At Last, a Foreign Policy Issue: Bush, Gore and the Balkans
Critical differences between a Bush and Gore presidency flared into the open over the weekend. It began when Condaleeza Rice, George W. Bush's senior foreign policy advisor, said in an interview in The New York Times that Bush would withdraw U.S. forces from the Balkans if elected. She argued the peacekeeping burden should fall on the Europeans rather than Americans. Another Bush campaign official, Ari Fleischer, emphasized the statement, saying, "The governor has made very clear the role of our military should be to fight and win wars and not to be the peacekeepers around the world.''
Vice President Al Gore struck back, saying Bush suffered from "a complete lack of judgment and a complete misunderstanding of history'' by advocating a diminished U.S. peacekeeping role in Europe. He went on to charge that Bush's view would be "more than an untested shift in America's foreign policy for the last half- century. It would be one that could jeopardize fragile alliances and damage NATO." Madeleine Albright added her weight, claiming Bush's view was risky and could lead to instability in the region.
During our series on the elections, our position was that, while there was fundamental agreement on U.S. foreign policy, there were substantial differences on how to implement a national security strategy. Gore's vision, derived from long Democratic tradition, saw U.S. power operating in the framework of alliances and multinational organizations, directed toward stability. Bush's vision, derived from the Republican perspective, saw U.S. security policy as more self-directed and more focused on limited national security strategies and objectives. Gore was more committed to multilateral action than was Bush.
Suddenly, this submerged theme rose, like Atlantis, from the depths. It opened with a tentative probe from the Bush ranks. Virtually tied with Gore, the Bush people sought to extend the campaign to a new battlefield where they might have an advantage. Obviously, their polls were indicating Gore might be vulnerable on foreign policy. The polls were also indicating Gore's vulnerability might be dangerous to challenge, and ultimately illusory. It might be dangerous because Americans tend to react badly if they sense politicians are using national security issues for political advantage, while weakening the president's ability to act forcefully. It might be illusory because voters, while dubious about the current foreign policy trend, might not be all that sensitive to the issue. In other words, when asked, voters might give an anti-administration answer, but with such low intensity that it might not affect their vote.
Nevertheless, the Bush people, needing a breakout issue, decided to probe. Notably, the Bush campaign did not allow George W. Bush to float his criticisms. Rather, attacks came from senior, but publicly obscure, staffers and advisors, thus allowing Bush to back off from the probe if it produced unsatisfactory results.
The Gore campaign immediately rolled out its heaviest guns. Not only did Gore blast back, but his team brought the secretary of state into the fray - not a common stratagem. It is usually advantageous to have the State Department appear above the political fray. Clearly, Gore either felt he could win an advantage here or that he was badly vulnerable. Certainly the response was massive, coordinated and intense. __________________________________________________________________
For comprehensive analysis on the situation in the Middle East be sure to see our Middle East Hot Spot. stratfor.com __________________________________________________________________
Now, it does not appear Gore's response meant he felt the battlefield offered him an advantage. As the second debate showed, Gore has tended to minimize his foreign policy differences with Bush. More important, it was not Gore who initiated the battle. If Gore's strategists had felt there was an advantage in raising foreign policy issues, they would have raised them at a time and place of their own choosing. They did not. Nevertheless, they responded vigorously to a probe they could have chosen to ignore. >From this, we can deduce the Bush camp's tentative probe hit a nerve.
The question is whether Gore's camp struck back effectively. To determine that, we need to consider where Bush chose to attack and where he didn't.
Bush chose Yugoslavia as his first battleground. He did not use Israel and Palestine. Superficially, it would appear Clinton, and therefore Gore, is far more vulnerable over the near-catastrophic Middle East explosion than he is over Yugoslavia. After all, Yugoslavia appears to be an administration success story. Milosevic has been toppled. A man the administration anointed as a democratic savior is easing into control. The Yugoslavian adventure appears to be moving toward success. Nevertheless, Bush views Yugoslavia as the vulnerable point in Democratic foreign policy. The issue is what the Bush people see and whether they are seeing clearly.
Bush and Gore are in general agreement on the need to intervene in Bosnia and Yugoslavia. Although Bush seemed less enthusiastic than Gore, he has not challenged Gore on the entry. What he has chosen to challenge him on is the exit strategy. Gore and the Clinton administration have positioned the United States for a long-term presence in the Balkans. Bush has chosen this long-term presence as the battleground.
This task should not be left to allies for several reasons. First, the allies may not wish to undertake the mission. Second, by themselves, they may not have either the political will or the military resources to do so. Finally, as regional powers themselves, they might have divergent parochial interests that cause them to use intervention as a way to enhance those interests. Instead of minimizing conflict, this could intensify it. Therefore, the United States - a nation without any parochial interests on a regional basis - must preside over the process. Or so goes the Democratic reasoning.
