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Military

14 November 2001

Text: State's Haass on Multilateralism, Terrorism

(Bush seeking to forge multilateralism in global era) (3350)
Expansive multilateral cooperation offers the best hope of defeating
the scourge of international terrorism, says Ambassador Richard Haass,
the State Department's director of policy planning.
"Multilateral cooperation is essential to success on the three major
fronts in the campaign against terrorism," Haass said November 14 at
an international conference on foreign policy and multilateralism.
The first major front, Haass said, is the destruction of the al-Qaida
terrorist network in Afghanistan and the removal of the radical
Taliban regime. The second front is the commitment to the political
and economic reconstruction of Afghanistan, he said.
Finally, he said, the third front is a multilateral campaign to find,
stop, and defeat terrorism across the globe. "We began the campaign on
this, the broadest front, even before our operations in Afghanistan,"
he said.
"We will stop them. Our campaign against international terrorism does
not represent some sort of 'clash of civilizations.' Instead, it is a
clash between civilization and those who would destroy it," Haass
said.
Destroying terrorism at its root will require the full spectrum of
statecraft -- diplomatic, law enforcement, intelligence, public
information, economic, and military, he said.
Following are terms and abbreviations used in the text:
-- GATT: General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
-- OSCE: Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
-- NAFTA: North American Free Trade Agreement.
-- APEC: Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.
-- WTO: World Trade Organization.
-- UN: United Nations.
-- UNHCR: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
-- G-8: Group of Eight major industrialized nations.
Following is a text of Haass' remarks:
(begin text)
Multilateralism for a Global Era
By Ambassador Richard N. Haass
Director, Policy Planning Staff, U.S. Department of State
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Conference: 
"After September 11: American Foreign Policy and the Multilateral
Agenda"
November 14, 2001
Woman's Democratic Club Conference Center
Washington, D.C.
Debates over the role of multilateralism have been a recurring element
in discussions of our foreign policy since the country's founding in
the eighteenth century. At their core, these debates have hinged upon
how we answer a basic, enduring question: how should the United States
work with others to foster a world conducive to our interests and
values.
How Americans have answered that question helped define the failures
and successes of U.S. foreign policy in the last century. Following
the First World War, the failure to sustain multilateral cooperation
helped pave the way to the Great Depression and the Second World War.
Following the Second World War, American success in forging new
multilateral arrangements like the United Nations, NATO, GATT, and the
Bretton Woods system, helped sustain our relationships with allies,
our prosperity, and our strength through the long decades of the Cold
War.
The debate over multilateralism took on new urgency in the wake of the
Soviet Union's demise. Ironically, multilateralism risked becoming a
victim of its own success. Victory in the Cold War called into
question the continued relevance of the multilateral institutions like
NATO that had served us so well when we confronted a qualitatively
different set of international challenges. Moreover, with the end of
the Cold War, the United States became and has since remained the
world's preeminent nation state in all measures of power and without a
"peer competitor" in sight. For some, multilateralism's necessity
seemed diminished.
During the past decade, Americans thus searched to find the
appropriate role for multilateralism. We worked with our partners
abroad to begin revising the multilateral institutions of the Cold War
era to ensure their relevance in the future, for instance, by
expanding NATO and strengthening the OSCE. Likewise, we worked to
extend and deepen cooperation in new domains with the creation of
NAFTA, APEC, and the WTO, and to integrate new partners-and even
former adversaries-into these multilateral arrangements.
We have learned from this decade of experience. Today, at the dawn of
a new century, the Bush Administration is forging a hard-headed
multilateralism suited to the demands of this global era, one that
will both promote our values and interests now and help structure an
international environment to sustain them well into the future.
Fundamentals matter. A successful foreign policy begins by
comprehending both the realities of power-its potential and its
limitations-and the nature of an era's challenges and opportunities.
We have not yet coined a catchy word or phrase to describe this period
of international relations. Nevertheless, we recognize that many of
the defining features of this increasingly globalized era are
intrinsically transnational. Equally important, they often defy the
efforts of any single country to solve alone-even a country as
powerful as the United States.
