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From: "R. A. Hettinga" <rah@shipwright.com>
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Subject: The Next World Order
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Date: Tue, 24 Sep 2002 09:52:15 -0400
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http://newyorker.com/fact/content/?020401fa_FACT1
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The New Yorker
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THE NEXT WORLD ORDER
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by NICHOLAS LEMANN
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The Bush Administration may have a brand-new doctrine of power.
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Issue of 2002-04-01
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Posted 2002-03-25
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When there is a change of command-and not just in government-the new people
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often persuade themselves that the old people were much worse than anyone
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suspected. This feeling seems especially intense in the Bush
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Administration, perhaps because Bill Clinton has been bracketed by a
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father-son team. It's easy for people in the Administration to believe
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that, after an unfortunate eight-year interlude, the Bush family has
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resumed its governance-and about time, too.
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The Bush Administration's sense that the Clinton years were a waste, or
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worse, is strongest in the realms of foreign policy and military affairs.
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Republicans tend to regard Democrats as untrustworthy in defense and
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foreign policy, anyway, in ways that coincide with what people think of as
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Clinton's weak points: an eagerness to please, a lack of discipline.
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Condoleezza Rice, Bush's national-security adviser, wrote an article in
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Foreign Affairs two years ago in which she contemptuously accused Clinton
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of "an extraordinary neglect of the fiduciary responsibilities of the
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commander in chief." Most of the top figures in foreign affairs in this
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Administration also served under the President's father. They took office
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last year, after what they regard as eight years of small-time flyswatting
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by Clinton, thinking that they were picking up where they'd left off.
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Not long ago, I had lunch with-sorry!-a senior Administration
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foreign-policy official, at a restaurant in Washington called the Oval
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Room. Early in the lunch, he handed me a twenty-seven- page report, whose
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cover bore the seal of the Department of Defense, an outline map of the
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world, and these words:
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Defense Strategy for the 1990s:
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The Regional Defense Strategy
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Secretary of Defense
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Dick Cheney
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January 1993
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One of the difficulties of working at the highest level of government is
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communicating its drama. Actors, professional athletes, and even elected
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politicians train for years, go through a great winnowing, and then perform
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publicly. People who have titles like Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense
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are just as ambitious and competitive, have worked just as long and hard,
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and are often playing for even higher stakes-but what they do all day is go
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to meetings and write memos and prepare briefings. How, possibly, to
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explain that some of the documents, including the report that the senior
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official handed me, which was physically indistinguishable from a
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high-school term paper, represent the government version of playing
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Carnegie Hall?
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After the fall of the Berlin Wall, Dick Cheney, then the Secretary of
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Defense, set up a "shop," as they say, to think about American foreign
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policy after the Cold War, at the grand strategic level. The project, whose
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existence was kept quiet, included people who are now back in the game, at
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a higher level: among them, Paul Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of
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Defense; Lewis Libby, Cheney's chief of staff; and Eric Edelman, a senior
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foreign-policy adviser to Cheney-generally speaking, a cohesive group of
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conservatives who regard themselves as bigger-thinking, tougher-minded, and
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intellectually bolder than most other people in Washington. (Donald
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Rumsfeld, the Secretary of Defense, shares these characteristics, and has
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been closely associated with Cheney for more than thirty years.) Colin
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Powell, then the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, mounted a
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competing, and presumably more ideologically moderate, effort to reimagine
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American foreign policy and defense. A date was set-May 21, 1990-on which
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each team would brief Cheney for an hour; Cheney would then brief President
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Bush, after which Bush would make a foreign-policy address unveiling the
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new grand strategy.
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Everybody worked for months on the "five-twenty-one brief," with a sense
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that the shape of the post-Cold War world was at stake. When Wolfowitz and
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Powell arrived at Cheney's office on May 21st, Wolfowitz went first, but
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his briefing lasted far beyond the allotted hour, and Cheney (a hawk who,
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perhaps, liked what he was hearing) did not call time on him. Powell didn't
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get to present his alternate version of the future of the United States in
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the world until a couple of weeks later. Cheney briefed President Bush,
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using material mostly from Wolfowitz, and Bush prepared his major
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foreign-policy address. But he delivered it on August 2, 1990, the day that
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Iraq invaded Kuwait, so nobody noticed.
