Imperialism of neighbors: a new paradigm for the use of American power.IN THE MONTHS LEADING UP TO THE INVAsion of Iraq, critics of the Bush administration's policy fell into two basic camps. One group opposed war outright; the other supported confronting Saddam but disputed the administration's manner and timing. Both sides, however, agreed on one point: that it was vital to secure international backing for U.S. policy. The war itself wouldn't necessarily require lots of allied military help; most critics understood that American forces alone could probably crush the military of a country like Iraq, whose annual gross domestic product is eight times smaller than the yearly U.S. defense budget. International support was crucial not to winning the war, they argued, but to securing the peace. On this point, the critics have been proven right. More than a month after the fall of Baghdad The Fall of Baghdad may refer to the following:
Iraq War or Second Persian Gulf War Brief conflict in 2003 between Iraq and a combined force of troops largely from the U.S. and Great Britain; and a subsequent U.S. were not enough to simultaneously press toward Baghdad, keep the Kurds and Turks from each other's throats, and secure the rear--let alone police Iraq's nuclear sites, ministries, hospitals, and museums. More troops have been pouring in since the fall of Baghdad, but evidently not enough to keep the peace. The consequences of Iraq's anarchy are likely to be profound, and not just because the few weapons of mass destruction Weapons that are capable of a high order of destruction and/or of being used in such a manner as to destroy large numbers of people. Weapons of mass destruction can be high explosives or nuclear, biological, chemical, and radiological weapons, but exclude the means of transporting or that might have been there could now be spreading. A country where the state fails to keep order, allowing robbery and rape to flourish, is, after all, the dystopian dys·to·pi·an adj. 1. Of or relating to a dystopia. 2. Dire; grim: "AIDS is one of the dystopian harbingers of the global village" Susan Sontag. Adj. version of American society that Middle Eastern dictators sell to their own people. Our failure to maintain basic law and order in Iraq has only validated one of Islamism's basic critiques of America and the societal values we want to export. The failure to garner international support--both for the invasion and for the post-war occupation--has itself stoked stoked adj. Slang 1. Exhilarated or excited. 2. Being or feeling high or intoxicated, especially from a drug. resentment toward 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. among Iraqis. The administration had presumed that average Iraqis would cheer U.S. troops as liberators. But while some did, many others expressed a deep suspicion of our motives and a clear desire that we leave quickly. Though any invading force might have provoked such feelings to some extent, the Iraqis' reaction is likely harsher because U.S. troops entered without U.N. authorization and for weeks tried to keep the peace without U.N. involvement, or making use of UN. agencies' considerable resources. The Iraqi people's reaction is natural and predictable: Having troops under cover of the international community on one's soil is understandably less galling and humiliating hu·mil·i·ate tr.v. hu·mil·i·at·ed, hu·mil·i·at·ing, hu·mil·i·ates To lower the pride, dignity, or self-respect of. See Synonyms at degrade. than being occupied by another country. The average Iraqi may suspect that George W. Bush wants to steal his country's oil, but would be less likely to harbor the same suspicion of Kofi Annan Kofi Atta Annan (born April 8, 1938) is a Ghanaian diplomat who served as the seventh Secretary-General of the United Nations from January 1 1997 to January 1 2007, serving two five-year terms. He was the co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2001. . This heightening resentment could gravely endanger American policy in Iraq. After floating a number of rationales--from suspected al Qaeda links to weapons of mass destruction--the Bush administration finally settled, in the weeks prior to the invasion, on the idea that our prime war objective was to create a stable, democratic Iraq in order to set off a virtuous chain reaction in the Middle East. To those who questioned our competence in this, administration hawks pointed to postwar Japan and Germany. But those successes required massive, multi-year military occupations In most wars some territory is placed under the martial law of a hostile army. Most belligerent military occupations end with the cessation of hostilities. In some cases the occupied territory is returned and in others the land remains under the control of the occupying power but usually . To achieve something similar in Iraq would almost certainly call for a similarly lengthy engagement--and maybe even a longer one, considering the country's ethnic divisions and its lack of democratic institutions and traditions. We are kidding ourselves if we think the United