One of Washington's most exclusive clubs
during the 1990s was the annual board dinner of The National
Interest. Presided over by founding editor Owen Harries and
often kicked off with a presentation by Henry Kissinger, the
group included Jeanne Kirkpatrick, Irving, Bea and Bill
Kristol, Samuel Huntington, Paul Wolfowitz, Norman
Podhoretz, Daniel Pipes, Charles Krauthammer, Marty
Feldstein, Eliot Cohen, Peter Rodman and a host of other
conservative thinkers, writers and doers, including just
about everyone now characterized as a "neoconservative."
What I always found fascinating about these dinners was
their unpredictability. People's views were very much set in
concrete during the Cold War; while
this group was divided into pro- and anti-détente camps,
virtually everyone (myself included) had staked out
territory years before. The Berlin Wall's fall brought a
great change, and there was no clear mapping between one's
pre-1989 views and the ones held thereafter. Roughly, the
major fault line was between people who were more realist
and those who were more idealist or Wilsonian. But everyone
was trying to wrestle with the same basic question: In the
wake of the disappearance of the overarching strategic
threat posed by the former USSR, how did one define the
foreign policy of a country that had suddenly become the
global hegemon? How narrowly or broadly did one define this
magazine's eponymous "national interest"?
It was at one of these dinners that
Charles Krauthammer first articulated the idea of American
unipolarity. In the winter of 1990–91, he wrote in
Foreign Affairs of the "unipolar moment"; in the Winter
2002/03 issue of The National Interest, he expanded the
scope of his thesis by arguing that "the unipolar moment has
become the unipolar era." And in February 2004, he gave a
speech at the annual dinner of the American Enterprise
Institute in which he took his earlier themes and developed
the ideas further, in the aftermath of the Iraq War. He
defined four different schools of thought on foreign policy:
isolationism, liberal internationalism, realism and his own
position that he defines as "democratic globalism", a kind
of muscular Wilsonianism--minus international
institutions--that seeks to use U.S. military supremacy to
support U.S. security interests and democracy
simultaneously.
Krauthammer is a gifted thinker and his ideas are worth
taking seriously for their own sake. But, perhaps more
importantly, his strategic thinking has become emblematic of
a school of thought that has acquired strong influence
inside the Bush Administration foreign policy team and
beyond. It is for that reason that Krauthammer's writings,
particularly his AEI speech, require careful analysis. It is
in the spirit of our earlier debates that I offer the
following critique.
The 2004 speech is strangely
disconnected from reality. Reading Krauthammer, one
gets the impression that the Iraq War--the archetypical
application of American unipolarity--had been an unqualified
success, with all of the assumptions and expectations on
which the war had been based fully vindicated. There is not
the slightest nod towards the new empirical facts that have
emerged in the last year or so: the failure to find weapons
of mass destruction in Iraq, the virulent and steadily
mounting anti-Americanism throughout the Middle East, the
growing insurgency in Iraq, the fact that no strong
democratic leadership had emerged there, the enormous
financial and growing human cost of the war, the failure to
leverage the war to make progress on the Israeli-Palestinian
front, and the fact that America's fellow democratic allies
had by and large failed to fall in line and legitimate
American actions ex post.
The failure to step up to these
facts is dangerous precisely to the neo-neoconservative
position that Krauthammer has been seeking to define and
justify. As the war in Iraq turns from triumphant
liberation to grinding insurgency, other voices--either
traditional realists like Brent
Scowcroft, nationalist-isolationists
like Patrick Buchanan, or liberal
internationalists like John Kerry--will step forward
as authoritative voices and will have far more influence in
defining American post-Iraq War foreign policy. The
poorly executed nation-building
strategy in Iraq will poison the well for future such
exercises, undercutting domestic political support for a
generous and visionary internationalism, just as Vietnam
did.
