Skip to Main Content
Boston University
  • Bostonia
  • BU-Today
  • The Brink
  • University Publications

    • Bostonia
    • BU-Today
    • The Brink
Other Publications
BU-Today
  • Sections
News, Opinion, Community

Is God on Our Side?

"

Nearly every day it seems, a new book, a magazine article, or a broadcast pundit assesses the war in Iraq — its origins, its impact on America and its place in the world, and its fallout. But for Andrew Bacevich, a College of Arts and Sciences professor of international relations, the most important voice on these matters comes from the Protestant theologian Reinhold Niebuhr more than half a century ago.

In 1952, Niebuhr wrote the book The Irony of American History, which assailed the enduring idea of America as exceptionally virtuous among nations, favored by God to guide world history according to his plan. Niebuhr instead argued for moral realism and statecraft conducted with an awareness of history’s moral ambiguity, the limits of power, and possible unanticipated consequences of global ambition.   

Bacevich, a conservative military veteran and a harsh critic of George W. Bush’s foreign policy, regards Niebuhr as a prophet whose ideas not only explain America’s struggle in Iraq, but also offer a palliative to a national self-righteousness that Bacevich considers illusory and ultimately self-destructive.

Bacevich will call for a “Niebuhrian revival,” in Boston University’s 2007 University Lecture, Illusions of Managing History: The Enduring Relevance of Reinhold Niebuhr, tonight at the Tsai Performance Center. Established in 1950 to honor faculty engaged in outstanding research, the University Lecture is an opportunity for the members of the BU community and the public to hear a distinguished scholar discuss a topic of recognized excellence.     

Bacevich, who fought in Vietnam and retired as an Army colonel after more than 20 years of service, first read Niebuhr’s book a decade ago. “I was immediately struck that it was the most profound interpretation of American foreign policy that I’d ever read,” he says. “And the insights that it contains were directly relevant to the problems we face in the post–Cold War, and now in the post-9/11, world.”

Bacevich acknowledges that Niebuhr’s ideas — that America is not predestined, as John Winthrop said, to be a “city upon a hill,” that our nation’s influence, particularly of the military sort, is not inevitably virtuous — are heresy to those who believe in national themes that have endured for centuries and have been amplified in the speeches of political leaders from every party. He points out that while The Irony of American History is a fixture on the reading list for his class Ideas in American Foreign Policy, the book has been out of print for years.

Nevertheless, says Bacevich, despite all Niebuhr’s words of caution and moral realism, the theologian was no isolationist.

“Niebuhr recognized that international politics are complex and perplexing and almost impossible to forecast,” he says, “which doesn’t mean you don’t act as a nation state. It means that you act with care and with a great awareness of unanticipated consequences.”

Bacevich has echoed Niebuhr’s philosophy in criticizing Bush and the doctrine of preventive war to remake the Middle East, criticism that began before the Iraq invasion.

“If, as seems probable, the effort encounters greater resistance than its architects imagine,” he wrote in a Los Angeles Times opinion article last March, “our way of life may find itself tested in ways that will make the Vietnam War look like a mere blip in American history.”

The violence that the Iraq war has unleashed became tragically personal for Bacevich this spring when his 27-year-old son, First Lieutenant Andrew J. Bacevich (CGS’01, COM’03), was killed by a bomb blast in Iraq. 

Indeed, the realities of war, Bacevich says, can lead people to make “the argument that ideas today don’t play a significant role in foreign affairs.” Nevertheless, he says, “to the extent that ideas do matter, I think there is a growing appreciation of Niebuhr’s relevance to our times.”

The Irony of American History is not a “prescription of what U.S. policy should be with regard to Iraq or Islamic radicalism,” he says. “You read the book to recognize the extent to which Americans over time have not been fully aware or fully honest about the motivations behind our nation’s actions. You read it as a cautionary tale.”

The 2007 University Lecture, which is free and open to the public, is today, October 9, at 6:30 p.m. at the Tsai Performance Center, 685 Commonwealth Avenue.

Chris Berdik can be reached at cberdik@bu.edu.

 

"

Explore Related Topics:

  • Faculty
  • Global
  • Share this story

Share

Is God on Our Side?

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print

Latest from BU Today

  • Varsity Sports

    Women’s Basketball Advances to Patriot League Semifinals for First Time

  • Student Life

    Terriers in Charge: Elizabeth Slade (ENG’20)

  • Varsity Sports

    Men’s Basketball Terriers Go Head-to-Head with Colgate in Patriot League Championship Wednesday in New York

  • University News

    BU Puts Plan for Remote Learning in Place if Coronavirus Forces Campus Closure

  • Student Life

    Terriers in Charge: Valerie Nam (Sargent’20)

  • Varsity Sports

    BU Men’s Basketball Advances to Patriot League Semifinals, Hosts Bucknell Sunday

  • Fine Arts

    Accurate Art

  • Things-to-do

    Spring Break in Boston? There’s Lots on Offer

  • Varsity Sports

    Men’s Lacrosse Hungry to Take Program to Next Level

  • Campus Life

    BU Suspends Out-of-State Alternative Service Break Trips as Coronavirus Spreads

  • Student Clubs

    What’s New, What’s Hot on WTBU

  • Voices & Opinion

    POV: We Need Unemployment Insurance to Protect Workers and the Economy from Coronavirus

  • In the City

    Getting to Know Your Neighborhood: Roxbury

  • Arts & Culture

    Creator and Cast of ABC’s A Million Little Things Visits BU Tomorrow, Will Screen Latest Episode

  • Varsity Sports

    Women’s Lacrosse Sees Offense as Key to a 2020 Patriot League Championship

  • Computational Science

    Game Changer: Azer Bestavros’ Journey from Egypt to Cambridge to BU’s Computing Mastermind

  • Coronavirus

    Explaining BU’s Coronavirus Plan

  • Construction

    Private Development Project Advances Albany Street Makeover

  • University News

    BU Launches Coronavirus Website

  • Politics

    Video: Students on the Issues That Matter Most to Them in the 2020 Presidential Election

Section navigation

  • Sections
  • Must Reads
  • Videos
  • Series
  • Close-ups
  • Archives
  • About + Contact
Get Our Email

Explore Our Publications

Bostonia

Boston University’s Alumni Magazine

BU-Today

News, Opinion, Community

The Brink

Pioneering Research from Boston University

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Youtube
  • Linked-In
© Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
© 2025 Trustees of Boston UniversityPrivacy StatementAccessibility
Boston University
Notice of Non-Discrimination: Boston University policy prohibits discrimination against any individual on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, physical or mental disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, genetic information, military service, pregnancy or pregnancy-related condition, or because of marital, parental, or veteran status, and acts in conformity with all applicable state and federal laws. This policy extends to all rights, privileges, programs and activities, including admissions, financial assistance, educational and athletic programs, housing, employment, compensation, employee benefits, and the providing of, or access to, University services or facilities. See BU’s Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Policy.
Search
Boston University Masterplate
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
Is God on Our Side?
0
share this