From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sun Sep 01 2002 - 21:51:44 MDT
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}THE NEXT WORLD ORDER 
by NICHOLAS LEMANN 
The Bush Administration may have a brand-new doctrine of 
power. 
Issue of 2002-04-01
Posted 2002-03-25 
When there is a change of command”and not just in 
government”the new people often persuade themselves that the 
old people were much worse than anyone suspected. This feeling 
seems especially intense in the Bush Administration, perhaps 
because Bill Clinton has been bracketed by a father-son team. It's 
easy for people in the Administration to believe that, after an 
unfortunate eight-year interlude, the Bush family has resumed its 
governance”and about time, too.
The Bush Administration's sense that the Clinton years were a 
waste, or worse, is strongest in the realms of foreign policy and 
military affairs. Republicans tend to regard Democrats as 
untrustworthy in defense and foreign policy, anyway, in ways that 
coincide with what people think of as Clinton's weak points: an 
eagerness to please, a lack of discipline. Condoleezza Rice, Bush's 
national-security adviser, wrote an article in Foreign Affairs two 
years ago in which she contemptuously accused Clinton of "an 
extraordinary neglect of the fiduciary responsibilities of the 
commander in chief." Most of the top figures in foreign affairs in 
this Administration also served under the President's father. They 
took office last year, after what they regard as eight years of 
small-time flyswatting by Clinton, thinking that they were picking 
up where they'd left off.
Not long ago, I had lunch with”sorry!”a senior Administration 
foreign-policy official, at a restaurant in Washington called the 
Oval Room. Early in the lunch, he handed me a twenty-seven- 
page report, whose cover bore the seal of the Department of 
Defense, an outline map of the world, and these words:
Defense Strategy for the 1990s: 
The Regional Defense Strategy 
Secretary of Defense 
Dick Cheney 
January 1993 
One of the difficulties of working at the highest level of 
government is communicating its drama. Actors, professional 
athletes, and even elected politicians train for years, go through a 
great winnowing, and then perform publicly. People who have 
titles like Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense are just as 
ambitious and competitive, have worked just as long and hard, 
and are often playing for even higher stakes”but what they do all 
day is go to meetings and write memos and prepare briefings. 
How, possibly, to explain that some of the documents, including 
the report that the senior official handed me, which was physically 
indistinguishable from a high-school term paper, represent the 
government version of playing Carnegie Hall?
After the fall of the Berlin Wall, Dick Cheney, then the Secretary 
of Defense, set up a "shop," as they say, to think about American 
foreign policy after the Cold War, at the grand strategic level. The 
project, whose existence was kept quiet, included people who are 
now back in the game, at a higher level: among them, Paul 
Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of Defense; Lewis Libby, 
Cheney's chief of staff; and Eric Edelman, a senior foreign-policy 
adviser to Cheney”generally speaking, a cohesive group of 
conservatives who regard themselves as bigger-thinking, tougher-
minded, and intellectually bolder than most other people in 
Washington. (Donald Rumsfeld, the Secretary of Defense, shares 
these characteristics, and has been closely associated with Cheney 
for more than thirty years.) Colin Powell, then the chairman of the 
Joint Chiefs of Staff, mounted a competing, and presumably more 
ideologically moderate, effort to reimagine American foreign 
policy and defense. A date was set”May 21, 1990”on which 
each team would brief Cheney for an hour; Cheney would then 
brief President Bush, after which Bush would make a foreign-
policy address unveiling the new grand strategy.
Everybody worked for months on the "five-twenty-one brief," with 
a sense that the shape of the post-Cold War world was at stake. 
When Wolfowitz and Powell arrived at Cheney's office on May 
21st, Wolfowitz went first, but his briefing lasted far beyond the 
allotted hour, and Cheney (a hawk who, perhaps, liked what he 
was hearing) did not call time on him. Powell didn't get to present 
his alternate version of the future of the United States in the world 
until a couple of weeks later. Cheney briefed President Bush, 
using material mostly from Wolfowitz, and Bush prepared his 
major foreign-policy address. But he delivered it on August 2, 
1990, the day that Iraq invaded Kuwait, so nobody noticed.
The team kept working. In 1992, the Times got its hands on a 
version of the material, and published a front-page story saying 
that the Pentagon envisioned a future in which the United States 
could, and should, prevent any other nation or alliance from 
becoming a great power. A few weeks of controversy ensued 
about the Bush Administration's hawks being 
"unilateral"”controversy that Cheney's people put an end to with 
denials and the counter-leak of an edited, softer version of the 
same material.
