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[casi] Pax Americana



Should be Pox Americana!!  Cheers, Ken Hanly

The president's real goal in Iraq

Bookman is
the deputy
editorial
page editor
of The Atlanta
Journal-
Constitution


By JAY BOOKMAN
The official story on Iraq has never made sense. The connection that the
Bush administration has tried to draw between Iraq and al-Qaida has always
seemed contrived and artificial. In fact, it was hard to believe that smart
people in the Bush administration would start a major war based on such
flimsy evidence.


The pieces just didn't fit. Something else had to be going on; something was
missing.
In recent days, those missing pieces have finally begun to fall into place.
As it turns out, this is not really about Iraq. It is not about weapons of
mass destruction, or terrorism, or Saddam, or U.N. resolutions.
This war, should it come, is intended to mark the official emergence of the
United States as a full-fledged global empire, seizing sole responsibility
and authority as planetary policeman. It would be the culmination of a plan
10 years or more in the making, carried out by those who believe the United
States must seize the opportunity for global domination, even if it means
becoming the "American imperialists" that our enemies always claimed we
were.
Once that is understood, other mysteries solve themselves. For example, why
does the administration seem unconcerned about an exit strategy from Iraq
once Saddam is toppled?
Because we won't be leaving. Having conquered Iraq, the United States will
create permanent military bases in that country from which to dominate the
Middle East, including neighboring Iran.
In an interview Friday, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld brushed aside that
suggestion, noting that the United States does not covet other nations'
territory. That may be true, but 57 years after World War II ended, we still
have major bases in Germany and Japan. We will do the same in Iraq.
And why has the administration dismissed the option of containing and
deterring Iraq, as we had the Soviet Union for 45 years? Because even if it
worked, containment and deterrence would not allow the expansion of American
power. Besides, they are beneath us as an empire. Rome did not stoop to
containment; it conquered. And so should we.
Among the architects of this would-be American Empire are a group of
brilliant and powerful people who now hold key positions in the Bush
administration: They envision the creation and enforcement of what they call
a worldwide "Pax Americana," or American peace. But so far, the American
people have not appreciated the true extent of that ambition.
Part of it's laid out in the National Security Strategy, a document in which
each administration outlines its approach to defending the country. The Bush
administration plan, released Sept. 20, marks a significant departure from
previous approaches, a change that it attributes largely to the attacks of
Sept. 11.
To address the terrorism threat, the president's report lays out a newly
aggressive military and foreign policy, embracing pre-emptive attack against
perceived enemies. It speaks in blunt terms of what it calls "American
internationalism," of ignoring international opinion if that suits U.S.
interests. "The best defense is a good offense," the document asserts.
It dismisses deterrence as a Cold War relic and instead talks of "convincing
or compelling states to accept their sovereign responsibilities."
In essence, it lays out a plan for permanent U.S. military and economic
domination of every region on the globe, unfettered by international treaty
or concern. And to make that plan a reality, it envisions a stark expansion
of our global military presence.
"The United States will require bases and stations within and beyond Western
Europe and Northeast Asia," the document warns, "as well as temporary access
arrangements for the long-distance deployment of U.S. troops."
The report's repeated references to terrorism are misleading, however,
because the approach of the new National Security Strategy was clearly not
inspired by the events of Sept. 11. They can be found in much the same
language in a report issued in September 2000 by the Project for the New
American Century, a group of conservative interventionists outraged by the
thought that the United States might be forfeiting its chance at a global
empire.
"At no time in history has the international security order been as
conducive to American interests and ideals," the report said. stated two
years ago. "The challenge of this coming century is to preserve and enhance
this 'American peace.' "
Familiar themes
Overall, that 2000 report reads like a blueprint for current Bush defense
policy. Most of what it advocates, the Bush administration has tried to
accomplish. For example, the project report urged the repudiation of the
anti-ballistic missile treaty and a commitment to a global missile defense
system. The administration has taken that course.
It recommended that to project sufficient power worldwide to enforce Pax
Americana, the United States would have to increase defense spending from 3
percent of gross domestic product to as much as 3.8 percent. For next year,
the Bush administration has requested a defense budget of $379 billion,
almost exactly 3.8 percent of GDP.
It advocates the "transformation" of the U.S. military to meet its expanded
obligations, including the cancellation of such outmoded defense programs as
the Crusader artillery system. That's exactly the message being preached by
Rumsfeld and others.
It urges the development of small nuclear warheads "required in targeting
the very deep, underground hardened bunkers that are being built by many of
our potential adversaries." This year the GOP-led U.S. House gave the
Pentagon the green light to develop such a weapon, called the Robust Nuclear
Earth Penetrator, while the Senate has so far balked.
That close tracking of recommendation with current policy is hardly
surprising, given the current positions of the people who contributed to the
2000 report.
Paul Wolfowitz is now deputy defense secretary. John Bolton is
undersecretary of state. Stephen Cambone is head of the Pentagon's Office of
Program, Analysis and Evaluation. Eliot Cohen and Devon Cross are members of
the Defense Policy Board, which advises Rumsfeld. I. Lewis Libby is chief of
staff to Vice President Dick Cheney. Dov Zakheim is comptroller for the
Defense Department.
'Constabulary duties'
