Source: Carnegie
Reprinted from the Washington Post, September 24, 2000
Dick Cheney blasted the Clinton administration this past week for letting
Saddam Hussein "slip off the hook" and for being "helpless" to do anything about
Saddam's ongoing weapons program. It's an excellent point. Except for one problem:
Don't ask Dick Cheney what he would do differently.
Only a month ago Tim Russert did ask Cheney what he thought the United States
should do if Saddam refused to allow U.N. weapons inspectors to return to Iraq.
Cheney's answer? "I think we have to monitor the situation very carefully."
According to Cheney, the "ultimate sanction" would be to launch air strikes
against "specific targets" related to weapons production. Never mind that the
Clinton administration has already tried this "ultimate sanction" a couple of
times to no effect. And Cheney isn't really sure he wants to go that far. As
he told Russert, "I think we want to maintain our current posture vis-a-vis
Iraq." Keep the international coalition together. Keep the economic sanctions
in place. "And hopefully, there'll be a change to the government of Iraq before
too long."
No wonder Cheney's upset at the Clinton-Gore administration: They're carrying
out his policy!
As a matter of fact, on this and other major issues of foreign and defense
policy, a question now looms. When it comes to international affairs, is there
really any difference between Bush and Gore?
Take Condoleezza Rice's China policy. Rice thinks we cannot afford four more
years of Clinton and Gore coddling China. Her alternative: four years of Republicans
coddling China. While George W. occasionally mumbles something about China being
a "strategic competitor" of the United States, Rice believes there is an "iron
law" by which economic reform leads to political reform in China. In other words,
eventually everything is going to be fine. "Our problem as Americans," she argues,
"is that we are really impatient." Isn't that Sandy Berger's line?
True, Rice admits that China is "a rising power that resents the American presence
in the Asia-Pacific, a rising power that is improving its strategic military
capabilities rapidly," a rising power that "threatens Taiwan," a rising power
that Rice believes will expand its nuclear arsenal to as many as 100 warheads,
enough, she says, "to threaten our missile defenses." But Rice is not worried,
any more than Bill Clinton is worried: "I'm not putting China in a category
of states that would try to blackmail the United States." And would a George
W. Bush administration change U.S. policy toward the increasingly "threatened"
and increasingly democratic Taiwan, even just a smidgen? No. When it comes to
Taiwan, says Rice, "no one changes the status quo."
At least we know that if W. is elected he will do more than Gore to strengthen
the military, right? Well, that's not clear either. As The Post's Roberto Suro
reported last week, Gore's budget plan increases national security spending
by $ 100 billion over the next decade. Bush's budget plan increases defense
spending by $ 45 billion. Now, to the untrained eye that looks like Bush is
proposing to spend less. Maybe we're just supposed to have faith that a Republican
president will spend more on defense than a Democrat, even if the Republican
candidate refuses to come out and say so during the campaign.
Privately, of course, Bush aides whisper that they might increase spending
by more than a paltry $ 4.5 billion a year, especially once Bush figures out
what kind of missile defense system he wants to build, something Rice says he
hasn't had time to do yet. And also don't forget: One way the Bush administration
plans to save more is by having the military do less. When Bush is president,
Rice says, the United States will not be the world's "911." We will be the world's
busy signal.
That is at least one difference between Bush and Gore. Gore still defends the
idea of American involvement in the world's trouble spots, though sometimes
he seems a bit preoccupied with deploying American power against microbes and
automobile exhaust. Bush has had his own moments of larger vision. Several months
ago he talked of a foreign policy shaped by a "distinctly American nationalism"
filled with grand ambition and moral purpose--in a speech given at the Reagan
Library. But now it looks as if that soaring rhetoric was just another tactic
to get past Sen. John McCain in the primaries, the foreign policy equivalent
of "reformer with results."
These days Team Bush, parroting Rice, sounds more like the neo-isolationist
John Kasich than the neo-Reaganite John McCain. Their call for a "review" of
all America's overseas commitments is pernicious as well as absurd. Cheney,
for one, talks of pulling American troops out of the Balkans, apparently oblivious
to the dangerous effect his words are already having throughout Europe and especially
in the mind of Slobodan Milosevic.
Throughout the campaign, Bush's people have insisted we not worry too much
about what W. does or doesn't know about foreign policy. As Rice put it, "the
presidency is not just the president. It's a whole team of people who are going
to get things done." As the campaign reaches it's final phase, we now know a
lot about the team, too. We know that on a number of big issues most of Bush's
vaunted advisers agree with Clinton and Gore. On the biggest issue where they
don't agree, American intervention abroad, Gore is probably more right than
they are.
So remind us again why Bush would make the better commander in chief?