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The team kept working. In 1992, the Times got its hands on a version of the
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material, and published a front-page story saying that the Pentagon
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envisioned a future in which the United States could, and should, prevent
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any other nation or alliance from becoming a great power. A few weeks of
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controversy ensued about the Bush Administration's hawks being
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"unilateral"-controversy that Cheney's people put an end to with denials
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and the counter-leak of an edited, softer version of the same material.
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As it became apparent that Bush was going to lose to Clinton, the Cheney
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team's efforts took on the quality of a parting shot. The report that the
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senior official handed me at lunch had been issued only a few days before
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Clinton took office. It is a somewhat bland, opaque document-a "scrubbed,"
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meaning unclassified, version of something more candid-but it contained the
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essential ideas of "shaping," rather than reacting to, the rest of the
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world, and of preventing the rise of other superpowers. Its tone is one of
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skepticism about diplomatic partnerships. A more forthright version of the
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same ideas can be found in a short book titled "From Containment to Global
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Leadership?," which Zalmay Khalilzad, who joined Cheney's team in 1991 and
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is now special envoy to Afghanistan, published a couple of years into the
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Clinton Administration, when he was out of government. It recommends that
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the United States "preclude the rise of another global rival for the
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indefinite future." Khalilzad writes, "It is a vital U.S. interest to
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preclude such a development-i.e., to be willing to use force if necessary
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for the purpose."
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When George W. Bush was campaigning for President, he and the people around
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him didn't seem to be proposing a great doctrinal shift, along the lines of
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the policy of containment of the Soviet Union's sphere of influence which
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the United States maintained during the Cold War. In his first major
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foreign-policy speech, delivered in November of 1999, Bush declared that "a
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President must be a clear-eyed realist," a formulation that seems to
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connote an absence of world-remaking ambition. "Realism" is exactly the
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foreign-policy doctrine that Cheney's Pentagon team rejected, partly
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because it posits the impossibility of any one country's ever dominating
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world affairs for any length of time.
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One gets many reminders in Washington these days of how much the terrorist
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attacks of September 11th have changed official foreign-policy thinking.
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Any chief executive, of either party, would probably have done what Bush
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has done so far-made war on the Taliban and Al Qaeda and enhanced domestic
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security. It is only now, six months after the attacks, that we are truly
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entering the realm of Presidential choice, and all indications are that
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Bush is going to use September 11th as the occasion to launch a new,
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aggressive American foreign policy that would represent a broad change in
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direction rather than a specific war on terrorism. All his rhetoric,
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especially in the two addresses he has given to joint sessions of Congress
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since September 11th, and all the information about his state of mind which
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his aides have leaked, indicate that he sees this as the nation's moment of
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destiny-a perception that the people around him seem to be encouraging,
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because it enhances Bush's stature and opens the way to more assertive
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policymaking.
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Inside government, the reason September 11th appears to have been "a
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transformative moment," as the senior official I had lunch with put it, is
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not so much that it revealed the existence of a threat of which officials
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had previously been unaware as that it drastically reduced the American
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public's usual resistance to American military involvement overseas, at
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least for a while. The Clinton Administration, beginning with the "Black
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Hawk Down" operation in Mogadishu, during its first year, operated on the
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conviction that Americans were highly averse to casualties; the all-bombing
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Kosovo operation, in Clinton's next-to-last year, was the ideal foreign
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military adventure. Now that the United States has been attacked, the
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options are much broader. The senior official approvingly mentioned a 1999
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study of casualty aversion by the Triangle Institute for Security Studies,
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which argued that the "mass public" is much less casualty-averse than the
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military or the civilian <20>lite believes; for example, the study showed that
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the public would tolerate thirty thousand deaths in a military operation to
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prevent Iraq from acquiring weapons of mass destruction. (The American
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death total in the Vietnam War was about fifty-eight thousand.) September
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11th presumably reduced casualty aversion even further.
