August 23, 2016
https://consortiumnews.com/2016/08/23/a-clinton-family-value-humanitarian-war/
Exclusive: The transformation
of the Democratic Party from the relative “peace party” to a belligerent “war
party” occurred during Bill Clinton’s presidency and is likely to
resume if Hillary Clinton is elected, writes James W Carden.
By James W Carden
The current debate over the
future of U.S. foreign policy is largely over whether the U.S. should continue
its self-anointed role as the policeman of the world, or whether it might be
wise for the next administration to put, in the words of Donald J. Trump,
“America First.”
On the other hand, Hillary
Clinton has repeatedly called for a more active U.S. foreign policy. The 2016
election is shaping up to be, among other things, a battle between the
inarticulate isolationism of Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton’s liberal
interventionism. Hers is an approach which came into vogue during the
administration of her husband.
During the 1992 campaign, Bill
Clinton sought to differentiate himself from President George H.W. Bush by
sounding “tough” on foreign policy. At the time, Clinton declared that, unlike
Bush, he would “not coddle dictators from Baghdad to Beijing.”
Once in office Clinton
departed from policies of his predecessor, whose foreign policy was steered by
“realists” such as national security adviser Brent Scowcroft and Secretary of
State James A. Baker. Baker’s judgment that the war in the Balkans did not
merit American intervention – “we don’t,” said Baker, “have a dog in this
fight,” was emblematic of the administration’s approach, which, despite
launching interventions in Iraq and Panama, was for the most part, a cautious
one.
Bush outraged New York Times columnist
William Safire when he warned of the danger that nationalism poses to regional
stability. Speaking in Kiev in 1991, Bush promised that “we will not
meddle in your internal affairs.”
“Some people,” he continued,
“have urged the United States to choose between supporting President Gorbachev
and supporting independence-minded leaders throughout the U.S.S.R. I consider
this a false choice.”
Such was Bush’s wariness over
riling Russia that, according to the historian Mary Elise Sarotte, Secretary of
State Baker (along with German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, and German Foreign
Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher) “repeatedly affirmed” to the Soviets “that
NATO would not move eastward at all.”
Bush decided that it was best
not to rub Russia’s diminished fortunes in its face. Not so President Clinton,
who vowed “not let the Iron Curtain be replaced with a veil of indifference.”
The Clinton team ignored the advice of Senators Bill Bradley, Sam Nunn and Gary
Hart and the former Ambassador to the USSR, Jack Matlock, who all urged the
administration to reconsider its policy of NATO expansion. Needless to
say, predictions that NATO expansion would have dire consequences for
U.S.-Russia relations have come to fruition.
Grandiose Ambitions
Speaking before the U.N.
General Assembly in September 1993, President Clinton declared that
the U.S. had “the chance to expand the reach of democracy and economic progress
across the whole of Europe and to the far reaches of the world.”
At the time, the stars seemed
aligned for such a pursuit. In Foreign Affairs, neoconservative writer Charles
Krauthammer declared that the end of the Cold War was America’s “unipolar”
moment. The pursuit of American global hegemony was not, according to
Krauthammer, some “Wilsonian fantasy.” It was, rather, “a matter of sheerest
prudence.”
During Clinton’s tenure, the
U.S. military was dispatched on ostensibly humanitarian grounds in Somalia
(1993), Haiti (1994), Bosnia (1995), and Kosovo (1999). Clinton also directed
airstrikes on Sudan in what was said to be an attempt on Osama bin Laden’s
life.
Clinton bombed Iraq (1998)
over its violations of the NATO enforced no-fly zones. That same year, Clinton
signed the Iraq Liberation Act into law which stipulated that “It should be the
policy of the United States to support efforts to remove the regime headed by
Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq.”
In some ways the now deeply
embedded belief in the efficacy and rightness of humanitarian intervention
dates back to NATO’s intervention in Bosnia in 1995. The success of the Dayton
Accords seemed to cement the idea that America was, after all, the
indispensable nation in the minds of the Clinton foreign policy team.
The historian David P. Calleo
has observed that while the Clinton administration “had always sported a
low-grade Wilsonian rhetoric that implied hegemonic ambitions,” it was only
after Dayton that “the policy began to imitate the rhetoric.”
The Clinton administration’s
second intervention in the Balkans in 1999, set the template for what George W.
Bush attempted in Iraq, and, later, what Barack Obama attempted in Libya. Once
again, in the absence of U.N. sanction, Clinton launched a war under
humanitarian pretexts. The 77-day aerial bombardment of Serbia carried out by
NATO was ostensibly undertaken to prevent what was said to be the looming
wholesale slaughter of Albanian Kosovars by Serbian forces.
The intervention in Kosovo not
only riled the Russians, it also upset American allies. Shortly before the
commencement of hostilities in Kosovo, France’s Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine
declared that the United States was not only a superpower, but a “hyper-power.”
According to Vedrine, the question of the American hyper-power was “at the
center of the world’s current problems.”
Kosovo set a pattern that has
held in subsequent interventions in Iraq, Libya and Syria. Advertised (all, or,
in part) as interventions on behalf of suffering Muslims, they invariably
end up strengthening the hand of those who are declared enemies of the U.S.:
Sunni Islamic extremists.
By the end of Bill Clinton’s
tenure, the prudence exhibited by George H.W. Bush had long since vanished.
Given her record, should Hillary Clinton win in November, the elder Bush’s
foreign policy “realism” will have little chance of reappearing.
[For more on this topic, see
Consortiumnews.com’s “Yes,
Hillary Clinton Is a Neocon.”]
James W Carden is a
contributing writer for The Nation and editor of The American Committee for
East-West Accord’s eastwestaccord.com. He previously served as an advisor on
Russia to the Special Representative for Global Inter-governmental Affairs at
the US State Department.
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