Because they were still just private citizens in 2000, the authors of the
project report could be more frank and less diplomatic than they were in
drafting the National Security Strategy. Back in 2000, they clearly
identified Iran, Iraq and North Korea as primary short-term targets, well
before President Bush tagged them as the Axis of Evil. In their report, they
criticize the fact that in war planning against North Korea and Iraq, "past
Pentagon wargames have given little or no consideration to the force
requirements necessary not only to defeat an attack but to remove these
regimes from power."
To preserve the Pax Americana, the report says U.S. forces will be required
to perform "constabulary duties" -- the United States acting as policeman of
the world -- and says that such actions "demand American political
leadership rather than that of the United Nations."
To meet those responsibilities, and to ensure that no country dares to
challenge the United States, the report advocates a much larger military
presence spread over more of the globe, in addition to the roughly 130
nations in which U.S. troops are already deployed.
More specifically, they argue that we need permanent military bases in the
Middle East, in Southeast Europe, in Latin America and in Southeast Asia,
where no such bases now exist. That helps to explain another of the
mysteries of our post-Sept. 11 reaction, in which the Bush administration
rushed to install U.S. troops in Georgia and the Philippines, as well as our
eagerness to send military advisers to assist in the civil war in Colombia.
The 2000 report directly acknowledges its debt to a still earlier document,
drafted in 1992 by the Defense Department. That document had also envisioned
the United States as a colossus astride the world, imposing its will and
keeping world peace through military and economic power. When leaked in
final draft form, however, the proposal drew so much criticism that it was
hastily withdrawn and repudiated by the first President Bush.
Effect on allies
The defense secretary in 1992 was Richard Cheney; the document was drafted
by Wolfowitz, who at the time was defense undersecretary for policy.
The potential implications of a Pax Americana are immense.
One is the effect on our allies. Once we assert the unilateral right to act
as the world's policeman, our allies will quickly recede into the
background. Eventually, we will be forced to spend American wealth and
American blood protecting the peace while other nations redirect their
wealth to such things as health care for their citizenry.
Donald Kagan, a professor of classical Greek history at Yale and an
influential advocate of a more aggressive foreign policy -- he served as
co-chairman of the 2000 New Century project -- acknowledges that likelihood.
"If [our allies] want a free ride, and they probably will, we can't stop
that," he says. But he also argues that the United States, given its unique
position, has no choice but to act anyway.
"You saw the movie 'High Noon'? he asks. "We're Gary Cooper."
Accepting the Cooper role would be an historic change in who we are as a
nation, and in how we operate in the international arena. Candidate Bush
certainly did not campaign on such a change. It is not something that he or
others have dared to discuss honestly with the American people. To the
contrary, in his foreign policy debate with Al Gore, Bush pointedly
advocated a more humble foreign policy, a position calculated to appeal to
voters leery of military intervention.
For the same reason, Kagan and others shy away from terms such as empire,
understanding its connotations. But they also argue that it would be naive
and dangerous to reject the role that history has thrust upon us. Kagan, for
example, willingly embraces the idea that the United States would establish
permanent military bases in a post-war Iraq.
"I think that's highly possible," he says. "We will probably need a major
concentration of forces in the Middle East over a long period of time. That
will come at a price, but think of the price of not having it. When we have
economic problems, it's been caused by disruptions in our oil supply. If we
have a force in Iraq, there will be no disruption in oil supplies."
Costly global commitment
Rumsfeld and Kagan believe that a successful war against Iraq will produce
other benefits, such as serving an object lesson for nations such as Iran
and Syria. Rumsfeld, as befits his sensitive position, puts it rather
gently. If a regime change were to take place in Iraq, other nations
pursuing weapons of mass destruction "would get the message that having them
. . . is attracting attention that is not favorable and is not helpful," he
says.
Kagan is more blunt.
"People worry a lot about how the Arab street is going to react," he notes.
"Well, I see that the Arab street has gotten very, very quiet since we
started blowing things up."
The cost of such a global commitment would be enormous. In 2000, we spent
$281 billion on our military, which was more than the next 11 nations
combined. By 2003, our expenditures will have risen to $378 billion. In
other words, the increase in our defense budget from 1999-2003 will be more
than the total amount spent annually by China, our next largest competitor.
The lure of empire is ancient and powerful, and over the millennia it has
driven men to commit terrible crimes on its behalf. But with the end of the
Cold War and the disappearance of the Soviet Union, a global empire was
essentially laid at the feet of the United States. To the chagrin of some,
we did not seize it at the time, in large part because the American people
have never been comfortable with themselves as a New Rome.
Now, more than a decade later, the events of Sept. 11 have given those
advocates of empire a new opportunity to press their case with a new
president. So in debating whether to invade Iraq, we are really debating the
role that the United States will play in the years and decades to come.
Are peace and security best achieved by seeking strong alliances and
international consensus, led by the United States? Or is it necessary to
take a more unilateral approach, accepting and enhancing the global
dominance that, according to some, history has thrust upon us?
If we do decide to seize empire, we should make that decision knowingly, as
a democracy. The price of maintaining an empire is always high. Kagan and
others argue that the price of rejecting it would be higher still.
That's what this is about.


