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Letters to the Editor
Dear Editor:
In her letter in response to my article “Gunboat
Democracy” (Volume 3, Issue 19), Roberta Cohen makes a
distinction between interventions that are to "save
lives" and “not at all about democracy" and
interventions that are solely intended to promote
democracy. She cites Somalia and Kosovo
as instances of the "save lives intervention.” Cohen
then writes that Grenada was also a case in which
democracy “was not an issue.” Instead, Cohen argues,
President Reagan’s publicly-stated reason for sending in
U.S. troops was “to save lives of American citizens
being held hostage by the [Grenadian] regime.”
First, it is worth mentioning that there were no U.S
hostages at the time of the Grenada invasion. Rather,
the Reagan administration ordered the invasion in order
to, among other things, ensure that a Tehran-style
hostage crisis did not occur. Among the other factors
that led to the invasion was the perception that
Grenada’s hardening alliance with Cuba, the
Soviet Union
and North Korea represented a geopolitical threat to the
United States. If there had not been a Soviet/Cuban
component to the crisis, then there almost certainly
would not have been an invasion.
But in addition to the threat to American lives and raw
geopolitical interests, the invasion of Grenada was
unquestionably about democracy. The vicious regime in
Grenada was antithetical to democracy and the Reagan
Administration made it publicly clear that it intended
to support efforts at building democracy after the
invasion. In fact, even before the Reagan Administration
had made the decision to launch the invasion, Grenada’s
neighboring island nations were begging Washington to
send in the Marines in order to remove the regime and
establish democracy.
To be sure, democracy was not the sole or even critical
factor in the decision to intervene. Yet, Ms. Cohen is
on shaky ground when she argues that Grenada cannot be
seen as a case of democracy by force. Instead of making
this point myself, it is more fitting to listen to the
views of the Grenadian people. A couple of days
following President Reagan’s recent death, the Grenadian
Parliament passed a resolution praising Reagan for his
“significant role in restoring peace and democracy.”
Gunboat democracy pure and simple.
Perhaps an easier way to look at this question of
“democracy by force” is to understand that the United
States will rarely if ever intervene
solely to
promote democracy. Geopolitical considerations, American
lives and humanitarian crises are the sparks that tips
the balance in favor of intervention. This was
certainly true in Vietnam when stopping communist
dominoes was infinitely more important to U.S.
policymakers than was any notion of democracy. Thus, it
is curious that Ms. Cohen selected Vietnam as a case of
a U.S. intervention that was all about democracy. In any
case, it’s a more viable argument to claim that Vietnam
represents one case where the United States
failed to promote democracy by force.
Ms. Cohen could very well be correct that interventions
should normally be reserved for episodes of “mass
starvings, mass killings, or genocide.” Yet, cases such
as Grenada and the invasion of Panama in 1989 suggest
that there might be a time and place for interventions
that do not directly relate to the criteria that Ms.
Cohen puts forth. I also agree that democracy promotion
should not necessarily be a component of every
U.S. intervention.
But these points are
entirely different than arguing that democracy has
never been brought to countries on the barrel of a
gun. Just ask the Grenadians.
Regards,
Russell Crandall
Davidson
College
Dear Editor:
Janusz
Bugajski, in his reply last week to my article in
the June 23 issue of In The National Interest
provides an illustration of the point I was trying to
make – the persistence of zero-sum, Cold War outlooks in
the think tank milieu. The personal aspect of the reply
is perhaps unfortunate, since no particular individual
or institution was at issue, but its contents can help
us understand the milieu situation.
The reply takes the form of throwing my argument back at
me – "[Straus'] comments are the most poignant example
of that other Cold War mentality – namely that America
and Russia were equivalent and basically shared the same
objectives." However, this is a simple mistake; I don't
have an "equivalence" mentality, and the imputation of
it to me in the above sentence is achieved by conflating
two different things: (1) the proposition that "America
and Russia were equivalent", (2) the proposition that
they "basically shared the same objectives." One can
believe either one of these propositions without
believing the other; they have no necessary relation. My
article did have something to do with the second
proposition, but nothing to do with the first – the
"equivalence" one.
For me there is something surrealistic in being
attributed a held-over "equivalence" mentality from the
Cold War. In the days when there really was a moral
equivalence crowd in America, I was always speaking out
against it. I don't have to do so anymore, because that
crowd has left the field in America and moved on
elsewhere. (But I do sometimes have to speak against it
in Moscow nowadays.)
What my article was actually about was not moral
equivalence or moral distance, but the need for a more
effective reconciliation of U.S. and Russian interests,
particularly in Central Asia. After the dramatic regime
change of 1991, a broad review of interests was needed
between Russia and the West, in order to see – with the
passing of the former regime interests that were
specific to the Soviet regime and had global
anti-Western implications – to what extent there were
new shared interests that deserve the effort that would
be needed for making them operational, and residues of
old tit-for-tat adversarial interests that could be
ended by cooperative strategy. In the absence of the
work being sufficiently done on the official level,
independent reviews of the interests have been
undertaken by a number of scholars and by parliamentary
bodies. They have all -- at least, all that I am
familiar with – found that the shared interests of
Russia and the West are considerably more far-reaching
and more fundamental than the opposing ones; that old
mutual oppositions of strategy are standing in the way
of real and vital interests on both sides; that it is
therefore feasible to pursue a more far-reaching
reconciliation of interests with Russia than as yet
achieved; and, if feasible, then necessary.
