Item of Interest
May 31, 2007
Can American Leadership Be Restored?
Chas W. Freeman, Jr. |
Editor's Note
Earlier this year Ambassador Chas Freeman, President
of the Middle East Policy Council, explored security
challenges facing America in remarks at a seminar
for new members of the US Congress titled " National
Security in the Age of Terrorism." That
presentation, provided to you by SUSRIS, was
illuminated by Freeman's experiences as a
distinguished career diplomat, including service as
U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia (1989-92). [ bio]
Today we are pleased to distribute for your
consideration an adjunct to the earlier, insightful
presentation, on this occasion remarks to the
Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs in
Washington on May 24, 2007. We thank Ambassador
Freeman and the Middle East Policy Council for
permission to reprint "Can American Leadership Be
Restored?" in SUSRIS.
Can American
Leadership Be Restored?
Ambassador Chas W. Freeman, Jr. (USFS. Ret.)
When our descendants look back on the end of the
20th Century and the beginning of this one, they
will be puzzled. The end of the Cold War relieved
Americans of almost all international anxieties. It
left us free to use our unparalleled economic power,
military might, and cultural appeal to craft a world
to our liking. We did not rise to the occasion.
Still, almost the whole world stood with us after
9/11.
There is still no rival to our power, but almost no
one abroad now wants to follow our lead and our
ability to shape events has been greatly � perhaps
irreparably � enfeebled. In less than a decade, we
have managed to discredit our capacity to enlist
others in defending our interests and to forfeit our
moral authority as the natural leader of the global
community. There is no need for me to outline to
this expert audience the many respects in which our
prestige and influence are now diminished.
Historians will surely wonder: how did this happen?
How our global leadership collapsed is, of course, a
question our politicians now evade as politically
incorrect. It's also a very good question and really
deserves an answer. I don't plan to try to give you
one. Why deprive our posterity of all the fun of
puzzling one out?
We are engaged in a war, a global war on terror; a
long war, we are told. It is somehow more dangerous
than the Cold War was, we are warned. So, to
preserve our democracy, we must now refrain from
exercising it. And, to keep our ancient liberties,
we must now curtail them. These propositions may
strike some here as slightly illogical, but I beg
you not to say so � especially if you have a
security clearance and want to keep it or are
interested in a job in this or a future
administration. To many now in power in Washington
and in much of the country, it remains perilously
unpatriotic to ask why we were struck on 9/11 or who
we're fighting or whether attempting forcibly to
pacify various parts of the realm of Islam will
reduce the number of our enemies or increase them.
So, we're in a war whose origins it is taboo to
examine, as the only presidential candidate of
either party to attempt to do so was reminded in a
debate with his fellow Republicans just last week.
And this is a war whose proponents assert that it
must � and will � continue without end. If we accept
their premises, they are right. How can a war with
no defined ends beyond the avoidance of retreat ever
reach a convenient stopping point? How can we win a
war with an enemy so ill-understood that we must
invent a nonexistent ideology of "Islamofascism" for
it? How can we mobilize our people to conduct a
long-term struggle with a violent movement once they
realize that its objective is not to conquer us but
to persuade us to stay home, leaving its part of the
world to decide on its own what religious doctrine
should govern its societies? And how can a war with
no clear objectives ever accomplish its mission and
end?
The answer is that no matter how many Afghans and
Arabs we kill or lock up in Guant�namo it can't and
it won't. The sooner we admit this and get on with
the task of reducing the war to manageable
proportions, the less we will compound the damage to
ourselves, our allies, our friends, and the
prospects for our peaceful coexistence with the
fifth of the human race that practices Islam. The
sooner we decide and explain what this war is about,
the fewer our enemies and the more numerous our
allies will be. The sooner we define achievable
objectives, the greater our hope of achieving them.
The sooner we stop rummaging blindly in the hornets'
nests of the Middle East, the less likely we'll be
stung worse than we have been.
