Senator Rand Paul addressed the Heritage Foundation today
on the topic of foreign policy. Though he was met by an eager and
full auditorium, he did not invite time for questions.
The senator began
memorably:
“Foreign policy is uniquely an arena where we should
base decisions on the landscape of the world as it is … not as
we wish it to be. I see the world as it is. I am a realist, not a
neoconservative, nor an isolationist.”
He went on to put this into a context: “that the
West is in for a long, irregular confrontation not with terrorism,
which is simply a tactic, but with Radical
Islam.”
With these ingredients, he began to identify both the
nature of radical Islam as a relentless movement that spanned
borders, and though a minority to be distinguished from Islam
itself, was often mainstream and supported by radicalized
governments. He noted that, “though often militarily weak, radical
Islam makes up for its lack of conventional armies with
unlimited zeal.”
In light of this reality, Paul acknowledged that
outright occupation on the McCain “100 years” model fans radical
Islam’s flames, but he also rejected the notion that “glad hands
and winning smiles” worked any better. Instead, Senator Paul spoke
favourably of George Kennan and the policy of
containment.
Though never succinct enough to be on a bumper
sticker, Senator Paul demonstrated how some of the elements of
Kenan’s containment policy were effective in ending the Cold War
and could be similarly effective in combating radical Islam. By
bringing a policy that seeks the “application of counter-force at a
series of constantly shifting geographical and political points” to
match the enemy, Paul sought to show that it could utilize a
“preponderance of strength” better than the Truman doctrine’s
“everywhere, all the time” model.
This matched another concern that Paul
highlighted—the reality of fiscal limitation. Whereas occupation
and overwhelming force are not financially possible everywhere and
for all time, Paul noted that a containment policy is actually
financially viable, and better suited to the limitless patience of
radical Islam.
For substantiation, Paul turned to Reagan. He
highlighted that Reagan combined strong language and diplomacy with
restraint and a “strategic ambiguity” where others would understand
“a policy in having no stated policy.”
Senator Paul drew a strong link between the two, and also to
himself when he noted that “one of Reagan’s national security
advisors wrote ‘Reagan’s Soviet policy had more in common with
Kennan’s thinking than the policy of any of Reagan’s
predecessors.’” The bottom line being that such an approach
contained communism until it killed itself, and was the best option
looking forward to countering radical Islam.