Diplomacy.
Jones, David T.
Diplomacy
By Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY)
Text: http://nationalinterest.org/commentary/rand-paul-diplomacy-9714
On January 14, Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) addressed the 20th
anniversary of the Center for the National Interest. In a 1,500 word
address, Senator Paul positioned himself as a centrist committed to
diplomacy as a first resort in addressing global problems, both
generally and specifically.
Senator Paul is frequently characterized as a libertarian, with
antediluvian foreign policy leanings emphasizing isolation. During his
presentation, he worked hard to gainsay such pigeonholing.
* He stressed commitment to trade, notably trade with China as not
only improving U.S. economics, but making war less likely;
* He endorsed George Kennan's "containment" approach
("containment is not a dead letter"), hypothesizing that
something comparable will be necessary to address the "worldwide
menace of radical jihad;"
* He praised the agreement to divest Syria of chemical weapons
without military action. Somewhat naively he hypothesized that "the
Syrian chemical-weapons solution could be exactly what we need to
resolve the standoff in Iran and North Korea;"
* He endorsed former Defense Secretary Robert Gates' new
volume with its conclusion that "Our foreign and national security
policy has become too militarized, the use of force too easy for
presidents;"
* He cited Colin Powell that war should be the politics of last
resort. "We should have a purpose our people understand and
support;" and
* He emphasized the need for both sides in a negotiation to think
they have "won" coupled with the need to provide a graceful
exit for the weaker partner in a negotiation.
Noting his appointment to the Foreign Relations Committee with some
amusement, he suggested that he liked "the name-calling,"
i.e., the need to label yourself appropriately before opponents label
you invidiously. He skewered neoconservatives claiming they label
"anyone who doesn't clamor first for the military option is
somehow an isolationist."
And he repeatedly emphasized that diplomacy should be our first
resort. He excoriated those rejecting negotiation because
"foreigners" can't be trusted. These are neoisolationists
for whom "diplomacy is distrusted and war is, if not the first
option, the preferred option."
Much of Senator Paul's speech is sound bites/aphorisms
--"There are really no new ideas there are only ideas that are
new to you."
--"I'm not sure that the world doesn't change by the
time you return to the same spot twice."
--"I don't naively think that dialogue always works, but
I believe we should avoid the rigidity of saying that dialogue never
works."
--"The technological ease of war though, dulls our ability to
be statesmen."
--"There is certainly a time for war. But the threshold should
be high, and the cause clear."
Senator Paul's foreign policy speech would get a ringing
endorsement from international relations generalists and "Getting
to 'yes'" seminars. It is a clear attempt to position
himself as a serious credentialed presidential "candidate" and
deserves attention from those who wonder whether he would practice what
he preaches, but want to hear what he says.