As it became apparent that Bush was going to lose to Clinton, the 
Cheney team's efforts took on the quality of a parting shot. The 
report that the senior official handed me at lunch had been issued 
only a few days before Clinton took office. It is a somewhat 
bland, opaque document”a "scrubbed," meaning unclassified, 
version of something more candid”but it contained the essential 
ideas of "shaping," rather than reacting to, the rest of the world, 
and of preventing the rise of other superpowers. Its tone is one of 
skepticism about diplomatic partnerships. A more forthright 
version of the same ideas can be found in a short book titled 
"From Containment to Global Leadership?," which Zalmay 
Khalilzad, who joined Cheney's team in 1991 and is now special 
envoy to Afghanistan, published a couple of years into the Clinton 
Administration, when he was out of government. It recommends 
that the United States "preclude the rise of another global rival for 
the indefinite future." Khalilzad writes, "It is a vital U.S. interest 
to preclude such a development”i.e., to be willing to use force if 
necessary for the purpose."
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
When George W. Bush was campaigning for President, he and the 
people around him didn't seem to be proposing a great doctrinal 
shift, along the lines of the policy of containment of the Soviet 
Union's sphere of influence which the United States maintained 
during the Cold War. In his first major foreign-policy speech, 
delivered in November of 1999, Bush declared that "a President 
must be a clear-eyed realist," a formulation that seems to connote 
an absence of world-remaking ambition. "Realism" is exactly the 
foreign-policy doctrine that Cheney's Pentagon team rejected, 
partly because it posits the impossibility of any one country's ever 
dominating world affairs for any length of time.
One gets many reminders in Washington these days of how much 
the terrorist attacks of September 11th have changed official 
foreign-policy thinking. Any chief executive, of either party, 
would probably have done what Bush has done so far”made war 
on the Taliban and Al Qaeda and enhanced domestic security. It is 
only now, six months after the attacks, that we are truly entering 
the realm of Presidential choice, and all indications are that Bush 
is going to use September 11th as the occasion to launch a new, 
aggressive American foreign policy that would represent a broad 
change in direction rather than a specific war on terrorism. All his 
rhetoric, especially in the two addresses he has given to joint 
sessions of Congress since September 11th, and all the 
information about his state of mind which his aides have leaked, 
indicate that he sees this as the nation's moment of destiny”a 
perception that the people around him seem to be encouraging, 
because it enhances Bush's stature and opens the way to more 
assertive policymaking.
Inside government, the reason September 11th appears to have 
been "a transformative moment," as the senior official I had lunch 
with put it, is not so much that it revealed the existence of a threat 
of which officials had previously been unaware as that it 
drastically reduced the American public's usual resistance to 
American military involvement overseas, at least for a while. The 
Clinton Administration, beginning with the "Black Hawk Down" 
operation in Mogadishu, during its first year, operated on the 
conviction that Americans were highly averse to casualties; the 
all-bombing Kosovo operation, in Clinton's next-to-last year, was 
the ideal foreign military adventure. Now that the United States 
has been attacked, the options are much broader. The senior 
official approvingly mentioned a 1999 study of casualty aversion 
by the Triangle Institute for Security Studies, which argued that 
the "mass public" is much less casualty-averse than the military or 
the civilian élite believes; for example, the study showed that the 
public would tolerate thirty thousand deaths in a military 
operation to prevent Iraq from acquiring weapons of mass 
destruction. (The American death total in the Vietnam War was 
about fifty-eight thousand.) September 11th presumably reduced 
casualty aversion even further.
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
Recently, I went to the White House to interview Condoleezza 
Rice. Rice's Foreign Affairs article from 2000 begins with this 
declaration: "The United States has found it exceedingly difficult 
to define its 'national interest' in the absence of Soviet power." I 
asked her whether that is still the case. "I think the difficulty has 
passed in defining a role," she said immediately. "I think 
September 11th was one of those great earthquakes that clarify 
and sharpen. Events are in much sharper relief." Like Bush, she 
said that opposing terrorism and preventing the accumulation of 
weapons of mass destruction "in the hands of irresponsible states" 
now define the national interest. (The latter goal, by the way, is 
new”in Bush's speech to Congress on September 20th, America's 
sole grand purpose was ending terrorism.) We talked in her West 
Wing office; its tall windows face the part of the White House 
grounds where television reporters do their standups. In her 
bearing, Rice seemed less crisply military than she does in public. 
