The
Bush Team Reloaded
Jim
Lobe
Jim
Lobe is Washington correspondent for the Inter Press Service.
|

President
George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Gen. Richard Myers and National
Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice walk out to address
reporters at Bush’s Crawford, Texas ranch
on August 23, 2004. The group was at the ranch for
Bush’s annual Defense Policy and Program Teams
meeting. (Luke Frazza/AFP) |
On
September 20, 2001, just nine days after the attacks on
New York and the Pentagon, the Project for the New American
Century (PNAC) laid out a consensus agenda for President
George W. Bush�s �war on terrorism.� In addition to military
action to oust the Taliban in Afghanistan and �capture
or kill� Osama bin Laden, PNAC called for regime change
in Iraq �even if evidence does not link Iraq directly
to the attack,� and �appropriate measures of retaliation�
against Iran and Syria if they refused to comply with
US demands to cut off support for Hizballah. Signed by
prominent neo-conservatives and a smattering of liberal
interventionists, the letter also called for a cutoff
in aid to the Palestinian Authority unless it immediately
halted attacks against Israel and a �large increase� in
defense spending in order to prevail in the conflict many
of the signers, notably former CIA director James Woolsey
and former Commentary editor Norman Podhoretz,
were soon describing as �World War IV.�
A
little over six months later, on April 3, 2002, PNAC released
a second letter directed more specifically at US policy
toward Israel-Palestine. The project�s chairman, Weekly
Standard editor and neo-conservative prince William
Kristol, gathered the signatures of 34 like-minded power
players, including a good slice of the membership of Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld�s Defense Policy Board. Richard
Perle, then chairman of that body, joined his fellow signers
in urging Bush to sever all ties with Yasser Arafat and
to �lend full support to Israel as it seeks to root out
the terrorist network that daily threatens the lives of
Israeli citizens.� �Mr. President, it can no longer be
the policy of the United States to urge, much less to
pressure, Israel to continue negotiating with Arafat,
any more than we would be willing to be pressured to negotiate
with Osama bin Laden or Mullah Omar,� the letter exhorted
the White House. �Israel�s fight against terrorism is
our fight. Israel�s victory is an important part of our
victory.�
Meanwhile,
the PNAC heavyweights continued, the US should �accelerate
plans for removing Saddam Hussein from power.�
Upping
the Ante
Six
months later, as war planning for Iraq was revving up
in earnest, Perle and former Bush speechwriter David Frum
upped the ante in their book, An End to Evil: How to
Win the War on Terror, an agenda that could best be
described as �hard-core neo-conservatism.� In addition
to boilerplate demands for ousting Saddam, it called for
engaging in �hot pursuit� of �terrorists� into Syria,
cutting off Iraqi oil supplies and outside arms supplies
to Damascus, and an outright rejection of Palestinian
national ambitions.
Among
its other recommendations, the slim volume encouraged
the Bush administration explicitly to reject the jurisdiction
of the UN Charter unless amended to accommodate Washington�s
new strategic doctrine of �preemption,� to cleanse the
CIA and State Department of their �realists� and �Arabists,�
and to undertake a new campaign to help �dissidents� in
Iran overthrow their government. �The regime must go,�
Perle and Frum wrote, a theme that would be echoed by
Kristol in the Weekly Standard as Bush was declaring
the end of major hostilities in Iraq aboard the USS Abraham
Lincoln. �The next great battle—not, we hope,
a military battle—will be for Iran,� Kristol declared.
�We are already in a death struggle with Iran over the
future of Iraq.�
Of
course, the neo-conservatives have provided no end of
suggestions to the White House over the past three and
a half years—many of them ignored. But the texts
cited above offer useful benchmarks for gauging their
past effectiveness and future ambitions, at least for
Bush�s second term. More than any other group within the
coalition of right-wing and unilateralist hawks that has
propelled the radical trajectory of US foreign policy
since September 11, the neo-conservatives have provided
the ideological coherence of the �vision� they sometimes
call the �Bush Doctrine� for �transforming� the Middle
East. Even though the neo-conservatives clearly lost influence
over management of Iraq beginning in the fall of 2003—as
it became clear that the insurgency did not consist only
of �Baathist dead-enders and foreign fighters�—their
record of accomplishment to date has been little short
of amazing. Not only did they push the Bush administration
into overthrowing Saddam Hussein and embracing Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, but they also scored both
successes at the expense of their primary foes in Washington—the
�realists�—who promote a narrower view of the national
interest and a more sanguine view of the status quo.
