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Dame theory: what Madeleine Albright can teach Bush about toppling dictators.


Madam Secretary: A Memoir By Madeleine Albright Madeleine Korbel Albright (born May 15 1937) was the first woman to become United States Secretary of State. She was nominated by President Bill Clinton on December 5 1996 and was unanimously confirmed by the United States Senate 99-0. She was sworn in on January 23 1997.  Miramax, $27.95

Few secretaries of state have managed to collect as diverse an assortment of critics as Madeleine Albright. Foreign Service bureaucrats resented her for making policy with a tight group of advisors in her seventh-floor offices, liberal interventionists slammed her record as Ambassador to the United Nations during the Rwanda crisis, when she lobbied to dismantle the small mission of U.N. peacekeepers just as Hutu militias began slaughtering" hundreds of thousands of thousands. But no one had more venom for the secretary than the neoconservatives. To them, Alright was the cruise director on what George Will George Frederick Will (born May 4, 1941) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning, conservative American newspaper columnist, journalist, and author. Education and early career
Will was born in Champaign, Illinois, the son of Frederick L. Will and Louise Hendrickson Will.
 dubbed America's vacation from history. She may have sounded like a neocon ne·o·con  
n. Informal
A neoconservative: "The neocons and hard-liners have long felt that no Soviet leader could be trusted" New York Times.
 when she spoke of America as the "indispensable nation," but she tried to cut deals with two of the three members of the axis of evil, Iron and North Korea, and she stood idly by as the economic sanctions Economic sanctions are economic penalties applied by one country (or group of countries) on another for a variety of reasons. Economic sanctions include, but are not limited to, tariffs, trade barriers, import duties, and import or export quotas.  she had championed early in the 1990s against its third member, Iraq, were whittled away by smuggling smuggling, illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain , lax enforcement, mad outright defiance. A fine example of Albright's combination of weakness and naivete na·ive·té or na·ïve·té  
n.
1. The state or quality of being inexperienced or unsophisticated, especially in being artless, credulous, or uncritical.

2. An artless, credulous, or uncritical statement or act.
 was her frantic pursuit of Yasser Arafat at the U.S. Ambassador's residence in Paris in late October 2000, begging him not to leave yet another of her fruitless negotiations to end dm war he was inciting against his old peace partner.

In her new memoir, Madam Secretary, Albright has few kind words for Arafat, calling him at various points, a "professional victim," and a "manipulator and survivor." During a visit to her farm in Virginia, her two-year old grandson let out a "piercing scream" at the first sight of the Palestinian leader. Such colorful touches are common in this often plodding and pedantic pe·dan·tic  
adj.
Characterized by a narrow, often ostentatious concern for book learning and formal rules: a pedantic attention to details.
 memoir focusing on Albright's four years, from 1997 to 2001, at the height of power. For example, she recounts how she learned of her Jewish ancestry from Washington Post reporter Michael Dobbs Michael Dobbs (born 14 November 1948) is a British politician and bestselling author. Background
Michael Dobbs was born on November 14 1948, the same day as Prince Charles, in England into a working class family who emigrated from County Laois, Ireland in 1940.
. Unfortunately, the book does not offer much in the way of news. We do learn that in 1998, Iran's Prime Minister Mohammed Khatami sent word to Ararat that Iran would support a negotiated settlement between Israel mad the Palestinians--a position at odds with the charter of Iran's Islamic Revolution, She 'also confirms that, at the request of South Korean President Kim Dae Jung Kim Dae Jung (kĭm dā jng), 1924–, president (1998–2003) of South Korea. A native of South Jeolla prov. , President Clinton was indeed ready to travel to Pyongyang at the end of his presidency. But anyone expecting a persuasive rebuttal rebuttal n. evidence introduced to counter, disprove or contradict the opposition's evidence or a presumption, or responsive legal argument.  of the toughest charges frequently leveled against the Clinton administration's foreign policy--for instance, that the president was not as committed as he should have been to hunting Osama bin Laden Osama bin Laden: see bin Laden, Osama. , or that the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  failed to stop the Saudis beheading the two prime suspects in the 1996 bombing of Khobar Towers that killed 19 Americans--will be disappointed. Reading this book, Albright's conservative critics will be tempted to gloat that they were right about her all along.