The pain of admitting failure will be all the
greater because this disaster was completely
bipartisan. Both parties colluded in
catastrophically misguided policies of militarism
and jingoistic xenophobia. We succumbed to panic and
unreasoning dread. We got carried away with our
military prowess. Our press embedded itself with the
troops and jumped into bed with our government. We
invaded countries that existed only in our
imaginations and then were shocked by their failure
to conform to our preconceptions. We asked our
military to do things soldiers can do only poorly,
if at all. Our representatives pawned our essential
freedoms to our Commander-in-Chief in exchange for
implied promises that he would reduce the risks to
our security by means that he later declined to
disclose or explain.
Not many among us voiced public objections. Those
who did found the press too busy demonstrating its
patriotism to publicize dissenting views. The issues
were, as always, too complex for television. As a
wise commentator recently pointed out, television
has the same relationship to news that bumper
stickers do to philosophy.
Perhaps that's why we decided to try out a
made-for-TV approach to international negotiation in
which our leaders demonstrate their resolve by
refusing to allow our diplomats to talk to bad guys
until they come out with their hands up. When that
approach produces the predictable impasse, we fall
back on the "shoot first, let God worry about what
happens next" neocon school of war planning. In the
mess that ensues, our primary concern is rightly to
support our troops. But supporting the troops is a
domestic political imperative, not a strategy, and
it doesn't tell our military what it is being asked
to achieve. As force protection becomes our major
preoccupation, we find we must pacify the countries
we occupy so that we can continue to station troops
in them to fight the terrorists our occupation is
creating.
Rather than consider the possibility that the
witless application to foreign societies of military
pressure, no matter how immense and irresistible it
may be, is more likely to generate resistance than
to make states of them, we prefer to blame the
inhabitants of these societies for their ingratitude
and internal divisions. So we threaten to withdraw
our political and economic support from them, while
piling on more American troops. Asked when our
soldiers may be able to declare their mission
accomplished and to leave Iraq and Afghanistan, our
Commander-in-Chief replies that this is a policy
question that the generals in the field should
decide, and that he's not going to decide for them.
Think about that for a minute. Since when are
generals responsible for making policy decisions?
They are conditioned to focus on implementing policy
and to avoid making it. Whatever happened to
civilian control of the military or "the buck stops
here?" Why should our military be left to hold the
bag in this way?
How we got into this mess is, however, far less
important than figuring out how we can get out of
it. Much more has been destroyed than just the
social and political orders in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The term "collateral damage" was invented to denote
the undesirable side-effects of actions on the
battlefield. But it certainly applies to the
consequences of our confused and counterproductive
conduct and the misdirection of our armed forces
since 9/11. We have greatly devalued our political
and moral standing with our allies and friends and
foolishly degraded the deterrent value of our
military power. The world now fears our savagery but
has lost confidence in our fair-mindedness,
judgment, and competence. What are the consequences
of this and how can we overcome them?
A common concern about the belligerent unilateralism
of the world's greatest military power is driving
lesser powers to look for political and economic
support from countries who are distant,
unthreatening, or unlikely to back American agendas.
So, for example, Venezuela, Brazil, Saudi Arabia and
key Africans are courting China; Europe is flirting
with Asia; and all are seeking the affections of the
oil and gas producers of the Middle East as well as
of Russia and India. In most countries, politicians
now see public spats with the United States as the
easiest way to rally their people and enhance their
prestige. The result is the progressive displacement
of our previously indispensable influence and
leadership in more and more areas of the world.
Sagging demand for our leadership may be a good
thing to the extent it relieves us of the burdens of
our much-proclaimed status as the sole remaining
superpower. But we're clearly bothered by being seen
as less relevant. Our answer to this seems to be to
build an even more powerful military. Some of you
will recall newspaper reports that our defense
spending is only about 3.6 percent of GDP,
reflecting a defense budget of only � I emphasize �
only $499.4 billion. But a lot of defense-related
spending is outside the Defense Department's budget.
This fiscal year we will actually spend at least
$934.9 billion (or about 6.8 percent of our GDP) on
our military. Outside DoD, the Department of Energy
will spend $16.6 billion on nuclear weapons. The
State Department will disburse $25.3 billion in
foreign military assistance. We will spend $69.1
billion on defense-related homeland security
programs and $69.8 billion for treatment of wounded
veterans. The Treasury will spend $38.5 billion on
unfunded military retirements. We will pay $206.7
billion in interest on war debt. Other bits and
pieces, including satellite launches, will add
another $8.5 billion. Altogether, I repeat, that's
about $935 billion. But there's no sign that all
this military spending � though it is vastly more
than the rest of the world combined � and the power
projection capabilities it buys are regaining
international leadership for us.
