a poignant example of Hitchens's sociopolitical
androgyny, his ambivalent relationship to
establishments. He visits the
USS Iowa, a World War II battleship recommissioned
by the Reagan Administration and just returned from a
tour of duty in the Middle East. He ingratiates himself
with the Iowa's captain by revealing that he is himself
the son of a Royal Navy officer and saw the last British
battleship,
HMS Vanguard, being towed to the breaker's yard. The
captain knows the punchline: "She slipped her tugs
and ran aground, didn't she? Like she was protesting."
The other officers are summoned and trustingly share
their carefully studied and much-loved British naval
lore. Then Hitchens stands on the bridge to watch a
demonstration broadside-saying a silent valediction to
those faraway Druse villages. And he writes a cheap
sneering account whose substance amounts to little more
than the assertions that the Iowa is a gunboat, that
Joseph Conrad portrayed a gunboat firing into Africa in
his celebrated story of colonialism gone wrong, Heart
of Darkness, and that therefore the whole enterprise
is by implication, in Conrad's phrase,
'incomprehensible."
As befits a Bollinger Bolshevik,
Hitchens's progress through AngloAmerican history
resembles that of a drunk down a corridor, lurching
erratically from wall to wall. This does have the
advantage of bringing some neglected corners into
unusually sharp focus. For example, Hitchens emphasizes
the vital role of
James Burnham, one of NR's original editors, in
formulating the American postWorld War II
interventionist Weltpolitik, supplementing, expanding
upon, and sometimes replacing Britain's global presence.
Hitchens points out striking similarities between
Burnham and the Winston Churchill of the
1946 Fulton "Iron Curtain" speech, which was not
merely a warning against the Soviets but also a call for
Anglo-American cooperation. In fact, both men at
different times proposed schemes of common citizenship
and even formal political union between the two
countries.
But Hitchens's havering has a fatal
disadvantage: he reels right past crucial historical
episodes. Thus, this study of American and British
foreign policy contains virtually no reference to the
Soviet Union, China, the Korean War, or Israel.
Britain's efforts to embroil the U.S. in both World Wars
loom large-perhaps too large-but there is no discussion
of why Britain itself became embroiled, or whether the
American Government had its own reasons (such as Pearl
Harbor) for going along. The British elite's abrupt
decision to abandon the Empire after 1945, the
subsequent geopolitical implosion of Britain, and the
fact that during this period Britain arguably sometimes
operated to the left of the U.S. in world politics is
ignored. Despite American pleas, the British recognized
Red China-and withdrew their forces from the Persian
Gulf. Finally, there is no explanation of why Britain is
now on the verge of political union not with the U. S.
but with a concert of its traditional European enemies,
or why the U. S. has blindly supported this implicitly
anti-American endeavor.
For this and other reasons,
Hitchens's book is essentially worthless as a guide to
the Anglo-American relationship. It cannot even be said
to have a thesis in any serious sense. Instead it has a
sort of insinuation that Anglophilia, British influence,
and even a desire to prop up British power were
responsible for drawing the U.S. into a worldwide role.
Hitchens's omissions conveniently
make this easier to argue. For instance, Korea was never
a British interest and the British government was
dubious about the conflict, but nevertheless sent troops
at the U.S.'s behest. For that matter, it would be
equally possible to argue that U. S. policy has
paradoxically propped up Soviet power, materially during
World War II and the detente era, and diplomatically
through containment, which tacitly conceded a Soviet
sphere of interest.
Even Hitchens cannot ignore the
fact that Washington was often actively hostile to
Britain's imperial interests during and after World War
II. But this is no problem for a student of the
dialectic. Hitchens simply posits an American
"anti-imperial imperialism" which was hostile to the
British even while emulating them.
The value of Hitchens's work is
rather as a buoy marking the submerged shoals of the
left-wing psyche. It is, for example, profoundly if
surreptitiously emotional. Smearing the Iowa as a
gunboat is typical of its style of argument. Hitchens's
opinions are generally conveyed adjectivally
("sports-check Republican"). And, of course, he is
ultimately motivated by self-hatred. By the final
chapter, it is clear that the dread disease of
"imperialism," from which he hopes the U.S. and Britain
are recovering in this new world without conquerors,"
actually consists of any tangible presence on the world
stage at all.
All of this comes together in
Hitchens's hysterical reaction to any supposed sign that
the Anglo-American relationship has an ethnic
underpinning, or that the U.S. itself has an ethnic
identity that might be affected by immigration policy.
Thus Hitchens insists on portraying the
anti-bilingualism lobby
"U.S. English" as a nativist anti-immigration
conspiracy, although its directors are openly divided on
the issue and the organization itself explicitly focuses
on the single issue of language. The overwrought
left-wing sensibility cannot be trusted to handle basic
factual distinctions of this sort.
What is the truth about the
AngloAmerican relationship? Both countries are
democracies, and their foreign policy is accordingly too
chaotic to be expressed as one theme, least of all
Hitchens's. The relationship between them is ultimately
one between peoples rather than one between the elites
that attract Hitchens--the Royal Navy buffs in the
wardroom of the Iowa being a case in point. Because the
peoples speak the same language, they are in some sense
members each of the other, sharing common cultural
values of liberty, economic liberalism, and respect for
law rather than power. Which is why Hitchens's
self-hatred effortlessly embraces both.