The
question now, of course, is: what are the neo-conservatives�
prospects in the second Bush term?
Hands
on Deck
|

Pentagon
adviser Richard Perle at a Jerusalem news conference
following a meeting of conservatives from the US
and Israel, October 14, 2003. (Lefteris Pitarakis/AP) |
The
neo-conservatives themselves are ebullient, particularly
in light of the missionary rhetoric of Bush�s inaugural
and State of the Union addresses, both of which drew heavily
from Natan Sharansky�s new book, The Case for Democracy.
Sharansky, the former Soviet dissident who currently serves
as Israel�s minister for diaspora and Jerusalem affairs,
is a long-time favorite of the neo-conservatives. His
book appears to have been the literary equivalent of a
precision-guided missile aimed—with almost embarrassing
flattery—at the mind of the Reader-in-Chief. �A
president who tells his advisers to go read Sharansky
is way ahead of his advisers,� Perle told an audience
at the right-wing Hudson Institute on February 11.
Adding
to the neo-conservatives� confidence, of course, was the
unexpectedly smooth running of the January 30 elections
in Iraq, even if the ultimate results may produce something
rather distant from the pro-Israel, pro-Western secular
government in Baghdad that the war party had envisioned.
Meanwhile, the impasse that stalled Iran policy during
the first term may finally be breaking the neo-conservatives�
way. Tensions between the US and the Islamic Republic
are clearly on the rise, as evidenced by Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice�s characterization of Tehran as
�totalitarian� during her maiden voyage to Europe and
her stubborn refusal to repeat her predecessor�s denial
that Washington seeks �regime change� in Iran. Crowning
the favorable auguries was the mid-February assassination
of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq al-Hariri. When
the administration cast suspicion so eagerly on Damascus,
immediately recalled the US ambassador and offered up
such menacing mutters as Bush�s observation that Syria
was �out of step� with the rest of the region, neo-conservatives
welcomed a golden opportunity to move Damascus into the
slot vacated by Iraq in the �axis of evil.�
Even
before the inaugural, however, the realists led by former
Secretary of State Colin Powell, long a neo-conservative
nemesis, appeared to be in retreat. By the end of 2004,
not only had Powell been told his services would no longer
be required, but the new CIA director, Porter Goss, and
his coterie of former Congressional aides appeared to
be engaged in a thoroughgoing purge of top-level operations
and analytical personnel at the CIA, the other realist
bastion in the national security bureaucracy. At the same
time, arch-realist Brent Scowcroft, who had served as
chairman of the President�s Foreign Intelligence Advisory
Board, found to his surprise and evident embarrassment
that his pro forma resignation at the end Bush�s first
term was rather ungraciously accepted. One could almost
hear the exultant back slapping among neo-conservatives
inside and outside government when journalist and Clinton
confidant Sidney Blumenthal reported that the dismissal
had been accompanied by the presidential observation,
�Scowcroft has become a pain in the ass in his old age.�
Finally,
the promotion of Ambassador to Romania and long-time nuclear
enthusiast J. D. Crouch II to the position of deputy national
security adviser under Stephen Hadley constituted a net
gain, if not for the neo-conservatives as such, then certainly
for their aggressive nationalist and Christian right partners.
Like Hadley, Crouch is a prot�g� not only of Vice President
Dick Cheney and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz,
with whom he helped prepare the 1992 Defense Policy Guidance
draft on which the December 2002 National Security Strategy
is based, but also of William Van Cleave, a nuclear strategist
who also serves on the boards of advisers of the far-right
Center for Security Policy here and the Ariel Center for
Policy Research in Israel. (In a 1999 letter to the Washington
Times that must warm the hearts of Wahhabis everywhere,
Crouch blamed the massacre of students at Columbine High
School in Colorado on �30 years of liberal social policy
that has put our children in day care, taken God out of
the schools, taken Mom out of the house and banished Dad
as an authority figure from the family altogether.�) Crouch�s
little-noted appointment capped a series of personnel
moves that certainly looked like an extremist makeover.
