SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tekboy who wrote (50899)10/10/2002 2:41:49 PM
From: Nadine Carroll  Respond to of 281500
 
on the first, just because there are lots of Arabs and a few Eurolefties who haven't gotten the news doesn't mean Israel (in its pre-67 borders plus some) isn't here to stay. If one really believes that the settlements are an organic and ineradicable part of the Zionist project, then one is really stuck, and either has to stomach the costs and strife that come from endless conflict with the Pals, or stomach giving up something you really, really want. Either way, it's not my--or our--problem.

Well, this is one problem the Israelis seem to have decided on, mostly -- they would go back to 67+, they just need to get security for it. Trouble is, who is there to hand the land over to? which brings me to

If the Sharon government were to make very clear that it supported the Clinton Plan and was prepared to restart negotiations over implementing it, then I'd be much more inclined to give them a free hand on their anti-terror operations.

Supposing that Sharon were to come around to this idea (a big if), there's still the problem of having an imaginary negotiating partner, because neither he nor the other Israelis will offer this deal again to Arafat and Hamas. We both know how most of the world is really, really big on what the poor Palestinians deserve (check the posts of our friend SFD), but really, really could-care-less about how the Palestinians behave, whether they keep any bargains, whether they still intend to destroy Israel, etc. The Eurocrats are STILL pushing Arafat as a "peace partner".

Also, for the Israelis, once offered and given forever -- at least in the world's imagination, all conditions having fallen down the memory hole. So I hardly blame Sharon for not laying out peace offers in the middle of a war. For this once, I think the loser should sue for peace, as happens in normal wars.



To: tekboy who wrote (50899)10/10/2002 2:43:07 PM
From: Eashoa' M'sheekha  Respond to of 281500
 
Settlement tightens the noose on Jerusalem.

( This is from Harretz today.Very Informative IMHO )

As opposed to the conventional wisdom in Israel, namely that the leaderships of the Palestine Liberation Organization, Fatah and the Palestinian Authority are exclusively engaged in internal squabbling, in recent days they have in fact been considering the issue of whether the two-state solution - the establishment of an independent and viable Palestinian state alongside the State of Israel - could even be implemented at this time.

The PLO's Negotiations Affairs Department, which is headed by Abu Mazen (Mahmoud Abbas), has raised the question of whether Israel's construction policies in the settlements in general and in Jerusalem in particular have not in effect shattered the previous framework for peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, obliging the sides to replace it with a more suitable framework.

Abu Mazen's department is now putting the finishing touches on a document that summarizes Israeli's construction activities, especially in the West Bank territories around Jerusalem, and in the eastern part of the city. The document also considers the implications of the new separation fence that is now going up. For its data, the framers of the document relied on readily available information that has appeared in the Israel press, or has been supplied by the Peace Now movement and the B'Tselem organization. The document is entitled "Israel's Pre-emption of a Viable Two State Solution." Appended to it is a separate chapter that considers the economic, social and political implications of Israeli construction policies in East Jerusalem.

In this spirit, Palestinian Finance Minister Salam Fayyad, who is currently in Washington, cautioned his American counterparts that Israeli settlement policies are liable to frustrate the implementation of a solution based on establishment of a Palestinian state alongside Israel. This was reported yesterday by sources in the PLO negotiations department. Fayyad left Sunday for conversations with senior U.S. figures on diplomatic and financial matters. He took with him a series of maps, as well as the document whose main points are described below.

Fayyad is considered an "American appointment" to the new Palestinian cabinet that was named in early June under international pressure to carry out reforms in the Palestinian government. Fayyad, a Tul Karm-born economist, served for years as a senior International Monetary Fund official. He has been the IMF's representative in the Palestinian Authority ever since the PA's establishment. In the few months since his appointment to the cabinet, Authority sources say that Fayyad has succeeded in making sure that Palestinian Authority's scant revenues are deposited in a single bank account (instead of several different accounts); has put an end to the never-ending deviations from the budget that were the result of the checks that Yasser Arafat would hand out to anyone who asked; has initiated the process of breaking up the PA's commercial monopolies; has established standards for transparency in the budget and in the ministries of the Authority; and has caused Israeli finance minister Silvan Shalom to transfer some of the tax revenues that Israel has owed the Palestinian Authority for two years.

