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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tekboy who wrote (118362)11/3/2003 1:57:54 AM
From: marcos  Respond to of 281500
 
' President Bush’s favorite verb is “expect.” He
announces peremptorily that he “expects” the Palestinians to
dump Yasir Arafat, “expects” countries to be with him or
against him, “expects” Turkey to cooperate. It is all part of
the administration’s basic approach toward foreign policy,
which is best described by the phrase used for its war
plan—”shock and awe.” The notion is that the United
States needs to intimidate countries with its power and
assertiveness, always threatening, always denouncing, never
showing weakness. Donald Rumsfeld often quotes a line
from Al Capone: “You will get more with a kind word and a
gun than with a kind word alone.”
But should the guiding philosophy of the world’s
leading democracy really be the tough talk of a Chicago
mobster? In terms of effectiveness, this strategy has been a
disaster. It has alienated friends and delighted enemies.
Having traveled around the world and met with senior
government officials in dozens of countries over the past
year, I can report that with the exception of Britain and
Israel, every country the administration has dealt with feels
humiliated by it. “Most officials in Latin American countries
today are not anti-American types,” says Jorge Castaneda,
the reformist foreign minister of Mexico, who resigned two
months ago. “We have studied in the United States or
worked there. We like and understand America. But we
find it extremely irritating to be treated with utter contempt.”
Last fall, a senior ambassador to the United Nations, in a
speech supporting America’s position on Iraq, added an
innocuous phrase that could have been seen as deviating
from that support. The Bush administration called up his
foreign minister and demanded that he be formally
reprimanded within an hour. The ambassador now seethes
when he talks about U.S. arrogance. Does this really help
America’s cause in the world? There are dozens of stories
like this from every part of the world. ...'

msnbc.com

This is the piece i most remember from the spring, Zakaria, 'The Arrogant Empire' [there was a link to it in your link there] ...... it simply will not do for a few men with extreme power to cook up stuff in the back rooms of Washington and then order around the Rest of Us to its execution, we will not long tolerate such a state, if they do not understand that every day in every way we will do what we are able to sap the power that feeds such hubris, they do not understand humanity, and so must not be left in charge of it ..... from Zakaria's fingers to ears of the gods - may their rule be 'lonely, brutish and short'



To: tekboy who wrote (118362)11/3/2003 3:29:10 PM
From: carranza2  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
An interesting article on the young Rumsfeld in this month's The Atlantic by James Mann, though not available online [ken might find a way]. The memo seems in character--Rummie may be at heart a bit of a gadfly, though a gadfly with energy, some good ideas, and lots of access. When things go wrong, though, beware as it appears his gadfly instincts take over.

C2@hedroveNixonnuts,too.com



To: tekboy who wrote (118362)11/5/2003 2:47:55 PM
From: Win Smith  Respond to of 281500
 
A Memo That Speaks Volumes latimes.com

[ That Dr. Rose is a smart guy, I hope he doesn't mind if I violate copyright and post his column for the record. Good to see him getting a little broader circulation, though I imagine the LA Times is usually written off as part of the liberal media conspiracy by the faithful. I particularly liked this part:

Not content with dominating U.S. foreign policy to a greater extent than any predecessor in memory, moreover, Rumsfeld and his supporters are now complaining that problems have arisen because they have too little power, rather than too much. As one "senior government official" told a reporter in the memo's defense, "Who was responsible for winning the Cold War? The military. Who is responsible for winning the global war on terror? Everybody. The military. The State Department. The Central Intelligence Agency. Justice and Customs have a big piece. When everybody is responsible, nobody is accountable."

Casual readers might assume that this Alice-in-Wonderland view of history represents a slip of the tongue. Surely it was "everybody" who was responsible for winning the Cold War, as the Soviet Union collapsed after being hemmed in by nearly half a century of multilateral political, ideological, economic and strategic containment. And surely it is "the military" that has dominated the prosecution of the war on terror, jealously keeping other agencies and countries at arm's length.

But no, this is what the Rumsfeld crowd really seems to believe: that the U.S. military alone won the Cold War, and that the solution to current problems lies in giving it an even more unfettered hand today.