Just consider some of the important foreign policy tasks before us:
-- stymieing the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction that
threaten to wreck havoc upon civilization;
-- promoting world trade and a robust international financial
architecture essential for our continued prosperity;
-- combating the spread of HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases that
not only pose health threats, but destroy societies, devastate
economies, and destabilize entire regions;
-- maintaining around the globe forward momentum for good governance,
rule of law, and democracy that expands the sphere of individual
freedom and development;
-- integrating new countries and peoples into the global economic
order so that they can reap its rewards instead of being left behind;
and
-- coping with state failures that endanger in this world of
increasing interconnections and unprecedented mobility not only their
neighbors, but also -- as we have tragically seen in the case of
Afghanistan -- American lives and our way of life.
This, of course, brings me to our preeminent national security
challenge-international terrorism. As the events of September 11th
tragically reminded us, international terrorism is globalization run
amok. Al-Qaida and its cousin terrorist networks have twisted the
benefits and conveniences of an increasingly open, integrated,
globalized world to serve their destructive agenda. And they have
demonstrated that globalization, despite its enormous benefits, brings
new vulnerabilities to the United States as well.
We should take Usama bin Laden, his minions, and their Taliban
supporters at their word. They seek to drive the United States out of
the Middle East so that they can topple regimes throughout the region
and destroy Israel; then they aspire to impose their rule. They
consider the United Nations a "tool of crime." They cannot abide by
the personal freedoms we take for granted-freedom of speech, freedom
of religion, the freedom of women to be educated. They will continue
their indiscriminate slaughter of innocents of all races, creeds, and
nationalities until they achieve their objectives or they are stopped.
We will stop them. Our campaign against international terrorism does
not represent some sort of "clash of civilizations." Instead, it is a
clash between civilization and those who would destroy it.
We understand that the campaign will be long and difficult. To destroy
terrorist networks root and branch, we will employ the full spectrum
of the tools of statecraft -- diplomatic, law enforcement,
intelligence, public information, economic, and military. And we
recognize that expansive multilateral cooperation offers the best hope
of triumphing over the international terrorist scourge. As President
Bush stressed last week: "The defeat of terror requires an
international coalition of unprecedented scope and cooperation."
Indeed, such cooperation provides the foundation for the campaign
against terrorism's success not just today, but in the years ahead.
Multilateral cooperation is essential to success on the three major
fronts in the campaign against terrorism: first, the predominantly
military front now in Afghanistan; second, the humanitarian,
political, and economic front of Afghan reconstruction; and, third,
the broad front against terrorism with a global reach that will
involve carefully tailored policies exploiting all the tools of
statecraft.
The first front: the destruction of the al-Qaida network in
Afghanistan and the removal of the Taliban regime that has aided and
harbored those responsible for the September 11th attacks as well as
other terrorist acts. A little more than five weeks ago, we began our
military campaign in Afghanistan. We could not wage this sustained
campaign by ourselves. We need basing and over-flight rights for our
forces operating in the region. We also need critical intelligence
above and beyond satellite photos and communications intercepts,
intelligence involving human contact-that which only those on the
ground can provide. Our allies are also supporting the campaign by
providing essential logistical support, increased security at American
facilities worldwide, and their own forces to backfill when ours have
to be redeployed. With each passing day, more countries offer forces
to join our military operations against al-Qaida and the Taliban and
in favor of securing liberated areas. Coalition members and
international organizations are also offering much needed diplomatic
and economic support to the frontline states in the region to ensure
their stability and security in these difficult times. The Taliban's
retreat marks success not just for the Afghan opposition or us, but
for the entire international coalition.
The second front: our commitment to the political and economic
reconstruction of Afghanistan so that it will never again be a safe
haven for the likes of Usama bin Laden, a source for drugs or
refugees, or a threat to its region. Our combined humanitarian,
political, and economic efforts on this front are all rooted in
multilateral cooperation.
Before the current crisis, the United States was already the world's
largest contributor of humanitarian aid to the Afghan people, who have
been starved by the Taliban -- sometimes through deliberate policies,
such as harassing and forcing out Western aid workers. Now, we have
redoubled our efforts. At each stage, we have worked closely with the
countries in the region and international organizations such as the
World Food Program and the UNHCR to address the Afghans' full range of
humanitarian needs.