Even when the Palestinian Legislative Council caused the new cabinet to resign, saying the cabinet had not complied with the requirements of the reform, its members underscored their great appreciation for Fayyad's professionalism. Three weeks ago, he also had an opportunity to show his patriotic backbone. Fayyad was attending a routine meeting with Yasser Arafat when IDF tanks laid siege to the Muqata and began destroying the compound. He could have left, in coordination with the Israeli authorities, but opted to remain with Arafat and the others, and from the besieged office continued to conduct conference calls on financial matters with representatives of the contributor countries that are partners in the reform program.

De-facto apartheid

The document that Abu Mazen's department has been drafting for the past month calls the settlements "colonies" and warns, "If the international community continues to remain unwilling to reign in Israeli colony construction and expansion, irreversible `facts on the ground' and the de facto apartheid system, such facts create will force Palestinian policy makers to re-evaluate the plausibility of a two-state solution."

According to the document, Israeli construction in the West Bank in general and in the area of Jerusalem in particular would leave the Palestinians with chances for a "state" in name only, that would more closely resemble an Indian reservation in the United States, with limited access to water and land. This is the opinion of the document's authors - a team of legal scholars, academics and geographers who have been working in the framework of what is called the "Jerusalem task force" for the past two years.

Israel has exploited the opportunity afforded by the conflict to expand in three directions, through its construction and settlement policies in Jerusalem. These trends originated long before the outbreak of the intifada: closing off East Jerusalem from the rest of the West Bank; for all intents and purposes cutting off the northern West Bank from the southern West Bank; and the prevention of any opportunity for Palestinian urban development, partly by means of expanding construction in the settlements of the West Bank in general, and in Jerusalem in particular.

According to the document, the Jerusalem metropolitan area that is now coming into being - through a network of outer and inner roads, outer and inner separation fences, the route of the light railway system and an accelerated wave of construction that is linking together Israeli settlements - will extend over an area of 440 square kilometers, of which only 25 percent lie in West Jerusalem, with the remainder in territory occupied in 1967.

This construction, which links Israeli settlements to Jerusalem, blocks the development options of the future capital of the promised Palestinian state, cuts off Palestinian settlements from one another and from East Jerusalem, and ensures continued Israeli control in widespread areas of the West Bank, through Israel's control of the roads.

Construction in southwest Jerusalem, which is closing in on Bethlehem and its sister cities of Beit Sahour and Beit Jala and the villages in the area, will deny them the opportunity of natural growth, and cut them off from both Jerusalem and the southern West Bank.

The document states that this is being perpetrated by means of the expansion of Gush Etzion (including the ultra-Orthodox settlement of Beitar Illit), which can expand up to two-and-a-half times its current size, through construction at Har Homa and the settlements along its flanks - Givat Hamatos and Givat Ha'arbaa, which is planned for the area south of Har Homa, and by means of paving the Zaatra-Beit Sahour road that would directly link eastern Gush Etzion (the settlement of Tekoa) with Har Homa.

In East Jerusalem, the document's authors cite the E-1 plan that would expand the Adumim settlement bloc, creating a contiguous territorial belt of settlement between Maale Adumim, Pisgat Ze'ev and French Hill. This would "consolidate Israeli control over key transportation junctions for all the roads connecting the northern West Bank to the south including the vital eastern ring road..." The same would happen with the east-west roads that link the Jordan rift in the east to western Israel. This E-1 expansion plan, which has already led to some expropriation of lands of surrounding Palestinian villages, "will also foreclose any possibility of Palestinian economic and urban development in the largest area of non-developed land near Occupied East Jerusalem, effectively destroying any prospects of meaningful Palestinian presence in Greater Jerusalem."