It did not have to be this way. One can start with
premises identical to Krauthammer's, agree wholeheartedly
with his critiques of the other three positions, and yet
come up with a foreign policy that is very different from
the one he lays out. I believe that
his strategy simultaneously defines our interests in such a
narrow way as to make the neoconservative position
indistinguishable from realism, while at the same time
managing to be utterly unrealistic in its overestimation of
U.S. power and our ability to control events around the
world. It is probably too late to reclaim the label
"neoconservative" for any but the policies undertaken by the
Bush Administration, but it is still worth
trying to reformulate a fourth
alternative that combines idealism and realism--but
in a fashion that can be sustained over the long haul.
Excessive Realism
Krauthammer and other commentators are correct that what
is seen as "Kissingerian" realism is not an adequate basis
for American foreign policy. A certain degree of
messianic universalism with regard to
American values and institutions has always been an
inescapable component of American national identity:
Americans were never comfortable with the kinds of moral
compromises that a strict realist position entails. The
question, which was the constant subject of those board
dinners, was: What kinds of bounds do you put around the
idealistic part of the agenda? Krauthammer answers this key
question in the following manner:
"Where to intervene? Where to bring democracy? Where to
nation-build? I propose a single criterion: where it counts.
Call it democratic realism. And this is its axiom: We
will support democracy everywhere, but we will commit blood
and treasure only in places where there is strategic
necessity--meaning, places central to the larger war against
the existential enemy, the enemy that poses a global mortal
threat to freedom. [italics in the original]"
While this axiom appears to be clear and straightforward,
it masks a number of ambiguities that make it less than
helpful as a guideline for U.S. intervention. The first has
to do with the phrase "strategic necessity", which of course
can be defined more and less broadly. Krauthammer initially
appears to be taking a realist position by opting for the
narrow definition when he refers to an "existential enemy"
or an enemy posing a "mortal" threat. If these words have
any real meaning, then they should include only threats to
our existence as a nation or as a democratic regime. There
have been such threats in the past: the Soviet Union could
have annihilated us physically and conceivably could have
subverted democracy in North America. But it is questionable
whether any such existential threats exist now. Iraq before
the U.S. invasion was certainly not one: It posed an
existential threat to Kuwait, Iran and Israel, but it had no
means of threatening the continuity of our regime. Al-Qaeda
and other radical Islamist groups aspire to be existential
threats to American civilization but do not currently have
anything like the capacity to actualize their vision: They
are extremely dangerous totalitarians, but pose threats
primarily to regimes in the Middle East.
This is not to say that Iraq and Al-Qaeda did not pose
serious threats to American interests: the former was a very
serious regional threat, and the latter succeeded in killing
thousands of Americans on American soil. Use of WMD against
the United States by a terrorist group would have terrible
consequences, not just for the immediate victims but also
for American freedoms in ways that could be construed as
undermining our regime. But it is still of a lesser order of
magnitude than earlier, state-based threats. The global Nazi
and communist threats were existential both because their
banner was carried by a great power, and because
ideologically there were many people in the United States
and throughout the Western world seduced by their vision.
The Islamist threat has no such appeal, except perhaps in
countries like France that have permitted high levels of
immigration from Muslim countries.
I suspect that Krauthammer's intended use of the term
"strategic necessity" is actually broader than is implied by
his own words about existential threats. At the end of his
axiom he leaps to the need to fight an "enemy that poses a
global mortal threat to freedom", and elsewhere speaks of
the United States as "custodian of the international
system", suggesting a broadminded understanding of
self-interest. Does "global" here mean threats that
transcend specific regions, like radical Islamism or
communism? If the enemy's reach has to be global, then North
Korea would be excluded from the definition of a "strategic"
threat. Or does "global" instead mean any mortal threat to
freedom around the globe? Does the fact that an "enemy"
poses a mortal threat to another free country but not to us
qualify it as our "enemy?" Is Hamas, an Islamist group which
clearly poses an existential threat to Israel, our enemy as
well? Is Syria? And if these are our enemies, why should we
choose to fight them in preference to threats to free
countries closer to home like the FARC or ELN, which
threaten democracy in Colombia, or Hugo Chavez in Venezuela?
What makes something "central" in this global war? Was Iraq
central to the war against radical Islamism?
