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The shadow men
Anonymous
04/27/03 at 04:06:00
The shadow men

Apr 24th 2003 | WASHINGTON, DC
From The Economist print edition


War in Iraq has helped to create a new American foreign-policy establishment.
Neo-conservatives are only part of it

IN 2000, a close-knit group of about 20 people took their places in the Bush
administration, hoping to overthrow Saddam Hussein and spread American ideas of democracy throughout
the Middle East. They called themselves “neo-conservatives” and, for two years, no one
paid them much notice.

Now the tyrant has gone, and governments around the world are nervously wondering what
this much suspected group of men mean to do next. With Baghdad still burning, the neo-cons'
most senior official, Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defence, popped up to say
that “there has got to be change in Syria”. That comment ushered in two weeks of harsh
diplomatic pressure from the Bush administration about the other Baath regime, though Mr
Wolfowitz quickly added that “change” did not, in this case, mean regime change.

Such talk rattles chancelleries round the world. Those in power try to be diplomatic
about their concerns. But Lord Jopling, a former British cabinet minister, spoke for many
when he told the House of Lords on March 18th that “neo-conservatives...now have a
stranglehold on the Pentagon and seem, as well, to have a compliant armlock on the president
himself.”






Robert Kagan, a neo-conservative writer living in Brussels, says “One finds Britain's
finest minds propounding...conspiracy theories concerning the ‘neo-conservative' (read:
Jewish) hijacking of American foreign policy. In Paris, all the talk is of oil and
‘imperialism’—and Jews.” A member of the French parliament quoted his country's foreign minister,
Dominique de Villepin, saying “the hawks in the US administration [are] in the hands of
[Ariel] Sharon”—a comment seen in some circles as a coded message about undue pro-Israeli
influence exercised by neo-cons, most of whom are Jewish, at the heart of the
administration.

So has a cabal taken over the foreign policy of the most powerful country in the world?
Is a tiny group of ideologues using undue power to intervene in the internal affairs of
other countries, create an empire, trash international law—and damn the consequences?

Not really. To argue that an intellectual clique has usurped American foreign policy is
to give them both too much credit, and too little. American foreign policy has not been
captured by a tiny, ideological clique that has imposed its narrow views on others. Rather,
the neo-cons are part of a broader movement endorsed by the president, and espoused, to
different degrees, by almost all the principals involved, from Vice-President Dick Cheney
down (Colin Powell, the secretary of state, is a notable exception). Strands of
neo-conservatism can even be found among some Democrats, which is why it makes sense to think that
a new foreign-policy establishment may be emerging.

For the same reason, the criticism neglects the role of others. Near-consensus is found
around the notion that America should use its power vigorously to reshape the world. Yet
because parts of the neo-con agenda have been adopted by a president who is a mostly
pragmatic decision-maker, and because the neo-cons themselves are politically astute, the
neo-cons do not have things all their own way. They are powerful in so far as the president
listens to them, rather than in their own right. The result is that American foreign
policy is becoming a mixture of neo-conservative ideas, the president's instincts—and the
realities of power.



How they grew
To see how this came about, start with who the neo-cons are. It is understandable that
they are seen as a clique, because, to begin with, they were. The group started in the
1960s as a breakaway faction from the Democratic Party. This first generation emerged as
critics of the liberal establishment of their day; paradoxically, considering their
reputation as ideologues, their main complaint was that Democrats had lost touch with the
practical results of their policies. The term “neo” (new) was an insult thrown at them by the
left, but it distinguished them from “real” conservatives; one of their founders, Irving
Kristol, joked that a neo-conservative was a liberal “mugged by reality”. Foreign policy was
only part of the original neo-con agenda: social policy was at least as important.



America and European integration
Apr 24th 2003


Washington, DC


Iraq, United States


"Rebuilding America's Defences", American Enterprise Institute, Weekly Standard





The second generation of neo-cons is different. Few are Democrats or former Democrats.
They are unapologetic Republicans. And while they retain distinctive views on domestic
matters (for example, neo-cons were among the fiercest critics of the former Republican
Senate leader Trent Lott, who was obliged to step down for making racist remarks), foreign
policy is their focus—partly because their main social-policy proposals, such as welfare
reform and the dismantling of affirmative action, have become mainstream.

The second generation forms a clique intellectually and socially, but not politically.
Most come from similar backgrounds, whether professors (like Mr Wolfowitz and Steve
Cambone, also at the Pentagon) or lawyers (like Doug Feith, the Pentagon's number three, Scooter
Libby, Mr Cheney's chief of staff, and the State Department's John Bolton). They join the
same think-tanks, such as the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) where Richard Perle,
perhaps their most flamboyant spokesman, is a fellow. They write for and read the same
magazine, the Weekly Standard, edited by Bill Kristol, son of one of the neo-cons' founders.
They co-author the same studies (five of the 27 authors of “Rebuilding America's
Defences”, a highly influential report published in 2000, are in the administration). They are,
in short, Washington talkers and intellectuals.