Yet they do so at their own risk: As the Bush administration encounters one snag after another in Iraq, it is becoming clear that, at least as of today, Albright has proved a more successful regime -changer than the very neocons who coined the phrase. For all her efforts to cut deals with Arafat, Kim Jong Il Kim Jong Il
 or Kim Chong Il

(born Feb. 16, 1941, Siberia, Russia, U.S.S.R.) Son of Kim Il-sung. He was designated his father's successor in 1980 and became North Korea's de facto leader on his father's death in 1994.
, and the Iranians, this Czech refugee whose family escaped both Nazism and communism, demonstrated not only moral clarity Moral clarity is a catch-phrase associated with American political conservatives. Popularized by William J. Bennett's Why We Fight: Moral Clarity and the War on Terrorism, the phrase moral clarity  but also effectiveness in opposing a ruthless and wily tyrant, Yugoslavia's Slobodan Mizlosevic. Albright's patient multilateral diplomacy, combined with forceful moral rhetoric and quiet funding for the opposition, may prove a far better model for ridding the Middle East of its dictators than last March's invasion.

Divine and overthrow

Albright's crowning moment came on Oct. 5, 2000 after Slobodan Milosevic clumsily tried to steal what turned out to be his final election and found himself overwhelmed by popular outrage on the streets of Belgrade and international condemnation abroad. I was on Albright's plane when CNN CNN
 or Cable News Network

Subsidiary company of Turner Broadcasting Systems. It was created by Ted Turner in 1980 to present 24-hour live news broadcasts, using satellites to transmit reports from news bureaus around the world.
 began broadcasting images of ordinary Serbs swarming into the parliament building in Belgrade. "You wouldn't believe what's happening," she told members of the press at the back of the plane. And she was right: We didn't. Or at least we hadn't. Months earlier, in September, her assistant James O'Brien had briefed reporters on the upcoming Yugoslav elections and how they fit into Albright's broader plan for driving Milosevic from power. Many reporters marveled at the secretary's naivete. After all, they reasoned, the Serbian strongman would just steal the election and be done with it.

But as her memoir makes clear, Albright was playing a much longer game than many people then imagined and with far more moving parts than they knew. Her plan in topple Milosevic took shape as the Kosovo Liberation Army The Kosovo Liberation Army or KLA (Albanian: Ushtria Çlirimtare e Kosovës or UÇK) was an ethnic Albanian paramilitary extremist group which sought independence for the province of Kosovo from Yugoslavia and Serbia in the late 1990s.  began its summer offensive against Serb security forces in July 1998. Milosevic responded with town-to-town sweeps which drove militants and civilians alike from their homes. It was those images of terrorized refugees flooding over the border into Albania, recalls Albright, that helped her persuade a reluctant President Clinton and NATO NATO: see North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
NATO
 in full North Atlantic Treaty Organization

International military alliance created to defend western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion.
 to threaten force against Milosevic if he did not halt his attacks on the Kosovars.

But while Albright was laying the groundwork to make war on Milosevic's security forces and Yugoslav National Army in Kosovo, she plotted his overthrow in Belgrade by other means. Part of her strategy was to sow divisions between him and his key constituencies. "We needed to send the message," she writes, "to Seth business-people that he was bad for business, to the Serb military that he invited the destruction of their institutions, and to the Serb middle class that he was wrecking their hopes for a peaceful and prosperous future."

Before executives and the middle class, she dangled the carrot of joining Europe--offering for instance at the Rambouillet negotiations full normalization In relational database management, a process that breaks down data into record groups for efficient processing. There are six stages. By the third stage (third normal form), data are identified only by the key field in their record.  in exchange for the right to send a peacekeeping force into Kosovo, after she approved a plan to bolster Milosevic's opposition--an offer he ultimately rejected. That mined out to be a clever maneuver because it allowed her both to offer Milosevic a credible way to avoid war while also alienating him from one of his key constituencies in Serbia. Not only did it strengthen her hand with wobbly NATO allies, but it also helped her isolate Milosevic at home and set the stage for the coup de grace coup de grâce  
n. pl. coups de grâce
1. A deathblow delivered to end the misery of a mortally wounded victim.