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Recently, I went to the White House to interview Condoleezza Rice. Rice's
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Foreign Affairs article from 2000 begins with this declaration: "The United
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States has found it exceedingly difficult to define its 'national interest'
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in the absence of Soviet power." I asked her whether that is still the
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case. "I think the difficulty has passed in defining a role," she said
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immediately. "I think September 11th was one of those great earthquakes
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that clarify and sharpen. Events are in much sharper relief." Like Bush,
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she said that opposing terrorism and preventing the accumulation of weapons
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of mass destruction "in the hands of irresponsible states" now define the
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national interest. (The latter goal, by the way, is new-in Bush's speech to
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Congress on September 20th, America's sole grand purpose was ending
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terrorism.) We talked in her West Wing office; its tall windows face the
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part of the White House grounds where television reporters do their
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standups. In her bearing, Rice seemed less crisply military than she does
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in public. She looked a little tired, but she was projecting a kind of
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missionary calm, rather than belligerence.
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In the Foreign Affairs article, Rice came across as a classic realist,
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putting forth "the notions of power politics, great powers, and power
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balances" as the proper central concerns of the United States. Now she
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sounded as if she had moved closer to the one-power idea that Cheney's
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Pentagon team proposed ten years ago-or, at least, to the idea that the
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other great powers are now in harmony with the United States, because of
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the terrorist attacks, and can be induced to remain so. "Theoretically, the
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realists would predict that when you have a great power like the United
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States it would not be long before you had other great powers rising to
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challenge it or trying to balance against it," Rice said. "And I think what
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you're seeing is that there's at least a predilection this time to move to
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productive and co<63>perative relations with the United States, rather than to
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try to balance the United States. I actually think that statecraft matters
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in how it all comes out. It's not all foreordained."
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Rice said that she had called together the senior staff people of the
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National Security Council and asked them to think seriously about "how do
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you capitalize on these opportunities" to fundamentally change American
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doctrine, and the shape of the world, in the wake of September 11th. "I
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really think this period is analogous to 1945 to 1947," she said-that is,
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the period when the containment doctrine took shape-"in that the events so
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clearly demonstrated that there is a big global threat, and that it's a big
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global threat to a lot of countries that you would not have normally
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thought of as being in the coalition. That has started shifting the
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tectonic plates in international politics. And it's important to try to
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seize on that and position American interests and institutions and all of
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that before they harden again."
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The National Security Council is legally required to produce an annual
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document called the National Security Strategy, stating the over-all goals
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of American policy-another government report whose importance is great but
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not obvious. The Bush Administration did not produce one last year, as the
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Clinton Administration did not in its first year. Rice said that she is
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working on the report now.
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"There are two ways to handle this document," she told me. "One is to do it
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in a kind of minimalist way and just get it out. But it's our view that,
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since this is going to be the first one for the Bush Administration, it's
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important. An awful lot has happened since we started this process, prior
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to 9/11. I can't give you a certain date when it's going to be out, but I
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would think sometime this spring. And it's important that it be a real
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statement of what the Bush Administration sees as the strategic direction
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that it's going."
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It seems clear already that Rice will set forth the hope of a more dominant
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American role in the world than she might have a couple of years ago. Some
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questions that don't appear to be settled yet, but are obviously being
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asked, are how much the United States is willing to operate alone in
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foreign affairs, and how much change it is willing to try to engender
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inside other countries-and to what end, and with what means. The leak a
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couple of weeks ago of a new American nuclear posture, adding offensive
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capability against "rogue states," departed from decades of official
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adherence to a purely defensive position, and was just one indication of
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the scope of the reconsideration that is going on. Is the United States now
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in a position to be redrawing regional maps, especially in the Middle East,
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and replacing governments by force? Nobody thought that the Bush
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Administration would be thinking in such ambitious terms, but plainly it
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is, and with the internal debate to the right of where it was only a few
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months ago.