As opposed to the southern and eastern gates of the capital, in which - according to the document - all it will take is a single bloc of settlements to functionally partition the eastern part of the city from its surroundings, the continuum of Palestinian construction, albeit thin, between Shuafat and Ramallah compelled Israel to build two settlement blocs along the outer rim of the city's northern gate. They are the Givon bloc that lies northwest of Givat Ze'ev, and includes Givon, Givon Hahadasha, Givat Shmuel and Har Adar; and the Binyamin bloc, which comprises Adam, the Sha'ar Binyamin industrial zone, Psagot, Tel Zion and Kochav Yaakov in the northeast.

There are three highways running east-west and north-south that are now being completed and expanded, which link these two Israeli settlement blocs to one another, to other settlement blocs in the West Bank, to western Jerusalem, and to Tel Aviv. These roads also happen to break up the continuum of Palestinian communities in the region, separating them from one another, disconnecting them from Ramallah and Jerusalem, and preventing their development. Examples include Jaba and Hizma in the east, and Sheikh Jarrah, Beit Hanina, Shuafat, A-Ram and Bir Naballah in the west, as well as the western villages of Bidu, Katana and Beit Iqsa.

The document states that as opposed to ring roads in other cities of the world, which are intended to ease traffic around densely populated areas, the ring road in Jerusalem is "intended to tighten Israeli control over Jerusalem." The ring road is designed to link "the southern colonies" - Tekoa and Har Homa - with "the northern colonies" and simultaneously divert Palestinian traffic far from the city center.

"The `security' wall," reports the document, "will be three times as long as the Berlin Wall, and at points, twice as high," and will in its initial stage lead to the de-facto annexation of 3-5 percent of West Bank territory to Israel. With its erection in East Jerusalem, an additional 3 percent of West Bank territory will be annexed to Israel, with a total of 90,000 Palestinians who are not residents of Israel finding themselves living between the fence and the Green Line.

The longstanding Israeli policy of discrimination on the allocation of budgets and land reserves is turning the Palestinian territory in Jerusalem proper into slums that are isolated from one another, states the chapter about the implications of Israeli construction in East Jerusalem for the Palestinian population. These slums are denied open land tracts for future population growth and economic and commercial growth.

The document predicts an exacerbation of population density in these slums, which will be fertile ground for poverty and disease. The Israeli construction policies in Jerusalem and in the northern and southern West Bank, spoils any possibility of leaving Jerusalem as an open city shared by two peoples and two states. The document concludes by cautioning that unless Israel leaves territorial continuity in the Palestinians' hands, "the only remaining option is for the Palestinians to accept a one-state, two nations solution." However, this will not be accepted by Israel because of Palestinian demographic superiority that threatens the Jewish state, say the authors of the document.

They conclude with the hope that Israeli fears about Palestinian demographic growth "might `push' the Israelis to reconsider their settlement policies and perhaps accept division of the city," and at the last moment come to their senses and accept the two-state solution.

By Amira Hass



To: tekboy who wrote (50899)10/10/2002 4:07:33 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
WHY WE'RE IN IRAQ

BY RICHARD REEVES
Universal Press Syndicate
October 8, 2002

WASHINGTON -- Presidents don’t declare war from the old Cincinnati train station, so it seems that President Bush’s latest Iraq speech was either a space-holder or a device to buy more time to plot or plan invasion. Whatever it was meant to be, the timing and location did not make a lot of sense and did not move the national debate forward.

In fact, the president moved back from threatening regime change. It seemed to be a disarmament speech. That may be wishful thinking. But Bush sounded more moderate and patient than he does here in the war capital. Around here the politicians, lobbyists and journalists who populate official Washington -- and the president, too -- talk and act as if Saddam Hussein and his weapons of mass destruction have reached the New Jersey Turnpike. And he’s headed south toward the Beltway that separates the capital from common sense.