In Latin America, Brazil is assuming the mantle of
regional leader, even as Hugo Ch�vez Fr�as and other
defiant nationalists seek to build influence at our
expense.
In Europe, transcontinental integration is
proceeding without reference to us or our views
about the roles of strategically important countries
like Turkey and Ukraine in the Eu. New relationships
are being forged with Russia. European policies
toward such problem states as Iran, Iraq, and Israel
increasingly diverge from our own.
Asia is returning to its pre-modern status as the
center of gravity of the world economy. Events there
are being driven not by us, but by the restored
wealth and power of China and India, a once again
assertive Japan, strategic repositioning by both
parts of Korea, growing partnerships between Muslim
nations in Southeast Asia and the Arabs and
Persians, the de facto reintegration of Taiwan with
the rest of China, and a bloom of pan-Asian
political and economic arrangements from which we
are absent.
In the Middle East, Iran has been empowered by our
blunders in Iraq, Palestine, and Lebanon. Saudi
Arabia has awakened from its traditional risk-averse
passivity to fill the diplomatic vacuums we have
created. Israel is even more despised and isolated
than we are, and together with the Israelis we are
rapidly multiplying the ranks of terrorists with
regional and global reach. And so it goes.
The world before us is both unfamiliar and
unanticipated. Our military-industrial complex,
securocrats, and pundits keep arguing for more
carriers, submarines, and fighter bombers. This is
good for the defense industrial base but, in terms
of stopping terrorists, it is, I am afraid, an
American equivalent of the Maginot Line: the
building of an impregnable deterrent to the threat
of the past, not the future. Like the French
generals, our defense planners are preparing for the
return of a familiar enemy � some new version of our
sadly vanished Soviet adversary that will rise to
compete with us for global hegemony and that we can
hold to account for failing to constrain attacks on
us by lesser enemies. But it is not what is
happening and it must now be doubted that it ever
will.
In the world of the early 21st Century, the major
ideological contest is between those who share our
past faith in the rule of law and the new American
contempt for the notion that we should, like others,
respect the UN Charter, the Geneva Conventions, and
other elements of international law. In some senses,
we have met the enemy and he is who we used to be.
We can count on no common threat to rally the world
behind us. In the new era, there are no blocs and no
clear battle lines. Those who are our allies for
some purposes may be our adversaries in respect to
others, and vice versa. For all of our military
strength, the demands on our diplomatic skills will
be the greatest in our history. The stakes are high
and the margins for error of our foreign policies
are steadily narrowing. We are, however, training
our diplomats for the transformative tasks of
imperial administration. Like our military planners,
our diplomatic leadership has it wrong. Our empire
was stillborn. We just didn't notice.
Our post Cold War global hegemony is being
undermined not by a peer competitor but by a
combination of our own neocon-induced ineptitude and
the emergence of countries with substantial power
and influence in their own regions. These regional
powers distrust our purposes, fear our militarism,
and reject our leadership. Distrust drives them to
reaffirm the principles of international law we have
now abandoned. Fear drives them to pursue the
development or acquisition of weapons with which to
deter the policies of preemptive attack and forcible
regime change we now espouse. (If the weak think the
powerful consider themselves above the law, the only
protection for the vulnerable is to arm themselves.
So scofflaw behavior in the name of halting or
reversing the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction actually promotes it.)
All this is creating a world of regional balances in
which we play a lessened role, some of these
regional balances � as in South Asia today and the
Middle East of the future � involving dangerous
nuclear standoffs between two or more middle-ranking
powers.
As new centers of economic and political power
emerge around the world, global institutions
designed to include countries whose participation is
essential to problem solving are no longer in
alignment with the actual distribution of either the
world's power or its problems. They reflect past
rather than present international pecking orders.