She looked a little tired, but she was projecting a kind of 
missionary calm, rather than belligerence.
In the Foreign Affairs article, Rice came across as a classic realist, 
putting forth "the notions of power politics, great powers, and 
power balances" as the proper central concerns of the United 
States. Now she sounded as if she had moved closer to the one-
power idea that Cheney's Pentagon team proposed ten years 
ago”or, at least, to the idea that the other great powers are now 
in harmony with the United States, because of the terrorist attacks, 
and can be induced to remain so. "Theoretically, the realists 
would predict that when you have a great power like the United 
States it would not be long before you had other great powers 
rising to challenge it or trying to balance against it," Rice said. 
"And I think what you're seeing is that there's at least a 
predilection this time to move to productive and coöperative 
relations with the United States, rather than to try to balance the 
United States. I actually think that statecraft matters in how it all 
comes out. It's not all foreordained."
Rice said that she had called together the senior staff people of the 
National Security Council and asked them to think seriously about 
"how do you capitalize on these opportunities" to fundamentally 
change American doctrine, and the shape of the world, in the 
wake of September 11th. "I really think this period is analogous to 
1945 to 1947," she said”that is, the period when the containment 
doctrine took shape”"in that the events so clearly demonstrated 
that there is a big global threat, and that it's a big global threat to a 
lot of countries that you would not have normally thought of as 
being in the coalition. That has started shifting the tectonic plates 
in international politics. And it's important to try to seize on that 
and position American interests and institutions and all of that 
before they harden again."
The National Security Council is legally required to produce an 
annual document called the National Security Strategy, stating the 
over-all goals of American policy”another government report 
whose importance is great but not obvious. The Bush 
Administration did not produce one last year, as the Clinton 
Administration did not in its first year. Rice said that she is 
working on the report now.
"There are two ways to handle this document," she told me. "One 
is to do it in a kind of minimalist way and just get it out. But it's 
our view that, since this is going to be the first one for the Bush 
Administration, it's important. An awful lot has happened since 
we started this process, prior to 9/11. I can't give you a certain 
date when it's going to be out, but I would think sometime this 
spring. And it's important that it be a real statement of what the 
Bush Administration sees as the strategic direction that it's going."
It seems clear already that Rice will set forth the hope of a more 
dominant American role in the world than she might have a 
couple of years ago. Some questions that don't appear to be settled 
yet, but are obviously being asked, are how much the United 
States is willing to operate alone in foreign affairs, and how much 
change it is willing to try to engender inside other countries”and 
to what end, and with what means. The leak a couple of weeks 
ago of a new American nuclear posture, adding offensive 
capability against "rogue states," departed from decades of official 
adherence to a purely defensive position, and was just one 
indication of the scope of the reconsideration that is going on. Is 
the United States now in a position to be redrawing regional 
maps, especially in the Middle East, and replacing governments 
by force? Nobody thought that the Bush Administration would be 
thinking in such ambitious terms, but plainly it is, and with the 
internal debate to the right of where it was only a few months ago.
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
Just before the 2000 election, a Republican foreign-policy figure 
suggested to me that a good indication of a Bush Administration's 
direction in foreign affairs would be who got a higher-ranking job, 
Paul Wolfowitz or Richard Haass. Haass is another veteran of the 
first Bush Administration, and an intellectual like Wolfowitz, but 
much more moderate. In 1997, he published a book titled "The 
Reluctant Sheriff," in which he poked a little fun at Wolfowitz's 
famous strategy briefing of the early nineties (he called it the 
"Pentagon Paper") and disagreed with its idea that the United 
States should try to be the world's only great power over the long 
term. "For better or worse, such a goal is beyond our reach," Haass 
wrote. "It simply is not doable." Elsewhere in the book, he 
disagreed with another of the Wolfowitz team's main ideas, that of 
the United States expanding the "democratic zone of peace": 
"Primacy is not to be confused with hegemony. The United States 
cannot compel others to become more democratic." Haass argued 
that the United States is becoming less dominant in the world, not 
more, and suggested "a revival of what might be called traditional 
great-power politics."
Wolfowitz got a higher-ranking job than Haass: he is Deputy 
Secretary of Defense, and Haass is Director of Policy Planning for 
the State Department” in effect, Colin Powell's big-think guy. 
Recently, I went to see him in his office at the State Department. 
On the wall of his waiting room was an array of photographs of 
every past director of the policy-planning staff, beginning with 
George Kennan, the father of the containment doctrine and the 
first holder of the office that Haass now occupies.