States can handle this on its own--or even that we would want to. The Bush administration must be given credit for its aggressive reassertion of American power since 9/11. But that tragedy should have also changed forever our notions of peacekeeping, nation-building, and humanitarian intervention Humanitarian intervention is a principle in international customary law, referred to the armed interference in a sovereign state by another with the stated objective of ending or reducing suffering within the first state. . The 21st century is likely to present us with any number of failed states where terrorists lurk, or with tyrants who garner power by exploiting ethnic division, creating destabilizing refugee flows and genocides we cannot ignore. Either America will choose to act, or be dragged into action. What's needed is a new paradigm New Paradigm In the investing world, a totally new way of doing things that has a huge effect on business. Notes: The word "paradigm" is defined as a pattern or model, and it has been used in science to refer to a theoretical framework. for how America should use its unprecedented power--one which recognizes that, while we may be able to fight wars on our own, we can't build a stable peace on our own; and one which takes advantage both of our overwhelming military strength and of the legitimizing force that comes with working with allies and through the United Nations. In fact, such a paradigm already exists. It's been brewing for decades. And it's one that both the Republican and Democratic parties may be more in agreement on than you might think. United Naysayers A staggering amount of misinformation mis·in·form tr.v. mis·in·formed, mis·in·form·ing, mis·in·forms To provide with incorrect information. mis about the United Nations has been disseminated in recent months, starting with the notion--chiefly promoted by conservatives--that the organization is now almost as useless as the League of Nations once was. Consider the organization's role in Afghanistan. Since the war there ended in December 2001, Rumsfeld has extolled the virtues of "self-reliance" for Kabul, and how quickly Afghanistan was recovering under America's "modest footprint" Yet Afghanistan's self-reliance is largely a myth. Even as U.S. and Allied forces have failed to impose basic order in the country (thanks largely to a paucity of troops), the United Nations has been quietly keeping the country alive. During the winter of 2001-2002, it was the U.N. World Food Programme that moved food aid--much of it supplied by the United States--to hard-to-reach areas as war was still raging. To little notice or acclaim, the WFP WFP World Food Programme (United Nations) WFP Windows File Protection (Microsoft) WFP Water for People (international humanitarian organization) WFP Winnipeg Free Press averted a famine. It was Lakhdar Brahimi
Of course, in many ways the United Nations is a mess. The grim lesson of the 1990s--of the disastrous peacekeeping missions from Somalia to Bosnia to Rwanda to Sierra Leone--is that the United Nations will never by itself have sufficient muscle for effective or aggressive peacekeeping or nation-building. But institutions like the United Nations are still invaluable--not for collective security, which they've failed at miserably--but for humanitarian aid Humanitarian aid is material or logistical assistance provided for humanitarian purposes, typically in response to humanitarian crises. The primary objective of humanitarian aid is to save lives, alleviate suffering, and maintain human dignity. and support, as well as infrastructure building, involving schools, hospitals, and clinics, which they're generally good at (as the Bush administration seems, partially and belatedly, to have conceded). More importantly, the U.N. Security Council can confer the kind of legitimacy on war-fighting and nation-building tasks that unilateralist u·ni·lat·er·al·ism n. A tendency of nations to conduct their foreign affairs individualistically, characterized by minimal consultation and involvement with other nations, even their allies. declarations from Washington clearly cannot. So it's time It's Time was a successful political campaign run by the Australian Labor Party (ALP) under Gough Whitlam at the 1972 election in Australia. Campaigning on the perceived need for change after 23 years of conservative (Liberal Party of Australia) government, Labor put forward a to resurrect and take seriously, at long last, one of Bush administration's own ideas: a division of labor in the world. It is an idea that the White House seems to have forgotten as it set about alienating many of America's traditional allies during its two and a half years in office, but one that deserves more currency. America must be the uberpower, overseeing global stability from the commanding heights of air and space, while others must contribute stabilizing troops, like the proposed European rapid-reaction force, in their own backyards. But to bring this harmonious order about we must rethink an even older idea, one that's almost been deemed dead