What’s the hurry? What’s going on here? I hope the president knows. The rest of us can’t be sure, but watching and talking to some of the president’s men this is my guess:

The president and his folk, particularly his most hawkish advisers -- that group would include National Security Adviser Condileeza Rice, Assistant Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz and man of war Richard Perle -- see this as a window of opportunity to re-create the Middle East in our image and interests. Saddam, who is a monster, but a regional and contained one, is just an excuse. The real goal is stability. The Bush administration wants stable oil prices, stable Arab governments and a secure Israel . This, they think, is the right time and Iraq is the place to start.

Bush and company are ready to roll the dice. All the talk of tough weapons inspections and United Nations resolutions is for cover. Many of the people in charge are hoping there will be no resolutions of any kind, which will give them greater reason to use greater United States military power in lieu of diplomacy or any kind of regional solutions. The Middle East as it is right now is just too irrational for our purposes. Maybe we can straighten these people out.

Good luck. I am not opposed to that. Not many Americans are. We want to be the benevolent masters of a new and benevolent “democratic” colonialism. But listening to that kind of talk about a democratic Iraq and Saudi Arabia, which we would like to surround, I find myself thinking of November 1, 1963, the day we changed the regime in South Vietnam.

That was the day, 39 years ago, the day President Ngo Dinh Diem was assassinated in a military coup signed off on by President Kennedy. Diem was our boy, as Saddam was when the Iraqis attacked Iran twenty years ago, but the South Vietnamese leader resisted American control one time too often. The generals, with our encouragement, took over and proved to be incompetent fools. We meant well, really. But from that day on, South Vietnam was an American colony and our defeat and humiliation were predestined.

That analogy is not exact, of course. But we wasted almost twenty years there, trying to remake the place and its people in our image. If we try the same thing in Iraq, the result will be about the same over the long run: early victories, occupation and, one day, withdrawal.

One of the more sensible theoretical debates going on in Washington is about how long we will have to stay in Iraq if we or unnamed Iraqi conspirators are able to remove Saddam by coup, asassination or invasion. Optimists talk about five years; pessimists talk about fifty years. Okay, there is an obvious next question: How long do you think Iraqis will be there?

So who will prevail over time? I don’t know, but I know it won’t be us.

__________________________________________________

RICHARD REEVES, author of President Nixon: Alone in the White House (October 2001), is a writer and syndicated columnist who has made a number of award-winning documentary films. His ninth book, President Kennedy: Profile of Power — now considered the authoritative work on the 35th president — won several national awards and was named the Best Non-Fiction Book of 1993 by Time. His other best selling books include Convention and American Journey: Travelling with Tocqueville in Search of American Democracy.

Recipient of the 1998 Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Society of Newspaper Columnists, Reeves writes a twice-weekly column that appears in more than 100 newspapers. He is a former chief political correspondent for The New York Times and has written extensively for numerous magazines, including The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, Esquire and New York.

richardreeves.com



To: tekboy who wrote (50899)10/11/2002 5:13:14 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
A world of dangers to juggle

By H.D.S. Greenway
Columnist
The Boston Globe
10/11/2002

DISARMING IRAQ is in the deepest interests of the United States and of the United Nations, but as this country girds its loins for war there are several dangerous conditions in the world that will infect our national health if left unattended. Here are three that cannot be ignored.

''Not unlike the AIDS virus, changing and mutating as it resists the immune system,'' so does Al Qaeda split and mutate, a French antiterrorism judge, Jean Luis Bruguiere, told The Boston Globe. Al Qaeda may be down, but it is far from out. It doesn't have a country of its own, as it had in Afghanistan, but it has split up and gone to ground in a dozen other countries.

Many terrorism experts have long viewed Al Qaeda as an amorphous malignancy. There is the top leadership under the direct sway of Osama bin Laden and his mentor and strategist, Ayman al Zawahiri, who may still be at large.