It's another indication of the way things are moving in Washington 
that Haass seems to have become more hawkish. I mentioned the 
title of his book. "Using the word 'reluctant' was itself reflective of 
a period when foreign policy seemed secondary, and sacrificing 
for foreign policy was a hard case to make," he said. "It was 
written when Bill Clinton was saying, 'It's the economy, 
stupid'”not 'It's the world, stupid.' Two things are very different 
now. One, the President has a much easier time making the case 
that foreign policy matters. Second, at the top of the national-
security charts is this notion of weapons of mass destruction and 
terrorism."
I asked Haass whether there is a doctrine emerging that is as broad 
as Kennan's containment. "I think there is," he said. "What you're 
seeing from this Administration is the emergence of a new 
principle or body of ideas”I'm not sure it constitutes a 
doctrine”about what you might call the limits of sovereignty. 
Sovereignty entails obligations. One is not to massacre your own 
people. Another is not to support terrorism in any way. If a 
government fails to meet these obligations, then it forfeits some of 
the normal advantages of sovereignty, including the right to be left 
alone inside your own territory. Other governments, including the 
United States, gain the right to intervene. In the case of terrorism, 
this can even lead to a right of preventive, or peremptory, self-
defense. You essentially can act in anticipation if you have 
grounds to think it's a question of when, and not if, you're going to 
be attacked."
Clearly, Haass was thinking of Iraq. "I don't think the American 
public needs a lot of persuading about the evil that is Saddam 
Hussein," he said. "Also, I'd fully expect the President and his 
chief lieutenants to make the case. Public opinion can be changed. 
We'd be able to make the case that this isn't a discretionary action 
but one done in self-defense."
On the larger issue of the American role in the world, Haass was 
still maintaining some distance from the hawks. He had made a 
speech not long before called "Imperial America," but he told me 
that there is a big difference between imperial and imperialist. "I 
just think that we have to be a little bit careful," he said. "Great as 
our advantages are, there are still limits. We have to have allies. 
We can't impose our ideas on everyone. We don't want to be 
fighting wars alone, so we need others to join us. American 
leadership, yes; but not American unilateralism. It has to be 
multilateral. We can't win the war against terror alone. We can't 
send forces everywhere. It really does have to be a collaborative 
endeavor."
He stopped for a moment. "Is there a successor idea to 
containment? I think there is," he said. "It is the idea of 
integration. The goal of U.S. foreign policy should be to persuade 
the other major powers to sign on to certain key ideas as to how 
the world should operate: opposition to terrorism and weapons of 
mass destruction, support for free trade, democracy, markets. 
Integration is about locking them into these policies and then 
building institutions that lock them in even more."
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
The first, but by no means the last, obvious manifestation of a new 
American foreign policy will be the effort to remove Saddam 
Hussein. What the United States does in an Iraq operation will 
very likely dwarf what's been done so far in Afghanistan, both in 
terms of the scale of the operation itself and in terms of its 
aftermath.
Several weeks ago, Ahmad Chalabi, the head of the Iraqi National 
Congress, the Iraqi opposition party, came through Washington 
with an entourage of his aides. Chalabi went to the State 
Department and the White House to ask, evidently successfully, 
for more American funding. His main public event was a panel 
discussion at the American Enterprise Institute. Chalabi's leading 
supporter in town, Richard Perle, the prominent hawk and former 
Defense Department official, acted as moderator. Smiling and 
supremely confident, Perle opened the discussion by saying, 
"Evidence is mounting that the Administration is looking very 
carefully at strategies for dealing with Saddam Hussein." The war 
on terrorism, he said, will not be complete "until Saddam is 
successfully dealt with. And that means replacing his regime. . . . 
That action will be taken, I have no doubt."
Chalabi, who lives in London, is a charming, suave middle-aged 
man with a twinkle in his eye. He was dressed in a double-
breasted pin-striped suit and a striped shirt with a white spread 
collar. Although he and his supporters argue that the Iraqi 
National Congress, with sufficient American support, can defeat 
Saddam just as the Northern Alliance defeated the Taliban in 
Afghanistan, this view hasn't won over most people in 
Washington. It isn't just that Chalabi doesn't look the part of a 
rebel military leader ("He could fight you for the last petit four on 
the tray over tea at the Savoy, but that's about it," one skeptical 
former Pentagon official told me), or that he isn't in Iraq. It's also 
that Saddam's military is perhaps ten times the size that the 
Taliban's was, and has been quite successful at putting down 
revolts over the last decade. The United States left Iraq in 1991 
believing that Saddam might soon fall to an internal rebellion; 
Chalabi's supporters believe that Saddam is much weaker now, 
and that even signs that a serious operation was in the offing could 
finish him off. But non-true believers seem to be coming around 
to the idea that a military operation against Saddam would mean 
the deployment of anywhere from a hundred thousand to three 
hundred thousand American ground troops.