The president's real goal in Iraq

Bookman is
the deputy
editorial
page editor
of The Atlanta
Journal-
Constitution


By JAY BOOKMAN
The official story on Iraq has never made sense. The connection that the
Bush administration has tried to draw between Iraq and al-Qaida has always
seemed contrived and artificial. In fact, it was hard to believe that smart
people in the Bush administration would start a major war based on such
flimsy evidence.

Related
 Transcript of Oct. 7 chat
 Donald Kagan: Comparing America to ancient empires is 'ludicrous'
 Download "Rebuilding America's Defenses" report
 Read President Bush's National Security Strategy


CONTRIBUTORS TO 2000 REPORT

 "Rebuilding America's Defenses," a 2000 report by the Project for the New
American Century, listed 27 people as having attended meetings or
contributed papers in preparation of the report. Among them are six who have
since assumed key defense and foreign policy positions in the Bush
administration. And the report seems to have become a blueprint for Bush's
foreign and defense policy.

Paul Wolfowitz
Political science doctorate from University of Chicago and dean of the
international relations program at Johns Hopkins University during the
1990s. Served in the Reagan State Department, moved to the Pentagon during
the first Bush administration as undersecretary of defense for policy. Sworn
in as deputy defense secretary in March 2001.
John Bolton
Yale Law grad who worked in the Reagan administration as an assistant
attorney general. Switched to the State Department in the first Bush
administration as assistant secretary for international organization
affairs. Sworn in as undersecretary of state for arms control and
international security, May 2001.
Eliot Cohen
Harvard doctorate in government who taught at Harvard and at the Naval War
College. Now directs strategic studies at Johns Hopkins and is the author of
several books on military strategy. Was on the Defense Department's policy
planning staff in the first Bush administration and is now on Donald
Rumsfeld's Defense Policy Board.
I. Lewis Libby
Law degree from Columbia (Yale undergrad). Held advisory positions in the
Reagan State Department. Was a partner in a Washington law firm in the late
'80s before becoming deputy undersecretary of defense for policy in the
first Bush administration (under Dick Cheney). Now is the vice president's
chief of staff.
Dov Zakheim
Doctorate in economics and politics from Oxford University. Worked on policy
issues in the Reagan Defense Department and went into private defense
consulting during the 1990s. Was foreign policy adviser to the 2000 Bush
campaign. Sworn in as undersecretary of defense (comptroller) and chief
financial officer for the Pentagon, May 2001.
Stephen Cambone
Political science doctorate from Claremont Graduate School. Was in charge of
strategic defense policy at the Defense Department in the first Bush
administration. Now heads the Office of Program, Analysis and Evaluation at
the Defense Department.