Since they exclude key players, they can't contrive
workable solutions or buy-in to them by those who
must support them or refrain from wrecking them if
they are to succeed. The problem is most obvious in
organizations devoted to economic matters.
Take the G-7, a self-constituted
Euro-American-Japanese club of democracies plus
Russia. The G-7 once played a central role in
managing the global economy. It still discusses
global trade and investment imbalances. But, without
Chinese participation, this amounts to little more
than ineffectual whining.
Or consider energy and the environment, other issues
of broad concern. With the fastest growing new
energy consumers like China, India, and Brazil
outside the OECD and its affiliated International
Energy Agency, there is no way to coordinate an
effective international response to energy shortages
or crises. And when the United States absents
ourselves, as we have from the Kyoto regime and from
some parts of the UN system, even less can be
accomplished.
The same pattern of growing misalignment between
power and institutions exists throughout the
international system. The membership and voting
arrangements of the UN Security Council, for
example, reflect both the colonial era and the
outcome of World War II far better than they mirror
current realities. A body charged with the
management of global security and other vitally
important issues is obviously handicapped in its
ability to make, legitimize, and enforce its
decisions if it overweights Europe, inflexibly
slights India and Japan, and includes no Muslim
nation or group of nations among its permanent
members. The UN's difficulties are compounded by the
contemptuous treatment it now receives from
Washington, and by the effects on its image here and
abroad of our using it primarily to fend off
international condemnation of outrageous behavior by
Israel. We can and must do better than this.
To regain both credibility and international
respect, we Americans must, of course, restore the
vigor of our constitutional democracy and its
respect for civil liberties. But that in itself will
be far from enough. The willingness of others to
follow us in the past did not derive from our
ability to intimidate or coerce them. Instead, we
inspired the world with our vision and our example.
Now, we know what we're against. But what are we
for? Whatever happened to American optimism and
idealism? To be able to lead the world again we must
once again exemplify aspirations for a higher
standard of freedom and justice at home and abroad.
We cannot compel � but must persuade � others to
work with us. And to lead a team, we must rediscover
how to be a team player.
When President Roosevelt first proposed what became
the United Nations, he envisaged a concert of powers
that could foster a harmonious and largely peaceful
world order, increasingly free of both want and
fear, and respectful of individual and collective
rights as well as of the cultural diversity of
humankind. That vision remains both relevant and
compelling. The bipolar struggles of the Cold War
strangled it at birth. But the Cold War is over and
the world that is emerging, though it contains
multiple strategic geometries, needs a common
architecture that can flexibly address its problems
and sustain its peace and development. As currently
constituted, the UN does not serve these fundamental
purposes well. It is time to admit that it has lost
the confidence of many of its members. We need to
update it, as we must reform other institutions �
like the G-7, the World Bank, and the International
Monetary Fund � to be able to manage the challenges
before us. And if we cannot bring these
organizations into alignment with emerging
realities, we should not shrink from starting over
by creating alternatives to them.
Like our own country, the UN was founded on the
belief that liberty, tranquility, and the general
welfare are best secured by the rule of law �
universal adherence to rules that provide
predictable order and protect the weak against the
strong. That concept, like parliamentary democracy,
is a unique contribution of Western culture to
global civilization. It has been embraced, though
not yet implemented, almost everywhere. Achieving
its implementation and embedding it firmly in the
structure of the emerging world order should be at
the very top of our foreign policy agenda. It must
be at the center of any reaffirmation of the UN's
purposes through its reform or replacement.
But, if America and Europe, which originated and
sponsored the idea of a tolerant, rule-bound
international order as an alternative to the law of
the jungle, are no longer united in support of the
rule of law, it is unlikely to survive, still less
to prevail as the international system evolves. And
as European arrest warrants for American agents
engaged in officially sanctioned kidnappings and
torture attest, the Atlantic community is now
seriously divided. If we Americans renew our
adherence to the rule of law at home, as I believe
we must, we would find the European Union ready to
work closely with us in promoting it abroad. Nowhere
has the utility of consultative processes been more
convincingly demonstrated than in Europe, where a
democratic common political culture respectful of
human rights has spread across a continent. A club
of democracies like the G-7 may now be unable to
manage the world's economy, but regular meetings at
the summit of such a grouping could have a major
impact on the world's political evolution if they
focused on harmonizing and promoting global
standards for the rule of law and parliamentary
democracy. The groundwork for such an effort is
already in place.