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Just before the 2000 election, a Republican foreign-policy figure suggested
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to me that a good indication of a Bush Administration's direction in
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foreign affairs would be who got a higher-ranking job, Paul Wolfowitz or
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Richard Haass. Haass is another veteran of the first Bush Administration,
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and an intellectual like Wolfowitz, but much more moderate. In 1997, he
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published a book titled "The Reluctant Sheriff," in which he poked a little
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fun at Wolfowitz's famous strategy briefing of the early nineties (he
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called it the "Pentagon Paper") and disagreed with its idea that the United
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States should try to be the world's only great power over the long term.
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"For better or worse, such a goal is beyond our reach," Haass wrote. "It
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simply is not doable." Elsewhere in the book, he disagreed with another of
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the Wolfowitz team's main ideas, that of the United States expanding the
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"democratic zone of peace": "Primacy is not to be confused with hegemony.
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The United States cannot compel others to become more democratic." Haass
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argued that the United States is becoming less dominant in the world, not
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more, and suggested "a revival of what might be called traditional
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great-power politics."
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Wolfowitz got a higher-ranking job than Haass: he is Deputy Secretary of
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Defense, and Haass is Director of Policy Planning for the State Department-
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in effect, Colin Powell's big-think guy. Recently, I went to see him in his
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office at the State Department. On the wall of his waiting room was an
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array of photographs of every past director of the policy-planning staff,
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beginning with George Kennan, the father of the containment doctrine and
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the first holder of the office that Haass now occupies.
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It's another indication of the way things are moving in Washington that
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Haass seems to have become more hawkish. I mentioned the title of his book.
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"Using the word 'reluctant' was itself reflective of a period when foreign
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policy seemed secondary, and sacrificing for foreign policy was a hard case
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to make," he said. "It was written when Bill Clinton was saying, 'It's the
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economy, stupid'-not 'It's the world, stupid.' Two things are very
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different now. One, the President has a much easier time making the case
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that foreign policy matters. Second, at the top of the national-security
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charts is this notion of weapons of mass destruction and terrorism."
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I asked Haass whether there is a doctrine emerging that is as broad as
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Kennan's containment. "I think there is," he said. "What you're seeing from
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this Administration is the emergence of a new principle or body of
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ideas-I'm not sure it constitutes a doctrine-about what you might call the
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limits of sovereignty. Sovereignty entails obligations. One is not to
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massacre your own people. Another is not to support terrorism in any way.
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If a government fails to meet these obligations, then it forfeits some of
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the normal advantages of sovereignty, including the right to be left alone
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inside your own territory. Other governments, including the United States,
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gain the right to intervene. In the case of terrorism, this can even lead
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to a right of preventive, or peremptory, self-defense. You essentially can
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act in anticipation if you have grounds to think it's a question of when,
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and not if, you're going to be attacked."
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Clearly, Haass was thinking of Iraq. "I don't think the American public
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needs a lot of persuading about the evil that is Saddam Hussein," he said.
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"Also, I'd fully expect the President and his chief lieutenants to make the
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case. Public opinion can be changed. We'd be able to make the case that
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this isn't a discretionary action but one done in self-defense."
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On the larger issue of the American role in the world, Haass was still
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maintaining some distance from the hawks. He had made a speech not long
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before called "Imperial America," but he told me that there is a big
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difference between imperial and imperialist. "I just think that we have to
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be a little bit careful," he said. "Great as our advantages are, there are
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still limits. We have to have allies. We can't impose our ideas on
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everyone. We don't want to be fighting wars alone, so we need others to
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join us. American leadership, yes; but not American unilateralism. It has
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to be multilateral. We can't win the war against terror alone. We can't
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send forces everywhere. It really does have to be a collaborative endeavor."
