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Beyond
Criticism?
Christian
Brose
In
response to the September 11 attacks, the Bush
Administration broadly reformulated U.S. foreign policy
to confront a post-Cold War world threatened by
terrorist groups, their rogue state sponsors and
proliferating weapons of mass destruction. Ironically,
an allegedly conservative administration eschewed the
status quo and undertook, what was for all intents and
purposes, a revolution in foreign policy thinking.
Preemption was pushed to the forefront of security
strategy. The UN and NATO were called to account. Old
allies were challenged and new ones sought. Engaging the
internal dynamics of states was deemed as much or more
important than responding to their external behavior. In
the wake of this bold initiative, skeptics often had a
difficult time finding firm footing from which to
advance substantive criticisms.
This is slowly beginning to change. As Nikolas Gvosdev
noted in last week’s edition, “The Coalition for a
Realistic Foreign Policy” is a smattering of disparate
critics united to challenging the tenets of
administration policy. Another emerging coalition was on
display this Tuesday and Wednesday at the New American
Strategies for Security and Peace Conference—hosted
jointly by The Century Foundation, The American Prospect
magazine and the Center for American Progress, a new
progressive research institute run by John Podesta.
Whereas the former coalition sought to “redirect our
foreign policy to the defense of vital American
interests”, the New American Strategies conference
sought to go beyond criticism to articulate a thoughtful
liberal or progressive alternative to the Bush
Administration’s foreign policy.
On hand to offer such an alternative were a colorful
smattering of think tankers, former Clinton officials
(including William Perry, Richard Holbrooke and Sandy
Berger), retired military officers, two congressmen,
three senators (Joseph Biden, Hillary Clinton and Chuck
Hagel), a governor, a mayor and presidential candidate
General Wesley Clark. The coalition’s mission statement
proclaimed, “There is
mounting evidence that the present course will weaken
rather than strengthen
America's own security; reduce rather than increase
world stability; and create more hostility towards the
United States rather than admiration for our dynamic
economy and democratic way of life.”
Frustrated with
merely booing from the bleachers, the intellectual core
of the Democratic party is uniting and suiting up to
grapple with the Bush Administration’s provocative
ideas, as well as to offer counter-arguments of its own.
It is
interesting to note, however, the liberal coalition
accepts many of the current administration’s
intellectual points of departure. It agrees that the
United States must today consider preemptive action as
tool of counter-proliferation (albeit one of absolute
last resort). It shares the administration’s emphasis on
the need to better equip the United States to handle
threatening internal dynamics of foreign states. As
would be obvious, the liberal coalition here puts
greater emphasis on poverty, hunger and disease as
transnational threats that can debilitate already
dysfunctional states. They recognize, as does the
administration, that failed states can be a breeding
ground for terrorism.
Here, however, the similarities end, and the liberal
coalition sought to contemplate a different trajectory
from the current course of U.S. foreign policy. Former
National Security Advisor Sandy Berger expressed five
principles that must guide a thoughtful alternative to
the current administration. First, if preemption is a
flawed policy, then what other viable options exist to
deal with states determined to attain weapons of mass
destruction? Second, how must U.S. policy address a
North Korea in the event that it will not be placated
with treaties or security guarantees and is dead set on
going nuclear? Third, how important is it for the United
States to be admired for its character versus respected
for its ability and willingness to wield overwhelming
force? Fourth, what type of leadership should America
pursue in order to rally foreign states in support of
our national interests? Finally, how can this nation’s
resources be allocated more prudently to meet its
expansive national security goals?
With regard to the question of preemptive strikes and
preventive wars, Ivo Daalder of the Brookings Institute
provided the best example of an administration critic
who has begun thinking through their assumptions and
formulating serious challenges. Though he thought the
administration had turned a useful tool of last resort
into a guiding doctrine of U.S. foreign policy, he
viewed preemption as sound in theory and occasionally
necessary in practice. On the whole, however, he viewed
it as self-defeating: proclaiming a “doctrine of
preemption” leads aspiring nuclear powers to speed up
their weapons production, exacerbates the security
dilemma between adversarial countries like India and
Pakistan and encourages states to justify brutal
policies in the name of preempting terrorism.
What is needed, therefore, is a new consensus about the
legitimate use of this seemingly expansive tool. The
debate, Daalder argued, should not be phrased in terms
of “now or never” but rather “how, when and by whom.” If
the UN has historically failed in addressing dangerous
developments within states and if the unilateral
exercise of U.S. power can be impractical, undesirable
and counterproductive, then what is to be the new
paradigm for managing intrastate conflict? This is a
tall task indeed, and it is unsurprising that no
solutions were unveiled.
This was also the case with regard to the other
questions Berger posed about American leadership,
alliances and resource allocation. It was widely agreed
that the Bush Administration behaves arrogantly and
immaturely, as though it is the only country with
legitimate national interests. This disposition was
reminiscent of President Bush’s pre-9/11 talk of the
need for humility in foreign policy, and many panelists
made ironic reference to the President’s early rhetoric
as the touchstone of the emerging liberal position. If
the United States does not take the problems of others
seriously, it was argued, then it should not be
surprised when others do not take America’s concerns
seriously either.
The New American Strategies conference did not
necessarily achieve its goal of going beyond criticism
of the current administration. It did, however, begin an
important (and overdue) bipartisan debate about the new
ideas and realities confronting America’s position in
the post-Cold War world. The Bush Administration has
spearheaded this debate more or less alone since
September 11, and it is in
America’s
interest to have a serious intellectual counterweight to
any prevailing administration. If liberals in general
and the Democratic Party in particular are to offer a
viable platform on national security and foreign policy,
it will emerge out of the vigorous debate of ideas that
is now appearing in a nascent stage.
The big question, however, that remained unanswered at
the conference’s close was how to handle the situation
in Iraq, a problem stabbed at by numerous people in even
more ways. New and better strategies to prosecute the
counterinsurgency campaign and reconstruct the country
were in short supply while criticism was hurled from
every conceivable perspective. For this liberal
coalition to be effective, they must target their
criticisms and coordinate their proposed remedies to
tackle what will undoubtedly be the fundamental foreign
policy issue in the upcoming election, as well as the
main priority of any American administration for the
foreseeable future.
Christian Brose is assistant editor of
The National Interest.
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