It is clear that Krauthammer's axiom provides very little
practical guidance for answering these questions. He might
respond that applying the general principle requires
prudential judgment. He might further respond that his
position is very distinct from that of the realists because
he is using democracy as an instrument to advance U.S.
strategic interests: By transforming Iraqi politics and
turning a bloodthirsty dictatorship into a Western-style
democracy, new possibilities will open up for the entire
region that promises to get at some of the root causes of
terrorism. This is indeed an ambitious and highly idealistic
agenda, and it is precisely in the prudential judgments
underlying the current project of transforming the Middle
East that his argument is fatally flawed.
Excessive Idealism
Of all of the different views that have now come to be
associated with neoconservatives, the strangest one to me
was the confidence that the United States could transform
Iraq into a Western-style democracy, and go on from there to
democratize the broader Middle East. It struck me as strange
precisely because these same neoconservatives had spent much
of the past generation warning--in The National Interest's
former sister publication, The Public Interest, for
example--about the dangers of ambitious social engineering,
and how social planners could never control behavior or deal
with unanticipated consequences. If the United States cannot
eliminate poverty or raise test scores in Washington, dc,
how does it expect to bring democracy to a part of the world
that has stubbornly resisted it and is virulently
anti-American to boot?
Krauthammer picks up this theme in his speech. Noting how
wrong people were after World War II in asserting that Japan
could not democratize, he asks, "Where is it written that
Arabs are incapable of democracy?" He is echoing an argument
made most forthrightly by the eminent Middle East scholar
Bernard Lewis, who has at several junctures suggested that
pessimism about the prospects for a democratic Iraq betrays
lack of respect for Arabs.
It is, of course, nowhere written that Arabs are
incapable of democracy, and it is certainly foolish for
cynical Europeans to assert with great confidence that
democracy is impossible in the Middle East. We have, indeed,
been fooled before, not just in Japan but in Eastern Europe
prior to the collapse of communism.
But possibility is not likelihood, and good policy is not
made by staking everything on a throw of the dice. Culture
is not destiny, but culture plays an important role in
making possible certain kinds of institutions--something
that is usually taken to be a conservative insight.
Though
I, more than most people, am associated with the idea that
history's arrow points to democracy, I have never believed
that democracies can be created anywhere and everywhere
through sheer political will. Prior to the Iraq War, there
were many reasons for thinking that building a democratic
Iraq was a task of a complexity that would be nearly
unmanageable. Some reasons had to do with the nature of
Iraqi society: the fact that it would be decompressing
rapidly from totalitarianism, its ethnic divisions, the role
of politicized religion, the society's propensity for
violence, its tribal structure and the dominance of extended
kin and patronage networks, and its susceptibility to
influence from other parts of the Middle East that were
passionately anti-American.
But other reasons had to do with the United States.
America has been involved in approximately 18
nation-building projects between its conquest of the
Philippines in 1899 and the current occupations of
Afghanistan and Iraq, and the overall record is not a pretty
one. The cases of unambiguous success--Germany, Japan, and
South Korea--were all ones in which U.S. forces came and
then stayed indefinitely. In the first two cases, we were
not nation-building at all, but only re-legitimizing
societies that had very powerful states. In all of the other
cases, the U.S. either left nothing behind in terms of
self-sustaining institutions, or else made things worse by
creating, as in the case of Nicaragua, a modern army and
police but no lasting rule of law.
This gets to a much more fundamental point about
unipolarity. Krauthammer has always stressed the vast
disparity of power between the United States and the rest of
the world, vaster even than Rome's dominance at the height
of its empire. But that dominance is clear-cut only along
two dimensions of national power: the cultural realm and the
ability to fight and win intensive conventional wars.