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He stopped for a moment. "Is there a successor idea to containment? I think
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there is," he said. "It is the idea of integration. The goal of U.S.
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foreign policy should be to persuade the other major powers to sign on to
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certain key ideas as to how the world should operate: opposition to
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terrorism and weapons of mass destruction, support for free trade,
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democracy, markets. Integration is about locking them into these policies
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and then building institutions that lock them in even more."
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The first, but by no means the last, obvious manifestation of a new
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American foreign policy will be the effort to remove Saddam Hussein. What
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the United States does in an Iraq operation will very likely dwarf what's
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been done so far in Afghanistan, both in terms of the scale of the
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operation itself and in terms of its aftermath.
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||
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||
Several weeks ago, Ahmad Chalabi, the head of the Iraqi National Congress,
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the Iraqi opposition party, came through Washington with an entourage of
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||
his aides. Chalabi went to the State Department and the White House to ask,
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||
evidently successfully, for more American funding. His main public event
|
||
was a panel discussion at the American Enterprise Institute. Chalabi's
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||
leading supporter in town, Richard Perle, the prominent hawk and former
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||
Defense Department official, acted as moderator. Smiling and supremely
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||
confident, Perle opened the discussion by saying, "Evidence is mounting
|
||
that the Administration is looking very carefully at strategies for dealing
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||
with Saddam Hussein." The war on terrorism, he said, will not be complete
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||
"until Saddam is successfully dealt with. And that means replacing his
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regime. . . . That action will be taken, I have no doubt."
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|
||
Chalabi, who lives in London, is a charming, suave middle-aged man with a
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twinkle in his eye. He was dressed in a double-breasted pin-striped suit
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and a striped shirt with a white spread collar. Although he and his
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||
supporters argue that the Iraqi National Congress, with sufficient American
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||
support, can defeat Saddam just as the Northern Alliance defeated the
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Taliban in Afghanistan, this view hasn't won over most people in
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||
Washington. It isn't just that Chalabi doesn't look the part of a rebel
|
||
military leader ("He could fight you for the last petit four on the tray
|
||
over tea at the Savoy, but that's about it," one skeptical former Pentagon
|
||
official told me), or that he isn't in Iraq. It's also that Saddam's
|
||
military is perhaps ten times the size that the Taliban's was, and has been
|
||
quite successful at putting down revolts over the last decade. The United
|
||
States left Iraq in 1991 believing that Saddam might soon fall to an
|
||
internal rebellion; Chalabi's supporters believe that Saddam is much weaker
|
||
now, and that even signs that a serious operation was in the offing could
|
||
finish him off. But non-true believers seem to be coming around to the idea
|
||
that a military operation against Saddam would mean the deployment of
|
||
anywhere from a hundred thousand to three hundred thousand American ground
|
||
troops.
|
||
|
||
Kenneth Pollack, a former C.I.A. analyst who was the National Security
|
||
Council's staff expert on Iraq during the last years of the Clinton
|
||
Administration, recently caused a stir in the foreign-policy world by
|
||
publishing an article in Foreign Affairs calling for war against Saddam.
|
||
This was noteworthy because three years ago Pollack and two co-authors
|
||
published an article, also in Foreign Affairs, arguing that the Iraqi
|
||
National Congress was incapable of defeating Saddam. Pollack still doesn't
|
||
think Chalabi can do the job. He believes that it would require a
|
||
substantial American ground, air, and sea force, closer in size to the one
|
||
we used in Kuwait in 1990-91 than to the one we are using now in
|
||
Afghanistan.
|
||
|
||
Pollack, who is trim, quick, and crisp, is obviously a man who has given a
|
||
briefing or two in his day. When I went to see him at his office in
|
||
Washington, with a little encouragement he got out from behind his desk and
|
||
walked over to his office wall, where three maps of the Middle East were
|
||
hanging. "The only way to do it is a full-scale invasion," he said, using a
|
||
pen as a pointer. "We're talking about two grand corps, two to three
|
||
hundred thousand people altogether. The population is here, in the
|
||
Tigris-Euphrates valley." He pointed to the area between Baghdad and Basra.
