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Pentagon reaffirms
globocop role By Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON - March has been a bad month
for the world's multilateralists who, encouraged
by several early appointments to the US State
Department and a successful presidential tour of
Europe, had hoped that President George W Bush
would temper his unilateralist instincts in his
second term. But culminating in Friday's release
by the Pentagon of a new "National Defense
Strategy of the United States of America", the
past few weeks have showered a bracing dose of
cold water on that notion.
Combined with
the nomination earlier in the month of
super-unilateralist John Bolton as Bush's
ambassador to the United Nations, as well as the
US withdrawal from the jurisdiction of the
International Court of Justice (ICJ) for cases
involving the Vienna Convention on Consular
Relations, the new Strategy strongly suggests that
Washington's interest in its traditional
alliances, multilateral institutions, and even
international law is on a downward trajectory.
The 24-page public document, signed by
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, is designed to
lay out some of the basic assumptions of the US
role in the world, particularly as regards peace
and security, that will guide the Quadrennial
Defense Review (QDR), an important exercise
carried out every four years that steers the US
Strategy, the Pentagon's more than US$400 billion
annual budget, and military "transformation" over
the next five to 10 years.
While The New
York Times highlighted one suggested innovation -
inviting foreign allies into classified
discussions on the QDR as it is developed - as
evidence of greater collegiality and openness to
allies, the Strategy puts far greater stress on
the critical importance of retaining Washington's
independence and its unchallengeable military
dominance in strategic regions, particularly in
and around Eurasia.
While the first of
four "strategic objectives" listed in the report
is securing the US from direct attack, the second
is to "secure strategic access and retain global
freedom of action".
"Strengthen[ing]
alliances and partnerships" rates No 3. At another
point, it warns that "some enemies may seek to
terrorize our population and destroy our way of
life, while others will try to ... limit our
global freedom to act ..."
In dramatic
contrast to the National Security Strategy of the
USA released in September 2002 - nine months after
Washington ousted the Taliban in Afghanistan and
six months before its invasion of Iraq - the
latest Strategy does not even mention the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) by name,
except obliquely by the phrase "traditional
allies" or "partners", suggesting a strong
preference for ad hoc "coalitions of the willing",
rather than permanent collective-security
arrangements.
"NATO is kind of missing in
action now in their strategy," Loren Thompson, a
military analyst at the Virginia-based Lexington
Institute, told the Los Angeles Times.
The
United Nations and its Security Council also go
unmentioned in the new document.
Several
other aspects of the strategy also suggest a
growing wariness of, if not hostility to,
multinational mechanisms and international law.
Under "vulnerabilities", for example, the
Strategy notes, "Our strength as a nation-state
will continue to be challenged by those who employ
a strategy of the weak using international fora,
judicial processes, and terrorism."
While
the outgoing under secretary of defense for
policy, Douglas Feith, stressed that the provision
was not intended to equate proponents of
international law with terrorists, he made clear
that Washington will resist attempts to submit it
to treaties that it has not ratified, such as the
Rome Protocol for the International Criminal Court
(ICC).
"The arguments that some people
make to try to, in effect, criminalize foreign
policy and bring prosecutions where there is no
basis for jurisdiction under international law as
a way of trying to pressure American officials,"
he said, echoing a position long held by Bolton
and other members of the right-wing Federalist
Society, an association of lawyers and judges who
strongly oppose the application of international
law and conventions if, in their view, they
impinge on US sovereignty.
"If there are
countries that don't share our goals, they may try
to use established international fora to inhibit
us doing what we need to do in our national
interest," said Admiral William Sullivan, vice
director of the Strategy, Plans and Policy Office
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "That's what this
paragraph addresses."
The document also
makes clear that Washington intends to ignore or
demand changes in international law if they
constrain Washington's freedom of action.
"Many of the current legal arrangements
that govern overseas posture date from an earlier
era," it states. "Today, challenges are more
diverse and complex, our prospective contingencies
are more widely dispersed, and our international
partners are more numerous.
"International
agreements relevant to our posture must reflect
these circumstances and support greater
operational flexibility. They must help, not
hinder, the rapid deployment and employment of US
and coalition forces worldwide in a crisis," it
goes on, adding, for example, that legal
protections for US personnel against possible
transfer to the ICC, the global tribunal for
crimes against humanity, genocide and war crimes,
will continue to be sought.
The Strategy
also reiterates Bush's strategic doctrine of
"preemption", particularly in the case of a
"potentially catastrophic impact of an attack
against the United States, its allies and its
interests", a phrase that, significantly, did not
qualify its application to situations in which
such an attack was "imminent".
Similarly,
the Strategy calls for "preventive" military
action by the US and its partners, citing, as an
example, "to prevent the outbreak of hostilities
or to help defend or restore a friendly
government. Under the most dangerous and
compelling circumstances, prevention might require
the use of force to disable or destroy (weapons of
mass destruction) in the possession of terrorists
or others or to strike targets (eg, terrorists)
that direct threaten the United States or US
friends or other interests."
The Strategy
suggests that Washington will not be reluctant to
send its forces into other states that, in its
opinion, do not "exercise their sovereignty
responsibly" or that "use the principle of
sovereignty as a shield behind which they claim to
be free to engage in activities that pose enormous
threats to their citizens, neighbors, or the rest
of the international community".
US
freedom of action, which the document asserts will
provide a stabilizing influence in key regions,
must also be assured "in and from the global
commons, including space and cyberspace, as well
as international waters and airspace".
"Key goals ... are to ensure our access to
and use of space, and to deny hostile exploitation
of space to adversaries," the document states.
(Inter Press Service) |