By Philip Klein on 8.17.07 @ 12:10AM
In his essay in Foreign Affairs, Rudy Giuliani proposes to take the fight against terrorism to its second stage.
The biggest challenge facing Republican presidential candidates
is how to advocate sustaining an aggressive fight against terrorism
to a war weary nation that is dissatisfied with President Bush.
In an essay for Foreign Affairs released this
week, Rudy Giuliani, who has made fighting terrorism the primary
rationale for his candidacy, has laid out a bold strategy for
confronting a threat that he compares with the Cold War.
Giuliani defends many of President Bush's policies -- most
notably the Iraq War -- and, in the broader sense, gives the
President credit for "orchestrating the most fundamental shift in
U.S. policy since Harry Truman" by going on the offensive against
terrorism in response to the Sept. 11 attacks. But Giuliani
recognizes the need to pursue new strategies given current
realities, just as Dwight Eisenhower and his successors "accepted
Truman's framework" but adapted with the times.
In his essay, Giuliani departs from President Bush by calling
for a larger military, a more muscular diplomacy, and, perhaps most
significantly, a more temperate approach to spreading democracy
throughout the world. And, as he has already declared on the
campaign trail, Giuliani has already given the conflict a new
moniker: the Terrorists' War on Us.
The American Spectator spoke
with Giuliani's chief foreign policy advisor, Yale professor
Charles Hill, last month and Hill's influence can be seen
throughout the essay. Striking a similar tone as Hill did in his
interview with TAS, Giuliani portrays the threat of
terrorism as a generational struggle, and a direct challenge to the
"international system" of the civilized world. "These enemies wear
no uniform," Giuliani writes. "They have no traditional military
assets. They rule no states but can hide and operate in virtually
any of them and are supported by some."
To Giuliani, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan represent the
"early battles of the long war" against radical Islamic fascism and
he stresses that "we must understand that our enemies are
emboldened by signs of weakness" as we learned from our pullout
from Lebanon after the 1983 Marine barracks bombing and the
withdrawal from Somalia in 1993. Therefore, he supports a sustained
U.S. presence in Iraq and Afghanistan with the ultimate goal being
"to defeat the terrorists and the insurgents...and to allow these
countries to become members of the international system in good
standing." He is cautious in terms of projecting what type of
governments could emerge, writing, "We must be under no illusions
that either Iraq or Afghanistan will quickly attain the levels of
peace and security enjoyed in the developed world today."
WHILE PRESIDENT BUSH HAS RECEIVED criticism for being overly
idealistic in his foreign policy by pledging to spread democracy
throughout the world, Giuliani calls for a balance between realism
and idealism. He is quick to note that true realism should not be
confused with the so-called "realist" school of foreign policy
thought. "That doctrine defines America's interests too narrowly
and avoids attempts to reform the international system according to
our values," he writes. Still, he recognizes that there are lessons
to be learned for the realist approach, including "tempering our
expectations of what American foreign policy can achieve" and
avoiding "promising too much or indulging false hopes."
Giuliani recognizes that "Democracy is a noble ideal, and
promoting it abroad is the right long-term goal of U.S. policy,"
but cautions that it "cannot be achieved rapidly" and argues that
"elections are necessary but not sufficient to establish genuine
democracy."
On the diplomatic front, Giuliani mentions two different avenues
of diplomacy that we could be pursuing. One is public diplomacy. In
his international travels since leaving public office, Giuliani has
noted that the U.S. is letting myths persist abroad about American
intentions without challenging them. He wants to make sure that all
U.S. diplomats understand that their core responsibility is to
defend U.S. policy abroad. "Too many people denounce our country or
our policies simply because they are confident that they will not
hear any serious refutation from our representatives," he argues.
"The American ideals of freedom and democracy deserve stronger
advocacy. And the era of cost-free anti-Americanism must end."
As for state-to-state diplomacy, Giuliani writes that it has
gotten a bad rap in recent years because one side views it as the
equivalent of surrender and the other side views it as a cure-all.
To Giuliani, the model should be Ronald Reagan at Reykjavik who
"was open to the possibility of negotiations but ready to walk away
if talking went nowhere." Diplomacy, especially with regard to
Iran, must be conducted with skepticism and those who the U.S.
negotiates with "must know that America has other options." As
Giuliani has put it before, if Iran knows that America is willing
to take military action to prevent it from obtaining nuclear
weapons, it's much less likely that the U.S. will need to take such
action.
Giuliani also calls for America to strengthen the international
system. One way would be to adapt NATO to the threat of terrorism
by letting more countries in without regional limitations given
that "its founding rationale dissolved with the end of the Cold
War..." But as for the United Nations, Giuliani said that we
shouldn't expect more from it beyond certain humanitarian and
peacemaking functions. "The UN has proved irrelevant to the
resolution of almost every major dispute of the last 50 years," he
writes.
GIVEN GIULIANI'S RECORD OF SUPPORT for Israel, most prominently
with his ejection of Yasser Arafat from a Lincoln Center UN concert
in 1995, there was no doubt that he would be a friend to Israel as
presidential candidate, but until now, it wasn't quite obvious how
pro-Israel he would be.
Even President Bush, who has consistently sided with Israel
throughout his presidency, has supported working toward a two-state
solution, but Giuliani explicitly rejects pursuing the
establishment of a Palestinian state, and he puts the ball firmly
in the Palestinians' court. "It is not in the interest of the
United States, at a time when it is being threatened by Islamist
terrorists, to assist the creation of another state that will
support terrorism," he writes. "Palestinian statehood will have to
be earned through sustained good governance, a clear commitment to
fighting terrorism, and a willingness to live in peace with
Israel."
Giuliani begins his piece with a simple declaration: "We are all
members of the 9/11 generation."
While such a statement may not have been disputed in 2002 or
2004, after more than four years of an unpopular war in Iraq, it is
unclear whether the American public still has the stomach for the
kind of sustained offensive against terrorism that Giuliani
proposes. The question that all Republicans will have to confront
in the coming election is whether Americans are merely fed up with
President Bush and the way the war is currently being executed, or
if they have begun to question the wisdom of dedicating so many
resources to fighting terrorism in the first place.
Republican voters know that no matter which way the political
winds blow, no matter how tastes change, Rudy Giuliani will never
forget the morning of September 11, 2001. With his essay in
Foreign Affairs, they now have a much better idea of how,
if elected, he would move the War on Terror into its second
phase.
Philip Klein is a reporter for The American
Spectator.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Islam, Military, Iraq, Iran, Israel, United Nations, NATO, Fascism