in George W.. Bush's Washington: multilateralism. A workable multilateralism. Call it cooperative regional policing: a hybrid system A hybrid system is a dynamic system that exhibits both continuous and discrete dynamic behavior — a system that can both flow (described by a differential equation) and jump (described by a difference equation). , dependent on U.S. leadership, regional muscle and, when possible, U.N. legitimation. To work, the new system needs regional powers and organizations like 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 do the grunt work of peacekeeping and peacemaking Peacemaking See also Antimilitarism. Agrippa, Menenius Coriolanus’s witty friend; reasons with rioting mob. [Br. Lit.: Coriolanus] Antenor percipiently urges peace with Greeks. [Gk. Lit. that the United Nations has failed at. At the same time, however, such regional forces need to be trained and pressured to act in accordance with universal or U.N. norms, and to go in, when possible, under the auspices of Security Council resolutions. The peacekeeping and nation-building model for the future will not be collective security using U.N. forces but more often "collective approval" from New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , and with regional powers--often trained, advised, and supplied by the United States--doing the dirty work. In cases where regional powers are not available or trustworthy, U.S. civilian/military peacekeepers can step in. U.N. "blue helmets"--that is, troops under U.N. command--or even observer missions may still suffice in some cases. But in general the United Nations needs to become an outsourced organization, much like the modern corporation. The "CNN Effect CNN Effect The temporary shifting of consumer spending that occurs as a result of gripping news. Notes: Consumer spending tends to slow during events such as the Persian Gulf War in 1991 or the terrorist raids in 2001 as people stay home glued to their televisions. " Regional policing was used to brilliant effect during the 1999 crisis in East Timor East Timor (tē`môr) or Timor-Leste (–lĕsht), Tetum Timor Lorosae, republic, officially Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste (2002 est. pop. , which I regard as a model for how, in the future, American leaders, inevitably drawn into what we once considered other people's problems, can often negotiate a sensible outcome by using the institutions we built, like the United Nations. There, in that tiny, distant province of the Indonesian archipelago--about as far as you can get, literally and figuratively, from what are typically considered America's national interests--East Timorese separatists were being hacked to death with machetes by Jakarta-backed militias. People were dying by the thousands, in the full glare of the international media. Bill Clinton, who was president at the time, wanted no part of this crisis. After six years in office, his administration was long in the tooth, tired of its crisis-a-minute pace--and not especially eager to sponsor new independence movements. Asked about the crisis at a news conference that week at the White House, the president's national security adviser, Samuel R. Berger, flippantly flip·pant adj. 1. Marked by disrespectful levity or casualness; pert. 2. Archaic Talkative; voluble. [Probably from flip. told reporters that he didn't "intervene" every time his daughter messed up her room at college. Berger, an avuncular a·vun·cu·lar adj. 1. Of or having to do with an uncle. 2. Regarded as characteristic of an uncle, especially in benevolence or tolerance. , good-natured man, apologized the next day, calling his remark "an awkward way of saying we can't obviously go everywhere, do everything" But he didn't take back the point. While, behind the scenes, U.N. Ambassador Richard Holbrooke Richard Charles Albert Holbrooke (born April 24, 1941) is an American diplomat, magazine editor, author, Peace Corps official, and investment banker. He is also the only person to have held the Assistant Secretary of State position for two different regions of the world (Asia and did make some efforts to resolve the conflict, Clinton and Berger were publicly avowing the kind of hard-fibered realism that would have done George W. Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, and their ilk proud. Then a strange thing happened. Clinton found that, no matter how hard he tried, he could not get away from East Timor. No matter which way he turned, it kept popping up in front of him, like some maddening ghost image See ghosting server. Ghost image (optics) An undesired image appearing at the image plane of an optical system. Each surface of an optical system divides the incoming light into two parts: (1) the reflected light, which returns into the first medium, and , on TV and newspaper front pages, in reporters' persistent questions, and at the top of his discussions with other heads of state at an annual summit of Pacific Rim Pacific Rim, term used to describe the nations bordering the Pacific Ocean and the island countries situated in it. In the