Adapted from the book WITH ALL OUR MIGHT: A Progressive Strategy for Defeating Jihadism and Defending Liberty,
edited by Will Marshall, (Rowman & Littlefield, 2006)
Democrats are increasingly critical of President Bush's handling of national security. But do they have their own plan? Can they make Americans safer? The answer to both questions is an emphatic "yes." The details are in With All Our Might, a new book edited by Will Marshall of the Progressive Policy Institute. The book offers 15 essays by leading foreign policy thinkers in the Democratic Party. Together, they present a progressive alternative to the Bush administration's faltering policies for defeating jihadist terrorism. The following article is adapted from the book's opening essay.
Americans should not be lulled into complacency by the fact that terrorists
have not struck the
United States since
9/11. The worldwide contagion of
jihadist violence is growing, not contracting.
Incredibly, the Bush administration
appears to be losing an ideological
war to fanatics who exult in the
murder of innocents and dream of
restoring the medieval caliphate.
Throughout the Middle East, there
is disturbingly broad sympathy for
Osama bin Laden and copycat extremist
groups. In much of Europe, official
and public antipathy for the Bush
administration overshadows a mutual
trans-Atlantic interest in confronting
Islamist violence.
Partly because of his errors in Iraq,
partly due to his own shortcomings as
a communicator, and partly due to the
myopia of his top aides at the
Pentagon and elsewhere, the president
has failed to rally progressive forces,
both in the West and in the Middle
East, against an ideology that is profoundly
hostile to liberal values and to
the humane ethos of genuine Islam.
The Bush administration's failures
are not simply a matter of incompetence.
They are the systematic reflection
of a worldview -- conservative
unilateralism -- that believes America
can shape international affairs simply
by flexing its military muscle.
Even before 9/11, conservatives
looked at the growing "power gap"
that America enjoys with the rest of
the world and reached two flawed conclusions.
First, they overestimated
what can be achieved by military
power alone. The continuing carnage
in Iraq, three years after U.S. forces
easily toppled Saddam Hussein, is a
tragic measure of their error. Second,
they underestimated the value of international
alliances and institutions that
augment and help to legitimate the
use of American power.
In short, the Bush Republicans
have been tough, but they have not
been smart. The security formula of
military dominance, ad hoc "coalitions
of the willing," and pre-emptive
war has failed to make Americans
safer or the jihadists weaker. In fact,
the Republicans' purblind policies
have opened up the greatest chasm in
modern memory between the scope
of American power and our actual
sense of security and standing in the
world. But the American electorate
will not turn over national leadership
to the Democrats unless they step
forward with a new and better plan
for victory.
Democrats should begin by reaffirming
their party's commitment to progressive
internationalism -- the belief
that America can best defend itself by
building a world safe for individual liberty
and democracy.
Progressive internationalism occupies
the vital center between the neo-imperial
right and the noninterventionist left,
between a view that assumes our might
always makes us right, and one that
assumes that because America is strong it
must be wrong. It stresses the responsibilities
that come with our enormous
power: to use force with restraint but not
to hesitate to use it when necessary; to
show what the Declaration of Independence
called "a decent respect for the
opinions of mankind"; to exercise leadership
primarily through persuasion
rather than coercion; to reduce human
suffering where we can; and to bolster
alliances and global institutions committed
to upholding an increasingly democratic
world order.
By applying the organizing principles
of progressive internationalism --
national strength, equal opportunity,
liberal democracy, U.S. leadership for
collective security -- Democrats can
design a strategy that will defeat
Islamist extremism. That strategy
should specifically revolve around five
key imperatives:
First, we must marshal all of
America's manifold strengths, starting
with our military power but going well
beyond it, for the struggle ahead.
Second, we must rebuild
America's alliances, because democratic
solidarity is one of our greatest
strategic assets.
Third, we must champion liberal
democracy in deed, not just in
rhetoric, because a freer world is a
safer world.
Fourth, we must renew U.S. leadership
in the international economy and
rise to the challenge of global competition.
Fifth, we must summon from the
American people a new spirit of
national unity and shared sacrifice.
Use all our strengths. Democrats
must be committed to preserving
America's military pre-eminence,
because a strong military undergirds
U.S. global leadership. Diplomacy
works best when it is backed by the
credible threat of force. Therefore, we
must give high priority to repairing
the damage done by the Bush administration
to America's all-volunteer
force.
But it is also important to be clear
about what military force can and cannot
accomplish in the struggle against
radical Islam. Our real enemy is the
jihadist ideology, and you cannot kill
beliefs with a gun. To prevail in the
struggle against jihadism, we must work
with moderate Muslims to change the
conditions that breed anger and despair
throughout the greater Middle East.