In most other countries, where foreign policy is made by permanent bureaucracies, it
would be unthinkable for a small group of professors and lawyers to take any sort of
policymaking role, let alone a dominant one. In America, with its traditions of entrepreneurial
policy advocacy and political appointees, it is not so odd.

What is unusual is that the neo-cons are so different from the Texan business
establishment gathered around George Bush. They also differ from the corporate chieftains the
president hired for top jobs, such as Mr Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld (both former CEOs). Many
neo-cons backed John McCain, Mr Bush's Republican rival, in the campaign; a few had even
supported Al Gore.

So it was hardly surprising that, at the start, neo-cons were merely one among several
groups vying for foreign-policy influence—and without much success. On the campaign trail,
Mr Bush talked about a “humble, but strong” policy and was critical of
“nation-building”—very un-neo-con stances. The dominant foreign-policy voice in the president's early days
was that of Condoleezza Rice, the national security adviser. Ms Rice's main concern was
to improve America's ties with other great powers—a policy that, while part of the neo-con
agenda, was hardly uppermost in it.

Even Mr Cheney, who was to become the neo-cons' most powerful backer, seemed to differ
from them early on. As defence secretary under the first President Bush, he had supported
the decision not to overthrow Saddam in 1991 (to Mr Wolfowitz's dismay). And he was on
record as being critical of Israel and its settlement policies—anathema to the most
pro-Israeli neo-cons. Even in the aftermath of September 11th 2001, when Mr Wolfowitz went to the
president to argue his case that the terrorist attacks showed America needed urgently to
address the threat of Saddam Hussein, he was fobbed off.



Intellect v chaos
So how did the neo-cons go from being one group among several to the positions of
influence they now occupy? By articulating views that came to seem more important after
September 11th 2001—but which many conservatives agreed with even before that.

Neo-cons start with the notion that America faces the challenge of managing a “unipolar
world” (a phrase coined by a neo-conservative commentator, Charles Krauthammer, in 1991).
They see the world in terms of good and evil. They think America should be willing to use
military power to defeat the forces of chaos. Admittedly, they go on to advocate
democratic transformation in the Middle East, a view that is not shared throughout the
administration. (This is an extremely radical policy, so not only are neo-cons not ‘neo', they are
not, in the normal sense of the term, conservative either.) But that apart, their views
are not so different from others in the administration.

Neo-cons are also energetic in style, preferring moral clarity to diplomatic finesse, and
confrontation to the pursuit of incremental advantage. They are sceptical of multilateral
institutions that limit American power and effectiveness; they prefer to focus on new
threats and opportunities, rather than old alliances.

Again, these views are not unique to neo-cons. The trends have been visible in American
policy since the end of the cold war. Indeed, as Walter Russell Mead of the Council on
Foreign Relations points out, opinion in the Republican Party has been shifting for longer
than that. The movement away from Euro-centric east-coasters towards Sunbelt conservatives
more concerned about Asia, Latin America and the Middle East began with Barry Goldwater
and Ronald Reagan in the 1970s.

These common intellectual roots made it possible for neo-cons to maintain close ties with
traditional conservative politicians such as Messrs Rumsfeld and Cheney. Though neither
really counts as a neo-con, Mr Rumsfeld signed a letter to President Bill Clinton in 1998
urging him to make removing Saddam Hussein and his regime “the aim of American foreign
policy”, and the founding document of neo-con policy was the Defence Planning Guidance
drafted for Mr Cheney in 1992 during his stint as defence secretary. Written by Mr Wolfowitz
and Mr Libby, it raised the notion of pre-emptive attacks and called on America to
increase military spending to the point where it could not be challenged. Ten years later, both
ideas have been enshrined as official policy in the 2002 National Security Strategy.

The event that turned general like-mindedness into specific influence was the terrorist
assault of September 11th 2001. “Night fell on a different world,” Mr Bush said. Neo-cons
had long been obsessed with the Middle East and with “undeterrable” threats, such as
nuclear weapons in the hands of terrorists. Traditional Republican internationalists, who had
less to say on either count, offered little intellectual alternative. As the old rule of
politics says, “You can't fight something with nothing.” Mr Bush therefore embraced large
parts of the neo-con agenda.