Below that level are a loose group of associates who can operate on their own knowing that whatever they do will be justified under the Al Qaeda rubric, so they don't need much contact with the top leadership. Then there are the armies of amateur wannabes and copy cats who have been given inspiration and an example of what can be done to harm us. As we have seen, these zealots can be second- or third-generation Muslims born in the West or converts from Christianity whom Al Qaeda calls ''white moors.''

The long, relentless struggle against Al Qaeda will entail hard police work and shared intelligence, and the fear is that this effort could be compromised if our attention is too much elsewhere.

Like a patient on the operating table with a tumor removed, but still awaiting stitches and open to infection, so does Afghanistan remain extremely vulnerable. Our task there is only half done. Foreign security forces, which the country badly needs and wants, have inexplicably not been extended outside the capital.

The central government's writ runs so thin in the countryside that the diseases of violence and corruption are taking hold. It was government by warlord that caused most Afghans to welcome the Taliban when it first arrived, and it is government by warlord that threatens Afghanistan today.

A year after America's Afghan war began, only a fraction of the funds the international community promised to reconstruct Afghanistan have actually arrived. Hamid Karzai, America's chosen leader, recently expressed the fear that Iraq could draw attention, energy, and assistance away from his country in which so much remains to be done. Well might he fear.

In what has become a chronic condition, the Israeli-Palestinian problem grinds on - bringing fear, bitterness, and increasing political rigidity to the Israelis, and despair, rage, and a whole new generation of martyrs to the Palestinians. Amnesty International has reported that both the Israelis and Palestinians are killing children with impunity, and the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child said both sides were guilty of ''acts of terror.''

The war between the Palestinians and the Israelis and all its attendant horrors is of paramount importance to the United States because of the resonance to brings to the entire Arab and much of the Muslim world beyond. Al Qaeda may not care a fig for the Palestinians, but the conflict can bring in recruits and sympathy as perhaps no other.

Clearly, the Palestinians and Israelis cannot break out of their ''danse macabre'' by themselves, and it is unconscionable that the United States should refuse to engage in the problem. In the long run, ending the Israeli occupation is the only way to end the conflict, the only way to make Israel a safer place.

Bush administration officials have said that the United States is capable of handling more than one conflict at a time, and it need not be that the unfinished wars in Afghanistan and against Al Qaeda suffer. But the Israel-Palestine problem has already been swept under the Oval Office rug in the runup to Iraq, and I am haunted by James Baker, the former secretary of state, admitting that the first Bush administration's attention was so taken by Iraq that the Balkans missed the attention it might have otherwise received.

War against Iraq may be inevitable, even necessary, but I would love to hear the president speak more to these other issues as he makes his case for war.
_____________________________________________

H.D.S. Greenway's column appears regularly in the Globe.

© Copyright 2002 Globe Newspaper Company.

boston.com



To: tekboy who wrote (50899)10/11/2002 6:08:11 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
A Foreign Policy Harmful to Business
______________________________________________

tek: Here's an excerpt from a new book (called 'The Politics of Fortune') that could be very interesting...

OCTOBER 14, 2002
BusinessWeek Online
Premium Edition

BOOK EXCERPT

A Foreign Policy Harmful to Business

Unilateralism imperils global economic stability, says Yale's Jeffrey Garten


Jeffrey E. Garten is dean of the Yale School of Management and an Economic Viewpoint columnist for Business Week. He served on the staffs of Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and Cyrus Vance and was an officer in the 82nd Airborne Division and the U.S. Special Forces. Garten was an investment banker from 1979 to 1992. He was Undersecretary of Commerce for International Trade in the first Clinton Administration.

In an upcoming book, he analyzes the economic risk of President Bush's foreign policy.

