Cold War Liberals Together Again
by Tom Barry
by Tom Barry
The
neoconservative Project
for the New American Century (PNAC) has signaled its intention
to continue shaping the government’s national security strategy
with a new public letter stating that the “U.S. military is too
small for the responsibilities we are asking it to assume.” Rather
than reining in the imperial scope of U.S. national security strategy
as set forth by the first Bush administration, PNAC and the letter’s
signatories call for increasing the size of America’s global fighting
machine.
The
January 28th PNAC letter advocates that House and Senate leaders
take the necessary steps “to increase substantially the size of
the active duty Army and Marine Corps.”
Joining
the neocons in the letter to congressional leaders were a group
of prominent liberals giving some credence to PNAC’s claim that
the “call to act” to increase the total number of U.S. ground forces
counts on bipartisan support.
After
an initial spate of public pronouncements after September 11th and
during the onset of the Iraq occupation, the Project for the New
American Century is again positioning itself as the policy institute
that will set the second Bush administration’s security agenda.
Although PNAC’s 1997 statement of principles included only prominent
right-wing figures many of whom later joined the first Bush administration the
neocon policy institute has repeatedly reached out to liberals to
give its public letters to the Congress and the president the gloss
of bipartisanship.
Its
new call for congressional leaders to increase overall U.S. troop
levels includes endorsement of key liberal analysts. Among the signatories
are the leading foreign policy analysts at the Brookings Institution
and the Progressive
Policy Institute, which are closely associated with the Democratic
Party. The endorsees of the letter are largely neoconservatives
who are principals in such neocon-led institutes as PNAC, American
Enterprise Institute (AEI), Foundation
for the Defense of Democracies, and the Center
for Security Policy. However, this call for a larger expeditionary
force was also signed by prominent liberal hawks, including Michael
O’Hanlon, Ivo Daalder, James Steinberg, and Will
Marshall all of whom have signed previous PNAC letters
and policy statements.
Support
for a “Generational Commitment” in Middle East
PNAC’s
“Letter to Congress on Increasing U.S. Ground Forces” endorses Secretary
of State Rice’s
assessment that U.S. military engagement in the Middle East is a
“generational commitment.” To meet that commitment, the PNAC signatories
call on Congress to fulfill its constitutional obligation to raise
and support military forces which they say means increasing the
number of ground forces by at least 25,000 troops annually over
the next several years.
PNAC,
which has repeatedly called for increases in the military budget
and for military-backed “regime change” around the world, is concerned
that the “United States military is too small for the responsibilities
we are asking it to assume.” The neoconservative policy institute,
which produced the blueprint for the national security strategy
of the first Bush administration, echoes the recent assertion by
the chief of the Army Reserve that the “overuse” of U.S. ground
forces in Iraq and Afghanistan could be result in a “broken force.”
Given
that the military’s reenlistment rates are declining and recruitment
goals are not being met, PNAC’s call for Congress to increase troop
levels implies either reintroducing the draft or dramatically increasing
the pay for volunteer enlistees. The latter option would in effect
create a global mercenary force deployed to meet the new responsibilities
of preventive war, regime change, and political restructuring of
the Middle East.
Liberal
Hawks Fly with the Neocons
The
recent PNAC letter to Congress was not the first time that PNAC
or its associated front groups, such as the Coalition for the Liberation
of Iraq, have included hawkish Democrats.
Two
PNAC letters in March 2003 played to those Democrats who believed
that the invasion was justified at least as much by humanitarian
concerns as it was by the purported presence of weapons of mass
destruction. PNAC and the neocon camp had managed to translate their
military agenda of preemptive and preventive strikes into national
security policy. With the invasion underway, they sought to preempt
those hardliners and military officials who opted for a quick exit
strategy in Iraq. In their March 19th letter, PNAC stated that Washington
should plan to stay in Iraq for the long haul: “Everyone those who
have joined the coalition, those who have stood aside, those who
opposed military action, and, most of all, the Iraqi people and
their neighbors must understand that we are committed to the rebuilding
of Iraq and will provide the necessary resources and will remain
for as long as it takes.”
Along
with such neocon stalwarts as Robert
Kagan, Bruce
Jackson, Joshua
Muravchik, James
Woolsey, and Eliot
Cohen, a half-dozen Democrats were among the 23 individuals
who signed PNAC’s first letter on post-war Iraq. Among the Democrats
were Ivo Daalder of the Brookings Institution and a member of Clinton’s
National Security Council staff; Martin Indyk, Clinton’s ambassador
to Israel; Will Marshall of the Progressive Policy Institute and
Democratic Leadership Council; Dennis Ross, Clinton’s top adviser
on the Israel-Palestinian negotiations; and James Steinberg, Clinton’s
deputy national security adviser and head of foreign policy studies
at Brookings. A second post-Iraq war letter by PNAC on March 28
called for broader international support for reconstruction, including
the involvement of NATO, and brought together the same Democrats
with the prominent addition of another Brookings’ foreign policy
scholar, Michael O’Hanlon.
In
late 2002 PNAC’s Bruce Jackson formed the Committee for the Liberation
of Iraq that brought together such Democrats as Senator Joseph Lieberman;
former Senator Robert Kerrey, the president of the New School University
who now serves on the 9/11 Commission; PPI’s Will Marshall; and
former U.S. Representative Steve Solarz. The neocons also reached
out to Democrats through a sign-on letter to the president organized
by the Social
Democrats/USA, a neocon institute that has played a critical
role in shaping the National Endowment for Democracy in the early
1980s and in mobilizing labor support for an interventionist foreign
policy.