2. A finishing stroke or decisive event.
 flint followed the Sept. 24, 2000 election.

Albright further laid the groundwork for Milosevic's fall by bolstering the fractious frac·tious  
adj.
1. Inclined to make trouble; unruly.

2. Having a peevish nature; cranky.



[From fraction, discord (obsolete).
 internal opposition which he had always been able to divide and conquer in the past. Between 1998 and 2000, U.S. agencies like the International Republican Institute and the C.I.A. poured a little over $150 million into Milosevic's opposition, which went for pollsters who helped craft an opposition election message, expanded free media like the radio station B-92 and training for poll monitors, who eventually played a key role in discrediting Milosevic's claims to have won the election. State Department funding for the opposition included training in nonviolent action--which helped build a small student organization, Otpor, that became the backbone of the coalition that elected Vojislav Kostunica to the presidency. All the while, Albright continued to meet with anti-Milosevic Serb politicians and used her bully pulpit to make clear that the United States wanted "Milosevic out of power, out of Serbia, and in the custody of the war crimes tribunal." By the time Serbs and Montenegrins were ready to vote on Sept. 24, 2000, Europe and the United States were reading from the same page: the only way the country could join Europe was without Milosevic. By the spring of 2001, Milosevic was in a cell at the Hagaue, and Serbia was taking its first steps toward a democratic, European future.

Baghdad vs. Belgrade

Belgrade, of course, is not Baghdad. In Yugoslavia, there was enough political space to hold an election, albeit an imperfect one, and sufficient freedom to mobilize the forces of opposition. Force may have been the only way to topple Saddam's regime. But there's little doubt that had it been possible for him to have been overthrown from the inside rather than by foreign arms, many of the problems Iraqis and American soldiers are facing in the country today would be diminished. Moreover, Albright's Balkans strategy fundamentally relied on the military power and moral force of relatively coherent ratified alliances. It is too soon to say whether the second Gulf War will spark a wave of democratic movements throughout the Middle East, as the president promised in his speech to the American Enterprise Institute The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI) is a conservative think tank, founded in 1943. According to the institute its mission "to defend the principles and improve the institutions of American freedom and democratic capitalism — limited government,  before it began. But if it does, it would be infinitely preferable for those revolutions to be more of the Belgrade style than that of Baghdad.

In Iran, at least the neocons appear to recognize that the Albright approach may hold promise. Since June of 2002, the Pentagon's civilians have quietly pushed a plan to humiliate the mullahs, by publicizing some of their seamier overseas investments while, at the same time, funneling money and assistance to the country's democratic opposition. But the United States can't finish this job alone. To prom pt the day when Iranians' aspirations for democracy are realized, the president should talc another page from Albright's playbook: leveraging diplomatic pressure to corner noxious regimes in the diplomatic arena, not just on the battlefield. To date, the Europeans, to their shame, have enjoyed an active wade with Tehran, but as the Iranian nuclear weapon effort speeds ahead, they have grown increasingly, wary, and the Bush administration should turn that wariness into a unified front. Mobilizing our European allies to isolate and destabilize de·sta·bi·lize  
tr.v. de·sta·bi·lized, de·sta·bi·liz·ing, de·sta·bi·liz·es
1. To upset the stability or smooth functioning of:
 the mullahs' regime could be as important a step as it was in the Balkans.

During her tenure, Albright often spoke about a Europe "whole mad free." Despite her failures in the Middle East and Rwanda, she managed to advance that vision by removing the most wicked regime in Europe. President Bush has set himself an equally noble but far more difficult goal in the Middle East. It might he dine for him to pay attention to how Albright achieved hers.

Eli J. Lake is the State Department correspondent for UPI UPI
abbr.
United Press International
.
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Title Annotation:On Political Books
Author:Lake, Eli J.
Publication:Washington Monthly
Date:Oct 1, 2003
Words:1686
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