There is another dimension to this. Long-term peacekeeping operations cause a diffusion of U.S. forces. Scattering them piecemeal around the world creates vulnerability should a major power choose to challenge the United States militarily. Embedded in the Democratic worldview is the assumption that this is not a realistic threat. The view is there is no competing center of politico-military power at the present time, nor is there a danger of an emerging coalition of challengers _____________________________________________________________
The Democratic perception of U.S. foreign policy is that the United States is not only the leader of a powerful coalition of nations, but that it is the leader of a world coalition in which there is, more or less, consensus among leading powers about the important things. Most major nations are moving toward greater liberalization of political and economic systems. Most major powers, and lesser powers as well, have as their most important priority the maintenance of international stability, in order to both enhance liberalization and create an atmosphere of stability and order necessary to facilitate free trade and, therefore, global prosperity.
>From the Democratic perspective, the United States does not face strategic threats from great powers. The greatest threats to the international system come from tertiary, rogue powers. These powers not only create internally repressive regimes, but also threaten their regions with their politico-military adventurism. According to this theory, the very fact that they are illiberal, repressive regimes causes them to engage in regional destabilization. Therefore, it is in the interest of the United States to destroy the repressive regimes in order to create regional stability. It is also in the interest of the United States to remain in the region after the repressive regime is destroyed in order to create the security necessary to allow new democratic governments to take root and flourish.
The net result of this perspective is viewing the American military's primary function as a force to be used against tertiary powers that are either engaged in internal repression, regional destabilization or, as is usually the case, both. U.S. forces should not be used alone, but they should always be present to prevent regional allies from allowing the mission to degenerate into a regional squabble. Moreover, the presence of U.S. troops is a means of compelling others to participate. The risk is low because there are no global geopolitical threats. Therefore, U.S. troops will be used in noncombat roles for extended periods of time; indeed, for indeterminate periods of time.
Here Bush has struck. He has struck at the visceral American aversion to open-ended interventions in other countries' internal affairs. Part of this has to do with Vietnam, an American intervention in a complex internal political conflict that involved both foreign and domestic elements - leading to disaster. Part of it strikes at a deeper sensibility. This is the idea embedded in American political culture that the United States should serve as an exemplar to other nations, many of these so deeply flawed their problems cannot be solved. Intervening in these countries in an attempt to improve them lead only to disaster. Arrogant as this might be, it is a deeply held American perception. Bush is playing to both the ongoing fear of Vietnam and the deep-seated belief that nothing can possibly save the Balkans from themselves.
Embedded in this visceral message is a competing strategic vision. Deep inside the Republican vision is a variant on the Nixon Doctrine. This doctrine held that countries bordering the Soviet Union had the primary responsibility for protecting themselves from the Soviet Union. The United States would provide aid and support, but would not take major responsibility. Bush's argument that the Balkans is a European problem basically holds that the stability of Europe is Europe's concern.
More than that, Bush is reminding the American public that Europe is a prosperous, sophisticated and stable region with ample resources to manage its own affairs. There is a deeply held feeling among Americans that foreign allies have taken advantage of them. They believe Europeans are happy to see U.S. troops bear the major burden for stabilizing the Balkans, though the Europeans are the major beneficiaries of that stabilization. _____________________________________________________________
The Gore vision - that unless the United States takes the lead in managing the coalition, the coalition will fail to carry out its responsibilities - is seen by much of the public as proof of European irresponsibility and an argument against continued presence. Thus, Gore might have played directly into Bush's hands when he said NATO could collapse if U.S. forces pulled out of the Balkans. That set the stage for Bush to argue that if the Europeans are incapable of maintaining NATO without U.S. risk-taking, then it is the Europeans' problem.
A fundamental geopolitical dispute lies beneath. Bush sees the dissipation of forces in peacekeeping operations as strategically dangerous. The Republican worldview, while close to the Democrats, is ultimately not convinced the age of great power rivalry is over. Chinese and Russian behavior is viewed suspiciously. Apart from tertiary rogue states, such as North Korea or Iraq, Republicans remain concerned about great power challenges. They see the primary function of the armed forces as securing national security against major powers, and see peacekeeping as a subsidiary function to be terminated as quickly as possible. Gore sees great power challenges as obsolete, and sees peacekeeping as the primary realistic mission of the armed forces.
Ultimately, we believe the U.S. public will tolerate peacekeeping operations in extreme cases; long-term deployments designed for political rather than military purposes are unattractive. Moreover, there is a sense NATO and other allies use American willingness to bear the burden as a means for evading responsibility. There is little fear of great power challenges, but there is also little patience with the idea that European tranquility is an American responsibility.
Bush's probe triggered a massive response from Gore. Gore has made it clear that, in his view, NATO cannot function without the United States. He also made it clear there is no exit strategy from the Balkans. Here Gore is politically vulnerable. Bush will strike back, saying Europe is Europe's problem, and that a permanent presence in the Balkans is unacceptable. He will try to turn Clinton's major foreign policy success against Clinton and Gore.
But underneath it all are the beginnings of a deep debate over foreign policy. On the one side, there are those who see the end of great power rivalry and view the military as a tool for policing minor regional unrest. On the other side are those who see the past 10 years as a mere interregnum between great power rivalries and think the armed forces should be preparing for major wars.
Whatever else Americans agree upon, this is a fundamental rift in worldviews, and it has emerged in the campaign. Our sense is that the Democrats are politically more vulnerable on this issue than they might like to be. That is why Bush took a shot at it. That is why Gore came out swinging. _____________________________________________________________
For more on North America, see: stratfor.com _______ |