The pieces just didn't fit. Something else had to be going on; something was
missing.
In recent days, those missing pieces have finally begun to fall into place.
As it turns out, this is not really about Iraq. It is not about weapons of
mass destruction, or terrorism, or Saddam, or U.N. resolutions.
This war, should it come, is intended to mark the official emergence of the
United States as a full-fledged global empire, seizing sole responsibility
and authority as planetary policeman. It would be the culmination of a plan
10 years or more in the making, carried out by those who believe the United
States must seize the opportunity for global domination, even if it means
becoming the "American imperialists" that our enemies always claimed we
were.
Once that is understood, other mysteries solve themselves. For example, why
does the administration seem unconcerned about an exit strategy from Iraq
once Saddam is toppled?
Because we won't be leaving. Having conquered Iraq, the United States will
create permanent military bases in that country from which to dominate the
Middle East, including neighboring Iran.
In an interview Friday, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld brushed aside that
suggestion, noting that the United States does not covet other nations'
territory. That may be true, but 57 years after World War II ended, we still
have major bases in Germany and Japan. We will do the same in Iraq.
And why has the administration dismissed the option of containing and
deterring Iraq, as we had the Soviet Union for 45 years? Because even if it
worked, containment and deterrence would not allow the expansion of American
power. Besides, they are beneath us as an empire. Rome did not stoop to
containment; it conquered. And so should we.
Among the architects of this would-be American Empire are a group of
brilliant and powerful people who now hold key positions in the Bush
administration: They envision the creation and enforcement of what they call
a worldwide "Pax Americana," or American peace. But so far, the American
people have not appreciated the true extent of that ambition.
Part of it's laid out in the National Security Strategy, a document in which
each administration outlines its approach to defending the country. The Bush
administration plan, released Sept. 20, marks a significant departure from
previous approaches, a change that it attributes largely to the attacks of
Sept. 11.
To address the terrorism threat, the president's report lays out a newly
aggressive military and foreign policy, embracing pre-emptive attack against
perceived enemies. It speaks in blunt terms of what it calls "American
internationalism," of ignoring international opinion if that suits U.S.
interests. "The best defense is a good offense," the document asserts.
It dismisses deterrence as a Cold War relic and instead talks of "convincing
or compelling states to accept their sovereign responsibilities."
In essence, it lays out a plan for permanent U.S. military and economic
domination of every region on the globe, unfettered by international treaty
or concern. And to make that plan a reality, it envisions a stark expansion
of our global military presence.
"The United States will require bases and stations within and beyond Western
Europe and Northeast Asia," the document warns, "as well as temporary access
arrangements for the long-distance deployment of U.S. troops."
The report's repeated references to terrorism are misleading, however,
because the approach of the new National Security Strategy was clearly not
inspired by the events of Sept. 11. They can be found in much the same
language in a report issued in September 2000 by the Project for the New
American Century, a group of conservative interventionists outraged by the
thought that the United States might be forfeiting its chance at a global
empire.
"At no time in history has the international security order been as
conducive to American interests and ideals," the report said. stated two
years ago. "The challenge of this coming century is to preserve and enhance
this 'American peace.' "
Familiar themes
Overall, that 2000 report reads like a blueprint for current Bush defense
policy. Most of what it advocates, the Bush administration has tried to
accomplish. For example, the project report urged the repudiation of the
anti-ballistic missile treaty and a commitment to a global missile defense
system. The administration has taken that course.
It recommended that to project sufficient power worldwide to enforce Pax
Americana, the United States would have to increase defense spending from 3
percent of gross domestic product to as much as 3.8 percent. For next year,
the Bush administration has requested a defense budget of $379 billion,
almost exactly 3.8 percent of GDP.
It advocates the "transformation" of the U.S. military to meet its expanded
obligations, including the cancellation of such outmoded defense programs as
the Crusader artillery system. That's exactly the message being preached by
Rumsfeld and others.
It urges the development of small nuclear warheads "required in targeting
the very deep, underground hardened bunkers that are being built by many of
our potential adversaries." This year the GOP-led U.S. House gave the
Pentagon the green light to develop such a weapon, called the Robust Nuclear
Earth Penetrator, while the Senate has so far balked.
That close tracking of recommendation with current policy is hardly
surprising, given the current positions of the people who contributed to the
2000 report.
Paul Wolfowitz is now deputy defense secretary. John Bolton is
undersecretary of state. Stephen Cambone is head of the Pentagon's Office of
Program, Analysis and Evaluation. Eliot Cohen and Devon Cross are members of
the Defense Policy Board, which advises Rumsfeld. I. Lewis Libby is chief of
staff to Vice President Dick Cheney. Dov Zakheim is comptroller for the
Defense Department.
'Constabulary duties'
Because they were still just private citizens in 2000, the authors of the
project report could be more frank and less diplomatic than they were in
drafting the National Security Strategy. Back in 2000, they clearly
identified Iran, Iraq and North Korea as primary short-term targets, well