Americans have no particular taste or facility for
nation-building; we want exit strategies rather than
empires--a point Krauthammer reiterated at the start of his
lecture. Where then does he think the domestic basis of
support will come from for this unbelievably ambitious
effort to politically transform one of the world's most
troubled and hostile regions? And if the nation is really a
commercial republic uncomfortable with empire, why is he so
eager to expand its domain? Lurking like an unbidden guest
at a dinner party is the reality of what has happened in
Iraq since the U.S. invasion: We have been our usual inept
and disorganized selves in planning for and carrying out the
reconstruction, something that was predictable in advance
and should not have surprised anyone familiar with American
history.
Allies, Institutions and Legitimacy
The final area of weakness in Krauthammer's argument lies
in his treatment of legitimacy, and how the United States
relates to the rest of the world. Failure to appreciate
America's own current legitimacy deficit hurts both the
realist part of our agenda, by diminishing our actual power,
and the idealist portion of it, by undercutting our appeal
as the embodiment of certain ideas and values.
Krauthammer avoids confronting this issue by creating a
bit of a parody of foreign critiques of American policy,
something easily dismissed because it comes from "the
butchers of Tiananmen Square or the cynics of the Quai
d'Orsay." He manages to lump both the Democratic Party and
most of our European allies into a single category of
liberal internationalists. He argues that their opposition
to the Iraq War was founded on a self-proclaimed normative
commitment to multilateralism and international law. For
liberal internationalists, war is legitimate only if it is
sanctioned by the United Nations. But this high-mindedness,
he argues, masks motives that are much baser: the Europeans
are Lilliputians who want to tie the American Gulliver down
and reduce American freedom of action. So they are both
naive and hypocritical in the same breath.
What Krauthammer here describes as the
Democratic/European position is one that is readily
recognizable and does in fact characterize the views of many
opponents of the Iraq War. But if he had listened carefully
to what many Europeans were actually saying (something that
Americans are not very good at doing these days), he would
have discovered that much of their objection to the war was
not a normative one having to do with procedural issues and
the UN, but rather a prudential one having to do with the
overall wisdom of attacking Iraq. Europeans tended not to be
persuaded that Iraq was as dangerous as the Bush
Administration claimed. They argued that Ba'athi Iraq had
little to do with Al-Qaeda, and that attacking Iraq would be
a distraction from the War on Terror. Many Europeans,
moreover, did not particularly trust the United States to
handle the postwar situation well, much less the more
ambitious agenda of democratizing the Middle East. They
believed that the ongoing Palestinian-Israeli conflict was a
more dangerous source of instability and terrorism than Iraq
and that the Bush Administration was undercutting its own
credibility by appearing to side so strongly with the
policies of Ariel Sharon.
All of these were and are, of course, debatable
propositions. On the question of the threat posed by Iraq,
everyone--Europeans and Americans--were evidently fooled
into thinking that it possessed significant stockpiles of
chemical and biological weapons. But on this issue, the
European bottom line proved to be closer to the truth than
the administration's far more alarmist position. The
question of pre-war Iraq-Al-Qaeda links has become intensely
politicized in America since the war. My reading of the
evidence is that these linkages existed (indeed, it would be
very surprising if they did not), but that their
significance was limited. We have learned since September 11
that Al-Qaeda did not need the support of a state like Iraq
to do a tremendous amount of damage to the United States and
that attacking Iraq was not the most direct way to get at
Al-Qaeda. On the question of the manageability of postwar
Iraq, the more skeptical European position was almost
certainly right; the Bush Administration went into Iraq with
enormous illusions about how easy the postwar situation
would be. On the question of Palestine, the Europeans are
likely wrong, or at least wrong in their belief that we
could move to a durable settlement of the conflict if only
the United States decided to use its influence with Israel.
The point here is not who is right, but rather that the
prudential case was not nearly as open-and-shut as
Krauthammer and other neoconservatives believe. He talks as
if the Bush Administration's judgment had been vindicated at
every turn, and that any questioning of it can only be the
result of base or dishonest motives. Would that this were
so. The fact that our judgment was flawed has created an
enormous legitimacy problem for us, one that will hurt our
interests for a long time to come.