We are also now heavily engaged in the multilateral efforts to found a
transitional government to replace the Taliban, one that will
represent the interests of all the people of Afghanistan and move the
country toward a stable, peaceful future. I can personally attest that
our approach is multilateral to the core. As the U.S. Coordinator for
Afghanistan's future, I am in regular contact with UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan, his special envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, and the
representatives of nearly every country interested in Afghanistan's
fate. On Monday at the United Nations, for instance, I participated in
discussions of Afghanistan's future within the 6+2 Group, comprising
Afghanistan's immediate neighbors as well as the United States and
Russia. And we are working closely as well with our European and Asian
allies and our partners in the region to help the Afghan opposition to
establish a transitional government framework.
The economic reconstruction of Afghanistan must move in step with the
political. Here too our approach is fundamentally multilateral. The
United States is now working with other donors to create a group to
support the long-term reconstruction of Afghanistan. We hope that such
a group will harness the international community's resources and
channel them to build the economic foundations for a more stable
Afghanistan.
The third front: as President Bush has repeatedly stressed,
"Afghanistan is the beginning of our efforts in the world.... [But] we
will not rest until terrorist groups of global reach have been found,
have been stopped, and have been defeated." Once again, our strategy
is multilateral. We began the campaign on this, the broadest front,
even before our operations in Afghanistan. We must remember that
al-Qaida cells exist in over sixty countries around the world --
including our own. Combating other terrorist groups with global reach
-- as well as their supporters wherever and whoever they may be --
demands that we work cooperatively with our coalition partners to
maximize the effectiveness of our efforts -- be they diplomatic,
economic, intelligence, law enforcement, strategic information, or
military.
These efforts have already had impact. We are working aggressively
with other countries to choke off terrorists' financial lifelines,
both by fully implementing U.N. Security Council Resolution 1373 and
by freezing the assets of those individuals and entities listed in
Executive Order 13244. Over 150 nations have joined us in these
efforts, together blocking tens of millions of dollars in potential
terrorist assets. Similarly, intelligence sharing and law enforcement
cooperation has led to numerous arrests and new leads around the
world. Just yesterday, for example, Spanish authorities arrested nine
suspected terrorists. Success in Afghanistan is likely to provide
further impetus to these efforts.
The challenge of terrorism is not transitory. Neither can be our
response. We must be prepared to use the full range of tools of
statecraft-from law enforcement and diplomacy to intelligence and
military operations -- now and in the future. We must therefore begin
creating the machinery to fight, in President Bush's words, "terrorism
in general." We must work to establish the frameworks for cooperation
that will make us and our partners less vulnerable to terrorism in the
future and better able to fight it when it does appear. We have
already taken the first steps in this direction, for instance, by
helping create a new counterterrorism subgroup to the G-8. But we have
only just begun.
Considered together, our efforts on these three fronts in the campaign
against terrorism -- our current operations in Afghanistan, our
efforts to ensure a better future for the Afghan people, and our fight
against terrorism with a global reach -- all highlight how
multilateral cooperation does not have to constrain us. Rather, such
cooperation can be a true force multiplier, enabling us to leverage
our assets in combination with others'.
When we step back from and reflect upon the campaign against
terrorism, it is possible to discern basic principles to guide our
approach to multilateralism in the coming years.
First and foremost, American leadership is fundamental. Without it,
multilateral initiatives can go astray -- or worse. We must be
resolute and confident once we have embarked upon a policy. Yet
leadership demands, President Bush has emphasized on many occasions, a
sense of humility. Leadership thus requires genuine consultation. We
must respect the values, judgment, and interests of our friends and
partners. We will need their support not just today and tomorrow, but
in months and years to come.
In forming multilateral initiatives in this era, we should not be
shackled by the memories of past animosities or prickly relations.
Ultimately, we are interested in results. We thus must continue to try
to integrate countries like Russia, China, and India into our efforts
to create a better future.
We cannot expect every nation to make the same commitment to a
coalition. Differences in capabilities, location, foreign policy
outlook, and domestic concerns make this impracticable. Instead, we
should expect our coalitions to be dynamic and embrace the benefits of
the division of labor. Some multilateral efforts will become embedded
in more formal institutional structures, but others will change
through time as the particular challenges wax, wane, and evolve. Even
in the campaign against terrorism we have, as Secretary of Defense
Rumsfeld says, not "a single coalition," but "revolving coalitions
that will evolve and change over time depending on the activity and
the circumstance of the country."