Lingering
Uncertainty
|

John
Negroponte addresses reporters at the UN, March
21, 2003. (Richard Drew/AP) |
Yet,
despite all these post-election developments, it is not
yet clear that the neo-conservatives and their allies
are indeed in the driver�s seat. In the round of second-term
appointments, the neo-conservatives have suffered a few
losses, the most significant of which are the impending
departure of Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas
Feith and the still uncertain fate of the administration�s
quintessential unilateralist, Undersecretary of State
for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton.
Feith
has been at the center of charges of �stovepiping� unvetted
evidence of Iraq�s ephemeral ties to al-Qaeda to confederates
in Cheney�s office and of excluding regional specialists
at the State Department and the CIA from post-war planning.
He is a long-time supporter of the Israeli far right.
According to the insider newsletter The Nelson Report,
Rice once remarked after a Feith presentation on the Middle
East at a National Security Council principals� meeting
in which he stood in for Rumsfeld, �Thanks Doug, but when
we want the Israeli position, we�ll invite the ambassador.�
Bolton, who had actively campaigned, with Cheney�s support,
to become Rice�s deputy at the State Department, is now
in limbo, although there have been persistent reports
that he may take I. Lewis �Scooter� Libby�s place as Cheney�s
national security adviser. That move would send Libby,
another committed neo-conservative who also contributed
to the 1992 Defense Policy Guidance draft under Wolfowitz,
to take Feith�s post at the Pentagon. Such a scenario
would constitute a major victory for the hawks over the
realists.
Still,
the realists are not entirely out of the picture, as demonstrated
by Rice�s appointments. Not only did she resist Cheney
in declining to appoint Bolton as her deputy, but her
appointment of Trade Representative Robert Zoellick, a
life-long Atlanticist and top adviser to James Baker when
he served as treasury secretary and secretary of state,
could almost be seen as a deliberate act of defiance.
A consummate pragmatist, Zoellick combines intellectual
brilliance and a strong strategic sense with bureaucratic
skills that are probably Powell�s equal and may nearly
match Cheney�s. Adding to the impression that Rice may
lean to her own realist roots is the appointment of another
pragmatist, NATO Ambassador Nicholas Burns as undersecretary
for policy, as well as the naming of Ambassador to Egypt
David Welch as head of the Near East bureau. (Welch�s
�Arabist� tendencies may be held in check by his new deputy,
Elizabeth Cheney, whose nomination Rice was clearly not
in a position to resist.) Rice�s choices for counselor,
Philip Zelikow, and for policy planning director, Stanford
political scientist Stephen Krasner, also suggest that
her realist reflexes are asserting themselves, even as
she steadfastly echoes the grandiose rhetoric of Bush�s
major presidential addresses. Given her unusually close
personal relationship with Bush, her views, if she chooses
to press them, could balance out those of the administration�s
two leading hawks, Cheney and Rumsfeld, in ways that her
predecessor could hardly dream of.
In
much the same vein, Bush�s surprise choice as national
intelligence director, John Negroponte, marks another
potentially major victory for the realists, despite Negroponte�s
fearsome and ruthless reputation earned in Honduras 20
years ago. A former ambassador to Mexico, the Philippines,
the UN and, since coming out of retirement last summer,
Iraq, Negroponte served as deputy national security adviser
under Powell in the last two years of the Reagan presidency
of accelerated d�tente with Soviet premier Mikhail Gorbachev.
Although more hard-line than Powell, Negroponte, who will
probably enjoy as much �face time� with the president
as any other major foreign policy figure, is known for
his supreme self-confidence and assertiveness in private,
even as he faithfully hews to the official line in public.