before President Bush tagged them as the Axis of Evil. In their report, they
criticize the fact that in war planning against North Korea and Iraq, "past
Pentagon wargames have given little or no consideration to the force
requirements necessary not only to defeat an attack but to remove these
regimes from power."
To preserve the Pax Americana, the report says U.S. forces will be required
to perform "constabulary duties" -- the United States acting as policeman of
the world -- and says that such actions "demand American political
leadership rather than that of the United Nations."
To meet those responsibilities, and to ensure that no country dares to
challenge the United States, the report advocates a much larger military
presence spread over more of the globe, in addition to the roughly 130
nations in which U.S. troops are already deployed.
More specifically, they argue that we need permanent military bases in the
Middle East, in Southeast Europe, in Latin America and in Southeast Asia,
where no such bases now exist. That helps to explain another of the
mysteries of our post-Sept. 11 reaction, in which the Bush administration
rushed to install U.S. troops in Georgia and the Philippines, as well as our
eagerness to send military advisers to assist in the civil war in Colombia.
The 2000 report directly acknowledges its debt to a still earlier document,
drafted in 1992 by the Defense Department. That document had also envisioned
the United States as a colossus astride the world, imposing its will and
keeping world peace through military and economic power. When leaked in
final draft form, however, the proposal drew so much criticism that it was
hastily withdrawn and repudiated by the first President Bush.
Effect on allies
The defense secretary in 1992 was Richard Cheney; the document was drafted
by Wolfowitz, who at the time was defense undersecretary for policy.
The potential implications of a Pax Americana are immense.
One is the effect on our allies. Once we assert the unilateral right to act
as the world's policeman, our allies will quickly recede into the
background. Eventually, we will be forced to spend American wealth and
American blood protecting the peace while other nations redirect their
wealth to such things as health care for their citizenry.
Donald Kagan, a professor of classical Greek history at Yale and an
influential advocate of a more aggressive foreign policy -- he served as
co-chairman of the 2000 New Century project -- acknowledges that likelihood.
"If [our allies] want a free ride, and they probably will, we can't stop
that," he says. But he also argues that the United States, given its unique
position, has no choice but to act anyway.
"You saw the movie 'High Noon'? he asks. "We're Gary Cooper."
Accepting the Cooper role would be an historic change in who we are as a
nation, and in how we operate in the international arena. Candidate Bush
certainly did not campaign on such a change. It is not something that he or
others have dared to discuss honestly with the American people. To the
contrary, in his foreign policy debate with Al Gore, Bush pointedly
advocated a more humble foreign policy, a position calculated to appeal to
voters leery of military intervention.
For the same reason, Kagan and others shy away from terms such as empire,
understanding its connotations. But they also argue that it would be naive
and dangerous to reject the role that history has thrust upon us. Kagan, for
example, willingly embraces the idea that the United States would establish
permanent military bases in a post-war Iraq.
"I think that's highly possible," he says. "We will probably need a major
concentration of forces in the Middle East over a long period of time. That
will come at a price, but think of the price of not having it. When we have
economic problems, it's been caused by disruptions in our oil supply. If we
have a force in Iraq, there will be no disruption in oil supplies."
Costly global commitment
Rumsfeld and Kagan believe that a successful war against Iraq will produce
other benefits, such as serving an object lesson for nations such as Iran
and Syria. Rumsfeld, as befits his sensitive position, puts it rather
gently. If a regime change were to take place in Iraq, other nations
pursuing weapons of mass destruction "would get the message that having them
. . . is attracting attention that is not favorable and is not helpful," he
says.
Kagan is more blunt.
"People worry a lot about how the Arab street is going to react," he notes.
"Well, I see that the Arab street has gotten very, very quiet since we
started blowing things up."
The cost of such a global commitment would be enormous. In 2000, we spent
$281 billion on our military, which was more than the next 11 nations
combined. By 2003, our expenditures will have risen to $378 billion. In
other words, the increase in our defense budget from 1999-2003 will be more
than the total amount spent annually by China, our next largest competitor.
The lure of empire is ancient and powerful, and over the millennia it has
driven men to commit terrible crimes on its behalf. But with the end of the
Cold War and the disappearance of the Soviet Union, a global empire was
essentially laid at the feet of the United States. To the chagrin of some,
we did not seize it at the time, in large part because the American people
have never been comfortable with themselves as a New Rome.
Now, more than a decade later, the events of Sept. 11 have given those
advocates of empire a new opportunity to press their case with a new
president. So in debating whether to invade Iraq, we are really debating the
role that the United States will play in the years and decades to come.
Are peace and security best achieved by seeking strong alliances and
international consensus, led by the United States? Or is it necessary to
take a more unilateral approach, accepting and enhancing the global
dominance that, according to some, history has thrust upon us?
If we do decide to seize empire, we should make that decision knowingly, as
a democracy. The price of maintaining an empire is always high. Kagan and
others argue that the price of rejecting it would be higher still.
That's what this is about.



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