Well, yes, the looking glass quality of various instances of neocon "facts and logic" has been noted here previously, but that's another story. In full: ]

Rumsfeld's leaked note points to his strengths -- and his serious shortcomings.
By Gideon Rose
Gideon Rose is the managing editor of Foreign Affairs.

October 31, 2003

The publication last week of a confidential memo from Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld pressing aides to come up with new ideas for fighting the war on terror brought a depressingly predictable reaction.

Critics of the Bush administration pointed to the memo's bleak assessment of the current situation ("mixed results" against Al Qaeda, a "long, hard slog" ahead in Afghanistan and Iraq) and contrasted it with the administration's more optimistic public statements. Rumsfeld defenders, meanwhile, argued that the memo's tough questions revealed a praiseworthy drive and lack of complacency. (A third camp of conspiracy theorists agreed that the memo cast Rumsfeld in a good light and reasoned from this that the whole episode had probably been choreographed by his office.)

Both the blame and the praise were legitimate, but hardly reason to get excited. Most serious observers, after all, have long seen the administration's relentless happy talk about progress in Iraq and elsewhere as spin, so they can hardly claim to have been shocked when it was openly revealed as such. And given the difficulties the administration has encountered in its reconstruction efforts, it would be surprising if Rumsfeld was not searching for new policy options.

Ironically, the most interesting aspect of the memo has been largely overlooked. Its few bracing paragraphs offer evidence not only of Rumsfeld's strengths but also his glaring weaknesses. Perceptive enough to see the true dimensions of the problem at hand, he appears utterly incapable of understanding how to solve it.

The memo correctly distinguishes between the short-term struggle — a battle to the death between existing forces on either side — and the long-term one, in which the size and composition of the opposing forces can change over time. It correctly points to nonmilitary factors, such as the success of "the madrasas and the radical clerics" in the Muslim world, as the crucial factor driving the number of future enemies. And it draws a correct conclusion from these points, that in addition to its current counter-terrorism policies the United States needs "a broad, integrated plan to stop the next generation of terrorists."

But rather than exploring how external and internal conditions might shape the demand for and supply of radical Islamism, the memo remains stuck in an intellectual rut, limited by a crudely conventional "hard power" outlook. The possibilities it floats — a leaner and more agile U.S. military, pressure on the madrasas' funders, covert operations to "entice" the madrasas "to a more moderate course" — are all essentially negative. They focus on coercion or manipulation, displaying the cynical worldview captured in the Vietnam-era quip "grab 'em by the balls and their hearts and minds will follow."

Rumsfeld seems unable to see that the radicals' success is made possible by the weakness, brutality and incompetence of the governments they confront, and that the only way to beat the madrasas is by offering attractive alternatives to the millenarian escapism they peddle. Helping to build healthy polities across the broader Middle East; helping to provide decent educations, jobs and life prospects to ordinary citizens of the countries in question; leading international coalitions that foreigners actually want to join rather than ones they have to be bullied into supporting — that such actions might be crucial to the larger struggle is simply not the sort of thing Rumsfeld ponders.

In a well-ordered administration, of course, this might not matter. There can be virtue, of course, in having Cabinet members stick to their lathes. If the secretary of Defense manages combat well, the fact that he thinks little of nation-building, repeatedly alienates the rest of the world and chooses bigoted religious zealots for top positions wouldn't matter much, because he wouldn't be in charge of political and economic development, diplomacy or intercultural relations.

In the Bush administration, however, the Defense Department — in conjunction with the vice president's office — seems to be running the show, and so the limitations the memo reveals are more than a bit disturbing.

Not content with dominating U.S. foreign policy to a greater extent than any predecessor in memory, moreover, Rumsfeld and his supporters are now complaining that problems have arisen because they have too little power, rather than too much. As one "senior government official" told a reporter in the memo's defense, "Who was responsible for winning the Cold War? The military. Who is responsible for winning the global war on terror? Everybody. The military. The State Department. The Central Intelligence Agency. Justice and Customs have a big piece. When everybody is responsible, nobody is accountable."

