<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=826> U.S. Foreign Policy: Grim
Continuity Guaranteed


by Srdja Trifkovic

http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=826

Barack Obama's selection of
<http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=13354> Joseph Biden as his Vice
President, Hillary Clinton's  <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=795>
appointment to State,
<http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article5234621.
ece> Robert Gates' retention at the Pentagon, and the selection of General
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/dec/07/obamas-nsc-selection-admire
d-by-both-sides> James Jones as head of the National Security Council point
to the President-elect's willful blindness to the collapsing economic
foundation of the American
<http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/12/08/1038950270370.html>
hyperpower. His key appointees all share a vision – a grand strategy of
sorts – that guarantees an unwelcome continuity of this country's foreign
and security policies in the next four years. 

That vision is deeply flawed. What America needs is a new
<http://www.d-n-i.net/fcs/boyd_grand_strategy.htm> grand strategy. Limited
in objectives and indirect in approach, it should seek security and freedom
for the United States in a stable model of global co-existence that does not
threaten the security or deny the legitimate interests of other players. As
a Chicago Tribune commentator
<http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-oped1202hawkdec02,0,4506
121.story> noted recently,

in the case of foreign policy, the American people and the world should get
the "change" they were promised because the foreign policy challenges are
not unprecedented. The problems are known. What works is known. And it is
not the policy of the Clinton administration hawks… The new Obama team seems
caught up in the facile calls for force: Vice President-elect
<http://www.chicagotribune.com/topic/politics/government/joe-biden-PEPLT0075
48.topic> Joe Biden is proud of demanding force in Bosnia, Kosovo and
Darfur.
<http://www.chicagotribune.com/topic/politics/government/hillary-clinton-PEP
LT007433.topic> Sen. Hillary Clinton supported the
<http://www.chicagotribune.com/topic/unrest-conflicts-war/wars-interventions
/iraq-war-EVHST000043.topic> Iraq War. The candidate for UN ambassador,
Susan Rice, is an outspoken hawk.

If the Obama administration was serious about the rhetoric of "change" in
world affairs, it could start by withdrawing all U.S. troops from Europe and
the Far East in the next four years. Some 150,000 American soldiers who are
still based in Germany, South Korea, and Japan are not needed, and their
continued presence is a hindrance to greater stability in both regions. 

The threat to Europe's security does not come from Russia or from a fresh
bout of instability in the Balkans. The real threat to Europe's security and
to her
<http://islamicterrorism.wordpress.com/2008/08/25/is-muslim-immigration-to-e
urope-a-conspiracy-oriana-fallaci> survival comes from
<http://www.jihadwatch.org/dhimmiwatch/archives/011958.php> Islam, from the
<http://www.vdare.com/francis/terrorist_haven.htm> deluge of utterly
unassimilable Third World immigrants, and from
<http://web.inter.nl.net/users/Paul.Treanor/nohumans.html> collapsing
birthrates. All three are caused entirely by the moral decrepitude and
cultural degeneracy of "Old Europe," not by any shortage of soldiers and
weaponry. The continued presence of a U.S. contingent of any size in
<http://www.ramstein.af.mil/> Ramstein or Naples can do nothing to alleviate
these problems, because they are largely spiritual. 

As it happens, none of Obama's national security quartet are committed to a
withdrawal. The key figure on this issue, former and future Defense
Secretary Robert M. Gates,
<http://www.aicgs.org/documents/advisor/holmes0508.pdf> has frozen plans for
any further reducing U.S. forces in Europe. In November of last year, when
the issue last came up for review, he decided to maitain 40,000 U.S.
soldiers in Germany and Italy – twice as many as had been planned for
retention by his predecessor Donald Rumsfeld under a drawdown that began in
2005. 

This is unfortunate. A speedy withdrawal of U.S. forces from Europe
facilitates the emergence of an effective
<http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/display.article?id=2693> European defense force
(long advocated by France), and if it causes the weakening and eventual
demise of NATO, both Europe and America will be better off. Instead of
declaring victory and disbanding the alliance in the early 1990's, the
Clinton administration successfully redesigned it as a mechanism for
openended out-of-area interventions at a time when every rationale for its
existence had disappeared. Following the air war against Serbia almost a
decade ago, NATO's area of operations became unlimited, and its "mandate"
entirely self-generated.

