Diplomats Rebuke Bush
LA Times
By Ronald Brownstein, Times Staff Writer
June 17, 2004
WASHINGTON — The call for President Bush's defeat in a
statement released Wednesday by a group of former diplomats and
military officials highlighted the stark divide that has opened
among foreign policy experts over the administration's national
security strategy.
Although some of the 27 members of Diplomats and Military
Commanders for Change are identified most closely with Democratic
administrations, almost all served presidents of both parties
— either as ambassadors, executive branch officials or
military officers.
In that way, the group's formation symbolizes how Bush's
search for new approaches to safeguard America has triggered a
backlash among the centrist foreign policy establishment.
It also indicates that the debate over Bush's direction could
provoke the sharpest realignment of loyalties on foreign affairs
since the emergence of neoconservative thinkers roughly 30 years
ago.
"The statement suggests how much certain parts of Bush's
foreign policy do mark a break with the establishment," said Bill
Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard and a leading conservative
theorist. "The simplest way to put it is that Bush thinks 9/11
was a fundamental break and we needed a new doctrine after that,
and the foreign policy establishment doesn't believe that."
Indeed, a central critique by the group is that Bush abandoned
alliance-based strategies that had provided the foundation of
U.S. security since World War II.
"Today, we see that structure crumbling under an
administration blinded by ideology and a callous indifference to
the realities of the world around it," said Phyllis Oakley, a
former State Department official in the Reagan and Clinton
administrations and a group member.
The group's criticisms largely track those leveled against
Bush in the last year by other career national security
officials. These include former White House counterterrorism
chief Richard A. Clarke; retired Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, the
former commander of the U.S. Central Command; and a large number
of retired diplomats who released a statement last month
criticizing Bush's Middle East policy.
Wednesday's statement also echoed the dissent over Bush's
policy by Sens. Richard G. Lugar (R-Ind.) and Chuck Hagel
(R-Neb.), some of the last embodiments of the "internationalist"
wing of the GOP that prizes cooperation with other nations.
Yet Bush's insistence that old strategies, such as emphasizing
deterrence of threats rather than preemptive action against them,
are inadequate to meet the new challenges of terrorism has drawn
support from some traditionally left-leaning voices, such as
Walter Russell Mead, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations think tank.
Also, former Clinton national security aide Ivo H. Daalder has
argued that internationalists such as the diplomats and military
officers' group may be overestimating the degree to which the
U.S. can rely on international institutions like the United
Nations to pursue its goals.
The result of these tremors may be the most turbulence in the
foreign policy landscape since the late 1970s, when a flight of
hawkish Democratic thinkers known as neoconservatives migrated to
the GOP in reaction to the dovish post-Vietnam foreign policy
embraced by most Democratic politicians.
"I don't know where it ends up, but clearly it is a very fluid
moment like the late 1970s," Kristol said.
Those signing the sharply worded statement included Arthur A.
Hartman, ambassador to the Soviet Union for President Reagan; and
Jack F. Matlock, who assumed that post toward the end of Reagan's
second term and held it under President George H.W. Bush. Others
were William Harrop, the elder Bush's ambassador to Israel;
retired Gen. Merrill A. McPeak, the Air Force chief of staff
during the Persian Gulf War; retired Adm. William J. Crowe, the
Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman under Reagan; and Donald McHenry,
the U.N. ambassador under President Carter.
The statement charged that the younger Bush had "weakened"
American national security and left the U.S. more isolated in the
world than at any other time by overemphasizing military force
and shunning traditional allies. The group condemned the invasion
of Iraq as "an ill-planned and costly war from which exit is
uncertain."
Although the statement did not explicitly endorse Sen. John F.
Kerry of Massachusetts, the presumptive Democratic presidential
nominee, it directly urged Bush's defeat.
The Bush campaign disputed the group's claim that it was
bipartisan or nonpartisan. Campaign officials noted that at least
13 of the 27 signers had made political contributions to
Democrats and that 11 endorsed Clinton in at least one of his
presidential campaigns or Al Gore in 2000.
The group's organizers acknowledged that some of its members
were primarily identified with Democratic administrations. But
they said that many members had supported Republicans and that it
was inaccurate to portray the group as allied with either
party.
Harrop and Oakley said they voted for Bush in 2000. At a news
conference Wednesday, McPeak acknowledged that he had endorsed
Kerry after earlier supporting former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean in
the Democratic race. But he said he served as the Oregon chairman
for GOP nominee Bob Dole in 1996 and on a veterans committee for
Bush in 2000.
"This administration has gone away from me, not vice versa,"
McPeak said.
The group's membership is drawn almost entirely from career
diplomatic and military officials who reflect the commitment to
internationalism that mostly has held the upper hand in U.S.
foreign policy since World War II. In that sense, the group's
statement might be best understood as a revolt of professionals
who believe Bush has radically veered from the course set for
decades by Republican and Democratic presidents.
"If we were on active duty," said Charles W. Freeman Jr.,
ambassador to Saudi Arabia under Bush's father and a signer of
the document, "this would be the equivalent of a mass
resignation."
Bush allies agree that he has set a different course through
an increased willingness to act without overt international
sanction, to use the military more aggressively and to heighten
efforts to encourage democracy in the Middle East. But they argue
that the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks demanded those changes.
"This is a group that shares John Kerry's pre-Sept. 11
worldview and supports [his] … failed ideas for treating
terrorism as a matter mainly for law enforcement and
intelligence," said Steve Schmidt, a spokesman for the Bush
campaign.
In their statement, and more directly in interviews, the
group's members argue that the attacks did not justify Bush's new
directions, particularly his move toward greater unilateral
action. "The fundamentals of protecting American citizens, of
protecting our national security, [have] not changed," said
Robert V. Keeley, ambassador to Greece under Reagan.
But some analysts who have criticized aspects of Bush's
decisions argue that the terrorism threat sharpened a divergence
of interests between the U.S. and Europe that would make it
difficult for any president to re-create the close alliances
America enjoyed during the Cold War.
"With Sept. 11, the focus of American foreign policy has
changed from Europe to the Middle East," said Mead, author of
"Power, Terror, Peace and War," a new book largely sympathetic to
Bush's foreign policy. "That is going to cause a certain
distancing of the U.S. and Europe in any case."
The question of how much America can rely on allies and how
much it must act alone looms as a central issue in this year's
presidential campaign. Wednesday's statement provides additional
evidence that the question also is likely to endure as a key
foreign policy debate long beyond November's vote.
Times staff writer Mary Curtius contributed to this
report.
Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
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