America and the World: Conversations on the Future of American Foreign Policy.
Bullington, J.R.
Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft, America and the World:
Conversations on the Future of American Foreign Policy, Basic Books,
2008, pp 291, $27.50
Bitter, partisan rancor has characterized most discussion of
foreign policy in America in recent years. This is a long tradition that
has waxed and waned in intensity, depending on the perceived success or
lack thereof of the country's involvement in international affairs,
since the founding of the Republic. When this rancor runs high, it
encourages our enemies, confuses our friends, and makes difficult the
formulation and execution of any coherent U.S. foreign policy.
But there is another tradition as well, involving agreement on
broad principles--the Monroe Doctrine, the containment policy of the
Cold War--as well as restraint in name-calling and judging
motivations--dissent is not termed un-American and intelligence mistakes
are not called lies--combined with a vigorous bipartisanship that
actively seeks consensus. When this tradition is ascendant, as it was,
for example, in the 1940s, American foreign policy tends to be more
successful than when it is not, for example, in the Vietnam era and
since 2003.
This book, as defined in its introduction, is "an experiment
to see if a prominent Democrat and a prominent Republican--speaking only
for themselves and not for or against either party--could find common
ground for a new start in foreign policy." The experiment
succeeded, and it produced what its dust jacket blurb correctly calls
"a deeply informed and provocative book that defines the center of
responsible opinion on American foreign policy."
The book consists of a series of discussions during the spring of
2008 between Zbigniew Brzezinski, National Security Advisor to Jimmy
Carter, and Brent Scowcroft, who held the same position under Gerald
Ford and George H. W. Bush, moderated by David Ignatius, a Washington
Post columnist and former Executive Editor of the International Herald
Tribune.
Brzezinski and Scowcroft might be considered foreign policy
realists, in that they tend to begin with consideration of the national
interest. But they both resist categorization as realists or idealists,
agreeing that U.S. policy must strike a balance between the extremes of
either school, combining power with principle, acknowledging
limitations, and recognizing that everything can't be done at once.
They agree that the next president should stress bipartisanship in
his foreign policy.
Here are some other important points of agreement:
* A Cold War mindset that obscures new global realities, including
the reduced role of the nation state, persists among U.S. policymakers.
* The United States has become "too frightened in this age of
terrorism, too hunkered down behind physical and intellectual
walls."
* While the "global center of gravity" is shifting toward
Asia, a strong Atlantic community is vital for the United States as well
as Europe, and the West will remain pre-eminent for some time.
* Chances are good that China can be peacefully assimilated into
the international system, and there is no need for the United States to
choose between China and Japan as its principal "anchor point"
in Asia.
* A vigorous U.S. effort to solve the Israeli-Palestinian problem
should be a high priority for the next president.
* In spite of its limitations and current problems, the United
States remains the country most able to "exercise enlightened
leadership" for the global community.
There are also some significant points of disagreement:
* While both publicly opposed the invasion of Iraq before it was
launched, Scowcroft believes it has "created new conditions"
requiring that we stabilize the situation before leaving. As he put it,
"I think simply withdrawing is an impediment to a solution. And
Zbig thinks it helps."
* Both believe that Russia is trying to re-assert pre-eminence in
the territory of the former USSR, especially Georgia and Ukraine; both
are skeptical of the utility of putting missile defense installations in
Poland and the Czech Republic; but Brzezinski favors the option of NATO membership for Ukraine while Scowcroft opposes it.
* Scowcroft is more concerned than Brzezinski about a nuclear Iran,
fearing that "we stand on the cusp of a great flowering of
proliferation if Iran is not contained in its attempt to develop a
capability for nuclear weapons;" but neither seems to have a good
prescription for thwarting this development other that continuing the
thus-far-futile effort to mobilize greater international pressure.
These wise men agree that U.S. policy has not adapted well to a
world that is changing in fundamental ways. They want to "restore a
confident, forward-looking America," and they are optimistic about
the country's future--but only if it "can rise to the
challenge of dealing with the world as it now is, not as we wish it to
be."