Our desire to work cooperatively with others does not mean, however, a
willingness to agree to unsound efforts just because they are popular.
Empty or ineffective but high-profile agreements do not make for a
sound foreign policy. As we know from our own history, majorities are
not always right. We also cannot forget that the United States has
unique global responsibilities. And if we are to meet them
effectively, we may not always be able to go along with measures that
many or even most others support. We are willing to listen, learn, and
modify policies when we hear compelling arguments. But we all
recognize that even the closest of friends will sometimes disagree on
what constitutes the best policy.
We have, moreover, demonstrated that we can and will act alone when
necessary. Our right to self-defense is unquestioned. Secretary of
State Powell has repeatedly underscored this fact to prevent any
misunderstanding. As he testified to the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee in October, "There are no arrangements within this coalition
which in any way, shape, fashion or form constrain the President and
the exercise of his constitutional responsibilities to defend the
United States of America and to defend the people of the United
States."
By the same token, we do not take lightly the costs to ourselves and
to others when we forego participation in some multilateral
initiative. In the future, we will give consultations every reasonable
chance to produce an acceptable compromise. But if we conclude that
agreement is beyond reach, we will explain why and do our best to put
forth alternatives.
In sum, multilateralism is not an end in itself, but it is often a
necessary means to our ends. A commitment to multilateralism need not
constrain our options -- done right, it expands them.
The campaign against terrorism embodies these basic principles.
However, we need not -- indeed we must not -- limit our
multilateralism to counterterrorism. We must confront a series of
transnational challenges including the proliferation of weapons of
mass destruction, the spread of HIV/AIDS, and the trafficking in
humans and drugs that we cannot tackle by ourselves. This will require
that we work with others to reinvigorate our traditional alliances,
recast relationships with former adversaries, and integrate more
countries and peoples into a mutually beneficial international order.
So even while the campaign against terrorism must be our top national
security priority, it cannot be our only one.
The most basic challenge facing American foreign policy, therefore, is
to continue in the midst of this immediate and pressing crisis to make
progress across the full spectrum of issues that will affect our
future. We must continue to strive to integrate other countries and
organizations into arrangements that are necessary to sustain a world
consistent with U.S. values and interests.
This is a demanding task. Some might ask whether is too demanding. How
in the midst of a major conflict can we expect to do it?
We have done it before. We did it during the Second World War when
Americans helped found the United Nations and the Bretton Woods
system. And we did it again during the Korean War. Fifty years ago
this month, for instance, Secretary of State Dean Acheson led an
American delegation to Paris to discuss with our allies how to add
sinew and muscle to the skeleton of NATO, how to reintegrate their
former mortal enemy Germany into the West, how to fortify the still
fragile democracies of Europe so that they could be self-sustaining
and prosperous when Marshall Plan support ended, and how to build upon
the success of the Schuman Plan and foster further political and
economic integration in Europe.
Today we are reaping the rewards of such investments made fifty years
ago as our allies come to our aid when our homeland has been attacked.
Witness NATO's unprecedented invocation of Article 5 of the NATO
Treaty, Australia's invocation of Article 4 of the ANZUS Treaty, and
how both have matched words with deeds. Witness Japan's historic
support for the campaign against terrorism. Witness our Western
Hemispheric neighbors' invocation of the Rio Treaty and their
commitment to combat terrorism in our backyard. Symbolizing this
solidarity and how an attack against one is an attack against all,
today NATO AWACs manned by Germans, Danes, Belgians, and other
nationalities fly overhead protecting American airspace. Such are the
benefits of consistent, forward-looking, and realistic
multilateralism.
Our challenge is to stay true to this tradition of hard-headed
multilateralism. We need to resist the temptation of unilateralism,
which only in special circumstances can be effective in this
globalized world. At the same time, we need to resist going along to
get along-that's soft-headed multilateralism. Like Goldilocks, we need
to get it just right. Hard-headed multilateralism is not an
alternative to leadership, but its manifestation.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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