Casual readers might assume that this Alice-in-Wonderland view of history represents a slip of the tongue. Surely it was "everybody" who was responsible for winning the Cold War, as the Soviet Union collapsed after being hemmed in by nearly half a century of multilateral political, ideological, economic and strategic containment. And surely it is "the military" that has dominated the prosecution of the war on terror, jealously keeping other agencies and countries at arm's length.

But no, this is what the Rumsfeld crowd really seems to believe: that the U.S. military alone won the Cold War, and that the solution to current problems lies in giving it an even more unfettered hand today.

Luckily, the White House doesn't seem to be buying this line. The secretary of Defense might even discover that when your only tool is a sword, you can end up having to fall on it.



To: tekboy who wrote (118362)11/9/2003 10:26:50 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
"The U.S. foreign-aid budget as a percentage of gross national product (GNP) ranks last among the world's wealthiest countries (at about 0.1 percent)."

terrorismanswers.com

And the Bush / Cheney regime takes us into a reckless and very expensive war in Iraq...Yet, could we have spent the hundreds of billions more productively and gained the respect of the rest of the world...?



To: tekboy who wrote (118362)11/9/2003 6:06:33 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
How the Pentagon forgot about running Iraq.

slate.msn.com

<<...Another reason the neocons go for grand theories may be that their primary experience tends to come from the classroom, rather than the real world. Colin Powell, who took fire in Vietnam, has a visceral sense of what happens when a military engagement turns sour that those who served out the war at the University of Chicago may lack. What's more, few neoconservatives have cultivated a deep appreciation or understanding of other cultures—unless you count the Athens of Pericles or Machiavelli's Florence.

Constrained within a strong foreign-policy-making apparatus, such as that of the previous President Bush, theory-makers can be highly valuable. People like Wolfowitz are assets when it comes to challenging the assumptions of pre-existing policies, bringing ambitious ideas into a debate, and articulating basic principles. Kirkpatrick, Richard Pipes, and others were useful in exactly this way under President Reagan. Under Reagan, the more ambitious fantasies of the neoconservatives were effectively checked by George Shultz and other practically minded policymakers.

Under the current Bush, however, the check was blank—Powell was beaten down while Condi Rice and Dick Cheney somehow went AWOL. The result was that a few charismatic, outside-the-box thinkers were able to bamboozle the president into mistaking their roll of the dice for a mature judgment. No wise old head (where was Brent Scowcroft when we needed him?) took the president aside to explain that winning a debate in the Cabinet room isn't the same thing as having a sensible policy. (Bush's tax cuts are another example of a similar phenomenon, driven by a different set of ideologues: the supply-siders.)

Back during the 2000 campaign, George Will and others argued that presidential intelligence didn't matter. This notion was reinforced after Sept. 11, when it became fashionable to argue that Bush's "moral clarity" was preferable to the ability to comprehend many sides of a complicated issue. In fact, presidential intelligence does matter. The intellectual qualities Bush lacks—historical knowledge, interest in the details of policy, and substantive (as opposed to political) judgment—might well have prevented the quagmire we're facing in Iraq right now. A more engaged president—one who understood, for instance, the difference between the Sunnis and the Shiites—surely would have asked about Plan B...>>



To: tekboy who wrote (118362)11/16/2003 1:54:01 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
The New Yorker's unfair slam on Wes Clark and his role in the Kosovo war...

____________________________________

Defending the General
By Fred Kaplan
Posted Thursday, Nov. 13, 2003, at 4:13 PM PT
slate.msn.com

What's so bad about winning a war?

I don't know whether Gen. Wesley Clark is qualified to be president, but Peter J. Boyer's profile in this week's New Yorker—which paints him as scarily unqualified—is an unfair portrait as well as a misleading, occasionally inaccurate précis of the 1999 Kosovo war and Clark's role in commanding it.

Boyer relies heavily on some of Clark's fellow retired Army generals who clearly despise him. The gist of their critique, as Boyer summarizes, is that Clark, while a brilliant analyst, "had a certainty about the rightness of his views which led to conflicts with his colleagues and, sometimes, his superiors."

