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Other Options Haven’t Worked: Let’s Try Diplomacy

June 25, 2009 by Haviland Smith

[Originally published in The Herald of Randolph.]

Since the Second World War, the Republicans have said consistently that the Democrats’ main foreign policy problem is that they are either unable or unwilling to successfully and purposefully project American power abroad.  In this context, there are  three means by which we can project power abroad: We can do it with military operations, we can do it with covert, regime change/intelligence operations and we can do it with diplomatic operations.

Over those sixty-odd years, American administrations are said to have been involved in 32 cases of either  military or covert intelligence projections of power in which we have attempted to overthrow sitting governments.  They range from Korea through Iran and Cuba to Bosnia and Afghanistan. Democrat administrations have been involved in 10 of those operations where Republicans have supported 22. Some, like Korea, Cuba, Afghanistan and Iraq have been supported by both Republican and Democrat administrations.

Thus,  it would appear that, successful or not, Republicans are better than twice as  likely to project power through military or intelligence operations than are  the Democrats.

Just what have all those  operations really done for America?  Let’s examine alleged US  Intelligence or regime change operations first. Consider Iran (1953),  Guatemala (1954), Costa Rica (1955), Syria 1957), Indonesia (1958), Dominican  Republic (1960), Peru (1960), Equador (1960), Congo (1960), Cuba (1961),  Brazil (1964), Chile (1972), Angola (1975) and Nicaragua (1981).  Our  “success” in installing Shah Reza Pahlavi in Iran haunts us to this day.   Cuba helped solidify Castro in power.  The remaining Latin America  operations left us with a “big brother”, negative legacy that still infuriates  our Latin neighbors.  Ditto those in Africa and Islam.

Our military projections of power can be  examined in Korea (1950-53), Viet Nam (1961-73), Lebanon (1982-84), Grenada  (1983), Panama (1989), Iraq (Gulf) (1991), Somalia (1993), Bosnia (1994-95),  Kosovo (1999), Afghanistan (2001-date) and Iraq (2003-date). With the possible  exception of Bosnia and Kosovo where we have dampened ethnic hatred at least  for the moment (a positive outcome) and maybe Panama, all of which were of  relatively minor international importance, it is really hard to see the  benefits of our other, larger scale, military adventures.  Korea remains  divided and leaves a nuclear North Korea.  Viet Nam was a loss.   Afghanistan and Iraq do not look likely to be wins.

So, in relation to the amount of US national treasure poured into these military and intelligence adventures, he return seems pretty meager.   That was obvious from the start in  Korea and Viet Nam where we were motivated by a largely imagined communist  threat. Yet, we went ahead, repeating the same behaviors for over sixty years, always finding a questionable, illusory threat, now terrorism, to  justify our actions.  And we still haven’t stopped.  Or have we?
Surprisingly, President Obamahas chosen to  prolong the Iraq and Afghanistan operations, yet it would seem from his recent  statements that a really basic change is underway in our foreign policy.   He says we are not at war with Islam.  He speaks of “respect” for  Islam and of talking with Iran and perhaps even with the Taliban.  It  seems likely this new president is going to employ the most underused tool of  power projection in our national arsenal, one that has not seen the light of  day for almost eight years. – Diplomatic power.

And what happens?  President Obama  is attacked immediately by a cross-section of the press and the entire  political spectrum as soft on terror, soft on Iran, soft on Islam, and soft on  our enemies whoever they may be. Comfortable with the clearly unsuccessful  past, these critics see anything other than confrontation with our adversaries  as appeasement at best and capitulation at  worst.

Today’s  Republicans have come full circle. They have had their fling at projecting  power through military and intelligence operations at the expense of coalition  building and diplomacy. By any reasonable standard, they have come up empty.   There is really nothing left for them to do but paint today’s Democrats  as capitulators and appeasers who are soft on everything and unwilling or  unable to appropriately project American power abroad!

If we read history, which most politicians and many of our most prolific media commentators apparently do not, then it is  time to put our old military and intelligence projections of power aside, if  only because they have not served our interests in the post-WWII world. We have not employed diplomatic power as a primary weapon for years.  We really need to give it a chance,  It is our best if not only option in today’s new, confusing and increasingly complicated world.

Haviland  Smith is a retired CIA Station Chief who served in Eastern and Western Europe,  the Middle East and as chief of the counterterrorism staff.  A longtime  resident of Brookfield, he now lives in Williston.

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