post–World War II era, the Pacific Rim has become an increasingly important and interconnected economic region. nations. By coincidence, just as East Timor was exploding in controversy, the president was heading to nearby Auckland, New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland. , where he would be the leading presence at the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, a relatively new forum launched by George H.W. Bush Noun 1. George H.W. Bush - vice president under Reagan and 41st President of the United States (born in 1924) George Herbert Walker Bush, President Bush, George Bush, Bush to guarantee America's role as the region's leading economic and military power. Meanwhile, on the ground in East Timor, the United Nations was in jeopardy of losing its credibility altogether after its previous peace-keeping debacles in the 1990s. Anti-separatist militias had the U.N. compound there, established to monitor a referendum on independence, under siege. The secretary general ordered an evacuation. Like Afghanistan, Indonesia was one of those places that had fallen into Washingtons lap without anyone really noticing. This exotic archipelago nation, which straddled many important shipping lanes in Asia, was near collapse thanks to the East Asian financial crisis (precipitated, at least in part, by a rapid market-opening promulgated prom·ul·gate tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates 1. To make known (a decree, for example) by public declaration; announce officially. See Synonyms at announce. 2. by the free-market fervor that America had impressed on everyone after the Cold War). The Americans were still sending large scale financial aid to Jakarta as a result. Perhaps worst of all for Clinton, the horrors in East Timor were getting blared all over cable and satellite worldwide, 24 hours a day, and eventually dominated the discussions at APEC APEC in full Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Trade group established in 1989 in response to the growing interdependence of Asia-Pacific economies and the advent of regional economic blocs (such as the European Union and the North American Free Trade Area) (where Indonesia, of course, was present). This 24-hour TV culture--the so-called "CNN effect"--had come to be an essential element of the international community, shaping consensus and common opinions among very different countries. Jose Ramos Jose Ramos (born 1965), also known as Pepe Ramos, is a Puerto Rican boxing manager. Biography Jose Ramos surfaced in the 1990s, when he became famous in the boxing world as Felix Trinidad's career took off. Ramos, Trinidad and Felix Trinidad Sr. Horta, an East Timorese underground activist, recalled for me how different this was from his early years. During the Cold War, Ramos Horta, who still sports what looks like a permanent three-day stubble, was an obscure, ragged presence who would paste bumper stickers on bathroom stalls at conferences to call attention to his people's plight. But suddenly, he recalls, it all came together for him under the glare of international media, and "the Indonesians were caught off guard." By 1999 Ramos Horta had won a Nobel Peace Prize The Nobel Peace Prize (Swedish and Norwegian: Nobels fredspris) is the name of one of five Nobel Prizes bequeathed by the Swedish industrialist and inventor Alfred Nobel. and world recognition, and Clinton was on the spot. As Berger himself noted glumly glum adj. glum·mer, glum·mest 1. Moody and melancholy; dejected. 2. Gloomy; dismal. n. 1. at an Auckland press conference, a week after his clumsy remark about intervention, East Timor had "riveted the region's and the world's attention?' Clinton was faced with a stark choice: to take the lead against the slaughter, or to jeopardize the credibility of the United Nations, APEC, and America's global leadership role. So the president, at long last, acted. During a refueling stop in Hawaii en route to Auckland, Clinton announced a suspension of military assistance and sales to Indonesia. Quietly, he also pressured the IMF IMF See: International Monetary Fund IMF See International Monetary Fund (IMF). to withhold money. This was given the heft of international law a few days later, on Sept. 14, when he directed Holbrooke to push through U.N. Security Council Resolution 1264, which authorized a peacekeeping force peacekeeping force n → fuerza de pacificación peacekeeping force n → forces fpl qui assurent le maintien de la paix , at a special late-night session of the Security Council. (China, never eager to approve violations of national sovereignty, interestingly enough approved the intervention, after getting assurances that it would happen only if the Indonesians themselves wanted it.) The Australians, meanwhile, fearing an onslaught of boat people across the Timor Sea--and perhaps coveting an inside track on the rich oil and gas deposits that East Timor would gain--volunteered a peacekeeping force. In the face of all this opprobrium OPPROBRIUM, civil law. Ignominy; shame; infamy. (q.v.) marshaled by the lone