______________________________________________________

Not long from now, American forces may be entering Baghdad. We can only hope that the U.S. and whichever of its allies join it are successful in toppling Saddam Hussein and making way for a less malevolent regime. Count me among those who believe that the Iraqi dictator must be forced out and that whatever weapons of mass destruction he possesses must be eliminated. But we should not lose sight of the fact that whenever the war begins, however it is conducted, and however it ends, the underlying direction of American foreign policy has veered sharply from its course of the last decade. It is a dangerous shift, based on a mistaken reading of the most important forces shaping the world and the way to exert constructive influence over them.

In the Bush Administration's disdain for the hard work of cultivating allies until the U.S. is pressed to the wall; in its radically new doctrine that the U.S. has the right to preemptively attack others in the name of self-defense when it alone determines there is enough of a threat; in the way it has given short shrift to international trade, finance, development, environmental policies, and the strengthening of international institutions--in these and other areas, America has militarized its foreign policy at the expense of a large number of other goals. As a result, it has widened the gap between America's immediate security goals and its critical longer-term requirements for international cooperation. No one should argue that national security isn't paramount, but the more urgent issue is how should we define and pursue it so that a broader range of our critical interests are advanced, too.

When you look around at the American political landscape, however, who is it that can and will forcefully raise this issue? Certainly no one in the Bush Cabinet is going to challenge the President, Vice-President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, and the other hard-line nationalists. Don't look to our Congress, rarely known for its global viewpoint, let alone for taking principled stands that could cost votes. As for the public, there won't be any state or local referendums in the upcoming midterm elections offering alternatives for how America wields its enormous influence abroad.

Only one group has the experience, the knowledge, the perspective, and the clear self-interest to provide some countervailing influence to the dangerous ways that Washington is throwing around American military power--and that is the nation's top business leaders.

They are, after all, the men and women whose operations depend heavily on revenues from abroad. Their complex logistical systems and research capabilities span continents. Their businesses rely on financing from international banks and local stock markets. Their workforces include millions of overseas employees. Their companies have planted increasingly deep roots in diverse local cultures. The best of them are pro-market while understanding the need for sound regulation within and among nations. They are the only obvious champions for an internationalist approach appropriate to an era in which globalization and the expansion of markets are the defining forces.

The problem is that the voices of America's CEOs are nowhere to be heard, and understandably so. Their stature and credibility have been seriously tarnished by corporate scandals, and they have little standing on public policy these days. They have their hands full in regaining public trust while still competing successfully in a hypercompetitive global economy. It is my hope, nevertheless, that they can dig themselves out of their reputational hole. It is a hope based on my sense that the heightened vigilance to CEO responsibility and corporate governance, forced on Corporate America by public outrage, investor behavior, congressional legislation, and more aggressive regulators, will have an immediate and positive impact on business conduct and public perceptions of it. If there is a turnaround, I would like our top business leaders to have a strong voice on a range of the nation's most vital policies, including its foreign relations.

After all, until World War I, U.S. diplomacy was based primarily on the advice of President George Washington that we should have commercial relations with all countries and entangling alliances with none. For well over its first century, American foreign policy was a partnership between government and business, driven by efforts to keep markets open for exports and investments.

It wasn't until after World War II, when the U.S. undertook responsibilities for defending the free world against the Soviet Union, that economic and commercial considerations were overshadowed by political and military goals. But even then, Washington's notion of containing Moscow and its strategy for winning the Cold War was based in large part on a goal of ensuring the social cohesion and economic prosperity of the West. Freeing up trade and investment flows across borders was a major part of that effort. And building multilateral institutions as a foundation for the global economy was central. From the Marshall Plan to the creation of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to the push for successive rounds of trade-liberalizing talks, business leaders worked hand-in-glove with Washington.