|
||
"Ideally, you'd have the Saudis on board." He pointed to the Prince Sultan
|
||
airbase, near Riyadh. "You could make Kuwait the base, but it's much easier
|
||
in Saudi. You need to take western Iraq and southern Iraq"-pointing
|
||
again-"because otherwise they'll fire Scuds at Israel and at the Saudi oil
|
||
fields. You probably want to prevent Iraq from blowing up its own oil
|
||
fields, so troops have to occupy them. And you need troops to defend the
|
||
Kurds in northern Iraq." Point, point. "You go in as hard as you can, as
|
||
fast as you can." He slapped his hand on the top of his desk. "You get the
|
||
enemy to divide his forces, by threatening him in two places at once." His
|
||
hand hit the desk again, hard. "Then you crush him." Smack.
|
||
|
||
That would be a reverberating blow. The United States has already removed
|
||
the government of one country, Afghanistan, the new government is obviously
|
||
shaky, and American military operations there are not completed. Pakistan,
|
||
which before September 11th clearly met the new test of national
|
||
unacceptability (it both harbors terrorists and has weapons of mass
|
||
destruction), will also require long-term attention, since the country is
|
||
not wholly under the control of the government, as the murder of Daniel
|
||
Pearl demonstrated, and even parts of the government, like the intelligence
|
||
service, may not be entirely under the control of the President. In Iraq,
|
||
if America invades and brings down Saddam, a new government must be
|
||
established-an enormous long-term task in a country where there is no
|
||
obvious, plausible new leader. The prospective Iraq operation has drawn
|
||
strong objections from the neighboring nations, one of which, Russia, is a
|
||
nuclear superpower. An invasion would have a huge effect on the internal
|
||
affairs of all the biggest Middle Eastern nations: Iran, Turkey, Saudi
|
||
Arabia, and even Egypt. Events have forced the Administration to become
|
||
directly involved in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, as it hadn't wanted
|
||
to do. So it's really the entire region that is in play, in much the way
|
||
that Europe was immediately after the Second World War.
|
||
|
||
In September, Bush rejected Paul Wolfowitz's recommendation of immediate
|
||
moves against Iraq. That the President seems to have changed his mind is an
|
||
indication, in part, of the bureaucratic skill of the Administration's
|
||
conservatives. "These guys are relentless," one former official, who is
|
||
close to the high command at the State Department, told me. "Resistance is
|
||
futile." The conservatives' other weapon, besides relentlessness, is
|
||
intellectualism. Colin Powell tends to think case by case, and since
|
||
September 11th the conservatives have outflanked him by producing at least
|
||
the beginning of a coherent, hawkish world view whose acceptance
|
||
practically requires invading Iraq. If the United States applies the
|
||
doctrines of Cheney's old Pentagon team, "shaping" and expanding "the zone
|
||
of democracy," the implications would extend far beyond that one operation.
|
||
|
||
The outside experts on the Middle East who have the most credibility with
|
||
the Administration seem to be Bernard Lewis, of Princeton, and Fouad Ajami,
|
||
of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, both of whom
|
||
see the Arab Middle East as a region in need of radical remediation. Lewis
|
||
was invited to the White House in December to brief the senior
|
||
foreign-policy staff. "One point he made is, Look, in that part of the
|
||
world, nothing matters more than resolute will and force," the senior
|
||
official I had lunch with told me-in other words, the United States needn't
|
||
proceed gingerly for fear of inflaming the "Arab street," as long as it is
|
||
prepared to be strong. The senior official also recommended as interesting
|
||
thinkers on the Middle East Charles Hill, of Yale, who in a recent essay
|
||
declared, "Every regime of the Arab-Islamic world has proved a failure,"
|
||
and Reuel Marc Gerecht, of the American Enterprise Institute, who published
|
||
an article in The Weekly Standard about the need for a change of regime in
|
||
Iran and Syria. (Those goals, Gerecht told me when we spoke, could be
|
||
accomplished through pressure short of an invasion.)
