29

In the MCU, Captain America is the leader of the Avengers, who were operating for SHIELD (at least until its destruction), which itself was under the command of a mysterious "World Council".

But, at the same time, Captain America started his superhero career as an American soldier. He is still a symbol for Americans and a symbol of America outside his country.

What is Captain America's true allegiance? The movies’ dangers are so huge that the interests of the USA coincide with those of the world, but is it stated somewhere in the movies which side he would choose if the USA had interests that were in contradiction with those of the rest of the world?

I am mostly interested in answers about the MCU, but I am not sure there is conclusive information in it. In that case, I would be happy to hear about the comics.

Mithical
  • 38,898
  • 17
  • 178
  • 229
Taladris
  • 8,895
  • 7
  • 53
  • 89

2 Answers2

37

Captain America is conceptually an unabashed idealist. His allegiance is to "the USA as it should be".

In a conflict between the USA and anyone, he would

  • support the USA (or rather, its government) if its goals and actions are morally sound,
  • oppose the US government (using legitimate democratic channels preferably) in the opposite case,
  • and in the case of a conflict of legitimate interests on both sides, he would try to enable the compromise that is most compatible with American values.

The latter two would be difficult to write though, as they require a politician respectively a diplomat as protagonist, not the soldier that Cap is.

Mark Rogers
  • 23,037
  • 19
  • 108
  • 160
Michael Borgwardt
  • 17,650
  • 2
  • 71
  • 90
  • 12
    "Oppose the US government (using legitimate democratic channels)" Is that what you call was happening in Civil War (For comics cap)? Or Even in CA:TWS? Cap has no problem being an outlaw if it means upholding what he thinks is morally right and in-line with what the USA should be. – Thorn May 19 '15 at 13:21
  • 7
    @Thorn: Let me clarify: he'd use legitimate channels as much as possible – Michael Borgwardt May 19 '15 at 13:32
  • 2
    @Thorn for the record, Cap DID try to reason with Maria Hill before it all hit the fan (in the comics). In "Winter Soldier", he never really had a chance to try things diplomatically before HYDRA forced his hand. But yes, ultimately, he will do what he believes is right despite what anyone else thinks. – Omegacron May 19 '15 at 14:21
  • 13
    I'd love to watch the movie where Cap goes door to door collecting signatures for a petition. Or organizes a rally. –  May 19 '15 at 17:34
  • 6
    So Captain America is basically Ron Paul. Got it. – hownowbrowncow May 19 '15 at 17:42
  • @Keen oh great, now I'm sure I've got an artificially placed memory in which I remember the Cap doing exactly that! –  May 19 '15 at 19:33
  • Is there any canon backup for any of those assertions? (not saying you're wrong) – DVK-on-Ahch-To May 28 '15 at 00:09
  • 1
    @hownowbrowncow that's assuming Ron Paul's stances are logically and morally sound... sometimes that's quite a stretch. – TylerH Jul 17 '17 at 15:49
  • "if its goals and actions are morally sound". But who decides moral soundness? (There have been a lot of people who've asserted "moral soundness" in their actions, and I've thought their actions to be highly immoral. – RonJohn May 09 '18 at 23:31
  • @RonJohn: a very good question, probably one of the most difficult in philosophy - and a bit beyond the scope of a typical superhero comic book. – Michael Borgwardt May 10 '18 at 09:25
  • @MichaelBorgwardt the Fhnuzoag answer has the best answer: "as he understands them." – RonJohn May 10 '18 at 12:40
29

Captain America's true allegiance is to the ideals of America as he understands them.

http://prettyfakes.com/2006/11/america-is-a-piece-of-trash/

enter image description here

Fhnuzoag
  • 1,118
  • 8
  • 11