I have met a fair number of generals, and I can't think of a single one who did not have "a certainty about the rightness of his views." There may have been a couple of one-star generals who expressed this certainty in a modest tone, but above that rank—and Clark retired as a four-star general—their confidence easily became belligerent if their opinions were challenged.

Boyer acknowledges that Clark alienated some generals simply because he rubbed them the wrong way. First in his class at West Point, a Rhodes Scholar, an officer who felt at ease as a White House fellow and as a high-level Pentagon planning analyst—Clark's résumé did not fit many traditionalist officers' view of a warrior. However, Clark's most outspoken critics disliked him because of his views and actions during Kosovo, and that is where Boyer misreads both content and context.

Kosovo was the United States' first post-Cold War experiment in "humanitarian intervention." Clark, who was the U.S. Supreme Allied Commander in Europe (and who, before that, had been a military aide in the Dayton negotiations over Bosnia), supported going to war in order to protect the Kosovars from the savagery of Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic. Secretary of Defense William Cohen and the entire Joint Chiefs of Staff, who had no taste for interventions of practically any sort, opposed it.

That much, Boyer has right. But much else, he does not.

For instance, he portrays Clark as not only maneuvering around the chiefs in his advocacy, but also as drawing a lackadaisical Clinton White House—distracted by domestic troubles over Monica Lewinsky—into war. In fact, however, Clinton may have been distracted somewhat, but Secretary of State Madeleine Albright was not. Albright was a fiery supporter of military intervention in the Balkans (many have written of the famous meeting where she appalled the reticent chiefs by saying, "What good are all these fine troops you keep telling us about if we can't use them?"). Albright was the prime mover; many observers at the time—supporters and critics alike—called it "Madeleine's war." And her prime collaborator, Richard Holbrooke, Clinton's envoy to Bosnia, also enjoyed direct access to the president.

So it is more than a bit startling to read, in Boyer's article, the following sentence: "Clark's view, which had the support of Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Holbrooke, prevailed." It would be more apt to say, "Albright's view, which had the support of Holbrooke and Clark, prevailed." She welcomed Clark's endorsement, but she didn't need it to make her argument or to win it.

Boyer also distorts the war itself, mischaracterizing it as a senseless adventure. He tacitly takes the chiefs' position on this, without noting that many others besides Clark (and, for that matter, Albright and Holbrooke) held otherwise. Thousands of Bosnians were dying in a war that U.S. military power could have ended. Hundreds of thousands of Rwandans had recently been massacred in a civil war to which neither the United States nor the United Nations raised a finger, much less a fighter plane, in protest. Many of those pushing for intervention—and they included not just Clark but some of the most liberal, customarily antiwar politicians and columnists—wanted above all to avert another massacre. A case could be made—and the chiefs made it—that the United States shouldn't get involved in such messes where our own national security wasn't threatened. But it is false to attribute Clark's passionate lobbying, as Boyer pretty much does, to mere stubbornness.

Boyer is also off base when he likens the Kosovo conflict to George W. Bush's war in Iraq. He notes that Clark recently criticized Bush for invading Iraq without U.N. approval, yet observes that the Kosovo war was also initiated without the Security Council's permission. The bypassing of the United Nations that marked the onset of Kosovo, he writes, "did not seem entirely dissimilar from the prewar maneuverings regarding Iraq," when Bush bypassed the U.N. and resorted to a "coalition of the willing."

In fact, the two wars—both their beginnings and their conduct—were extremely dissimilar. True, when Clinton realized Russia and China would veto a resolution calling for intervention, he backed away from the Security Council. However, he did not subsequently piece together a paltry, handpicked caricature of a coalition, as Bush did for the war in Iraq. Instead, he went through another established international organization—NATO.

From that point on, the aim of the war was not only to beat back Milosevic, but also to hold together the Atlantic Alliance, which was, after all, fighting the first war of its 50-year history. Compromises had to be made in military tactics in order to achieve this political objective—and that, too, was anathema to U.S. officers.