The problem of judgment gets to the heart of what is
wrong with the vision of a unipolar world that Krauthammer
lays out. In his words, the United States "has been
designated custodian of the international system" by virtue
of its enormous margin of military superiority. If we had in
fact been designated global custodian, we would have no
legitimacy problem, but we have unfortunately designated
ourselves. We have in effect said to the rest of the world,
"look, trust us, we will look out for your interests. You
can do this safely because we not just any run-of-the-mill
hyperpower. We are, after all, the United States." While we
would not trust Russia, China, India, France or even Britain
with a similar kind of power, we believe that the rest of
the world should trust us. This is because the United States
is different from other countries, a democracy espousing
universal values and therefore not subject the same
calculations of self-interest as other would-be hegemons.
There is actually something to this argument. But it is
also not very difficult to see why it does not gain much
traction outside the United States, and not just among those
endemically hostile to America. Krauthammer-the-realist,
after all, argues for a narrow definition of national
interest, which does not suggest we will be a very reliable
partner to a struggling friend when we do not have important
interests at stake. And even if we were willing to bear
other people's burdens, what about our judgment?
Legitimacy is a tricky concept. It is related to
substantive principles of justice, but it is not the same
thing as justice. That is, people believe that a set of
institutions is legitimate because they believe they are
just, but legitimacy is always relative to the people
conferring legitimacy.
Legitimacy is important to us not simply because we want
to feel good about ourselves, but because it is useful.
Other people will follow the American lead if they believe
that it is legitimate; if they do not, they will resist,
complain, obstruct or actively oppose what we do. In this
respect, it matters not what we believe to be legitimate,
but rather what other people believe is legitimate. If the
Indian government says that it will not participate in a
peacekeeping force in Iraq unless it has a UN Security
Council mandate to do so, it does not matter in the
slightest that we believe the Security Council to be an
illegitimate institution: the Indians simply will not help
us out.
Krauthammer and others have dismissed the importance of
legitimacy by associating it entirely with the United
Nations--and then shooting at that very easy target. Of
course, the UN has deep problems with legitimacy. Since
membership is not based on a substantive principle of
legitimacy, but rather formal sovereignty, it has been
populated from the beginning by a range of dictatorial and
human-rights abusing regimes. Our European allies themselves
do not believe in the necessity of legitimization through
the Security Council. When they found they could not get its
support for the intervention in Kosovo because of the
Russian veto, they were perfectly willing to bypass the UN
and switch the venue to NATO instead.
But our legitimacy problem in Iraq went much deeper. Even
if we had switched the venue to NATO--an alliance of
democracies committed to the same underlying set of
values--we could not have mustered a majority in support of
our position, not to speak of the consensus required for
collective action in that organization. The Bush
Administration likes to boast of the size of the "coalition
of the willing" that the United States was eventually able
to pull together. One can take comfort in this only by
abstracting from the quality of the support we received.
Besides Britain and Australia, no one was willing to put
boots on the ground during the active phase of combat, and
now that post-conflict peacekeeping looks more like real
warfare once again, Spain, Honduras and other members of the
coalition are pulling out. Those countries that did support
the United States did so on the basis of an elite
calculation of national interest--in almost all cases
against the wishes of large majorities of their own
populations. This is true alike for Tony Blair, our
staunchest ally, and for Poland, the most pro-American
country in eastern Europe. While the behavior of Germany's
Gerhard Schröder in actively opposing the war was deeply
disappointing, I would still much rather have Germany on my
side than a feckless and corrupt Ukraine.
It is clear, in other words, that a very large part of
the world, including many people who are normally inclined
to be our friends, did not believe in the legitimacy of our
behavior towards Iraq. This is not because the Security
Council failed to endorse the war, but because many of our
friends did not trust us, that is, the Bush Administration,
to use our huge margin of power wisely and in the interests
of the world as a whole. This should matter to us, not just
for realist reasons of state (our ability to attract allies
to share the burden), but for idealist ones as well (our
ability to lead and inspire based on the attractiveness of
who we are).
I do not believe that the Bush Administration was in fact
contemptuous of the need for legitimacy. What they believed
and hoped, rather, was that legitimacy would be awarded ex
post rather than ex ante by the international community.