When the Berlin Wall was torn down in 1989, the overlap of America's foreign policy and its global economic and business interests was even clearer. Indeed, the environment seemed more like the pre-World War I days than post-World War II. As Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade in the first Clinton Administration, I helped shape policy. The biggest issues the Administration faced were not military in nature but competition with Japan and Europe, financial crises in Latin America and Asia, negotiations over the North American Free Trade Agreement, and the establishment of the World Trade Organization and China's entrance into it.

In Washington's eyes, the policies of the IMF, the World Bank, and the WTO were bigger issues than the future of NATO. The opening of Japan's markets was more critical than its military posture in Asia. The ratings that Standard & Poor's gave to Indonesia was of greater significance than sending our military advisers there. We pushed deregulation and privatization. We mounted massive trade missions to help U.S. companies win big contracts in emerging markets. Strengthening economic globalization became the organizing principle for most of our foreign policy. And American corporations were de facto partners all along the way.

I'll admit that the Clinton Administration probably went too far in conducting a foreign policy so oriented to commercial and economic interests. For one thing, a vast global terrorist organization, al Qaeda, emerged under our noses. Saddam Hussein was allowed to flaunt the U.N. directives with impunity. Even when it came to issues such as financial deregulation, it is now clear that we pushed for too much change in too short a time frame and that many countries did not have the policy underpinnings to accommodate turbulent markets. But now the pendulum has swung too far in the other direction. It's too much force of arms, too little focus on the long-term economic and social issues that are also a part of national security. If our foreign policy doesn't swing more to the center, disastrous consequences could follow.

No one can know for sure how globalization will play out, but there are two equally possible scenarios. The first is a rough extrapolation of what has already taken place: a steady increase in global trade and investment across the globe, stimulated by lower trade barriers and the deregulation of industries around the globe. In this scenario, the underlying forces of global economic integration are not stopped.

The other possibility is a precipitous slowdown in globalization, with nationalism winning the day. Trade and foreign investment do not stop, but the intense momentum of the last 20 years dissipate. There is a tightening of borders and new regulations on money flows, immigration, and transportation that accompanies the global war on terrorism. These act as a strong drag on any further opening of the world economy. A gradual rise in protectionism takes place, led by escalating tensions between the U.S. and Europe over export subsidies, steel, agriculture, genetically modified food, and privacy regulations. Whole regions of the world, such as the Islamic countries between Morocco and Saudi Arabia, are engulfed in political turmoil. An increasing number of governments, beginning with most of Latin America, reject policy prescriptions designed in Washington and on Wall Street. Global economic growth enters a long period of stagnation, and the world economy increasingly fragments.

What makes the present moment so important is that American policies may well be the decisive factor determining which of these two scenarios describes the future. The global economy is already quite weak. The growth of trade has dropped significantly, as has global foreign investment. Massive overcapacity in industries--steel, autos, telecommunications, air transport--hangs over the industrial structure. Stock markets everywhere are heading lower. The U.S. economy is fragile, and Japan and Germany have deeply chronic problems. We need to focus on getting the global economy back on track, but we aren't.

For the U.S., the stakes are especially high. We can afford to import far more than we export only if we can continue to borrow a billion dollars a day from foreign sources. Up to a quarter of our economic growth depends on exports. Our low inflation and interest rates depend on low-price imports. Our high level of productivity reflects sophisticated just-in-time global logistical systems. Our defense capabilities are heavily tied to the importation of electronic components from Asia. Our entrepreneurial culture is fueled by large-scale immigration. We need a smoothly functioning, open world economy as never before.

A number of the most fundamental tenets of the Bush Administration's foreign policy go against our global economic and business interests. Take, for example, its extreme unilateralism. Washington may well gather international support for its invasion of Iraq, but it will be only after every one of its allies except Britain has strenuously objected to the U.S. going it alone. It's hard to recall so many nations opposing the U.S. in such a high-pitched fashion.