superpower, Jakarta finally yielded to an Australian-led troop landing. U.S. forces were involved only at the margins, in a support role, but the mission was a notable success after years of peacekeeping failures. East Timor's transition to democracy and stability since then has been troubled; Rumsfeld, for example, has scoffed that prices are inflated in restaurants and stores in Dili because of the continued U.N. presence. But East Timor, like Bosnia, has at least stabilized and is off our radar screen for the time being. Holiday in Cambodia. Regionalizing conflicts will always be a messy solution. Australia was a rare First World country situated next door to a Third World hotspot. Other regional powers may not be as trustworthy as Canberra. And there are plenty of places where U.N.-approved regional solutions would prove impossible, or problematic at best. In some parts of the world, like East Africa and Central and South Asia This article is about the geopolitical region in Asia. For geophysical treatments, see Indian subcontinent. South Asia, also known as Southern Asia , no regional actor is strong or trusted enough to do the task. This means that in select spots, Washington must pitch in. And in some places, it already has: In Afghanistan, the simmering near-state of war between India and Pakistan, and the deep mistrust of neighboring powers like Iran and Russia, cried out for a U.S.-led or U.N.- led peacekeeping effort, but none was forthcoming; fortunately, NATO decided to go out of area. In central Africa, by contrast, the regional powers are still doing battle--with each other--in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. But there are potential paths out of many of these nettles net·tle n. 1. Any of numerous plants of the genus Urtica, having toothed leaves, unisexual apetalous flowers, and stinging hairs that cause skin irritation on contact. 2. Any of various hairy, stinging, or prickly plants. , and Washington must clear them. Whereas in the past many regional players reveled in geopolitical ge·o·pol·i·tics n. (used with a sing. verb) 1. The study of the relationship among politics and geography, demography, and economics, especially with respect to the foreign policy of a nation. 2. a. schadenfreude over their neighbors' misfortunes--and often exploited them--today, with their national economies increasingly regionalized and globalized, few governments want to risk the economic dislocation and refugee flows that result from nearby conflict. Then, too, the sight of U.N. blue-helmets peacekeeping in their own backyards spurred many regional organizations to take more action themselves. Hence the growing strength of regional organizations across the globe, from the new African New African is an English-language monthly news magazine based in London. Published since 1966, it is read by many people across the African continent and the African diaspora. Union to the once-toothless Organization of American States Organization of American States (OAS), international organization, created Apr. 30, 1948, at Bogotá, Colombia, by agreement of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, , which in recent years has to preempt pre·empt or pre-empt v. pre·empt·ed, pre·empt·ing, pre·empts v.tr. 1. To appropriate, seize, or take for oneself before others. See Synonyms at appropriate. 2. a. a war between Ecuador and Peru and helped to restore Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez to office after a coup. Few of these organizations are "security" or hard-power oriented, but here the United States can help in beefing them up. America already has a military structure in place to bolster regionalization regionalization Managed care The subdivision of a broadly available service–eg, a blood bank, into quasi-autonomous regional centers, capable of making decisions and providing more cost-effective and/or faster service to hospitals and health care facilities, and to ensure that it works for U.S. national interests: the U.S. military's four major regional commands in East Asia, Central Asia (which includes the Mideast), Europe, and Latin America. The American brass who run these headquarters already act as virtual "proconsuls" around the world, as The Washington Post's Dana Priest has noted in her book, The Mission. Wesley Clark, the former NATO commander who was himself such a proconsul Proconsul, in zoology Proconsul, extinct group of apes, now considered a subgroup of Dryopithecus. Proconsul fossils have been discovered in E Africa. It is a probable ancestor of the chimpanzee and lived from 12 to 25 million years ago. in Europe, notes that the regional commanders have control over resources, including the ability to deploy forces or provide training: "By contrast, when an assistant secretary of state comes to the region, he flies on commercial aircraft, arrives with couple of staffers. He doesn't have a separate line on resources?' In Latin America, for exam pie, the Pentagon could easily insist that its extensive joint military exercises come under regional OAS OAS See: Option adjusted spread