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US Foreign Policy Doublespeak?
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
American officials,
lawmakers and pundits have been analyzing – overanalyzing is probably
the right term – US President George W Bush's new National Security
Strategy (NSS), leading one to conclude that the document that was
issued last week has major significance in terms of gaining insights
into what kind of approach to world affairs the Bush administration
would be pursuing in the last three years of its term.
In a way, it
is not surprising that the pundits have been trying to deconstruct
the 2006 NSS in order to gain possible insights into the Bushies'
foreign policy. Has President Bush and his national security team
adopted a more "realistic" orientation? Will the United
States attack Iran's nuclear facilities? Will there be more of an
effort to apply a multilateral strategy in dealing with international
crises? Is China now being regarded as a "threat" by the
Americans?
It is very
much the same way that the Cold War-era "Kremlinologists"
pored over public documents issued by Moscow so as to figure out
what the Kremlin bosses were really thinking. The reason for that
is that not unlike the ideologues who were guiding Soviet foreign
policy were focusing a lot of their energy on propaganda, the neoconservatives
who have been behind the US diplomacy since 9/11 have been confining
their public discussion of America's role in the world to bombastic
and shallow propaganda about exporting "democracy" to
the Middle East and elsewhere.
Hence the need
to try reading "between the lines" of addresses and policy
papers by US officials and find out what Washington is "really"
planning to do in, say, Iran or China, since no one seriously assumes
that President Bush and his aides "really" believe in
their utopian global freedom-is-on-the-march visions.
The problem
is that parts of the long-overdue NSS sound very much like propaganda
marching orders for US diplomats and military personnel, a kind
that recalls Why-Are-We-Fighting? documentaries of World War II.
It lays out
a robust view of America's power and an assertive view of its responsibility
to bring change around the world, and underscores in a very thematic
way Mr. Bush's desire to make the spread of democracy the fundamental
underpinning of US foreign policy, as he expressed in his second
inaugural address last year.
In fact, the
opening words of the new document are lifted from that speech and
proclaim that "it is the policy of the United States to seek
and support democratic movements and institutions in every nation
and culture, with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world."
And when it
comes to the most controversial elements in Mr. Bush's strategy,
the new document does not provide any news. Indeed, it reaffirms
the doctrine of "preemptive" war against terrorists and
hostile states with chemical, biological or nuclear weapons, which
is exactly the same doctrine that had been enunciated in the 2002
NSS document and which has been applied with disastrous results
in the war in Iraq.
After the 2002
NSS was published, observers noted that the new strategy of preemption
shifted US foreign policy away from decades of deterrence and containment
towards a more aggressive stance of attacking enemies before they
attack the US.
But in the
aftermath of the war in Iraq, the general consensus among foreign
policy analysts in Washington was that the failure to find weapons
of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq fatally undermined an essential
assumption of the strategy of preemption – that intelligence about
an enemy's capabilities and intentions can be sufficient to justify
preventive war.
Against the
backdrop of the mess in Iraq, the conventional wisdom among policy
wonks in Washington has been that under the leadership of Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice the Bush administration has abandoned
its more unilateralist foreign policy and its schemes to oust unsavory
regimes around the world, and moved in the direction of more realism
in dealing with world affairs.
Pundits have
been proclaiming in the op-ed pages of leading newspapers and on
television news shows that Vice-President Dick Cheney and Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld have been losing their influence and that
Dr. Rice and her team of "realists" are now in charge
of foreign policy in Washington.
And, indeed,
the expectation in Washington was that the revised version of the
NSS would offer fresh thoughts about the preemption policy and send
new signals about the Bush administration's modified strategy.
Instead, the
2006 NSS insisted that the preemption policy "remains the same,"
defending it as necessary for a country in the "early years
of a long struggle" akin to the Cold War. "If necessary,
however, under long-standing principles of self-defense, we do not
rule out use of force before attacks occur, even if uncertainty
remains as to the time and place of the enemy's attack," the
document continues.
"When
the consequences of an attack with WMD are potentially so devastating,
we cannot afford to stand idly by as grave dangers materialize."
In that context, the new document seemed to imply that the Bush
administration was planning to apply its preemptive doctrine once
again, but this time against Iran.
"We may
face no greater challenge from a single country than from Iran,"
the 2006 NSS says. It recommits to efforts with European allies
to pressure Teheran to give up any aspirations of nuclear weapons,
but then adds ominously that "this diplomatic effort must succeed
if confrontation is to be avoided."
Interestingly
enough, the document with its threatening language directed against
Teheran, including the implication that Washington is considering
launching a preventive war against Iran, was issued in the same
week that reports from the Middle East indicated that American and
Iranian officials would be meeting soon to discuss their common
concerns in Iraq and find ways to stabilize that country.
So what is
going on here? On the one hand the Americans are sending signals
that they are planning to use military force against Iran, while
on the other they are expressing their willingness to open a diplomatic
dialogue with the Iranians. How can one square the reiteration of
a preemptive policy towards Iran with the taking of a step towards
détente with it?
And while we
are discussing inconsistencies in US foreign policy, how can we
explain the attempts by Washington to win the diplomatic support
of Beijing and Moscow for punitive measures against Iran at the
United Nations Security Council as a way of forcing the Iranians
to end their nuclear military program, while at the same time, Dr.
Rice is trying to enlist Australia and Japan to form an alliance
aimed at containing China and is also condemning Russia for its
failure to measure up to US democratic principles?
But inconsistencies
in foreign policy exist only when one assumes that the government
in questions is committed to a set of consistent foreign policy
principles, like the kind that the pundits have been searching for
in the 2006 NSS.
But my reading
of what is going on in Washington is that when it comes to foreign
policy (or for that matter, trade policy), the Bush administration
is now basically just muddling through. It does not have a coherent
policy on how to get out of Iraq, how to resolve the Iranian and
North Korean nuclear crises, how to revive the Israeli-Palestinian
peace process or how to deal with China and Russia.
So the Bush
administration gives a green light to the Europeans and the Russians
to negotiate with the Iranians, while at the same time it is pushing
for sanctions against Teheran. It calls for regime change in Teheran
while helping to bring to power the pro-Iranian Shi'ite clerics
in Baghdad.
It announces
an ambitious program to "export democracy" to Iran but
then it also agrees to negotiate with the Iranians on Iraq. And
it certainly applies double standards when it comes to the issue
of nuclear proliferation in Iran, India and Israel.
If
you accept the notion that the modus operandi of the Bush administration's
foreign policy is muddling through, that it really does not have
a "National Security Strategy," all the "inconsistencies"
suddenly make a lot of sense.
For some, it
might sound like bad news. Perhaps we should regard it as good news
if we recall that the only time that the Bush administration was
not muddling through was when it decided to invade Iraq. It thought
that it knew what it was doing. Now it finally recognizes that it
does not. And that's progress.
March
23, 2006
Leon
Hadar [send him mail] is
Washington correspondent for the Business
Times of Singapore and the author of Sandstorm:
Policy Failure in the Middle East (Palgrave Macmillan). Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2006 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved. Reprinted
with permission of the author.
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