Commentary: The United States is more normal and less exceptional than you think

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America sees vital interests in every corner of the globe - but it acts otherwise in practice, says the Lowy Institute’s International Security Program's Sam Roggeveen.

US President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris meet about the situation in Israel with members of Biden's Cabinet and national security team in the White House Situation Room on Oct 10, 2023. last Friday . It was a comment bound to get a reaction, and sure enough, economist Adam Tooze has devoted his latest Substack newsletter to the topic.

The exceptionalist mindset is grounded in the idea that the US has vital interests in every corner of the globe. Last Friday’s column by Axios CEO Jim VandeHei and Axios co-founder Mike Allen, which claims to be “based on regular conversations with White House”, illustrates this mindset. At no point do the authors stop to examine the actual stakes for the US in any of these crises. It is simply assumed that they are vital. The article quotes former US Defence Secretary Robert Gates: “There’s this gigantic funnel that sits over the table in the Situation Room. And all the problems in the world end up coming through that funnel to the same eight or 10 people.”The US remains exceptional in the sense that it defines its interests more broadly than any other nation.

 

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