auspices. Likewise, in Southeast Asia, Chinese participation would give the ASEAN ASEAN: see Association of Southeast Asian Nations. ASEAN in full Association of Southeast Asian Nations International organization established by the governments of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand in Regional Forum, known as ARF, the muscle to take over peacekeeping in still-troubled Cambodia. But without the imprimatur of a U.N. resolution or some other kind of multilateral authorization, most interventions by regional powers would be seen as little more than invasions. True, in some cases, legitimacy might be provided by the participation of NATO or other regional organizations. Kosovo, for instance, provides an example of successful multilateral intervention without Security Council authorization. Yet even there the United Nations came into play, at the end of the 78-day NATO bombing campaign. Milosevic had stood firmer than anyone had expected, and Clinton faced the politically nightmarish prospect of ordering a ground invasion. Washington needed Moscow, Milosevic's only remaining ally, to help persuade him to stand down. And to get Moscow on board, the United States needed the United Nations. Backed by a Security Council resolution and a U.N.-sanctioned peacekeeping force, the Russians proved crucial to Milosevic's eventual sub mission. NATO, the mightiest regional power in history, still needed U.N. legitimation to achieve what it wanted. Diplomacy 101 In an era of vast and growing resentment of the world's only superpower, which happily coincides with democratic leadership in most major nations, working to get U.N. legitimation also gives foreign leaders the face they need to sign onto U.S. initiatives. The role of the U.N. Security Council "is huge," says Wesley Clark, "because it enables your friends to do what you want them to do in their own domestic politics?' It's true that the equalizing mythology of the United Nations and its Security Council has become harder to sustain as American power has grown; even Bill Clinton, who is now mis-remembered as a starry-eyed multilateralist, came to view the council as a stagnant pool of lost great-power ambitions, a place where a Russia or France could puff themselves up into images of their former selves. But the kind of bitter breakdown on display last February, when the United States and France flailed at each other over Iraq, need not be inevitable as long as American presidents learn the basics of Diplomacy 101 (a class in which George W. Bush apparently didn't even earn his gentleman's C). A little magnanimity mag·na·nim·i·ty n. pl. mag·na·nim·i·ties 1. The quality of being magnanimous. 2. A magnanimous act. Noun 1. would go a long way. Clinton's Balkans unilateralism u·ni·lat·er·al·ism n. A tendency of nations to conduct their foreign affairs individualistically, characterized by minimal consultation and involvement with other nations, even their allies. , after all, also rubbed European nerves raw. But he left office wildly popular in Europe nevertheless. In every crisis, skeptics predict the breakup of the West and its institutions, and in every crisis they are wrong, for one simple reason: The only alternative is anarchy. Even the United Nations itself has begun to acknowledge the necessity of outsourcing collective security to regional and local muscle. It has also begun to underwrite so-called "wet lease" arrangements, where contributing countries pay for their own peacekeepers (as opposed to traditional dry-lease peacekeeping, where the United Nations supplies everything). According to William Durch, one of the authors of a U.N.-sponsored critique of peacekeeping in 2000, U.N. peacekeepers are as leery of a return to the bad old days of Bosnia as American unilateralists "and are looking toward this hybrid model them selves" As the United Nations seeks to downplay its own role in peacekeeping, while regional powers look to take up the slack, regionalizing peacekeeping under multilateral auspices--with America playing the role of guarantor and manager--is poised to become the system of the future. Yet efforts at regionalization remain unformalized. The State Department is still built around bilateral rather than regional relationships. U.S. ambassadors to nations are far more powerful than their counterparts to regional organizations; within the State Department, weak desk officers run most regional policy. According to Wes Clark, the civilian U.S. government "is not structured properly to deal with the outside world. The committee structure in Congress doesn't reflect the existing division of responsibilities [in the world]. The executive branch doesn't have in it the kinds of organization required to build American security facing outward. The State Department is not just bilateral. It essentially deals with information collection and purveyance pur·vey tr.v. pur·veyed, pur·vey·ing, pur·veys 1. To supply (food, for example); furnish. 