�You can be sure he will be hawkish in policy preferences,
but definitely on the realist side of the spectrum,� said
one retired foreign service officer who has been close
to Negroponte since the 1960s when they served in Vietnam
together. �If Cheney and Libby and the Pentagon civilians
tried to cherry-pick the intelligence and send it up to
the White House as they did before the war in Iraq, he
would resist it. This is the guy who stood up to Henry
Kissinger.�
Bush
reportedly asked at least three other realists, including
former CIA deputy director Robert Gates, to take the new
intelligence chief�s job. He did not ask neo-conservative
favorites Judge Lawrence Silberman, co-chairman of the
presidential commission on pre-Iraq war intelligence,
or John Lehman, a former business partner of Perle, hinting
that the president may have become more skeptical about
the �intelligence� provided by the more ideological personalities
around him.
Geostrategic
Constraints
As
the Bush administration sets sail on its second term,
the rhetoric is pure neo-conservative bombast, but the
personnel choices present a far more mixed picture, suggesting
that the impasse between ideological hawks and realists
on key issues—notably Iran, Syria and North Korea—that
made it so difficult for the administration to develop
coherent policy after the Iraq war may well persist.
But
even if Rice and Negroponte have become born-again neo-conservatives,
the hawks face a larger reality that threatens to frustrate
their ambitions in much the same way that that a legendary
iceberg ultimately made irrelevant the arrangement of
the deck chairs on the Titanic.
Despite
confident neo-conservative predictions that only 30,000
US troops would be needed to police Iraq by the current
date, the reality is that more than four times that number
are likely to remain there through at least the end of
2005. Instead of coddling a secular, pro-Western successor
regime to Saddam Hussein, the US may spend the year wrangling
with newly elected religious parties over key issues of
domestic policy in Iraq. Meanwhile, the financial costs
of the US presence have already far surpassed the estimates
that got former Bush economic adviser Lawrence Lindsay
fired two years ago. Negroponte, who is reported to believe
that the US is far from out of the woods in Iraq, probably
will not be shy about reminding the hawks of the yawning
gap between their pre-war confidence and the post-war
reality.
Not
only are US land forces overstretched in Iraq and Afghanistan,
but Congress, including a steadily growing number of Republican
lawmakers, is increasingly concerned about a budget deficit
that is undermining investor confidence in the dollar
and shows few signs of fading. With the cost of US military
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan running at some $5
billion a month, the idea of a major new commitment to
�boots on the ground�—such as the kind that PNAC
and Perle would presumably like to hold in reserve for
Iran, if not Syria—seems quite frankly out of the
question.
Moreover,
the fact that key Congressional committees are already
undertaking a review of the intelligence on Iran suggests
that the administration, even if Negroponte plays along,
will face significantly more skepticism about its claims
regarding the threat posed by Tehran to the US and its
allies than was the case with Iraq. The same applies in
spades to Washington�s European allies, including Great
Britain, which will very strongly oppose any US military
action against Iran without a serious and sustained commitment
by Washington to the EU-3 effort to negotiate a resolution
of the nuclear question. While the hawks may still be
able to assemble a �coalition of the willing� made up
in part of Arab Gulf states worried about the absence,
apart from presumed US bases in Iraq for the foreseeable
future, of a regional check on Iran�s power, an Iraqi
government dominated by leaders who were sheltered by
Tehran for more than two decades is most unlikely to go
along. Even Afghanistan may be reluctant to serve as a
launching pad for a US offensive against a neighbor that
so far has been quite helpful to the Karzai government.
The
same considerations apply even to commando and aerial
strikes against nuclear and regime targets—an option
a number of predominantly neo-conservative groups, including
the Committee on the Present Danger and the Iran Policy
Committee, insist must be available if indeed Washington
concludes that Iran is on the verge of obtaining nuclear
weapons. Indeed, as with Iraq, where the neo-conservatives
predicted that US troops would be welcomed as �liberators�
with flowers and sweets, they now insist fancifully that
airstrikes would spark a popular uprising that would bring
about the immediate collapse of the regime.
Next
Steps
Apart
from geostrategic constraints, the hawks, including the
neo-conservatives, face internal disagreements as well.
While the coalition of neo-conservatives, aggressive nationalists
and the Christian right was united on key objectives during
the first term, particularly with respect to sidelining
Arafat and ousting Saddam, clear differences within and
among the groups have emerged over next steps.