No one trying to defend America's national interests can plausibly argue that we shouldn't pursue our interests aggressively or that the U.S. should accept policies just to appease our friends abroad. But we have an Administration that has stridently rejected every treaty that has come along--those designed to protect the environment, deal with nuclear and biological weapons proliferation, and prosecute international criminals--without signalling that it is willing to make modifications or to offer alternatives. It is the kind of behavior that historically has caused nations to unite against previous superpowers, from the Roman Empire to Britain.

This king-of-the-hill approach is at direct odds with achieving what America needs--more cooperation from other governments on a huge range of global issues. Such collaboration includes intelligence and law enforcement to pursue terrorists, but goes much further. For example, America needs rules for international trade to give the U.S. access to markets and the means to redress infractions of negotiated rules. The same goes for international investment. U.S. banks would be helped by a stronger regime for global banking regulation. American companies could benefit from the adoption of international accounting standards. They would be helped by a harmonization of antitrust rules in place of the 60 different sets now in force. And stronger protection for intellectual-property rights is critical to high-tech companies. How could we possibly believe that other nations will cooperate with us on these issues if America so defiantly depreciates agreed rules, treaties, and partnerships, the very basis of global prosperity since 1945?

A second big problem relates to Bush's policy that the U.S. has the right to invade another nation if it feels threatened. Now that Washington has announced that we are unrestrained by anything but our own sense of security, what right do we have to object if Russia attacks Georgia because of alleged terrorism, if China goes after Taiwan, if India preemptively strikes at Pakistan to take out its nukes?

The big issue is disregard for international law. The U.N. Charter places stringent limits on the right of self-defense, saying that the unilateral use of force can be used only against imminent threat of attack. The danger is that once the U.S. brazenly departs from international treaties, it invites widespread cynicism about all global agreements and opens the door to other nations' flaunting them, too.

The combination of a strong penchant for unilateralism and a high-profile policy of preemptive attack is bound to add fuel to the fire of anti-American resentment already flaring around the world. Given escalating possibilities for terrorist attacks against American facilities, U.S. corporations are particularly vulnerable. The State Dept. can get increasing support from our own Marines or local police or it can close embassies when these threats seem imminent. CEOs have no such luxuries. At a time when the overseas operations of American multinationals loom so large in Corporate America's revenue picture and when so many of our essential imports come from American subsidiaries abroad, disruptions to corporate operations carry serious economic costs.

America's top CEOs should be figuring out what their collective interests are and how to communicate their views effectively. They should at least lean against the wind of highly nationalist, militaristic, unilateral, and preemptive policies and argue for a more global approach that starts with the premise that America cannot defy its key allies and expect to succeed in building a stronger foundation for the global economy. They need to be arguing for higher-level attention to trade, international banking, and securities regulation, as well as global rules for mergers, accounting, and food safety. They need to be pushing for much greater support for international institutions, especially the IMF, World Bank, and the WTO, while making efforts to enhance their effectiveness. They need to focus more attention on economic policies that reduce world poverty.

While Washington is obsessed with what it doesn't like, it needs a perspective on the world that is more than the overthrow of Saddam and the end of terrorist threats. With Washington seeing military might as the key to American influence in other spheres, CEOs ought to explain why strong armies alone don't translate into strong economies. While Washington is behaving as if American sovereignty and security is all that matters, CEOs ought to be talking about the real world, where sovereignty is waning, economic security and progress is a collective endeavor, and having allies and strong international institutions is essential.

This is a much different world than the one reflected by the Bush Administration's foreign policy. In their private conversations with government officials, in the public reports of their business associations, in their support for foreign-policy research in think tanks and universities, business leaders ought to be doing what the Administration isn't: presenting a vision for what Secretary of State Colin Powell has labeled the post-post-Cold War world.

___________________________________________________________
From The Politics of Fortune: A New Agenda for Business Leaders by Jeffrey E. Garten. Copyright 2002 by Jeffrey E. Garten. Adapted by permission of Harvard Business School Press.

businessweek.com@@sGq@9GUQpNPsCw4A/premium/content/02_41/b3803085.htm?se=1