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Tony
Blair Saved Queen Elizabeth II and the Monarchy: Can Jim Baker Save
President Bush II and the Establishment?
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
DIGG THIS
The Queen,
a film directed by Stephen Frears with Helen Mirren in an Oscar-winning
performance as Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, is meant to be the
cinematic account of the composed – well, chilly – response by the
Queen to the death of Princess Diana in a car crash in a Paris tunnel
in 1997, which enraged the hysterical British masses.
But in fact,
the movie is about the way Prime Minister Tony Blair ends up saving
the institution of monarchy. The head of the New Labor government
(played by Michael Sheen) explains to Her Majesty that she needs
to contain the threatening populist wave by demonstrating to her
subjects that she feels their pain.
Blair's political
instincts put him at odds with his wife and advisers who spurn the
Royals. But the savvy PM understands that if you start questioning
the legitimacy of the reign of the Queen, you are in danger of sliding
down a dangerous slippery slope that could threaten all of Britain's
traditional institutions. Hence, by helping to save the monarchy,
Blair is really protecting the interests of the entire British Establishment.
If Blair was seen by many as being responsible for saving Queen
Elizabeth II, the conventional wisdom in Washington now is that
former United States secretary of state James Baker has taken it
upon himself to save the US Iraq policy, and by extension, the political
fortunes of President George W Bush.
Baker, a longtime
personal friend and political ally of the members of the Bush Dynasty,
has been appointed by Congress as co-chair of the Iraq Study Group
(ISG), a high-level panel of prominent former officials charged
by Congress with taking a fresh look at America's policy on Iraq.
His panel,
which is co-chaired by former Democratic representative Lee H. Hamilton
is scheduled to issue its report some time after the 2006 mid-term
elections. And everyone in the US capital – the Bush Administration,
Congress, the media – are now holding their breath waiting for the
words of wisdom to be dispensed by the US capital's ultimate Wise
Man.
In a way, if
Baker succeeds in drawing up constructive ideas for getting the
US out of the quagmire in Mesopotamia, he will not only be protecting
America's geo-strategic position and saving the political legacy
of Bush the Second; he will also be helping to save that very elusive
creature, the American Establishment.
"The Establishment,"
according to Wikipedia is a slang term, popularized in the 1960s
and 1970s to refer to the "traditional ruling class elite and
the structures of society they control."
Many Americans,
who pride themselves on the relatively open political and economic
system ("My son would grow up to be a president") insist
that unlike Britain and Europe, the US doesn't have such a rigid
political ruling class.
Conspiracy
theorists imagine that decision-making in Washington, especially
when it comes to issues of war and peace, are made by the members
of a small cabal associated with the Pentagon, the Big Corporations,
the Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission.
The reality
is, as the developments leading to the war in Iraq have demonstrated,
the major decisions in US foreign policy are made by a relatively
small elite of policymakers, led by the White House, and shaped
by powerful bureaucrats, lawmakers, lobbies and pundits.
While these
influential political players include Republicans and Democrats,
conservatives and liberals, they all seem to share a common interest
in the aftermath of the Cold War in maintaining US global political,
economic and military primacy.
If anything,
the war in Iraq and its aftermath has exposed a debate among leading
members of this establishment.
On the one
hand, realist internationalists like James Baker and Zbigniew Brzezinski
and other public figures with ties to the administrations of president
Bill Clinton and George Bush the First have argued that the US'
leading position in the world and in the Middle East can be secured
only by playing a leadership role in multilateral structures and
through cooperation with allies.
US hegemony
On the other
hand, neoconservative ideologues like Paul Wolfowitz and Richard
Perle and their patrons (George Bush the Second; Richard Cheney;
Donald Rumsfeld) have advocated a unilateralist diplomatic and military
strategy to protect American global hegemony.
This has been
a dispute over means and not over goals, between those members of
the American Establishment who are willing to permit allies to set
some constraints on US policies as a way of maintaining an effective
collective action to achieve core American interests and those who
argue that the American Gulliver cannot allow himself to be constrained
by the weak and useless Lilliputians who are bound to follow him
if he only projects his power. The 9/11 terrorist attacks provided
an opportunity for the neoconservatives led by Wolfowitz and company
to apply their preferred strategy in the Middle East and worldwide.
And for a while,
in the aftermath of the initial military victories in Afghanistan
and Iraq it seemed as though the realist internationalists like
Baker and Brzezinski had lost the debate and were being marginalized
as members of the Establishment.