These include repressive and corrupt
governments, economic stagnation,
technological backwardness, military
weakness, and a humiliating sense of
cultural decline. Such conditions do not
excuse terrorism, but they do help to
explain the attraction of the Salafist
slogan: "Islam is the answer."
As British Prime Minister Tony
Blair has repeatedly said, the democracies
need a strategy that is both tough
on terrorists and tough on the conditions
that breed terrorism.
The United States and its democratic
allies can offer a remedy to the
pathologies that afflict the greater
Middle East different from the military-
centric approach the Bush
administration has followed. We
should launch a sweeping program of
economic, political, and social reform
in the region. Trade and financial
investment, aid tied to open governance
and modern education systems,
and consistent backing for human
rights and pro-democracy reformers
are the keys to a comprehensive,
patient strategy for banking the fires
of jihadist violence.
Such measures are especially important
in Iraq. The fact that President
Bush and his team have mismanaged
virtually every aspect of post-war reconstruction
does not justify an immediate
or precipitous withdrawal. Our national
interests demand that we not leave
until we are assured that Iraq will not
become a threat to Americans' safety.
And our national honor demands that,
having invaded their country, we not
abandon the Iraqi people to chaos and
sectarian violence.
Instead, we should rally the
American people for an extended and
robust security and reconstruction presence,
even as we push the administration
to gradually transfer security
responsibilities to the improving Iraqi
forces, help to build truly national
rather than sectarian institutions, and
shore up regional as well as international
backing for the Iraqi government.
Rebuild strategic alliances. Rather
than constraining U.S. freedom of
action, as conservative unilateralists
complain, our alliances have more
often extended America's reach,
amplified our voice in world affairs,
and increased global trust and confidence
in the exercise of our immense
power. Therefore, we must rebuild longstanding
strategic partnerships that have
begun to fray, cultivate better relations
with such rising democratic powers as
India, and strengthen institutions for
collective security. Renewing the
democratic solidarity of the West, in
particular, must be a top strategic priority.
At the same time, we must have no
illusions that multilateralism can be a
substitute for vigorous U.S. leadership.
It is, sadly, the case that our allies too
often lack the will, the cohesion, or the
means to undertake difficult assignments.
This is why the United States
had to lead the way in the Balkans during
the 1990s, as well as in Iraq.
We are also skeptical of the
European left's claims that the
United Nations presents a credible
alternative to U.S. power. From
Kosovo to Rwanda, and from Iraq to
Darfur, the United Nations has often
been paralyzed by a lack of consensus
among its leading powers and tarnished
by corruption among those
who execute its mandates. While we
should always try to build such a
consensus, we cannot let its absence
stop us when the case for armed
intervention is strategically or morally
compelling.
The answer is not to give up on
collective security, but to dramatically
transform the United Nations, or
create new institutions that enable
the international community to
muster the will and means to act on
its responsibility to protect people
from ethnic cleansing, genocide, and
catastrophic terrorist attacks. Progressive
internationalists also will
strengthen NATO's anti-terrorism
capabilities and nurture a growing
political consensus within NATO for
tackling the shared threat posed by
jihadist extremism.
Reclaim liberal democracy. Bush's
rhetorical embrace of Middle East
democracy as a strategic objective has
led some Democrats to reflexively conclude
that it must be a bad idea. But
Democrats should instead reclaim their
own tradition of muscular liberalism as
exemplified by Presidents Truman,
Kennedy, and Clinton -- a tradition
that has championed liberal democracy
in deed, not just in rhetoric.
One clear area where progressives
can draw that line between themselves
and the Bush administration is on the
use of torture as an instrument of
American military policy. The prisoner
abuses at Abu Ghraib and the promotion
of extreme interrogation techniques
at Guantanamo not only invite
others to mistreat U.S. prisoners; they
also erode our moral standing with
advocates of human rights and
democracy abroad.
Principled conservatives, notably
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), know
that "waterboarding" is incompatible
with freedom fighting. It is disgraceful
that many others, including Vice
President Dick Cheney, do not.
Promoting democracy is in our
strategic interest because the intentions
and actions of states are as powerfully
shaped by their internal character and
governance arrangements as by abstract
concepts like the balance of power.
Countries with accountable political
institutions are better global citizens
than autocratic regimes. They tend to be
more open, more prosperous, more
likely to seek peaceful solutions to conflicts,
to keep their agreements, and to
abide by civilized norms of conduct.
It is hardly an accident that, of the
many rogue and failing states in the
world, none is a genuine democracy.
Progressives and Democrats must not
give up the promotion of democracy
and human rights abroad just because
Bush has paid it lip service. Advancing
democracy is fundamentally the
Democrats' legacy, the Democrats'
cause, and the Democrats' responsibility.