There was a widespread belief among members of the
administration that once it became clear that the United
States was going to disarm Iraq forcefully, other NATO
allies including France would eventually come on board.
Everyone was taken aback by the vehemence with which France
and Germany opposed the war, and by the U.S. failure to line
up normally compliant countries like Chile and Mexico during
the Security Council vote.
The hope that we would be awarded ex post
legitimacy was not an unreasonable calculation. It might
indeed have materialized had the United States found a large
and active WMD program in Iraq after the invasion, or if the
transition to a democratic regime had been as quick and
low-cost as the Bush Administration expected. Many people
have argued that American unilateralism towards Iraq breaks
a long pattern of transatlantic cooperation, but they are
forgetting history. The United States during the Cold War
repeatedly pushed its European allies to do things they were
reluctant to do, often by staking out positions first and
seeking approval later. In the end, American judgment on
these issues was better than that of the Europeans, and
legitimacy was in fact awarded retrospectively. When this
happened, the United States was not blamed for
unilateralism, but praised for its leadership.
One could then interpret the Iraq War simply as a
one-time mistake or unfortunate miscalculation coming on the
heels of a long string of successes. Certainly, it would be
utterly wrong to conclude that the war teaches us that the
United States should never stick its neck out and lead the
broader Western world to actions that our allies oppose or
are reluctant to undertake. Nor should we conclude that
pre-emption and unilateralism will never be necessary.
On the other hand, it is not simply bad luck that we
failed to win legitimacy as badly as we did this time. The
world is different now than it was during the Cold War in
ways that will affect our future ability to exert leadership
and claim to speak on behalf of the world as a whole. This
is so for three reasons.
The first difference is, of course, the demise of the
Soviet Union and the absence of an overarching superpower
threat. During the Cold War, there was rampant
anti-Americanism around the world and popular opposition to
U.S. policies. But our influence was anchored by
center-right parties throughout Europe that were both
grateful for America's historical role in the liberation of
Europe and fearful of Soviet influence. The global terrorist
threat may some day come to be interpreted in a similar
fashion, but it is not yet.
A second difference has to do with the very fact of our
military dominance. During the Cold War, when our power was
more or less evenly matched against that of the Soviets, we
cared a great deal about credibility and slippery slopes. We
were afraid that withdrawal in the face of a challenge would
be taken as a sign of weakness and exploited by the other
side. Today, the United States is utterly dominant in the
military sphere. Credibility in our willingness and ability
to use force remains important, but we simply do not have to
prove our toughness to the rest of the world at every turn.
The final difference has to do with the fact that the
current battlefield is not Europe but the Middle East. There
were always sharp differences of opinion between the United
States and its allies on how to proceed with respect to the
Soviet Union, but they pale in comparison to the differences
between the United States and virtually everyone else in the
world with respect to the Arab world. So it is to this issue
that we must turn.
Dealing with the Middle East
Krauthammer has thought long and hard about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and his views on how the
Israelis need to deal with the Palestinians colors his views
on how the United States should deal with the Arabs more
broadly. Krauthammer has not supported strongly engaging the
Arab world through political strategies. In the past, he has
put forward a particular view of Arab psychology, namely,
that they respect power above all as a source of legitimacy.
As he once said in a radio interview, if you want to win
their hearts and minds, you have grab a lower part of their
anatomy and squeeze hard.
Towards the end of his AEI speech, Krauthammer speaks of
the United States as being in the midst of a bitter and
remorseless war with an implacable enemy that is out to
destroy Western civilization. This kind of language is
appropriate as a description of Israel's strategic situation
since the outbreak of the second intifada. The question is
whether this accurately describes the position of the United
States as well. Are we like Israel, locked in a remorseless
struggle with a large part of the Arab and Muslim world,
with few avenues open to us for dealing with them other than
an iron fist? And in general, does a strategic doctrine
developed by a small, vulnerable country surrounded by
implacable enemies make sense when applied to the situation
of the world's sole superpower, a country that spends as
much on defense as the next 16 most powerful countries put
together?
