Our ‘Broken Windows’ World

T. Belman’  I have no idea what his point is. What is his thesis?

By Jim Huylebroek, The New York Times

For years, “broken windows” policing — the idea that the best way to prevent serious crime was to enforce laws against petty crime — was derided by critics as unnecessary, unjust, even racist. So cities across America pulled back from prosecuting the supposedly small stuff, like shoplifting.

Now we’ve seen a jump in violent crime.

Criminologists can debate the causes of the new crime wave. But many people intuitively understand that places in which decay and disorder become the norm are places where crime tends to thrive. That’s because crime is largely a function of environmental cues — of the palpable sense that nobody cares, nobody is in charge, and anything goes.

We now live in a broken-windows world. I would argue that it began a decade ago, when Barack Obama called on Americans to turn a chapter on a decade of war and “focus on nation-building here at home,” which became a theme of his re-election campaign.

It looked like a good bet at the time. Osama bin Laden had just been killed. The surge in Iraq had stabilized the country and decimated Al Qaeda there. The Taliban were on the defensive. Relations with Russia had been “reset.” China was still under the technocratic leadership of Hu Jintao. The Arab Spring, eagerly embraced by Obama as “a chance to pursue the world as it should be,” seemed to many to portend a more hopeful future for the Middle East (though some of us were less sanguine).

Review some of what’s happened since then.

We vacated Iraq in 2011. But instead of getting peace, we got the horror of ISIS, forcing us to send back troops and fight a war that has lasted for years, cost thousands of civilian lives and led to the displacement of more than three million people.

We declared in 2012 that Bashar al-Assad’s use of chemical weapons would cross a red line and lead to a decisive U.S. response. At least as of 2018, he was still gassing his own people. We’ve mostly ceased to notice.

Unrestrained violence in Syria forced millions into exile, bringing unbearable strain on countries like Lebanon while flooding Europe with refugees in 2015. One result was a populist backlash that included Brexit, big electoral gains for neo-fascist parties in France and Germany and a major assist to Donald Trump’s presidential campaign.

China last year unilaterally revoked the “one country, two systems” policy for Hong Kong. Does anyone outside that city even remember?

Vladimir Putin seized Crimea in 2014, six months after the Syrian chemical-weapons crisis, and was met by a muted response. Putin fomented a pro-Russian insurrection in eastern Ukraine and was met by a muted response. Putin sent armed forces to support al-Assad in Syria and was met by a muted response. Putin interfered in our elections and was met by a muted response.

More recently, President Biden has offered tough talk on Putin. But when it came to blocking Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany, his administration offered a muted response.

It’s in this global context that the catastrophe in Afghanistan is playing out. Beyond the humanitarian calamity it represents for the Afghan people, the political debacle it represents for Biden (though he scarcely appears aware of it), and the national disgrace it represents for Americans who don’t think we should go begging to the Taliban to extend our exit deadline, the Afghan surrender is the most visible evidence that the era of Pax Americana is over.

We have turned the corner into a world of unlit streets, more hospitable to predators than it is to prey.

In this world, the temptation can only grow stronger for Putin to break the back of NATO by picking off a vulnerable member like Latvia (where a quarter of the population is ethnically Russian and the opportunities for subversion are great). Ditto for China seizing Taiwan. For that matter, what keeps the Taliban (or some nominal offshoot that provides the Taliban with plausible deniability) from taking hundreds of stranded Westerners hostage and humiliating Biden just as Iranian revolutionaries once humiliated Jimmy Carter?

Some pundits lightly dismiss the notion of credibility in statecraft. But foreign policy is also conducted by taking the measure of your opponents, as John F. Kennedy learned after Nikita Khrushchev thrashed him at their summit in Vienna and built the Berlin Wall two months later.

If you’re wondering why remote and God-forsaken Afghanistan matters in places of allegedly greater strategic relevance to the United States, ask yourself what signals this bungled withdrawal — the overconfident predictions, the lousy military intelligence, the incompetent diplomatic coordination, the unwillingness to stand by allies — sends about our capacity to deal with a more serious adversary, especially one that can hold the American heartland at risk.

Critics of the past 75 years of American foreign policy have consistently attacked the idea, and counted the costs, of the United States as the world’s policeman. They are soon to learn just how high the costs can go when the policeman walks off the job.

August 25, 2021 | 5 Comments »

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5 Comments / 5 Comments

  1. @Sebastien Zorn
    You raise an interesting question: Do the Dems know or care about policy? They transparently pursue both riches and power, but as far as policy goes, it’s hard to see any method to the madness, beyond assuring themselves more riches and more power. That they would work so hard, however, to promote national suicide, even to the ultimate detriment of their own avariciousness, demonstrates either madness, or malicious intent, or both.

    How is mental illness usually treated? First, the afflicted person must be prevented from doing further harm to themselves or others. Only then treatment can begin.

    How is malicious intent addressed? First, it must be recognized for what it is, ‘sedition’, then go after it by any means necessary. Like cancer, it is an existential threat.

    Our national body is terribly sick, mentally and physically. The healing can only begin with bitter medicine. It must be done.

  2. The Times probably doesn’t mind printing it because the Dem candidate, Adams, is a law and order guy, and Bush and his supporters are in the anti-Trump camp. they don’t really seem to care about policy on the merits all that much in the long run. It’s a kind of tribal politics. You just have to be anti-Trump. I mean look at who they championed against Trump. Biden, who authored the draconic 3 times you’re out (which I don’t necessarily have a problem with – I can’t believe there are people walking around who have been jailed 9, 10 times for felonies) crime bill that the Dems were now condemning as racist when Trump liberalized those laws! If you look at it from a policy perspectivem it’s not rational. It’s almost religious. That’s the irony, here. Even religious Trump supporters support him because they agree with him on policy. The Dems don’t even know or care about policies have the time and just repeat gossip because it’s just about “well this is how our crowd votes and I don’t want to be left out.”

  3. His thesis is that Putin is out to break the back of NATO because New York has unlit streets and it’s Obama’s fault. The police should be arresting everybody for everything and the US military should be conquering rogue regimes and nation-building everywhere. He sounds like a neoconservative from 20 years ago saying let’s just go back to the way we did it then. Rudy Giuliani for mayor and GW Bush for President.