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A
New Kind of Neocon?
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
DIGG THIS
Nikolas Gvosdev,
editor of the National
Interest, a foreign policy magazine affiliated with the
Nixon Center in Washington, DC, has recently been trying to revitalize
the stale discourse on U.S. global strategy in the capital of the
world's only remaining superpower. Gvosdev, whose magazine has been
shaken up by post-Iraq invasion ideological disputes (leading to
the departure from its editorial board of neoconservative Charles
Krauthammer, as well as ex-neocon Francis
Fukuyama), has been holding gatherings that bring together realist
and internationalist critics of President George W. Bush's foreign
policy agenda to discuss alternative approaches to the Bush administration's
neoconservative hegemonic strategy.
In late September,
the National Interest convened a meeting to consider “What
a Post-Bush Foreign Policy Might Look Like.” Gvosdev invited two
foreign policy experts, one a Republican and one a Democrat, to
predict how an administration of, say, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) or
Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) would change U.S. global strategy, and
in particular, whether they would reverse current policies. The
conventional wisdom in Washington is that a Republican president
like McCain might embrace a “Bush lite” approach (that's the best-case
scenario some say a Republican super-hawk would try to “out-neoconize”
Bush), and a Democrat like Senator Clinton would adopt more sensible
and internationalist diplomacy, à la Bill Clinton.
To the surprise
of some of those attending the National Interest event, it
was the speaker representing the Democratic perspective, Will
Marshall, president and founder of the Progressive
Policy Institute, who ended up “out-neoconizing” Bush. Republican
Stefan Halper, former official in the Reagan and Bush Senior administrations
and a fellow at the Centre of International Studies at Cambridge
University, presented a devastating critique of the foreign policy
of Bush Junior.
That a Republican
conservative was urging a more realistic and less interventionist
foreign policy and a Democratic liberal was advocating a hegemonic
global strategy aimed at strengthening American military presence
abroad as well as at promoting “democracy” worldwide should not
shock anyone familiar with the history of U.S. politics and foreign
policy. Indeed, as Halper has noted in a book he coauthored with
Jonathan Clarke, America
Alone: The Neo-Conservatives and the Global Order (2004),
many of the neoconservatives who joined the Republican Party at
the height of the Cold War had been hawkish liberal Democrats critical
of their party for “abandoning” the interventionist and militarized
policies pursued by Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and Lyndon
Johnson and for adopting an “isolationist” agenda. The neoconservatives
accused George McGovern and his supporters of “hijacking” the Democratic
Party's foreign policy and of “appeasing” the Soviet bloc.
Yet the neoconservatives
were also very critical of the Realpolitik approach pursued by the
Nixon-Kissinger
team that created the conditions for détente and arms control
agreements with the Soviets and the opening toward China. And moreover,
even under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush
when such figures as Richard
Perle, Paul
Wolfowitz, and I.
Lewis Libby served in top foreign and defense policy jobs
neoconservatives opposed policies that they considered contrary
to their staunchly pro-Israel ideas. Such policies included Reagan's
decision to withdraw U.S. troops from Lebanon or Bush Senior's pressure
on Israel to end its settlement policies and negotiate with the
Palestinians.
The foreign
policy principles espoused by neoconservatives unilateralist
military intervention aimed at establishing U.S. global hegemony,
a messianic Wilsonian agenda of spreading democracy worldwide, and
a radical pro-Likud Zionist stance run very contrary to the
cautious pursuit of U.S. interests traditionally reflected by conservative
and realist Republican foreign policy. Republican and conservative
critics of the neoconservatives felt the need to reassess their
“union” with the neoconservatives, which had made sense during the
ideological and strategic conflicts with the Communists during the
Cold War, but whose impact on U.S. foreign policy, the Republican
Party, and the conservative movement proved to be disastrous after
9/11.
Critics like
Halper argue that neoconservatives seized the Republican Party's
diplomatic and national security agenda after 9/11 and persuaded
Bush and his advisers to adopt their approach in the Middle East
as part of an effort to establish U.S. hegemony and American-style
democracy in the region, while also trying to advance Israel's interests
there. But if anything, the Iraq misadventure has demonstrated the
“limitations of American power,” as Halper put it during his presentation.
“Reality has been a harsh teacher,” and is leading the American
elites and public including Republicans to recognize
that although the United States may have the world's strongest,
most technologically advanced military, it cannot be effectively
used to “export American values” to the Middle East and elsewhere,
Halper said.
But at the
same time as realists and conservatives in the Republican Party
are hoping to challenge the dominance of the neoconservatives over
their party's foreign policy, many leading Democratic activists
and liberal intellectuals seem to be calling on their party to embrace
an even more “pure” or radical version of the neoconservative ideology.