Unfortunately, Biden, Clinton, Gates and Jones are all NATO-for-ever
enthusiasts. They refuse to acknowledge that, in terms of a realist grand
strategy, NATO has become positively detrimental to U.S. security. As it
expands eastwards, it forces the United States to assume at least nominal
responsibility for open-ended maintenance of a host of disputed frontiers
that were drawn often arbitrarily by communists, Versailles diplomats, and
assorted local tyrants—and which bear little relation to ethnicity,
geography, or history. America should not underwrite the freezing in time of
a post-Soviet outcome in the Crimea or Abkhazia that is neither stable nor
necessarily "just" or "democratic." With an ever-expanding NATO, eventual
adjustments will be more potentially violent for the countries concerned and
more risky for the United States, which does not and should not have a
vested interest in preserving an indefinite status quo in the region.

In the Middle East, a realist strategy would give up on trying to make the
region "as it should be," rather than dealing with it as it is. Iraq, in
particular, forces us to accept the anarchic nature of the world. She is not
ripe for any democratic transition, she can be managed for as long as her
realities are accepted, and she needs to be left to her own devices. Her
Islamic cultural and spiritual heritage precludes her adoption of a
political system based on the notion of popular sovereignty.

A realist global strategy demands safeguarding our primary interests in the
Middle East, which means preserving our continued access to oil resources,
preventing regional actors from acquiring weapons of mass destruction, and
countering the terrorist threat that emanates from the region. Ameliorating
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a secondary interest. As for opening the
region to trade, encouraging more pluralist forms of governance, promoting
the rule of law, etc.—these may be worthy objectives, but they are none of
our concern. Try explaining that to VP Biden or Mrs. Clinton.

The development of a coherent anti-jihadist strategy in Washington should go
hand in hand with demystifying the relationship between the United States
and Israel, which should be redefined in terms of mutual  interests. Our
interest demands the destruction of global jihad in all its forms and the
continued existence of the state of Israel, but both of these imperatives
are based on geopolitical rather than emotional, moral, or scriptural
grounds.

In the Far East, the threat to South Korea's and Japan's security is
potentially more real, but it can and should be handled by those two very
capable and affluent nations. A continued U.S. defense shield over them is
unjustified. The dangers of our continued military presence vastly exceed
any possible benefits. Japan and South Korea should finally become mature,
self-reliant powers. For decades, they chose to focus on economic
development at the expense of military strength, secure in the protection
provided by the United States. Only by removing her tripwire can America
finally force them to upgrade their militaries and to assume the full
economic and political burden of their own defense. A policy of
disengagement may include a green light to both to develop limited nuclear
capabilities as a deterrent to North Korea's and China's arsenals.

The challenge that the rise of China presents to the United States is more
pressing than any other global issue except for the ever-present threat of
jihad. Beijing is rapidly becoming a regional power of the first order, the
Asian superpower that will need to be contained or appeased. Presently, the
bone of contention is the status of Taiwan. Many Taiwanese would prefer to
sever all links with the mainland so that Taiwan can become an independent
state. Beijing says that it will not allow that to happen. To condone
Taiwan's separation would be tantamount to accepting the status of a
second-class power, with serious implications for the future status of Tibet
and for the restive Muslim-populated Sinkiang-Uighur province in the far
west of the country.

China is an ancient power, coldly hostile to outsiders, steeped in
Realpolitik, and indifferent to the notion that diplomacy is or should be
guided by any motive other than self-interest. Her neighbors will be hard
pressed to negotiate the terms and conditions of an acceptable relationship
with Beijing that fall short of China's outright hegemony. To keep her
ambitions in check, it is necessary to halt further American investment in
the Chinese economy, to reverse the outsourcing that has thus far obtained,
and to erect trade barriers against the continuing deluge of Chinese-made
products in American stores. It is also necessary to provide Taiwan—in
addition to Japan and South Korea—with top-notch defensive arsenals,
including nuclear weapons.

The alternative is to accept, with the best possible grace, the rise of
China as a first-order power. A reigning power is naturally disinclined to
look on benignly as another rises, but the fact remains that a conflict
between America and China is not inevitable. The relationship will need to
be managed skillfully—with more reciprocity in the field of trade and
exchange rates—but its essential ingredient will be our acceptance of Taiwan
as part of China. Taiwan will be eventually reintegrated (preferably with
all kinds of safeguards and special-status provisions), and it is in the
American interest to facilitate peaceful reunification.

The geopolitical equation of containing and confronting China in
northeastern Asia and jihad everywhere else would also demand better
relations with India and Russia. India is China's sole natural rival in Asia
and a neglected ally in the "War on Terror," but no strategic relationship
can be effected so long as Pakistan continues to be perceived in
Washington—mistakenly—as an essential regional ally. Islamabad is guilty of
nuclear proliferation as well as aiding and abetting Islamic terrorism of
the kind that hit Bombay a month ago. 