2. To advertise or circulate. . Only in rare cases does it try to influence and act. And even when it does, it doesn't have any real mechanism to do so other than the personal charm of the ambassador. We don't have any action agency in cases where states are failing." A wrenching record of missed opportunities has already piled up. Had Clinton recognized the possibilities of regional action earlier, for example, he might have exploited the offers from Nigeria, Tanzania, Ghana, and others to send peacekeepers to Rwanda in the early stages of the 1994-95 genocide. In the end, those troops stayed home because they lacked transport and equipment. As journalist Samantha Power notes in her book A Problem From Hell, a small number of peacekeepers might have had a deterrent effect: "The Hutu were generally reluctant to massacre large groups of Tutsi if foreigners (armed or unarmed) were present" When it comes to failed states and humanitarian disasters, it's time for the neocons, Wilsonian idealists, and devotees of realpolitik realpolitik Politics based on practical objectives rather than on ideals. The word does not mean “real” in the English sense but rather connotes “things”—hence a politics of adaptation to things as they are. to get into bed together. In practice, raw force and multilateralism go hand in glove Adv. 1. hand in glove - in close cooperation; "they work hand in glove" cooperatively, hand and glove . And it's worth noting that Bush and Clinton alike pushed for more regionalization of conflict resolution. Indeed, one of the very few times Bush had something nice to say about Clinton's foreign policy was during the second presidential debate in 2000, when he praised the administration's decision to train Nigerian troops for intervention in Sierra Leone. Condoleezza Rice, Bush's national security adviser, has written that humanitarian interventions "might be better carried out by regional actors, as modeled by the Australian-led intervention in East Timor. The U.S. might be able to lend financial, logistic, and intelligence support" And in June 2001, Rumsfeld authorized a study that recommended establishing "regional joint forces" that could undertake a wide variety of small-scale operations in Europe, the Middle East, or in Asia, in addition to full-scale combat. There is also something of an emerging transatlantic consensus: the French and Germans would certainly prefer to take care of their own backyard--witness the Europeanization of peacekeeping in Bosnia and Kosovo--and British diplomat Robert Cooper has called for an "imperialism of neighbors," which recognizes that for developed countries "instability in your neighborhood poses threats which no state can ignore" In truth, regionalization is a rediscovered rather than a new idea. The "regional impulse," as scholars Townsend Hoopes and Douglas Brinkley call it, was there from the United Nations' founding moments. As early as 1943, Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles proposed to supplement FDR's vision of the four great powers as global policemen with seven regional organizations. Later, Churchill proposed three regional councils, one each for Europe, the Pacific, and the Western Hemisphere, to support the planned Security Council. The U.N. Charter's long-ignored Chapter 8 also provides for the use of regional actors. But few observers have connected the dots between that section and the more commonly used Chapter 7, which dictates responses to threats to the peace. Churchill was enthusiastic about the regional councils because, as he said, "only the countries whose interests were directly affected by a dispute ... could be expected to apply themselves with sufficient vigour to secure a settlement." He was right. We might also recall the words of one of Churchill's near-contemporaries, Walter Lippman. During the Cold War, the renowned columnist fought titanic battles against American overextension overextension extension beyond the normal limit for a joint, commonly causing sprain of its ligaments. ; in the late 1940s he called containment doctrine "a strategic monstrosity monstrosity 1. great congenital deformity. 2. a monster or teratism. ?' Ultimately, the Vietnam War--containment's bastard child--made Lippman look prescient pre·scient adj. 1. Of or relating to prescience. 2. Possessing prescience. [French, from Old French, from Latin praesci . In Bosnia and Kosovo under Clinton, and more boldly under George W. Bush, America seems, at long last, to have finally exorcised those ghosts of Viemam. America has become very, very good at fighting wars efficiently and devastatingly. But we haven't yet figured out how to clean up the new quagmires of the 21st century: the postwar mess. That means the war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism. The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism could easily become a strategic monstrosity if we don't develop a better strategy, and fast. MICHAEL HIRSH is a senior editor of Newsweek. He is the author of AT WAR WITH OURSELVES: WHY AMERICA IS SQVANDERINC ITS CHANCE TO BUILD A BETTER WORLD fr0m which this article is adapted. |
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