Rumsfeld�s
aversion to �nation-building� and his explicit repudiation
of former Army chief of staff Gen. Eric Shinseki�s recommendation
for an occupying force of �several hundred thousand� for
Iraq have come under sustained attack from Kristol and
his sidekick, Robert Kagan. Amid the uproar over Rumsfeld�s
dismissive response to a soldier�s complaint about unarmored
Humvees in Iraq, Kristol penned an op-ed in the Washington
Post demanding that �the defense secretary we have�
step down. Similarly, Rumsfeld�s refusal to support the
permanent expansion by as much as 150,000 troops for US
land forces over the next several years has spurred repeated
calls for his resignation by many of the same individuals
who charge that he and his supporters, including Perle,
are both exhausting the US military and reducing its credibility
as a global power capable of waging war in North Korea
or Iran at the same time that it is fighting insurgencies
in Iraq and Afghanistan. Interestingly, the same individuals
who have supported a major expansion of the US military
also have appealed, sometimes with liberal interventionists,
for greater flexibility and tact in dealing with European
allies and even the United Nations.
A
second cause of discord has been Iran. While the hawks
are agreed that Washington�s aims should be to achieve
�regime change� and prevent Tehran from becoming a nuclear
power with unilateral military action, if necessary, they
have not agreed on intermediate steps. One faction, whose
thinking is represented in a policy paper published in
late 2004 by the Committee on the Present Danger (CPD),
has called for Washington to back the EU-3 process and
engage Tehran to the extent of opening an embassy there,
actively promoting people-to-people exchanges and supporting
the political opposition in much the same way it did in
the Soviet bloc in the 1980s. The paper was adopted only
after heated arguments with the more hard-line neo-conservative
faction, led by Perle disciple Michael Rubin, that would
have killed it if not for the intervention of former secretary
of state and CPD honorary co-chairman George Shultz, who
is perhaps the administration�s least talked about but
most influential foreign policy eminence grise,
as well as a Rice patron. The more hard-line faction,
which is best represented by the Iran Policy Committee,
calls for a campaign of active destabilization, including
using the cultish Mojahedin-e Khalq as a vanguard for
Iran�s �liberation� from the �totalitarian� mullahs.
A
third area of internal disagreement may be the most difficult
for the neo-conservatives and leaders of the Christian
right, who together have been most responsible for the
historic realignment of US policy behind Israel�s Likud
Party. As in Israel, where Sharon�s Gaza �disengagement�
plan has badly split the Likud and its extreme-right allies,
so it has split the Likud�s biggest fans in the US, particularly
after the death of Arafat and the subsequent rise of Mahmoud
Abbas. Pat Robertson�s Christian Broadcasting Network,
for example, has become a mouthpiece for extremist settlers,
while hard-line neo-conservatives, such as Daniel Pipes,
Frank Gaffney (who is funded by casino king Irving Moskowitz)
and the Zionist Organization of America, are actively
campaigning against disengagement. Somewhat more politely,
Perle and his prot�g�e Danielle Pletka, once rumored to
be in the running to head the State Department�s Near
East bureau, express great skepticism and urge Bush not
to get too involved. So far, however, the Bush administration
is strongly supporting the plan. Guiding the process is
another neo-conservative prince, Elliott Abrams, who not
only enjoys Rice�s full confidence, but has also been
promoted to deputy national security adviser for promoting
global democracy. Despite his own intensely ideological
background, Abrams, another Shultz acolyte who reportedly
also enjoys a close personal relationship with Sharon,
is regarded above all as a Bush loyalist determined to
achieve his boss�s vision of a two-state solution in which
�Palestine� (an appellation that top administration officials
began using for the first time in January) will be both
�democratic� and �viable.� In spite of his public embrace
of Sharansky, a vocal Israeli opponent of Sharon�s plan,
Bush may have actually gained some appreciation for the
realist position that Washington�s standing in the Arab
world and in Europe requires at least the semblance of
an Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
All
of these internal disagreements can only add to the administration�s
difficulties in formulating a coherent policy for Iraq
since the invasion. Before the November election, the
administration was obviously constrained by its fear that
more military action would scare off too many voters.
While that factor has now receded, nothing else—including,
arguably, the balance of power within the administration,
has really changed. Reality is resistant to the radical
rhetoric emanating from the presidential podium.