But not immediately. The decision to take on Saddam by force seems to have been made
sometime between September 2001 and March 2002. In January 2002, in his state-of-the-union
address, Mr Bush invoked the infamous “axis of evil”—which could have been lifted from a
neo-con handbook. This February, he gave a speech to the AEI about building democracy in
Iraq and encouraging political reform in the Middle East.



How much to blame?
Some Europeans seem to think the neo-cons' influence is a direct result of Mr Bush's
inability to grasp basic foreign-policy ideas. The recent evolution of American policy does
not bear out this patronising view. The new policy was adopted in response to a
cataclysmic event. It enjoys support at almost every level of government, including Congress (the
main exceptions are the State Department and serving officers in the armed forces). Above
all, the new policy is defined by the president himself. The neo-con clique depends on Mr
Bush, not the other way around.

Fine, you might argue, but this just shifts the focus of concern from the cabal to the
consensus. Whoever formulates policy, it is still, say critics, inimical to the interests
of (some) Europeans, international law, multilateral institutions and traditional
alliances. Moreover, if policy is run by a coalition of people, of whom neo-cons are just the
first among equals, then that raises questions about the stability of the coalition, and
whether there are internal tensions waiting to erupt between neo-cons and others.

The worries about America's foreign policy are mostly about means and costs, not ends.
Neo-cons want to liberate Iraq, spread democracy through the Middle East and improve
counter-proliferation measures. Critics can hardly object to any of these, even if they do not
care to focus on the aims as relentlessly as neo-cons do.

Europeans often attribute everything they dislike in American policy to the influence of
this cabal. Yet to do so is obviously wrong: the administration's—indeed,
America's—disengagement from certain international treaties long predated the neo-cons' ascendancy. It
is true that neo-cons are more unsparing than most in their disdain for multilateral
bodies that they think act against American interests. But their attitude to “entangling
alliances” is pragmatic, rather than hostile across the board. Many, though not all, like NATO
because of its role in uniting eastern and western Europe after the collapse of
communism. When France and Germany held up a Turkish request to NATO for supplies of defensive
equipment before the Iraq war, the administration found a way round the obstacle within the
organisation, rather than acting outside it. The neo-cons' main ire is reserved for the
United Nations and, sometimes, the European Union (see article) .

Clearly there have been big diplomatic ructions in the past year, notably in the Security
Council over the second Iraq resolution. But it is hard to blame the neo-cons entirely,
or even at all. The French and Russians were responsible for much of the bad blood, while
the department largely responsible for American diplomacy in that unhappy hour was the
very un-neo-con State.

The one area where neo-conservative influence may really prove inimical to the interests
of others is Israel. Neo-cons are among Ariel Sharon's staunchest defenders. Most fear
the “road map” will endanger Israel's security, and will do everything they can to stop it.

On the other hand, the map is itself an indication of the limits of their influence. If
neo-cons really ran the show, as they are said to, there would almost certainly be no such
map. That there is testifies to the other forces acting on Mr Bush: the State Department,
the National Security Council, even Tony Blair.

These forces will continue to influence the president and moderate the neo-cons' power.
This could be good or bad. Good in that the wildest flights of neo-con fancy will be
grounded; bad if the result is policy incoherence. At the moment, the good outcome seems the
more likely.



The limits of influence
Iraq is the neo-cons' test case. Military victory has increased the group's influence
hugely; a serious reversal could undo it. But successful post-war reconstruction would
embolden them to press the president to adopt other bits of their agenda. This does not mean
sending troops to Damascus (the neo-cons write what they mean: they have always singled
out Iraq, and no other country, for military action). Rather, it means putting pressure on
Syria to stop supporting Hizbullah and on the Saudis to stop exporting Wahhabi extremism;
and it means backing the internal opposition in Iran to the clerical regime.

But there will be constraints on getting this wish-list through. The neo-cons have waited
more than ten years to reform Iraq. They will not lose interest in it, as happened in
Afghanistan. But they could be distracted by, say, a crisis in North Korea or on the Indian
subcontinent. They could be defeated in Congress over the cost of their plans, especially
if the economy falters. Or fault lines could re-emerge with mainstream conservatives over
how long to keep troops abroad, with the mainstream, backed by the cautious realists in
the armed forces, demanding that troops return home as soon as possible.

Lastly, there is Mr Bush himself. His main concern is re-election, and he has already
started to switch his attention back to the economy to avoid his father's fate. That may do
more than anything to temper the neo-cons' influence.

European and other governments could add their weight to these countervailing trends if
they chose. But, with the exception of Britain, they have not, preferring to demonise the
neo-cons as a cabal. This is almost certainly a mistake. The neo- cons are not a marginal
group. They are providing much of the intellectual framework for America's foreign
policy. Barring a serious reversal abroad, that will continue—and demonising them will merely
marginalise their critics.


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