The talking heads and those Republican clowns have made much
about our "failed" foreign policy.
Even friends question whether we have one. In this month's Foreign Affairs, Edelstein and Krebs argue that we shouldn't bother
with having one; that the world is too chaotic, competitions too multi-faceted,
for any effective foreign policy other than just reactive pragmatism[1].
Obama's "don't do
stupid shit" is fine as far as it goes, but he has taken it no further,
leaving us in a purely reactive mode, responding to events over which we neither
have control nor apparently anticipation.
A "no policy" policy is not enough. That aimless reactionism has
led to fourteen years of mucking around in the Mid-East (thanks to Cheney,
Rumsfeld, Feith, Wolfowitz, Tenet, Rice and the like who fed 43's ego and
impulsiveness.) Now we're in a here-we-go-again mode as Obama reacts to
Congressional, political, popular and military pressures to "do something
about those bastards."
In order to "win", by
which I mean achieve success, one must decide which games to play in, and which
not; determine what success looks like in each; determine the policies to guide
one's plays; and then make tactical moves that play to your strengths.
Certain policy principles logically
can lead to desirable but highly improbable, un-feasible, wishful outcomes. But identifying the far-out sometimes
triggers ideas which, upon reflection, turn out to be feasible after-all,
reachable mile-posts on the way to success. So, in keeping with that, the simpleton makes
these suggestions of where to play, of how to define success, of policies, and of
some far-out tactical moves:
- . Halt the foreign "war on terror" and begin to treat international terrorism just as we do domestic terrorism, as police and criminal justice matters. Share info and fully cooperate with international police efforts -- allies or not.
- Re-position the CIA as a spy and analysis agency and withdraw them from special ops. Their extra-judicial assassinations generate order-of-magnitude more terrorists for every one they kill. Use the military to do militaristic things; hold both agencies accountable to transparent civilian authority.
- Repeatedly veto military appropriations containing congressionally-mandated weapon purchases that the joint chiefs do not want until Congress gives up in order to fund DOD. Direct Joint Chiefs to focus on delivery of military force quickly, responsively, forcefully and productively. After all these years, get an audit of DOD expenditures.
- . Pursue base closures overseas as well as domestic ones. Re-invest savings in the diplomatic corps and Peace Corps, and link DOD budget increases to increases in diplomacy budgets.
- Don't just respond to terror inflicted on cultures we identify with; show we care equally about Madrid, Beirut, Ankara, Jakarta, Nairobi, Mumbai, Karachi, Jeddah, Kano, Kunming, Jerusalem, Moscow, Sharm el Sheikh, Buenos Aires, Bamako and many more....
- Define specifically what our "national interest" means in each troubled region (Eastern Europe, Mid-East, North Africa and Arabia, Southeast Asia, South America, the Arctic, etc.) and make the definitions clear to those nations involved.
- Adopt and publicize our respect for self-determination; drop our insistence on establishing universal democracy. If citizens select some other form of government, so long as it has been self-determined in a fair way, accept it, tolerate it even if we do not support it.
- Continue our "pivot" toward Asia but forego any more mutual defense treaties. Restrain NATO support and shift NATO burden increasingly onto European shoulders.
- Stop calling countries "friends"; they are nations, each with its own self-interest supreme, just as is ours. It is particularly galling to call Saudis and Pakistanis our "friends" while they disseminate hate and nurture terrorists.
- . Cancel the lease and give Guantanamo back to Cuba in return for taking in some of the detainees. (Is a 19thC naval base still that relevant to a 21stC navy?) Have the Justice Dept. enforce that detainees subject to US justice must be held in US jails and be subject to habeas corpus. This means transfer of remaining Guantanamo inmates to Federal Maximum Security prisons. Dare Congress to sue and/or impeach; in the meantime, the courts will have no place to which to send inmates back.
- . Support creation of Kurdistan by Iraqi, Turkish, and Syrian Kurds. Provide air and other support for self-defense at a price of not aggressing against neighbors.
- . Support creation of an independent Sunnistan in contiguous parts of Syria and Iraq. Get word to former Baathists that in return for squelching their ISIS crazies, we will support a new Sunni state, borders to be defined by Iraqi, Syrian and Turk negotiators, and will support its self-defense against Shia neighbors.
- . If those left in a rump Syria choose to retain Assad, pledge to accept and ignore the bastard. In a rump Shia-Iraq, accept whichever crazy their representatives select.
- . Support Israel, but undertake a steady, five-year scaling back of military assistance to both Israel and Egypt. Drop commitment to a two-state "solution" (which is no solution at all) and encourage Israel to move toward Palestinian citizenship. (A "religious democracy" is an oxy-moron if its population is heterogeneous. Either it's a theocratic autocracy or a secular republic.)
- . Become increasingly energy independent and self-reliant on critical resources.
- . Underscore our secular system of governance by removing "under God" from the pledge and "In God We Trust" from our money (yes, I said these are simplistic.)
- . Re-join the International Court of Justice; sign the land mine convention; ratify the Convention on the Law of the Sea (the best backing for our passive/aggressive resistance to Chinese claims in the South China Sea); and work to agree on -- and sign -- a global warming treaty in Paris.
I know, I know: idealistic,
impolitic, illegal, infeasible, fanciful and naive ... But on these policy principles can be built a
concerted foreign policy of leadership -- respect
for self-determination, well articulated
national-interest in each troubled region, a balance between Europe and Asia, support of world treaties, diplomacy
balanced with military might -- these are foreign policies from which goals
and winning strategies can be formed.
Anyway -- in the meantime -- don't
do stupid shit.
There's a lot to like here, especially the points having to do with scaling back the military overseas and at home and an audit of DoD. I hope you will send it to the White House and State. Why not?
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