|
||
|
||
Several people I spoke with predicted that most, or even all, of the
|
||
nations that loudly oppose an invasion of Iraq would privately cheer it on,
|
||
if they felt certain that this time the Americans were really going to
|
||
finish the job. One purpose of Vice-President Cheney's recent diplomatic
|
||
tour of the region was to offer assurances on that matter, while gamely
|
||
absorbing all the public criticism of an Iraq operation. In any event, the
|
||
Administration appears to be committed to acting forcefully in advance of
|
||
the world's approval. When I spoke to Condoleezza Rice, she said that the
|
||
United States should assemble "coalitions of the willing" to support its
|
||
actions, rather than feel it has to work within the existing infrastructure
|
||
of international treaties and organizations. An invasion of Iraq would test
|
||
that policy in more ways than one: the Administration would be betting that
|
||
it can continue to eliminate Al Qaeda cells in countries that publicly
|
||
opposed the Iraq operation.
|
||
|
||
When the Administration submitted its budget earlier this year, it asked
|
||
for a forty-eight-billion-dollar increase in defense spending for fiscal
|
||
2003, which begins in October, 2002. Much of that sum would go to improve
|
||
military pay and benefits, but ten billion dollars of it is designated as
|
||
an unspecified contingency fund for further operations in the war on
|
||
terrorism. That's probably at least the initial funding for an invasion of
|
||
Iraq.
|
||
|
||
This spring, the Administration will be talking to other countries about
|
||
the invasion, trying to secure basing and overflight privileges, while Bush
|
||
builds up a rhetorical case for it by giving speeches about the
|
||
unacceptability of developing weapons of mass destruction. A drama
|
||
involving weapons inspections in Iraq will play itself out over the spring
|
||
and summer, and will end with the United States declaring that the terms
|
||
that Saddam offers for the inspections, involving delays and restrictions,
|
||
are unacceptable. Then, probably in the late summer or early fall, the
|
||
enormous troop positioning, which will take months, will begin. The
|
||
Administration obviously feels confident that the United States can
|
||
effectively parry whatever aggressive actions Saddam takes during the troop
|
||
buildup, and hopes that its moves will destabilize Iraq enough to cause the
|
||
Republican Guard, the military key to the country, to turn against Saddam
|
||
and topple him on its own. But the chain of events leading inexorably to a
|
||
full-scale American invasion, if it hasn't already begun, evidently will
|
||
begin soon.
|
||
|
||
Lewis (Scooter) Libby, who was the principal drafter of Cheney's
|
||
future-of-the-world documents during the first Bush Administration, now
|
||
works in an office in the Old Executive Office Building, overlooking the
|
||
West Wing, where he has a second, smaller office. A packet of
|
||
public-relations material prompted by the recent paperback publication of
|
||
his 1996 novel, "The Apprentice," quotes the Times' calling him "Dick
|
||
Cheney's Dick Cheney," which seems like an apt description: he appears
|
||
absolutely sure of himself, and, whether by coincidence or as a result of
|
||
the influence of his boss, speaks in a tough, confidential, gravelly
|
||
rumble. Like Condoleezza Rice and Bush himself, he gives the impression of
|
||
having calmly accepted the idea that the project of war and reconstruction
|
||
which the Administration has now taken on may be a little exhausting for
|
||
those charged with carrying it out but is unquestionably right, the only
|
||
truly prudent course.
|
||
|
||
When I went to see Libby, not long ago, I asked him whether, before
|
||
September 11th, American policy toward terrorism should have been
|
||
different. He went to his desk and got out a large black loose-leaf binder,
|
||
filled with typewritten sheets interspersed with foldout maps of the Middle
|
||
East. He looked through it for a long minute, formulating his answer.