Link prosperity and security. Bush's
fiscal policy has weakened America's
strength by decoupling security from
sound economics.
Wartime presidents typically raise
taxes; Bush has repeatedly cut them,
shifting the cost of today's security to
our children, while also shifting the tax
burden from wealthy to working families.
Wartime presidents typically subordinate
everything to the war effort;
Bush has presided over an unprecedented
orgy of federal spending at the
behest of special interests. On his
watch, nonmilitary spending has grown
by an astonishing 27.9 percent.
As a result of these choices, America
today faces a national fiscal emergency
-- big budget deficits and an
exploding national debt, even before the
stupendous costs of the baby boom generation's
impending retirement are factored
in. Under the Bush Republicans,
Americans are borrowing more heavily
from foreigners than ever before to
make up the difference between what
we consume and what we produce. This
makes our nation's financial health dangerously
dependent on the willingness
of investors in China and other foreign
capitals to finance our debts.
Moreover, with two glaring exceptions,
the president has asked Americans
to give up virtually nothing for the war
effort. The first exception is, of course,
our all-volunteer military, which has
been asked to shoulder the physical burden
of the war. The second exception is
America's children and future generations,
onto whom the administration
has shifted the bulk of the financial cost
of this war.
Progressives believe that a strategy
of robust internationalism is only sustainable if we ask Americans to
share its costs and risks equitably.
That is why we would repeal the tax
cuts for the wealthiest among us and
use part of the proceeds to invest in
equipping, enlarging, and modernizing
America's Armed Forces. And we
would create new opportunities for
young Americans to make contributions
to our battle against terrorism,
such as enlarging national service to
assist with emergency preparedness,
and expanding training of young
people in languages that could help
the counterterrorism efforts of the
State Department and the CIA.
Progressives also understand that
our leaders cannot preach democracy
to others while ignoring the deep flaws
and injustices of our own democracy.
We must not flinch from tackling these
problems, including comparatively
high rates of poverty among working
families and children, the shameful fact
that over 40 million of our fellow citizens
still lack basic health insurance, a
persistent education achievement gap
between minority and white students
-- our No. 1 civil rights challenge
-- and the lack of public supports
for people who lose their jobs in the
fast-changing global economy.
"Ask not" ... again. At critical junctures
-- just after 9/11 and after the
2004 election -- Bush had opportunities
to rally the country behind a
comprehensive response to jihadist
terrorism that would have confronted
pressing domestic problems as well as
our overseas enemies. Instead, he and
his advisers chose to turn national
security into a partisan wedge issue.
For example, they filled our highest
post at the United Nations with an anti-U.N. ideologue, John Bolton, who
helped wage the Bush Florida recount
litigation in 2000. They wielded the
Patriot Act as a partisan bludgeon. They
turned key homeland security positions
into dumping grounds for unqualified
cronies, like the hapless Michael Brown
at the Federal Emergency Management
Agency. They filled sensitive public
diplomacy positions with political operatives
like Karen Hughes, who lack the
international experience or bipartisan
backing to speak for America and
improve the country's image abroad.
Progressive internationalists know
that America's national security policies
are doomed to fail if they are designed
to be either "red" or "blue." They will
work to rebuild the badly shredded
national consensus for engagement
abroad that existed during most of the
Cold War and the years immediately
following it.
The Democrats' challenge. Developing
a successful strategy against
jihadist terror is a security imperative for
all Americans. But it is a particular
political imperative for the Democratic
Party, which has long suffered from a
national security confidence gap.
Virtually the only thing the public
knows at this point about the
Democrats' positions on national security
is that a large number of them want
to pull out of Iraq. That communicates
very little -- even to those who might
favor withdrawal -- about the positive
steps Democrats would take to prosecute
the war against jihadist extremists
and make the country safer.
Of course Democrats have an obligation
as the opposition party to hold the
administration accountable for its failures
in Iraq. But discrediting Bush's
stewardship of U.S. foreign policy does
not, by itself, establish Democrats' credibility
on national security. Democrats
should be defining themselves not just
by their Iraq critique, but by their post-Iraq strategy.
It is notable that, in addition to
National security, the other area on
which Democrats still trail Republicans
by big margins in opinion
surveys is on the question of whether
voters "know what they stand for."
The two liabilities are linked: Democrats need to articulate a clear
and principled strategy for making
Americans safer, both to show what
they stand for, and to prove they can
be trusted to protect the country.
Our hope is that our book will provide
some of the strategic ideas to fuel
those conversations -- so that more progressives
can unite around national security
policies that give the public confidence,
and so that we can give America
the tools to win the battle against jihadist
terror in the years ahead.