The Cost of Unilateralism
by Chas Freeman
200Ambassador
Chas. W. Freeman Jr., president of the Middle East Policy
Council since 1997, was assistant secretary of defense for
international security affairs from 1993-94, earning the
highest public service awards of the Department of Defense
for his roles in designing a NATO-centered post-Cold War
European security system and in reestablishing defense and
military relations with China. He served as U.S. Ambassador
to Saudi Arabia (during operations Desert Shield and Desert
Storm). He was principal deputy assistant secretary of state
for African affairs during the historic U.S. mediation of
Namibian independence from South Africa and Cuban troop
withdrawal from Angola.
Chas. Freeman served as deputy chief of mission and chargé
d’affaires in the American embassies at Bangkok (1984-1986)
and Beijing (1981-1984). He was director for Chinese affairs
at the U.S. Department of State from 1979-1981. He was the
principal American interpreter during the late President
Nixon’s path-breaking visit to China in 1972. In addition
to his Middle Eastern, African, East Asian and European
diplomatic experience, he served in India.
Today, Chas. Freeman is also chairman of the board of Projects
International, Inc., a Washington-based business development
firm that specializes in arranging joint ventures, acquisitions
and other business operations for its American and foreign
clients. Prior to one of his frequent trips to the Middle
East, Chas discussed his views of the United States’
use of power in the world.
For some purposes, the use of military power is essential,
but those are limited. The use of force should be the exception,
not just on moral grounds, but because it is ineffective.
The ‘war on terrorism’ for example, is a misleading
term. This is not a war; it cannot be won on a battlefield.
There’s no ‘ism’ in terrorism; it is not
an ideology. It is a criminal form of struggle, unacceptable
to normal, civilized people. Whether or not the cause of
the struggle is just, the means must be condemned. We can
understand the Palestinians’ resistance to occupation
and ethnic cleansing through land seizures as just, for
example, but see their use of terror as a means as unjustifiable.
The way to deter and minimize criminal forms of struggle
is to apply the rule of law: stringent enforcement of law.
Our greatest weapon against terror is international law
and cooperative enforcement. Military action should hold
a secondary role.
“The effort to end terror, then, is a reason not to
abandon the 20th century American enterprise: building a
world based on law. To disregard law, to become a scofflaw
(and therefore to become anti-democratically dismissive
of the right of others to differ with us) is not just wrong.
It is self-defeating and destructive, and leads to an increase
of terror.
“The doctrines based on preemptive use of military
power originated in German thought in the 1920s and ’30s.
Applied in the Middle East, they have failed and have been
counterproductive. The notion that the U.S. should adopt
them is bizarre and unjustified both on moral and pragmatic
grounds.
“The irony is that during the 20th century, the United
States was the greatest champion of a rule-bound national
order. We succeeded in marketing our ideas and bringing
them to fruition in international institutions. In the 21st
century, the great champions of international law are France,
Germany and Japan. The people we sought to persuade are
persuaded. In the meantime we seem to have lost faith in
our own vision, and now seek to substitute a vision of might
making right and the ends justifying the means.
“This small group of strategic thinkers, with their
intellectual roots in pre-World War II German political
theory have essentially hijacked the Republican party. This
situation has a corrosive effect beyond foreign policy,
with two particularly objectionable domestic effects:
• The imposition of political correctness, which has
been most devastating to the American Jewish community that
has been intimidated into silence; great damage to public
debate
• A more indirect effect: the implementation of policies
with indifference to foreign opinion, based on Caligula’s
formula, ‘Let them hate us as long as they fear us’;
greatly restraining openness, due process and civil liberties
“In a series of desperate and ill-considered reactions
to the September 11 assault on us we have greatly restrained
civil liberties. We have suspended habeas corpus for certain
classes of people, chiefly Muslims and immigrants. We have
suspended the protections of due process for property for
Arabs, whose property is subject to seizure without evidentiary
hearings, and we have violated the Geneva Conventions with
the Taliban held at Guantanamo: They were not stateless
terrorists; they were captured defending their government
against a foreign invasion of their country.
“It is anomalous that a country normally guided and
strengthened by the rule of law, dispenses with the rule
of law, and thereby legitimizes the forms of behavior we
object to. Why are the British and French, who have had
greater experience with terror than we, able to maintain
a relatively open society, while we cannot?