Finding common ground with Europe and Japan will
also be key to curing our default on leadership with
respect to the climate. China is about to overtake
the United States as the world's largest emitter of
greenhouse gases. The prerequisite for persuading
China to behave responsibly is to join the other
industrial democracies in behaving responsibly
ourselves. Only then can we insist that China and
other newly industrializing nations do likewise
Let me conclude. I have been talking about how to
reassert our leadership on the global level. But, in
the end, we face the paradox that the world, though
globalized to an unprecedented degree, is made up of
a series of regions in which regional powers
increasingly call the shots. And all diplomacy, like
all politics, is local. We face perplexing choices
in every region of the world. But the policies that
have brought discredit upon us center on one region
� the Middle East. To restore our reputation we must
correct these policies. And the problem of terrorism
that now bedevils us has its origins in one region �
the Middle East. To end this terrorism we must
address the issues in the region that give rise to
it.
Principal among these is the brutal oppression of
the Palestinians by an Israeli occupation that is
about to mark its fortieth anniversary and shows no
sign of ending. Arab identification with Palestinian
suffering, once variable in its intensity, is now
total. American identification with Israeli policy
has also become total. Those in the region and
beyond it who detest Israeli behavior, which is to
say almost everyone, now naturally extend their
loathing to Americans. This has had the effect of
universalizing anti-Americanism, legitimizing
radical Islamism, and gaining Iran a foothold among
Sunni as well as Shiite Arabs. For its part, Israel
no longer even pretends to seek peace with the
Palestinians; it strives instead to pacify them.
Palestinian retaliation against this policy is as
likely to be directed against Israel's American
backers as against Israel itself. Under the
circumstances, such retaliation � whatever form it
takes � will have the support or at least the
sympathy of most people in the region and many
outside it. This makes the long-term escalation of
terrorism against the United States a certainty, not
a matter of conjecture.
The Palestine problem cannot be solved by the use of
force; it requires much more than the diplomacy-free
foreign policy we have practiced since 9/11. Israel
is not only not managing this problem; it is
severely aggravating it. Denial born of political
correctness will not cure this fact. Israel has
shown � not surprisingly � that, if we offer nothing
but unquestioning support and political protection
for whatever it does, it will feel no incentive to
pay attention to either our interests or our advice.
Hamas is showing that if we offer it nothing but
unreasoning hostility and condemnation, it will only
stiffen its position and seek allies among our
enemies. In both cases, we forfeit our influence for
no gain.
There will be no negotiation between Israelis and
Palestinians, no peace, and no reconciliation
between them � and there will be no reduction in
anti-American terrorism � until we have the courage
to act on our interests. These are not the same as
those of any party in the region, including Israel,
and we must talk with all parties, whatever we think
of them or their means of struggle. Refusal to
reason with those whose actions threaten injury to
oneself, one's friends, and one's interests is
foolish, feckless, and self-defeating. That is why
we it is past time for an active and honest
discussion with both Israel and the government
Palestinians have elected, which � in an irony that
escapes few abroad � is the only democratically
elected government in the Arab world.
But to restore our reputation in the region and the
world, given all that has happened, and to eliminate
terrorism against Americans, it is no longer enough
just to go through the motions of trying to make
peace between Israelis and Arabs. We must succeed in
actually doing so. Nothing should be a more urgent
task for American diplomacy.
Thank you.
Reprint courtesy of
Middle East Policy Council
About Amb. Freeman
Ambassador
Chas. W. Freeman, Jr. succeeded Senator George
McGovern as President of the Middle East Policy
Council on December 1, 1997. Ambassador Freeman was
Assistant Secretary of Defense for International
Security Affairs from 1993-94, earning the highest
public service awards of the Department of Defense
for his roles in designing a NATO-centered post-Cold
War European security system and in reestablishing
defense and military relations with China. He served
as U. S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia (during
operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm).
Ambassador Freeman Bio
http://www.mepc.org/about/freeman.asp
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