| WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
ARTICLE
EXTRACTS: Volume XV, No 1, SPRING 1998
Churchill's
Way: The Great Convergence of Britain and the United States
David Fromkin
In "Churchill's
Way," the noted author David Fromkin writes that the time may have
come for the fulfillment of Winston Churchill's "spacious and attractive
vision" of the English-speaking peoples as one. The wartime British
prime minister believed that the United States and Great Britain
ought to aim for some sort of unity, that "an England that no longer
could be supreme on her own could retain her greatness in a close
partnership with the United States." But, as the author notes, this
was not possible in Churchill's time because certain issues, particularly
the question of empire, divided the two nations. Now, however, "America's
and England's ways have converged. Bill Clinton's United States
and Tony Blair's United Kingdom share ideals as well as national
interests and strategic situation. Surely there now is a strong
case for also defining goals together, and moving toward achieving
them in partnership."
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The Door
of Opportunity: Creating a Permanent Peacekeeping Force
Lionel Rosenblatt and Larry Thompson
Lionel Rosenblatt
and Larry Thompson, President and Senior Associate, respectively,
of Refugees International, make the case for the creation of a permanent
U.N. peacekeeping force. Taking on the "anti-United Nations, anti-intervention
theorists," the authors nonetheless acknowledge that "the present
system of peacekeeping is too slow, too cumbersome, too inefficient,
too prone to failure, too ad hoc to meet the necessities of the
confusing, nameless era that has followed in the wake of the Cold
War." They advocate the establishment of a 15,000-member rapid reaction
force to deal with crises in countries that do not engage the urgent
political concerns of the big powersóto prevent the chaos, ethnic
conflict, or threats of strife in such countries from turning into
wider, long-lasting conflicts. Rosenblatt and Thompson describe
how such a force could be created, what its mission would be, and
how much it would cost.
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Clinton's
Warriors: The Interventionists
Robert Worth
"For better
or worse," writes Robert Worth in "Clinton's Warriors: The Interventionists,"
"the United States has become a global hegemon, supporting civic
order in a world of rogue states and nuclear proliferation, ready
to launch a devastating attack on Saddam Hussein's Iraq to achieve
compliance with U.N. inspection goals. This will require a new and
delicate balance between diplomacy and force, and the last thing
any president needs, in such circumstances, is a rebellious Pentagon."
Worth shows how President Clinton went about revamping the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, with the result that America's current military
leaders, in contrast to their immediate predecessors, are well disposed
toward the use of American troops for such "nontraditional missions"
as the deployments in Haiti and Bosnia. However, the author worries
that the president may have paid too high a price for the military's
cooperation.
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The Other
Africa: An End to Afro-Pessimism
David F. Gordon and Howard Wolpe
The only thing
more remarkable than the quiet renaissance that is slowly transforming
the African continent, note David F. Gordon of the Overseas Development
Council and Howard Wolpe, Presidential Special Envoy to Africa's
Great Lakes Region, in "The Other Africa: An End to Afro-Pessimism,"
is its invisibility. "By substituting caricature for analysis,"
Gordon and Wolpe assert, "Afro-pessimists have offered up a simplistic
and distorted portrayal of Africa, which only serves to reinforce
deeply held racial stereotypes, perpetuate a distinctly distorted
view of contemporary African realities, and deepen America's reluctance
to become more engaged there." If Americans continue to believe
that what happens in Africa is of little consequence to us, the
authors warn, we will miss our chance to help sustain this renewal
and to advance America's interests in the emerging markets of a
dynamic new Africa.
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Improving
Turkey's "Bad Neighborhood":
Pressing Ankara for Rights and Democracy
John Tirman
Among those
countries routinely considered to be stalwart U.S. allies, Turkey
has the worst human rights record. It has been persecuting its large
Kurdish minority for decades. Freedom of speech, association, and
religion are sharply curtailed for non-Kurdish Turks as well. "Washington's
response to this discomfiting fact is to ignore it," notes John
Tirman, Executive Director of the Winston Foundation for World Peace,
in "Improving Turkey's 'Bad Neighborhood': Pressing Ankara for Rights
and Democracy." Recognizing Ankara's resentment of outside interference
in Turkey's internal affairs, the author proposes three initiatives
that Washington could undertakeóone of which would include a role
for America's military leadersóto encourage Turkey to undertake
democratic reforms and resolve the Kurdish conflict by means of
political compromise. Among other things, the proposed initiatives
would "allow Turks to stop thinking of their country as the West's
sentry on a dangerous frontier, [which] might also have a positive
effect on Turkey's internal political discourse."