But the failure
of the unilateralist US project in Iraq and the Middle East – no
weapons of mass destruction and no Saddam-Osama ties; the anti-American
violence and the civil war; continuing opposition from regional
partners and international players and rising anti-American sentiment
– have made it clear that the neoconservatives were the ones losing
the debate and were being gradually marginalized.
Ironically,
the invasion of Iraq coupled with the ensuing effort to export American
values to the Middle East exposed the major threat that neoconservatism
posed to the American Establishment by strengthening the forces
that challenge US primacy – Iran and its Shiite allies in Iraq and
Lebanon, Syria and the radical Hamas in Palestine – while eroding
American ability to resolve the nuclear crises with North Korea
and Iran and manage its relationships with great powers like the
European Union, Russia, and China. The most important concern of
American Establishment has to do mainly with the impact that a disastrous
outcome of the war in Iraq would have on the attitudes of the American
public towards the continuing US leadership role in the world.
A costly US
defeat in Iraq followed by the collapse of that country, a bloody
civil war and possible intervention by outside regional players
could devastate the American position in the Middle East and could
produce pressure from voters to reduce, and perhaps even end the
expansive American military engagement in the region, followed by
similar demands to reassess US intervention in other parts of the
world. And that kind of rising isolationist and protectionist sentiments
could challenge the core beliefs and interests of the American Establishment,
whose members – Republicans and Democrats alike – continue to regard
Washington as the modern-day Rome, the central and dominant player
in the global system.
Moreover, all
the major potential presidential contenders in 2008, including Democrat
Hillary Clinton and Republican John McCain supported the decision
to go to war in Iraq, and a devastating blow to that undertaking
could strengthen the position of antiwar populist figures in both
parties that might decide to join the race to the White House.
Indeed, savvy
Democrats like Hillary Clinton recognize that if one starts questioning
the decision to go to war in Iraq, the next thing you know is that
he or she begins raising doubts about the central tenets of US foreign
policy, and before you know it, the American public is sliding on
a dangerous slippery slope, a process that could threaten the entire
American Establishment.
No surprise
So it is not
surprising that Baker and Hamilton, two traditional realist internationalists
are being called to the rescue by the Hillary Clintons as well as
the John McCains of Washington.
According to
some reports, the ISG report will probably draw the outlines of
a plan similar to a Bosnia-like partition of Iraq, providing wide
political autonomy to the Shiite south, the Kurdish north and the
Sunni area, including arrangements to divide the country's energy
resources among the three regions.
Baker and his
colleagues are also expected to call for US negotiations with Iran
and Syria as part of an effort to involve other regional players
in securing the stability of Iraq and for the launching of an international
initiative to resolve the other critical Middle East problems: Israel/Palestine,
Lebanon and the Iran nuclear crisis.
Both Democrats
and Republicans hope that the adoption of such a plan by Washington
would create the conditions for gradual withdrawal of American troops
from Iraq as Iraqi military and police forces backed by the US and
other governments could provide security and make it possible to
begin the economic reconstruction of that country.
In that context,
such a process coupled with progress in the Israeli-Palestinian
peace process, the integration of Hezbollah into Lebanon's political
system, and the possible transformation of Iran into a responsible
regional and international actor could mark the beginning of the
end of the Bush Administration's neoconservative-driven strategy
and a return to the more "Empire-Lite" approach that had
been advanced by presidents Clinton and Bush the First.
The US would
be able to maintain a leadership position in the Middle East by
working with the global powers (EU, Russia and China) and regional
allies (Turkey, the moderate Arab states, and Israel) while co-opting
rivals like Iran and Syria and trying to bring peace to the Holy
Land, Lebanon and Iraq. But it's quite possible that it is getting
too late to save American positions in Iraq and the Middle East.
The Bush Administration
may have unleashed such powerful destructive forces in the Middle
East that cannot be restrained and contained anymore. It may be
impossible to close Pandora's Box.
At
the same time, other global players, like the EU and Russia may
not have enough incentive to help Washington stabilize its position
in that region and may prefer to leave the US twisting in the wind.
And one cannot
dismiss the possibility that even if it is presented by the Baker
Commission with a realistic plan for Iraq, President Bush will not
be ready to change the course. After all, PM Blair was able to save
Queen Elizabeth II only because she wanted to protect the British
monarchy and Establishment. Is Bush ready to be saved by Baker?
Inquiring minds in the American Establishment want to know.
November
9, 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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