Air Force Gen. Michael Short, who presented Clark with a plan involving a classically massive set of opening-day airstrikes, was "dismayed," Boyer writes, when Clark didn't approve the plan on the grounds that NATO's member nations would never approve it.

Boyer, on balance, takes Short's side on this tale. Under Clark's command, Boyer laments, the United States "could only wage war by committee; the process was so unwieldy that it became, to future American Defense officials, an object lesson in how not to fight a war."

Maybe. But is there much doubt today that Clark was correct in this choice? Does anyone care to argue that intervening in Kosovo was a bad idea, that the Western alliance wasn't (at least for a brief spell) strengthened as a result, or that the war was unsuccessful? Milosevic surrendered, was captured, and is standing trial for war crimes in a court of international law—which is more than can be said of Saddam Hussein. The Serbian defeat was total, unchallenged, and internationally imposed, which may explain why the (truly multinational) postwar peacekeeping forces have suffered minimal casualties in the intervening years.

Clark was fired by Secretary of Defense William Cohen shortly after the war ended—and, just to make sure Clark didn't try to make an end-run, the chiefs leaked the firing to the Washington Post. The reasons for his dismissal seem clear: Clark had pushed a policy that Cohen and the chiefs had opposed (and, even after the war, continued to oppose); he went around them in his advocacy; he was too close, for the chiefs' taste, to Clinton (in signing Clark's release papers, Clinton was led to believe the move was a normal succession, not a dismissal); and, toward the end of the war, he pushed for a ground-invasion option that none of the Pentagon's top officials supported in the slightest.

Clearly, Clark made mistakes. Like many, he thought that merely threatening Milosevic with airstrikes would make him back down; after that didn't work, he thought three nights of bombing would crack his resistance. (The bombing campaign lasted 11 weeks.) But Clark was far from alone in this miscalculation; Clinton and Albright shared it. Clark also delivered a disastrous press briefing in the middle of the war (prompting Cohen to order him, "Get your f***ing face off the TV, no more briefings, period"). But the briefing (which I remember well and reported on at the time) was a disaster because Clark committed truth: He admitted, in a roundabout way, that the air war wasn't going well; he was impolitic, but he was right.

The fact that Cohen hated Clark, shuddered at the sight of him according to Boyer's article, should cause no discomfort to any prospective voter today. Cohen posted the least distinctive record of any secretary of defense in modern memory; he was widely seen as a milquetoast at the time and left no legacy to speak of.

Gen. Hugh Shelton, then the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, is another matter. Shelton has recently and famously said, in a public forum, that Clark's firing "had to do with integrity and character issues," adding that, for that reason, "Wes won't get my vote." Shelton has since refused to elaborate. If there's a story behind his claim, he should tell it, in the interests of the country. If there isn't, he should apologize. Boyer obviously talked with him in the course of researching the story, but the case against Clark—while there very well may be one—remains unmade.



To: tekboy who wrote (118362)11/20/2003 4:30:15 PM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
From the sidelines... Mqurice warns Hu Jintao that he is heading for big trouble by threatening my mates in Taiwan who might want to decide for themselves how they run the joint in Taiwan.

If Hu is determined that Taiwan and Hu's place be run under one constitution, then he can apply for a job with Taiwan as regional condominium manager based in Beijing.

Why Hu thinks it's he who should be the boss of Taiwan rather than the reverse is beyond me. I suppose he thinks he has more people that he is the boss of. Or maybe he has higher mountains [having taken over Tibet]. Or maybe he thinks land area is relevant.

Hu is obviously confused and he needs some instructions on being a good bloke, a good neighbour and to mind his manners.

He came to NZ, but I have no idea what he was discussing. Comrade Clark perhaps was soliciting his support for a job as UN Secretary General in exchange for something or other in the way of trade. He didn't pop round to my place to tell me what he was doing. Very poor form.

I'm sending an emissary to Beijing in a week or two who will see if he can't settle things down and put the place on the true path to Nirvana. At present, Hu is choosing the road to Armageddon. He won't like it there.