“At the moment, getting a visa to enter the U.S. is
hard, and is often impossible for Arabs, Muslims and Chinese
(for some reason). Arabs or Muslims suffer a high risk that
they will be humiliated at our borders, by law enforcement
on the spot, by customs officials, the Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) or even airline crews. We are damaging our
export position and our place in the global economy by giving
up what gave us the edge, our openness and our fundamental
decency of behavior and by being brazenly xenophobic. As
a result of our lack of regard for the rule of law at home
and abroad, our economy will suffer. We should not be surprised
if, nine months from now, we discover that 30 to 40 percent
of our exports have disappeared.
“The devastating economic effects of escalating mutual
brutality have, at the time we speak, turned the Israelis
and Palestinians to the task, once again, of trying to determine
their future. There’s no reason for anything but pessimism
in the short term, however, because the shared toll of the
dead and of seriously maimed survivors has made the polarization
complete. Neither group now has a majority who can accept
the notion of coexistence; with what both have witnessed
and experienced, they have internalized the impossibility
of coexistence. Arab and Muslim identification with the
rage of Palestinians suffering under occupation, however,
in the absence of a solution, makes the situation a nuclear
trigger: a small explosion in a small, contained space with
the potential to ignite a broader conflict, fueled by reactions
to our invasion of Iraq and other actions. The fifth of
the human race that is Muslim, is now profoundly alienated
from the U.S. It regards America and American policy as
unjust and indifferent to the suffering of anyone other
than ourselves and people who look like us. It should be
unacceptable to analyze this situation and call a solution
‘impossible.’ The U.S. arms and supplies Israel;
if we had the courage to use the leverage that we have to
compel Israeli rethinking of counterproductive policies,
the majority of the American people and of the Jewish population
in America would applaud that action. It is unacceptable
that a small, vicious struggle in the holy land should have
the clear potential to ignite something harmful to Americans
on a much larger scale, and that we do nothing.
“As a country, we have had earlier lapses in international
and domestic behavior, and we have ultimately self-corrected.
Consider the idiocy of the post-World War I period and the
similar anti-foreign frenzy culminating in the so-called
Palmer Raids and the Sacco and Venzetti trial. We interned
Japanese-American families and took their property during
World War II. When the consequences of our mistakes sink
in, we change personality and rethink our behavior. American
history inspires faith in the possibility of repentance
and redemption.
“When will we self-correct? It might come from the
perceived complexities of failures in Iraq. The president
justified the invasion on five grounds:
“He purported the need for regime change, but the
regime has been replaced with anarchy. He asserted the threat
of weapons of mass destruction, but we have learned that
even if they are in Iraq, they were essentially inconsequential
as a menace. We would democratize Iraq, he said, but thus
far we are desecularizing Iraq. We would strike a mighty
blow against terrorism, but so far the terrorists have not
noticed. Finally, by banging Iraq on the head, the kaleidoscope
of the Middle East would rearrange into a new and more advantageous
pattern we have yet to see.
“Perhaps the American taxpayer having to pay for Iraq’s
reconstruction, directly or indirectly, will get our attention.
Perhaps obnoxious American behavior will lead to coalitions
of the unwilling and recalcitrant, blocking our unilateral
behavior. Perhaps our exports will decline. Perhaps we will
no longer be able to import brains as we always have to
staff our university research and laboratory positions.
If so, we will respond appropriately. Americans have an
effective election system, and we are fundamentally a good
and just people.
“We have a long tradition of attracting talented people
because of our remarkable open environment and their ability
to be more productive here than where they came from. As
we call that atmosphere into question, and destroy that
openness or jeopardize the attractiveness of our society,
we risk losing our leadership edge. In the end, the cost
of unilateralism in political terms will be American isolation;
in economic terms it will mean losing our economic primacy.
“I believe that we are in one of the pivotal moments
of American history, a transitional period. During these
transitions—we’ve gone through them before-—the
compact of governance is renegotiated, the relationships
between the layers of government are re-arranged, and the
purposes of the country are redefined. We have all the symptoms
of transition to a new era; typically the pattern seems
to take 12 to 16 years. The new era, the nature of which
we can’t predict, has not arrived and is not yet defined.
“What is the best way to manage our security for the
next 10 to 20 years? It will not be by drawing a gun and
pointing it at the rest of the world, thereby amassing enemies
rather than friends. We should remember Teddy Roosevelt—‘Speak
softly and carry a big stick’: maintain military superiority;
do not boast about it; use it sparingly. We should rely
primarily on diplomacy and focus on enhancing our attractiveness,
on what others want to imitate. Our global leadership is
based on the fact that others have wanted to emulate American
society; they see our society as aspiring to a higher standard
of decency than any other. Maintaining ‘the city on
the hill’ is vital, for our own self-image, and to
keep alive our traditions of aspiring to higher spiritual
and ethical standards. If we lose the capacity to inspire,
we will lose the capacity to lead.”
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