Improving our relations with Russia, by accepting the legitimacy of her
strategic interests in the former Soviet Union, is even more pressing. It is
critically important for us to prevent the emergence of an alliance between
other powers that would be directed against our interests. The ongoing
improvement in Russo-Chinese relations does not have the character of a
formal alliance as yet, but it may lay the groundwork for one, so long as
the September 2002 Bush Doctrine remains in force.

Most of our disputes with Russia over the past two decades, including the
crisis in Georgia last August, tensions over the missile-defense system in
Poland and the Czech Republic and over pipelines bypassing Russia, constant
demands for NATO expansion, designs in Central Asia, and support for
Kosovo's independence have resulted from our refusal to accept the validity
of any Russian claims and the legitimacy of any Russian interests. This will
not change under Obama's "new" team.

The rest of the world, in a new grand strategy, should be left to its own
devices. In Latin America benign neglect invariably produces better results
than "engagement." As for Africa, the entire continent is irrelevant to our
geostrategic, economic, or any other rationally definable interest. Both
regions are neither assets nor threats, provided that the tens of millions
of would-be migrants to the Western world are held in check.

Strategy is the art of winning wars, and grand strategy is the philosophy of
maintaining an acceptable peace. America is good at the former and often
confused on the latter. Making the world safe for democracy (Wilson 1917) or
fighting freedom's fight ordained by history (Bush 2002) may be dismissed as
tasteless yet harmless rhetoric as long as there is a viable realist design
in the background. No such design exists, however, among Obama's key foreign
policy and national security appointees. The new team in the White House is
unlikely to grasp that a problem exists, let alone to act to rectify it.
Exceptionalist hubris has been internalized at both ends of the duopoly to
such an extent that no change appears possible.

A new grand strategy demands disengagement abroad and closing the migratory
floodgates at home. For this to happen, it is necessary to break the power
of the neoliberal-neoconservative regime in Washington. We cannot predict
when or how this will happen, but happen it will. A polity based on an evil
lie may last years (the Third Reich), or decades (the Soviet Union), or even
centuries (the Ottoman Empire), but it can never smother the seeds of its
own destruction.

The notion of America as a real, completed nation, a state with definable
national interests that ought to be the foundation of its diplomacy, is as
valid today as it was at the time of George Washington's famous warning.
Exceptionalist claims and millenarian utopias are as contrary to this
country's traditions and true interests today as they were in April 1861,
April 1917, or December 1941. It is unfortunate that this truth will be
rediscovered only after a lot more blood and treasure is wasted in pursuit
of unlimited, unattainable objectives.

With Joseph Biden, Hillary Clinton, Robert Gates and James Jonesin charge,
there will be no true debate in Washington on the ends and uses of American
power. The ideologues' resistance to any external checks and balances on the
exercise of that power will be upheld. Obama's new team and Bush's outgoing
one may differ in some shades of rhetoric, but they are one regime,
identical in substance and consequence. Its leading lights will go on
disputing the validity of the emerging balance-of-power system because they
reject the legitimacy of any power in the world other than that of the
United States, controlled and exercised by themselves. They will scoff at
the warning of 1815, 1918, or 1945 as inapplicable in the post-history that
they seek to construct.

They will confront the argument that no vital American interest worthy of
risking a major war is involved in Russia's or China's near-abroad with the
claim that the whole world is America's near-abroad.

It is vexing that the new team is taking over at a particularly dangerous
period in world affairs: the return of asymmetrical multipolarity. Following
a brief period of post-1991 full-spectrum dominance, for the first time
after the Cold War the government of the United States is facing active
resistance from one or more major powers. More important than the anatomy of
the South Ossetian crisis last August, or the Taiwanese crisis three years
from now, is the reactive powers' refusal to accept the validity of
Washington's ideological assumptions or the legitimacy of its resulting
geopolitical claims. At the same time, far from critically reconsidering the
Bushies' hegemonsitic assumptions and claims, the key decision-makers in the
Obama Administration will continue to uphold them.

Their ambition, unlimited in principle, will remain unaffected by the
ongoing financial crisis, just as Moscow's Cold War expansionism was
enhanced, rather than curtailed, by the evident shortcomings of the Soviet
centrally planned economy. Come what may, they will not allow the reality of
global politics to interfere with their world outlook, "neoliberal" or
"neoconservative," but hegemonic and irrational at all times.

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