Indeed, during his presentation at the National Interest event,
Marshall insisted that his party does not and would not advance
anti-war sentiment or hopes for military disengagement. “Our party
needs to show it can take on the job of defeating Islamic extremists
if we want to win the next election,” said Marshall, editor of the
recent book With
All our Might: A Progressive Strategy for Defeating Jihad and Defending
Liberty. “We need to fight for liberal principles abroad
as vigorously as we fight for them at home,” he said. He stressed
that Democrats “shouldn't abandon democracy as a goal.”
Criticizing
the Bush administration for declining to expand the military it
relies on as a major policy instrument, Marshall proposed that a
Democratic administration would grow the American military by 40,000
troops to better meet the demands of Iraq and Afghanistan. Not everyone
liked this idea; in response to Marshall's comments, one participant
responded: “If the first item on the Democrats' plan for foreign
policy is making the military bigger, color me Republican.”
Although Marshall's
views may have sounded like an echo of the neoconservative agenda,
they should not be considered a minority stance of the political
and intellectual Democratic elites. Much attention has been paid
to the anti-war bloggers and other Democratic Party rank-and-file
activists who helped torpedo Sen. Joe
Lieberman's (D-CT) Senate nomination as the party candidate.
Yet many of Lieberman's Democratic colleagues in the Senate and
the House not only backed the resolution giving Bush a green light
to invade Iraq, but also continue to oppose any congressional plan
to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq. Many of the same Democrats have
backed Bush's inflexible approach toward Iran in some cases
sounding tougher than the Republicans on the issue as well
as the White House's firm defense of Israel's recent military operations
in Lebanon and Palestine.
Moreover, as
New York University historian Tony Judt pointed out recently, many
hawkish liberal intellectuals and policy analysts who have ties
to the Democratic leadership and are affiliated with newspapers
and magazines such as the New York Times, Washington Post,
New Republic, and the New Yorker and with think tanks
like the Brookings Institution and the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, have acquiesced to Bush's foreign policy agenda (see “Bush's
Useful Idiots: Tony Judt on the Strange Death of Liberal America,”
London Review of Books, September 21, 2006). Not unlike Marshall,
they seem to be promoting the idea that the Democrats need to adopt
the ambitious neoconservative creed while trying to “improve” it
by making it more marketable and workable. They seem to suggest
that the neoconservative doctrine was fine it's just that
the Republicans lacked the talent and the imagination to turn it
into a success.
In some respects,
the liberal hawks tend to share more of an ideological affinity
with the Wilsonian elements in the neoconservative agenda than with
some of the more nationalist hawks, like Dick
Cheney and Donald
Rumsfeld, who seem more pre-occupied with the need to maintain
U.S. geostrategic hegemony. “For what distinguishes the worldview
of Bush's liberal supporters from that of his neoconservative allies
is that they don't look on the ‘War on Terror,' or the war in Iraq,
or the war in Lebanon and eventually Iran, as mere serial exercises
in the re-establishment of American martial dominance,” Judt argues.
“They see them as skirmishes in a new global confrontation: a Good
Fight, reassuringly comparable to their grandparents' war against
fascism and their Cold War liberal parents' stance against international
communism … Long nostalgic for the comforting verities of a simpler
time, today's liberal intellectuals have at last discovered a sense
of purpose: They are at war with ‘Islamo-fascism.'”
Among some
of these liberal hawks, Judt mentions Paul Berman, Christopher Hitchens,
and Peter Beinart, whose views on Iraq, the Middle East, and U.S.
foreign policy in general seem to be very similar to those of neoconservatives
William Kristol,
Robert Kagan,
and Lawrence Kaplan. While liberal hawks like Tom Friedman have
been critical of Bush's Iraq policy, much of their disapproval has
been directed at the management of the war and the occupation of
Iraq, not of the underlying justification of the administration's
hegemonic Wilsonian project in the Middle East.
Another
contingency of liberal hawks occupies positions of influence in
Washington think tanks, including the Saban Center for Middle East
Policy at the Brookings Institution, where such scholar-practitioners
as former U.S. ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk and Kenneth Pollack
have been cheerleaders for the Iraq War and have approved of Bush's
policies on Iran and Israel. In fact, one does not have to be a
veteran political observer to predict Indyk, Pollack, and other
experts on the Middle East, like former peace negotiator Dennis
Ross, would probably play a major role in influencing the policy
of a future Democratic administration. In that case, the Democratic
Party activists who rallied against Joe Lieberman should not be
surprised if Bush's Democratic successor ends up pursuing policies
that might be described as neoconservatism with a smiling Democratic
face.
This article
originally appeared on RightWeb.
October
12, 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.
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© 2006 RightWeb
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