I have followed US Politics closely since I was in my teens. There are reasons for this, starting with My Lai, and much reinforced by my perception, at age seventeen, that Richard Nixon was crazy enough to start a nuclear war to create an insane distraction from Watergate. That scared me badly and it was years before I got over it
Anyway, the way I see US politics over my lifetime is that it has been dominated by a kind of unholy succession process: Joe McArthy begat Richard Nixon; Richard Nixon adopted Ronald Reagan (after Reagan’s opportunistic reversal at the 1968 Republican convention); and Reagan begat George W Bush. I don’t mean they are all the same, of course not, but there is lots of continuity between them while, in contrast, the other strands in US politics have each been represented by one-off presidencies, disconnected from each other. Some of the ‘others’ have been competent (Eisenhower, Clinton, Bush Senior) while some have not (Johnson and Carter) but none have left successors who could follow up the capable things they did. In contrast the McArthy succession, from the point at which Nixon broke through to the presidency, haven’t been interested in competence. I am not always sure what they are interested in – ideology sometimes but not always (think of Reagan’s budget deficits) but I suspect they have been held together as much by personal vanity and loyalty to each other and their collective style of doing business, as anything else.
Unfortunately that means I can get things wrong. In this case Reagan incompetently boosted Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda but Bush senior and Bill Clinton successfully reversed those policies, damaged Saddam’s imperialist ambitions and drove Al Qaeda out of Somalia. All very good. I don’t mean their policies were one hundred percent successful, but they were rational and reasonably well planned. However, then comes my mistake; mine and, I think, Tony Blair’s; which is that when Bush junior seemed to adopt his father’s policies for Iraq and Clinton’s for Al Qaeda, that somehow the momentum of events – pre-existing plans, a collection of competent analysts, etc. would make things work. It was always worrying, but I was reassured when Tony Blair publicly supported Bush because I thought (and I think he thought) that UK involvement might constrain Bush’s worst excesses. However, even though I think that constraint has had some good effects, it hasn’t been enough. My mistake, now and throughout my adult life, has been to underestimate just how much colourful, imaginative work the McArthy tendency in US politics can bring to incompetence; just how far they will go to turn good policies into disasters; and just how far the malice and conceit which seems to motivate them can turn us, who ought to be natural allies for the US, into fearful, dismayed, depressed opponents.
There you go. This is a long post, for which I apologise. In short, Anne Applebaum is right to say that potential US allies are put off by US incompetence, but to add that if you keep voting for these monsters, and if you don’t organise a coherent opposition instead of one-off counter-campaigns, it is going to keep happening.