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Thoughts
on the Present Situation: An Interview with Zbigniew
Brzezinski
March
26, 2003
Q:
As the war in Iraq continues, what are your
thoughts on its progress?
A:
While at this stage it is too early to make any
categorical judgments, it would appear that before too
long, it is in the interest of U.S.
credibility--especially the Bush Administration's
credibility--to demonstrate tangibly that Iraq has--or
has had--weapons of mass destruction.
(Since Saddam is fighting for his life it would
be surprising, and rather strange, if he didn't use the
weapons of mass destruction that he is said to have.) Secondly, one would also hope that there will be more evident
demonstrations that the Iraqi people are welcoming their
"liberation."
Both issues,
after all, were central to the U.S. case for undertaking
what has been undertaken.
Q:
Is the conduct of the war with Iraq further
threatening the trans-Atlantic relationship?
A: It seems to
me that the conduct of the war itself is not affecting,
as of yet, the trans-Atlantic relationship.
Disagreement as whether the war should be have
been undertaken by the United States and Britain
alone--that issue keeps percolating.
Whether the
relationship will worsen or whether there will be a
reconciliation depends on how the United States acts in
the wake of its eventual but inevitable military victory
in Iraq.
Q:
What are those factors, then, that might repair
or further erode the trans-Atlantic relationship?
A:
A good clue can be found in the last two major
public statements by Prime Minister Tony Blair. He clearly put on record what our British ally--and by
extension many other Europeans--think.
First, there must be a major American effort to
seriously address the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
If the United States seriously engages that
issue--and that issue is the most serious source of Arab
hostility to the United States--some stability may
ensue. The
second is how the United States handles the humanitarian
situation in Iraq, and the question as to with what
rapidity the United States disengages as an occupying
power. If both are addressed, there is some possibility that the
trans-Atlantic cleavages will narrow.
However, if
the temptation of victory leads to follow-up campaigns
against Syria, Iran or Saudi Arabia, the probabilities
are high that the United States might find itself even
more alone.
Q:
What is motivating some (within and without the
Bush Administration) to advocate policies that might
further damage America's relationship with Europe?
A:
It is hard to analyze the motives of those
concerned unless they themselves expound upon them. It does appear that their primary focus in on the Middle East
as a region of dangerous instability, and for some more
specifically, on the security of Israel itself.
This stems in part from the belief that neither
Europe nor the Far East are as volatile as the Middle
East. In
that context there is some element of basic distress at
the attitude of the continental powers and the feeling
that ad hoc
arrangements might serve American interests better.
Personally, I
do not share these views; I believe they would prompt a
progressively accelerated slide into growing
international disorder, and they could potentially
prompt a significant isolation of America on the world
scene, in some respects replicating Israel's isolation
on the regional scene.
Q:
Last week, columnist Charles Krauthammer advised
the president, "Don't go back to the UN", that
while the United States need not formally leave, it
should allow it to "wither away."
(The Washington Post, March 21, 2003)
A:
Extremist reactions to complicated processes
rarely produce constructive solutions.
The United Nations was never the utopia its
uncritical advocates postulated nor the disgraceful
failure its critics claimed.
In some respects, the UN is useful.
In other respects, the UN's very concept of
universality collides with efficiency.
Zbigniew
Brzezinski, former national security advisor to the
president, is the Robert E.
Osgood Professor of American Foreign Policy at Johns
Hopkins University's School of Advanced International
Studies and a Counselor at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies.
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