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HERE'S "REAL SECURITY"?
The Nation
By William D. Hartung, April
24, 2006
Despite the change in public
attitudes driven by the acceleration of violence and chaos in Iraq,
high-ranking Democrats continue to believe that a "tough" approach
to national security is their best bet for winning elections. Because
of this misconception, their recently released plan for "Real Security"
fails to make the decisions needed to produce a smarter, more effective
defense policy.
Rather than hedge their bets
out of fear of being labeled "soft" on defense, Democrats should
distinguish themselves from the Bush Administration by setting a
date for withdrawal from Iraq. They should also take a broader view
of security, one promoting the notion that the government's job
is to protect its citizens from all major threats, whether they
emanate from terrorism, epidemics, natural disasters, environmental
degradation or entrenched poverty.
Instead, one of the most touted
elements of the Democrats' new plan is their pledge to "eliminate
Osama bin Laden [and] destroy terrorist networks like Al Qaeda."
This hawkish rhetoric has little
chance of generating a successful policy. Al Qaeda is a loosely
structured "network of networks" that can operate with or without
Osama bin Laden. "Destroying" it is the wrong goal. A more realistic
objective would be to render Al Qaeda irrelevant by addressing the
political, ideological, economic and security concerns that allow
it to attract new recruits. To its credit, the Democrats' Real Security
plan makes reference to these root causes of terrorism. But it contradicts
itself by suggesting that Al Qaeda can somehow be wiped out as though
it were a traditional military adversary.
One positive plank of the Democrats'
security platform is its commitment to lock up or destroy currently
unsecured nuclear bomb-making materials by 2010. This approach,
which is probably the most effective way to keep terrorist groups
from acquiring the ingredients for a nuclear weapon or "dirty bomb,"
would require nearly doubling current funding for this purpose,
to $3 billion a year. That amounts to less than two weeks of the
current cost of the Bush Administration's war.
Another sound idea is the pledge
to push for energy independence by promoting alternative fuels and
greater energy efficiency. The stated goal is to limit our dependence
on oil from "unstable regions," but there is no mention of the most
important reason to reduce use of fossil fuels--reducing the impact
of global climate change. If the Democrats could articulate an energy
investment plan that talks about how soon new technologies can make
a difference in reducing our dependence on oil, they would be better
positioned to underscore the hypocrisy of George W. Bush's promise
to end America's "addiction" to oil.
The most striking aspect of
the Real Security plan is what it leaves out. There is no talk of
reducing the US nuclear arsenal. There is no position taken on whether
the Democrats should renounce the use of force against North Korea
or Iran. There is no suggestion to cut the military budget, which
could reach $600 billion this year once the costs of the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan are taken into account. There are tens of billions
of dollars' worth of cold war-era relics in the military budget
that have no legitimate strategic purpose and are ripe for elimination.
With the 2006 elections looming,
it is unlikely that the Democratic leadership will change its official
national security strategy in any significant way. But individual
candidates can and should offer more progressive alternatives that
can prevent conflicts as well as resolve them.
William D. Hartung
William D. Hartung, a senior
research fellow at the World Policy Institute at New School University,
is co-author, with Michelle Ciarrocca, of the institute's report
Tangled Web: The Marketing of Missile Defense, 1994-2000 and a contributor
to Power Trip: US Unilateralism and Global Strategy After September
11 (Seven Stories).
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