|
||
|
||
"Let us stack it up," he said at last. "Somalia, 1993; 1994, the discovery
|
||
of the Al Qaeda-related plot in the Philippines; 1993, the World Trade
|
||
Center, first bombing; 1993, the attempt to assassinate President Bush,
|
||
former President Bush, and the lack of response to that, the lack of a
|
||
serious response to that; 1995, the Riyadh bombing; 1996, the Khobar
|
||
bombing; 1998, the Kenyan embassy bombing and the Tanzanian embassy
|
||
bombing; 1999, the plot to launch millennium attacks; 2000, the bombing of
|
||
the Cole. Throughout this period, infractions on inspections by the Iraqis,
|
||
and eventually the withdrawal of the entire inspection regime; and the
|
||
failure to respond significantly to Iraqi incursions in the Kurdish areas.
|
||
No one would say these challenges posed easy problems, but if you take that
|
||
long list and you ask, 'Did we respond in a way which discouraged people
|
||
from supporting terrorist activities, or activities clearly against our
|
||
interests? Did we help to shape the environment in a way which discouraged
|
||
further aggressions against U.S. interests?,' many observers conclude no,
|
||
and ask whether it was then easier for someone like Osama bin Laden to rise
|
||
up and say credibly, 'The Americans don't have the stomach to defend
|
||
themselves. They won't take casualties to defend their interests. They are
|
||
morally weak.' "
|
||
|
||
Libby insisted that the American response to September 11th has not been
|
||
standard or foreordained. "Look at what the President has done in
|
||
Afghanistan," he said, "and look at his speech to the joint session of
|
||
Congress"-meaning the State of the Union Message, in January. "He made it
|
||
clear that it's an important area. He made it clear that we believe in
|
||
expanding the zone of democracy even in this difficult part of the world.
|
||
He made it clear that we stand by our friends and defend our interests. And
|
||
he had the courage to identify those states which present a problem, and to
|
||
begin to build consensus for action that would need to be taken if there is
|
||
not a change of behavior on their part. Take the Afghan case, for example.
|
||
There are many other courses that the President could have taken. He could
|
||
have waited for juridical proof before we responded. He could have engaged
|
||
in long negotiations with the Taliban. He could have failed to seek a new
|
||
relationship with Pakistan, based on its past nuclear tests, or been so
|
||
afraid of weakening Pakistan that we didn't seek its help. This list could
|
||
go on to twice or three times the length I've mentioned so far. But,
|
||
instead, the President saw an opportunity to refashion relations while
|
||
standing up for our interests. The problem is complex, and we don't know
|
||
yet how it will end, but we have opened new prospects for relations not
|
||
only with Afghanistan, as important as it was as a threat, but with the
|
||
states of Central Asia, Pakistan, Russia, and, as it may develop, with the
|
||
states of Southwest Asia more generally."
|
||
|
||
We moved on to Iraq, and the question of what makes Saddam Hussein
|
||
unacceptable, in the Administration's eyes. "The issue is not inspections,"
|
||
Libby said. "The issue is the Iraqis' promise not to have weapons of mass
|
||
destruction, their promise to recognize the boundaries of Kuwait, their
|
||
promise not to threaten other countries, and other promises that they made
|
||
in '91, and a number of U.N. resolutions, including all the other problems
|
||
I listed. Whether it was wise or not-and that is the subject of debate-Iraq
|
||
was given a second chance to abide by international norms. It failed to
|
||
take that chance then, and annually for the next ten years."
|
||
|
||
"What's your level of confidence," I asked him, "that the current regime
|
||
will, in fact, change its behavior in a way that you will be satisfied by?"
|
||
|
||
He ran his hand over his face and then gave me a direct gaze and spoke
|
||
slowly and deliberately. "There is no basis in Iraq's past behavior to have
|
||
confidence in good-faith efforts on their part to change their behavior."
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
-----------------
|
||
R. A. Hettinga <mailto: rah@ibuc.com>
|
||
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
|
||
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
|
||
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
|
||
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
|
||
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'
|
||
|
||
|