The
liberal hawks not only joined with the neocons to support the war
and the post-war restructuring but have published their own statements
in favor of what is now widely regarded as a morally bankrupt policy
agenda. Perhaps the clearest articulation of the liberal hawk position
on foreign and military policy is found in an October 2003 report
by the Progressive Policy Institute, which is a think tank closely
associated with the Democratic Leadership Council. The report, entitled
Progressive Internationalism: A Democratic National Security
Strategy, endorsed the invasion of Iraq, “because the previous
policy of containment was failing,” and Saddam Hussein’s government
was “undermining both collective security and international law.”
PPI
President Will Marshall said that the progressive internationalism
strategy draws “a sharp distinction between this mainstream Democratic
strategy for national security and the far left’s vision of America’s
role in the world. In this document we take issue with those who
begrudge the kind of defense spending that we think is necessary
to meet our needs, both at home and abroad; with folks who seem
to reflexively oppose the use of force; and who seem incapable of
taking America’s side in international disputes.” Among the other
liberal hawks who contributed to the Progressive Internationalism
report were Bob Kerrey; Larry Diamond of the Hoover
Institution and the National Endowment for Democracy; and Michael
McFaul of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
The
repeated willingness of influential liberal leaders and foreign
policy analysts, such as Marshall, O’Hanlon, and Daalder, to join
forces with the neoconservative camp has bolstered PNAC’s claim
that its foreign policy agenda is neither militarist nor imperialist
but one that is based on a deep respect for human rights, democracy,
and universal moral values. Other liberal hawks signing the recent
PNAC letter include New Republic editor Peter Beinart; Steven
Nider, director of security studies at the Progressive Policy Institute;
James Steinberg, director of Brookings’ foreign policy studies program
and former director of the State Department’s Policy Planning office
during the Clinton administration; Craig Kennedy, president of the
German Marshall Fund and former program officer at the Joyce Foundation;
and Michelle Flournoy, a self-described “pro-defense Democrat” who
is a member of the Aspen Strategy Group and served in the Clinton
administration in the DOD’s strategy secretariat. Having Yale historian
Paul Kennedy, the author of The
Rise and Fall of Great Powers, sign the new letter was a
major coup for PNAC.
Not
surprising is the list of neocons signing PNAC’s new letter. In
addition to PNAC’s founders William
Kristol and Robert Kagan, other PNAC principals included as
signatories were its deputy director Daniel
McKivergan, executive director Gary
Schmitt, military strategist Thomas
Donnelly, Middle East associate Reuel
Marc Gerecht; and board members Bruce Jackson and Randy
Scheunemann. Signatories from the closely associated American
Enterprise Institute include Daniel Blumenthal, Joshua Muravchik,
Danielle Pletka, and Elliot Cohen. Other neocon luminaries among
the 34 signatories include pundit Max
Boot; Clifford
May, executive director of the Foundation for the Defense of
Democracies; and Frank
Gaffney, founder of the Center for Security Policy.
One
striking difference marking the new PNAC letter was its inclusion
of several high-ranking retired military officers, including Gen.
Barry McCaffrey, former SouthCom commander and Drug Czar and Lt.
Gen. Buster Glosson, who directed air strategy during the Gulf War.
Mugging
and Hugging
Irving
Kristol, known as the “godfather of neoconservatism,” famously
defined neoconservatives as “liberals who have been mugged by reality.”
That political mugging occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s
with the rise of the counterculture, the anti-war movement, and
progressive New Politics of the Democratic Party.
Former
Trotskyite militants and Cold War liberals like Kristol, Norman
Podhoretz, and Midge
Decter switched their loyalties to the Republican Party. The
“reality” that mugged the neocons was the progressive turn in the
Democratic Party led by such figures as Jesse Jackson, Bella Abzug,
George McGovern, and Jimmy Carter. In contrast, the neoconservatives
found the militant anticommunism and social conservatism of the
Ronald Reagan faction in the Republican Party invigorating. In the
neocon lexicon, liberalism became synonymous with secularism, women’s
liberation, anti-Americanism, and appeasement.
Over
the past quarter century, the neocons have sought, with increasing
success, to rid the Republican Party of its isolationists, its anti-imperialists,
and its realists. The younger neocons, such as William Kristol (son
of Irving) and Elliott
Abrams (son-in-law of Norman Podhoretz and Midge Decter), have
promoted a new right-wing internationalism that holds that America
should be both a global cop and a global missionary for freedom.
Traditional
conservatives and Republican Party realists say that the neocons’
foreign policy agenda is, respectively, neo-imperialist and unrealistic
about the capacity of U.S. military power to remake the world. Apart
from their militarist friends in the Pentagon and defense industries,
the neocons are finding that their closest ideological allies are
the internationalists in the liberal camp. Having recuperated from
their mugging, the neocons are now reaching out to liberals who
share their idealism about America’s global mission. To the delight
of the neocons at PNAC and AEI, an influential group of liberal
hawks share their vision of a U.S. grand strategy that will create
a world order based on U.S. military supremacy and America’s presumed
moral superiority.
February
12, 2004
Tom
Barry is policy director of the Interhemispheric
Resource Center (IRC). Posted with permission from Foreign Policy
in Focus.
Copyright
© 2005 Foreign Policy in Focus
|