I believe that there are real problems in transposing one
situation to the other. While Israel's most immediate Arab
interlocutors are indeed implacable enemies, the United
States faces a much more complex situation. In Al-Qaeda and
other radical Islamist groups, we do in fact confront an
enemy that hates us for what we are rather than for what we
do. For the reasons given above, I do not believe they are
an existential threat to us, but they certainly would like
to be, and it is hard to see how we can deal with them other
than by killing, capturing or otherwise militarily
neutralizing them.
But the radicals swim in a much larger sea of
Muslims--1.2 billion of them, more or less--who are not yet
implacable enemies of the United States. If one has any
doubts about this, one has only to look at the first of the
United Nations Development Program's two Arab Human
Development reports, which contained a poll asking whether
respondents would like to emigrate to the United States if
they had the opportunity. In virtually every Arab country, a
majority of respondents said yes. On the other hand, recent
Pew surveys of global public opinion show that positive
feelings about the United States in Jordan, Egypt, Turkey,
Pakistan and other supposedly friendly Muslim countries has
sunk to disastrously low levels. What these data taken as a
whole suggest is that for the broad mass of public opinion
in Muslim countries, we are disliked or hated not for what
we are, but rather for what we do. What they do not like is
a familiar list of complaints about our foreign policy that
we somehow continue to fail to take seriously: our lack of
concern for the plight of the Palestinians, our hypocritical
support for dictators in Muslim countries, and now our
occupation of Iraq.
The War on Terror is, in other words, a classic
counter-insurgency war, except that it is one being played
out on a global scale. There are genuine bad guys out there
who are much more bitter ideological enemies than the
Soviets ever were, but their success depends on the
attitudes of the broader populations around them who can be
alternatively supportive, hostile or indifferent--depending
on how we play our cards. As we are seeing vividly in Iraqi
cities like Fallujah and Najaf, counter-insurgency wars are
incredibly difficult to fight, because we must somehow
destroy the enemy without alienating the broader population
and making things worse. Counter-insurgency requires a
tricky mixture of precisely targeted force, political
judgment and extremely good intelligence: a combination of
carrots and sticks.
Israel used carrots during the Oslo process and then
shifted to sticks after its collapse and the beginning of
the second intifada. I do not want to second-guess either of
these approaches, neither of which seems to have worked very
well. But an American policy toward the Muslim world that,
like Sharon's, is largely stick will be a disaster: we do
not have enough sticks in our closet to "make them respect
us." The Islamists for sure hated us from the beginning, but
Krauthammerian unipolarity has increased hatred for the
United States in the broader fight for hearts and minds.
This suggests that we need a much more complex strategy that
recalibrates the proportion of sticks and carrots. This has
begun to happen with the leaking of the Bush
Administration's Greater Middle East Initiative, but that is
only the beginning of a much longer political struggle.
Israel's policy of constantly being on the offensive,
pre-empting and taking the initiative (as in its policy of
targeted assassinations) is also something that does not
scale well. Unlike Israel, the United States has a
substantial margin of strategic depth and does not
constantly have to run risks in order to stay on top. A sole
superpower that is seen being as inclined to intervene
pre-emptively and often will frighten not just its enemies
but its friends as well. The United States must never abjure
its right to pre-empt, but it is a right that needs to be
exercised cautiously. Even talking about such a strategy, as
we did in the National Security Strategy document, will tend
to promote opposing coalitions and resistance to U.S.
policies. Israel can afford to antagonize potential allies
and disregard international public opinion as long as it can
count on support from the United States. The United States
could, I suppose, survive if it were similarly isolated, but
it is hard to see why we would want to put ourselves in this
position. It is hardly an advantageous position from which
to launch an idealistic Wilsonian crusade to reshape the
Middle East in our image.
What Now?
Since I have volunteered only to write a critique of the
views expressed by Charles Krauthammer and am not myself
running for president, I am under no obligation to lay out
in depth a positive agenda for American foreign policy that
would serve as a substitute. On the other hand, there are
elements of a different neoconservative foreign policy that
are implicit in what I have said thus far.