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Embracing
Pop Culture: The Catholic Church in the World Market
Michael L. Budde
"Ours are strange
times indeed," writes political scientist Michael L. Budde of DePaul
University, in "Embracing Pop Culture: The Catholic Church in the
World Market." "The Pope makes multimillion-dollar publishing deals,
enjoys cross-media promotions that exemplify the corporate dreams
of 'synergy,' signs off on joint ventures with information behemoths
like IBM and Digital, andójust like Mickey Mouse, Batman, and the
Rolling Stonesóhas his image licensed to makers of hats, mugs, and
T-shirts. . . . Whether the Church (or any other religious tradition,
for that matter) will have any significant role to play in the future
depends on how it is affected by the for-profit global culture industries.
For those interested in maintaining Christianity as an independent,
critical voice, the prospects are not encouraging."
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Netanyahu
and the American Jews
Jonathan Broder
In "Netanyahu
and American Jews," Jonathan Broder, Washington correspondent for
The Jerusalem Report, illuminates the widening cracks in American
Jewry's emotional bond with Israel. American Jewish leaders, reflecting
the opinion of four out of five American Jews, have expressed acute
disappointment with the leadership of Israeli prime minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, whose "endless series of blunders, provocations, and
self-inflicted wounds" have brought the once-promising Oslo peace
process to its knees. Moreover, American Jews, 85 percent of whom
belong to the Reform and Conservative denominations, are deeply
troubled by Netanyahu's declared support for his Orthodox coalition
partners' desire to delegitimize Reform and Conservative Jews in
Israel. "For many Jews, their anger over the religious issue has
combined with their doubts about Netanyahu's peace policies, producing
a potent brew of hurt and hostility."
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Reviving
the State?
Ethan B. Kapstein
In his review
of the World Bank's World Development Report 1997, Ethan B. Kapstein,
Stassen Professor of International Peace at the Humphrey Institute
at the University of Minnesota, draws a picture of a stagnant organization
unable to address effectively the developmental problems it was
created to solve. Partly, this is because the Bank,"with its crippling
bureaucracy, duplicative functions, and many agencies, seems to
spend more time on internal reorganization than any other activity."
But it is also due to the Bank's continued reliance on the nation-state
as the organizational form best suited to confronting the issues
of the contemporary global environment. "Why not focus instead on
possible alternative institutional arrangements," Kapstein asks,
"including, for example, a greater role for the World Bank in international
economic management?" Thus far the Bank has not done so, however,
for the simple reason that it is a creature of the states. Therefore,
the Bank cannot do much to alter the international system for good
or ill; all it can do is to provide its clients with a set of "best
practices."
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"Marooned
in the Cold War"
Mark Danner, George F. Kennan, Strobe Talbott, and Lee H. Hamilton
Mark Danner's
article, "Marooned in the Cold War: America, the Alliance, and the
Quest for a Vanished World," which was published in the fall 1997
issue of World Policy Journal, elicited a strong response from prominent
writers in government and out. An exchange of letters between Richard
Holbrooke, former Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs,
and Mr. Danner appeared in the winter 1997/98 issue of the journal.
In this issue, we publish letters in response to "Marooned in the
Cold War" addressed to Mr. Danner by the eminent historian and diplomat
George F. Kennan, Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott, and
Rep. Lee H. Hamilton, ranking Democratic member of the House Committee
on International Relations, along with Mr. Danner's replies. Among
other things, Mr. Kennan writes: "I have seen no finer treatment
than this one, both as a summary of the salient features of the
conduct of American policy in the earlier decades of this century,
and as a treatment of the bewilderments into which we are now heading."
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