I recommend the USA keep the troops in South Korea and Okinawa [which are handy to China]. China is threatening war so in defence of democracy and freedom and all that good stuff, Taiwan needs to be defended against Hu. If Hu wants to blow up people, he'll find that there are very big consequences for him in person. Made in China will go down the gurgler very quickly.

The Nazi totalitarians enjoyed trade with the USA until the USA woke up, very belatedly, to what the autocratic boss types are really like. The USA is currently enjoying vast trade with China and it would NOT be good for that process to be interrupted. But sometimes, the price of freedom and civilization requires an interruption while the totalitarian bossy-britches are dealt with.

Hu has seen what my hard-earned money can pay for in Iraq, with excellent pin-point accuracy of large explosions. Would he really want a dose of that in Beijing, right underneath his armoured limousine? That's what war means. If he threatens war, he should expect to get war.

edition.cnn.com

Please ask somebody in the USA to explain the rules of civilization to Hu. It's not as though Taiwan has a lot of oil or anything that they are stealing by being independent. On the contrary, they are dependent on China for their wealth, through trade and investment.

Taiwan will be independent of China in the same way that New Zealand is independent of Australia. Nominally, but in practise, we need to align our policies with Australia's.

I'm disappointed in Hu. I had high hopes for him. But, he's still new to the job and maybe he just needs some reasoning to understand how to maintain harmony. Maybe George could swing by Beijing on the way home from tea with the Queen and Tony. If he likes, he's welcome to call in here too for a few rounds of golf at some of our beautiful golf courses.

Mqurice

<HONG KONG, China (CNN) -- Taiwan has hit back at threats by China to use force against its pro-independence moves, telling Beijing to "mind its own business".

In a statement release late Wednesday, the Taiwan government told China it had no right to interfere with the island's push for a new constitution and referendum bill.

"Taiwan is a democratic country. Only its 23 million people have the right to decide its future and what is best for them," a spokesman for Taiwan's cabinet, Lin Chia-lung, said in the statement.

"We can't tolerate interference with our internal affairs by any undemocratic countries," Reuters reports Lin saying.

The response follows Beijing's threat to use force against Taiwan should the island's pro-independence movement continue to escalate -- the first time since 2000 that China has issued such a warning.

In a tough statement, the Vice-Minister at Beijing's Taiwan Affairs Office Wang Zaixi said Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian's recent pro-separatist activities had crossed Beijing's "red line" and that they "run the risk of triggering a war" with the mainland.

"War will break out if the island declares formal independence," state media on Wednesday quoted Wang as saying.

"[The separatist forces] are set to pay a high cost if they think we will not use force against their conspiracy to promote formal independence."

Beijing regards Taiwan as a renegade province and has threatened to use force if the self-governing island declares independence.

In the past month or so, President Chen has indicated Taipei will be holding referendums on political issues -- and that the island's constitution will be revised in 2006 to reflect full-fledged statehood.

A representative from China's People's Liberation Army also spoke out for the first time since controversy broke out several months ago over Taiwan's "creeping independence" gambit.

The official China News Service quoted a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of Military Science, Luo Yuan, as saying that "the day 'Taiwan independence' is promulgated is also the time when war will be declared."

Luo said a number of senior PLA generals shared this feeling of urgency. ... continued...
>



To: tekboy who wrote (118362)12/6/2003 10:54:03 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Democracy Cannot Coexist with Bush's Failed Doctrine of Preventive War
_______________________________

by Benjamin R. Barber

Published on Wednesday, December 3, 2003 by the Los Angeles Times

In his historic speech at the National Endowment for Democracy recently, President Bush embraced a new doctrine, a "formal strategy of freedom" in the Middle East — and he did it just in the nick of time.

For although the war in Iraq is won, the peace has been lost, and that other Bush doctrine, the "preventive war" doctrine, is in disarray. The United States can neither withdraw with honor — anarchy, civil war and renewed tyranny probably would result — nor stay and fight on into a Vietnam-style quagmire, which is what the new Baathist-terrorist alliance is obviously hoping for. Bush's dilemma was evident in his Thanksgiving visit to Baghdad — a couple of hours with his fortressed troops but not a minute with the "liberated" Iraqis.

