Neoconservatives at Sea
by
Jim Lobe
Jubilant
over President George W. Bush's reelection victory just two months
ago, neoconservatives who played a leading role in shaping the radical
trajectory of U.S. foreign policy after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks appear increasingly divided on key issues and uncertain
of their position in Bush's second term.
All
are on board for the Jan. 30 elections in Iraq, and military strikes
against suspected Iranian nuclear facilities to prevent Teheran
from getting a bomb. But they cannot seem to forge a consensus on
US military strategy in Iraq, whether to demand greater military
spending than the Bush administration appears comfortable with,
or whether to back a policy of engagement with Iran prior to a military
strike.
They
are also worried about key appointments to second-term foreign policy
positions, particularly that of US Trade Representative Robert Zoellick
to serve as Secretary of State-designate Condoleezza Rice's deputy,
as well as other appointments to senior posts in the State Department.
But
the biggest blow to their unity and sense of purpose to date has
been the deep split that has developed within their ranks following
the death of Palestinian leader and "arch-fiend," Yassir
Arafat.
The
emergence of a "moderate" successor in Palestinian Authority
(PA) president-elect Mahmoud Abbas, coupled with his initial embrace
by both the Bush administration and a realigned Israeli government
seemingly determined to carry out its plan to disengage from Gaza
by the end of this year, has drawn harsh criticism from hard-line
neoconservatives.
These
include Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer, and
Center for Security Policy (CSP) chief Frank Gaffney, who fear that
both Bush and Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, are moving down a "slippery
slope" that will put Israel's security in serious jeopardy.
They
doubtless saw a ray of light in the announcement Friday by Sharon
cutting all ties with the PA until it "take(s) the necessary
steps to curb and stop terrorism," in retaliation for the killing
of six Israelis and wounding of five others by Palestinian militants
at a checkpoint Thursday.
The
split in neocon ranks, of course, mirrors that which has taken
place between the less-ideological elements in Israel's Likud Party,
such as Sharon and Deputy Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, and its more-extreme
elements who have long opposed any Israeli retreat from the occupied
territories for theological or nationalistic reasons.
Because
Israel's security is so central to the neoconservative worldview,
the split between the hard-line neoconservatives, who are closely
aligned with Likud's extremists, and their more pragmatic brethren,
such as Rice's top Middle East aide, Elliott Abrams, who lean more
to Sharon and even Olmert, deeply threatens its unity and ideological
coherence.
These
developments are surprising in many ways given the jubilation of
the neoconservatives over Bush's election victory and subsequent
decision to drop Secretary of State Colin Powell in his second term.
Within
days, prominent neocons, such as Danielle Pletka, a Middle East
specialist at Neocon Central, the American Enterprise Institute
(AEI), and their fellow-travelers, such as Undersecretary of State
for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton, were being
touted for top spots at the State Department and the National Security
Council.
Meanwhile,
hard-liners like Gaffney and AEI's Michael Ledeen and David Frum
were drawing up lists of new candidates for "regime change,"
including Iran, Syria, North Korea, China, and even Venezuela.
Since
then, a number of unanticipated developments appear to have deflated
their confidence. Indeed, by early this week, Frum, a former Bush
speechwriter who co-authored a book last year with AEI's Richard
Perle, the hub of Washington's neocon network, was positively sullen
over news of the latest appointments and recent statements on Iran
and Syria by Bush himself.
The
clearest of these developments, of course, was the continued deterioration
of the U.S. position in Iraq despite the leveling of Fallujah in
late November, which neoconservatives of all hues had confidently
declared would mark a turning point in the war.
The
prediction just last week by Gen. Brent Scowcroft (ret.), national
security adviser to Bush's father and former President Gerald Ford,
that Iraq was headed toward "incipient civil war," regardless
of how the Jan. 30 elections turn out marked the final break of
a longtime Bush loyalist and mainstream Republican with the neoconservative
foreign policy. But it also served as a dramatic reminder about
how disastrously wrong the prewar predictions by the neocons have
turned out to be.
Scowcroft's
statement, which came in a session in which another venerable foreign-policy
graybeard, Zbigniew Brzezinski, offered an even more pessimistic
forecast of imperial decline, quickly became the talk of the town
an exclamation point for the Establishment's accumulating horror
over the lack of light at the end of the Iraqi tunnel.
While
prominent neocons pooh-poohed the old guard for agreeing with "the
left," their crouch has become ever more defensive and sullen.
With
the insurgency as vigorous as ever, many neoconservatives began
rubbing salt in old wounds, reviving complaints that Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld had failed to deploy a large enough force, either
during the invasion or now, with elections pending. Others revived
arguments that the fatal mistake was in not relying more heavily
on Iraqis themselves, both now and at the time of the invasion.
Indeed,
Rumsfeld has now become another major point of contention among
neoconservatives with some, like the Weekly Standard's William
Kristol and Donald Kagan, claiming that he should have been fired
long ago for bungling the occupation, and others, such as Perle
and military historian Victor Davis Hanson, rushing to his defense.
Meanwhile,
Gaffney, who has defended Rumsfeld, offered the unkindest cut of
all this week in the Washington Times, calling proposed administration
cuts in missile defense and other big-money military programs to
pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan "Kerry-like"
a reference to the defeated Democratic contender for the
presidency and far short of what is needed to maintain US
global supremacy, which lies at the heart of the hawks' strategic
vision.
Another
nasty fight over Iran policy also blossomed in the neoconservative-dominated
Committee on the Present Danger (CPD), which, while united in accepting
the necessity of ultimately "taking out" Teheran's presumed
nuclear-weapons program, found themselves deeply divided over whether
to first "engage" Teheran by fully backing European initiatives
to move straight to the "regime-change-by-any-means-necessary-possible"
option.
The
result, an unwieldy compromise made possible by the intervention
of former Secretary of State George Shultz, did little to heal the
breach.
Meanwhile,
neoconservative hopes that Rice would either "straighten out"
or permanently marginalize the State Department so as not to obstruct
the hawks' second-term agenda, as Powell and his team tried to do
during the first term, have largely been dashed with the appointment
of Zoellick a protégé of both Scowcroft and
former Secretary of State James Baker and the likelihood
that NATO Amb. Nick Burns, another Atlantic-oriented realist, will
take the number three post.
Worse
for the neocons are reports that the regional assistant secretaries
of state, including the Near East bureau which neoconservatives
had hoped would go to Pletka or someone of her ilk, will be dominated
by career diplomats.
Bolton,
whom the hawks had hoped would be named Rice's deputy, will not
be promoted to any strategic position outside of Vice President
Dick Cheney's office, which already is overflowing with neoconservatives.
"Unsupported
by a clear-eyed deputy like Bolton," wrote a worried Frum last
week, "there is a very real risk that the department will run
her, rather than the other way around."
January
17, 2005
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2005 Inter Press Service
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