Whether or not everyone agrees with these propositions,
I hope they're clear enough that they won't be confused
again with moral equivalency propositions.
Further: Russia's "managed democracy" is quite wrongly
identified in Bugajski’s
reply as a continuation of the "democratic centralism"
of Soviet times. Actually, "managed democracy" emerged
in response to the chaos of Russia in the late 1990s and
arranged a coalescence around
the political center rather than the extremes. This came
a number of years after Gorbachev had abolished
"democratic centralism" and the other totalitarian
control structures of the Soviet regime, which had
enforced an ideology of activism and extremism. There
was a sharp historical discontinuity between the two
phenomena. The current Russian regime justifies its
"managed democracy," not as a global norm or a basis for
attacking Western democracy, but as a particular
necessity for stability during its transition -- made
necessary by the immaturity of its society. One may
disagree with the regime's claim of its necessity, but
it would be a poor basis for equating Russia with the
Soviet Union or for viewing it as an internationally
hostile force.
Nevertheless, it seems that a fair number of writers
nowadays are prone to understate the differences between
Russia and the USSR. The actual differences need to be
recalled and kept clearly in mind in a discussion like
this.
Specifically, the USSR was run by a Communist Party with
affiliates and clienteles all around the world. It
defined its goal in terms of global leadership for its
power structure and for its system. It carried on a
worldwide geopolitical and ideological struggle against
the mainstream Western-led world order. It had regime
interests – as distinct from national interests –
considerably more far-reaching than most regimes. These
regime interests gave it not simply various empirical
differences of interest from the West but a global
enmity to the West; the thing that softened the enmity
were the empirical interests,
which overlapped with those of the West.
Russia today has no such global regime interests or
ideological pretensions. There is no global
moral-ideological competition between Russia and the
West. Consequently, no moral equivalency strand of
thought has appeared again in the West vis-à-vis
Russia. No popular movement in the West is attacking the
responsible Western elites for considering themselves
morally superior to Russia; responsible elites are not
striking back by calling this "moral equivalency"
thinking. The whole issue has disappeared as regards
Russia; the surviving fragments of the equivalence
milieu have shifted over to saying that it is the
Islamic world that the West should not consider itself
superior to.
Despite the effective disappearance of equivalence
thinking on Russia in the West, some of the analysis
community is still imputing such an outlook to people as
a way of dismissing them. One wonders: why?
The most likely explanation is that it serves certain
milieu purposes. It is not hard to see how it fits in
with group habits. It was an easy way of dismissing
disagreement in the past; it is tempting to use it the
same way in the present. It can also help sustain group
morale, provide a common language, and facilitate group
consensus. It draws a clear line – and a comforting,
moral-sounding one – between "our side" and "the other
side". But this comes at a cost: the line is misplaced,
large slices of reality are excised from the group's
universe of discourse, and the style is not only
accusatory but unfounded.
Denunciations of "moral equivalency" can be understood
as a part of a demand for an anti-Russian attitude which
can still be sniffed in the air in some circles. It is a
demand that not only excommunicates many good people as
if they were on "the other side", but that has led some
of its own adherents to end up on the actual "other
side" that we face nowadays – the side of the Taliban.
The rise of the Taliban to power was viewed
sympathetically by the U.S. in the mid-1990s, on the
basis of arguments for "strengthening the independence"
of the region from Russia – a goal that was somehow
confused at the time with promoting democracy in the
region. It was a mistake that was terribly costly to
American interests. Russia made some effort to get us to
correct it, but few people over here were ready to
listen to advice from that source.
Ordinary Americans have no difficulty viewing the
American political regime as good and identifying with
its power and purposes, without at the same time taking
a purist view of it or disabling themselves from
recognizing its moral defects and practical mistakes.
And they can take a critical view of Russia's defects
without ascribing malicious virtue-free characteristics
to it, or adopting attitudes that would prevent them
from cooperating where interests are shared.
The description of Russian and American policy in the
reply is almost stereotypically dogmatic in denying
this: "America seeks partnerships with allies and
collaborators (including Russia) ... Russia tolerates
arrangements with America either because it is currently
too weak to oppose them or because it seeks to
pragmatically use U.S. capabilities to leverage and
strengthen its own positions [which were described in
each case as intended for bad purposes, such as crushing
the Chechens and increasing the power of the KGB]."
.
While this way of seeing things is obviously wrong,
given its determinedly negative interpretation of
everything that Russia does, nevertheless there is a
significant milieu that is partial to it. For this
reason, it is not without consequence. Its implications
are clear: 1) It is always right to diminish Russian
power and influence, since the latter is always evil in
intention, 2) It may be alright for the West sometimes
to make use of Russia's cooperation, but since Russia
cooperates only in order to increase its capabilities to
do evil, we must do everything along the way to prevent
any of the benefits from accruing to Russia, and 3) Any
kind of action that can be taken against Russia, should
be taken. One can behave in a completely hostile manner,
all the while stating and believing that one is "seek(ing)
partnerships ... including Russia," since any shortfall
in the resultant cooperation is simply blamed on Russia.
My earlier article had been getting at pretty much the
same point: by insistently attributing a zero-sum
approach to Russia, some Westerners create space for
following zero-sum approaches themselves, while dumping
all the blame on Russia and leaving Russia little choice
but to do what it is accused of in advance.
It is fortunate that Western national officials, faced
with their acute responsibilities to their countries
after September 11, have on the whole taken a more
accurate view. Otherwise no positive sums could have
emerged, and American national interests would have
suffered still worse.
Sincerely,
Ira Straus
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