The only alternative to withdrawal or quagmire is for the U.S. to succeed in its campaign for genuine democratization, which is the option the president has chosen. Unfortunately, he has done so without relinquishing preventive war or the faulty logic behind it.

The problem for the administration, already clear from the cries of "hypocrisy!" with which his "freedom strategy" is being met in some quarters, is that there is a startling gap between the president's welcome rhetoric about democracy and a policy that allows for unilateral invasion of other countries when the U.S. feels threatened, whether or not it has actually been attacked. It is this tension between democratization and preventive war that is at issue in Iraq.

Bush noted in his speech that democracy spread in the late 20th century because dictatorships collapsed from within or were overthrown by people demanding their liberty, just as the United States seized its freedom from the British in the 18th century. Yet in Iraq, the U.S. is trying to impose democracy at the barrel of a gun. But we cannot logically be an ardent advocate of the internal struggle for democracy and at the same time assert our unilateral right to invade enemies of our own choosing.

Bush urges the Saudis and Egyptians to press for democracy, but Washington continues to arm and fund undemocratic governments in both countries because they are putative allies in the war on terrorism. The president speaks of a "forward strategy of freedom in the Middle East," but anti-terrorist tactics mandate strategic alliances with tyrants — on the model of U.S. support for Saddam Hussein in the 1980s, when Iran was the greater enemy. The U.S. must make up its mind: Are we to be friends of democracy or friends of the enemies of our enemies?

Bush admirably condemns what Ronald Reagan called "cultural condescension" and rightly insists that Islam and democracy are compatible (look at Turkey, Indonesia, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Albania, Bahrain and Niger). Yet the administration seems afraid to trust the Shiites in Iraq, afraid they might be too fundamentalist, too prone to the seductions of terrorism.

The fact is that the U.S. often doesn't really want democracy — what it actually wants is an assent to its policies. That's why the U.S. sided with the French in 1991 when the Algerian elections were "canceled" because of the possibility of an Islamic victory. That's also why it fussed when Turkey's democrats voted to deny American soldiers a Turkish route to northern Iraq before the war.

Bush wants democracy for others, but apparently on an American schedule dictated by a concern for "stability" and the war against terrorism. Yet imagine Britain acknowledging the American Declaration of Independence but suggesting it be implemented on a British timetable.

Citizenship must be learned, and power must be responsibly used, but the best and only democratically acceptable means for learning responsibility is empowerment. Democracy is the right of people to make their own mistakes. As T.E. Lawrence — Lawrence of Arabia — wrote, it is "better to let them do it imperfectly than to do it perfectly yourself, for it is their country … and your time is short."

That is what real democracy requires. Can a United States of America committed to preventive war allow it?

Balancing American support for world democracy with world distrust for American empire requires consistency between theory and practice. It demands that the U.S. decide whether the war on terrorism trumps everything, including its own liberties, or whether the quest for a democratic world will now replace preventive war as Washington's primary foreign policy doctrine.

It is hard for the U.S. to be the beacon of freedom that Bush's speech celebrated — and the world so admires — when it has in many places come to be seen as the maker of war the world most fears. It is hard to lead a global struggle for human rights when the U.S. holds enemy aliens prisoners without rights and when Americans who criticize the preventive-war policy are vilified.

Democracy is a high ideal. It exacts a high price from those who champion it. Bush can pursue an inspirational foreign policy founded on democratization that will transform how the U.S. spends money, cooperates with others and forges alliances. Or he can persist in following a failed doctrine of preventive war aimed at defeating terrorism, whatever costs such a campaign may exact from democratic ideals at home and abroad. But he cannot pursue both.

_________________________________

Benjamin R. Barber is a University of Maryland political scientist and the author of "Jihad vs. McWorld: How Globalism and Tribalism Are Reshaping the World" and the newly published "Fear's Empire: War, Terrorism, and Democracy"

Copyright 2003 Los Angeles Times

commondreams.org