The United States
should understand the need to exercise power in pursuit of
both its interests and values, but also to be more prudent
and subtle in that exercise. The world's sole superpower
needs to remember that its margin of power is viewed with
great suspicion around the world and will set off
countervailing reactions if that power is not exercised
judiciously.
This means, in the first instance, doing the simple work
of diplomacy and coalition-building that the Bush
Administration seemed reluctant to undertake prior to the
Iraq War and not gratuitously to insult the "common opinions
of mankind." We do not need to embrace the UN or
multilateralism for its own sake, because we somehow believe
that such institutions are inherently more legitimate than
nation-states. On the other hand, we need likeminded allies
to accomplish both the realist and idealist portions of our
agenda and should spend much more time and energy
cultivating them.
The promotion of democracy through all of the available
tools at our disposal should remain high on the agenda,
particularly with regard to the Middle East. But the United
States needs to be more realistic about its nation-building
abilities, and cautious in taking on large
social-engineering projects in parts of the world it does
not understand very well. On the other hand, it is
inevitable that we will get sucked into similar projects in
the future (for example, after a sudden collapse of the
North Korean regime), and we need to be much better
prepared. This means establishing a permanent office with
authority and resources appropriate for the job the next
time around as part of a broader restructuring of the U.S.
government's soft-power agencies.
To this list I would add a final element that for reasons
of space I cannot elaborate here. The visionary founders of
the postwar order were institution-builders, who created not
just the much-maligned UN system, but the Bretton Woods
institutions, NATO, the U.S.-Japan and U.S.-Korea alliances,
the gatt, the WTO, and a host of other international
organizations. Institution-building is not something that
has occupied the time of officials in the Bush
Administration, but it should. If the United States does not
like the fact that the UN is dominated by non-democratic
regimes, then it should invest in an effort to build up
other institutions, like NATO or the Community of
Democracies founded during the Clinton Administration, that
are based on norms and values we share. The Community of
Democracies initiative, which the French foreign minister
Hubert Védrine tried to strangle at its birth, was never
taken seriously by the Republicans, for, I assume, "not
invented here" reasons. But such a global alliance of
democracies, led by newer ones in eastern Europe and Latin
America, could play a legitimizing function around the world
in a way that NATO cannot.
If the United States cannot create new global
institutions, then it could try to pursue a vision of
overlapping multilateral organizations on a regional basis.
The Bush Administration has stumbled into a six-power format
for dealing with North Korea; why not seek to make permanent
a five-power caucus once we (hopefully) get past the current
impasse over nuclear weapons with Pyongyang? Such an
organization could play a very valuable coordinating
function in the event of, say, a sudden North Korean
collapse. Mutual suspicions between Japan, Korea and China
are high, and a multilateral forum would be a much better
vehicle for sharing information and plans that the current
system of bilateral alliances running through Washington.
The Chinese in recent years have been pushing a series of
regional pacts--ASEAN Plus Three, the China-ASEAN Free Trade
Area, a Northeast Asian Free Trade Area, and ultimately, an
East Asian Free Trade Area--that they argue may some day
serve as the basis for regional security arrangements as
well. While the Japanese have seen these as bids for
regional leadership and have replied in kind with trade
pacts centered on themselves, the Bush Administration has
not, as far as I am aware, formulated anything like a
coherent response. Do we simply want to swat down proposals
for regional multilateral organizations, as we did in the
case of Mahatir's East Asian Community in the early 1990s or
Japan's proposal after the Asian financial crisis for a
regional IMF, or do we want to engage with the region and
shape such proposals in ways that can suit our own
interests? I believe that East Asia is
under-institutionalized and ripe for some creative thinking
by the United States.
I believe that this kind of recalibration of American
foreign policy still qualifies as falling in Krauthammer's
fourth "democratic globalism" basket, being neither
isolationist, liberal-idealist nor realist. Whether it will
ever be seen as neoconservative I doubt, but there is no
reason why it should not have this title.