Kenneth Pollack, a former C.I.A. analyst who was the National 
Security Council's staff expert on Iraq during the last years of the 
Clinton Administration, recently caused a stir in the foreign-policy 
world by publishing an article in Foreign Affairs calling for war 
against Saddam. This was noteworthy because three years ago 
Pollack and two co-authors published an article, also in Foreign 
Affairs, arguing that the Iraqi National Congress was incapable of 
defeating Saddam. Pollack still doesn't think Chalabi can do the 
job. He believes that it would require a substantial American 
ground, air, and sea force, closer in size to the one we used in 
Kuwait in 1990-91 than to the one we are using now in 
Afghanistan.
Pollack, who is trim, quick, and crisp, is obviously a man who has 
given a briefing or two in his day. When I went to see him at his 
office in Washington, with a little encouragement he got out from 
behind his desk and walked over to his office wall, where three 
maps of the Middle East were hanging. "The only way to do it is a 
full-scale invasion," he said, using a pen as a pointer. "We're 
talking about two grand corps, two to three hundred thousand 
people altogether. The population is here, in the Tigris-Euphrates 
valley." He pointed to the area between Baghdad and Basra. 
"Ideally, you'd have the Saudis on board." He pointed to the Prince 
Sultan airbase, near Riyadh. "You could make Kuwait the base, 
but it's much easier in Saudi. You need to take western Iraq and 
southern Iraq"”pointing again”"because otherwise they'll fire 
Scuds at Israel and at the Saudi oil fields. You probably want to 
prevent Iraq from blowing up its own oil fields, so troops have to 
occupy them. And you need troops to defend the Kurds in 
northern Iraq." Point, point. "You go in as hard as you can, as fast 
as you can." He slapped his hand on the top of his desk. "You get 
the enemy to divide his forces, by threatening him in two places at 
once." His hand hit the desk again, hard. "Then you crush him." 
Smack.
That would be a reverberating blow. The United States has 
already removed the government of one country, Afghanistan, the 
new government is obviously shaky, and American military 
operations there are not completed. Pakistan, which before 
September 11th clearly met the new test of national 
unacceptability (it both harbors terrorists and has weapons of 
mass destruction), will also require long-term attention, since the 
country is not wholly under the control of the government, as the 
murder of Daniel Pearl demonstrated, and even parts of the 
government, like the intelligence service, may not be entirely 
under the control of the President. In Iraq, if America invades and 
brings down Saddam, a new government must be established”an 
enormous long-term task in a country where there is no obvious, 
plausible new leader. The prospective Iraq operation has drawn 
strong objections from the neighboring nations, one of which, 
Russia, is a nuclear superpower. An invasion would have a huge 
effect on the internal affairs of all the biggest Middle Eastern 
nations: Iran, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and even Egypt. Events have 
forced the Administration to become directly involved in the 
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, as it hadn't wanted to do. So it's really 
the entire region that is in play, in much the way that Europe was 
immediately after the Second World War.
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
In September, Bush rejected Paul Wolfowitz's recommendation of 
immediate moves against Iraq. That the President seems to have 
changed his mind is an indication, in part, of the bureaucratic skill 
of the Administration's conservatives. "These guys are relentless," 
one former official, who is close to the high command at the State 
Department, told me. "Resistance is futile." The conservatives' 
other weapon, besides relentlessness, is intellectualism. Colin 
Powell tends to think case by case, and since September 11th the 
conservatives have outflanked him by producing at least the 
beginning of a coherent, hawkish world view whose acceptance 
practically requires invading Iraq. If the United States applies the 
doctrines of Cheney's old Pentagon team, "shaping" and 
expanding "the zone of democracy," the implications would 
extend far beyond that one operation.
The outside experts on the Middle East who have the most 
credibility with the Administration seem to be Bernard Lewis, of 
Princeton, and Fouad Ajami, of the Johns Hopkins School of 
Advanced International Studies, both of whom see the Arab 
Middle East as a region in need of radical remediation. Lewis was 
invited to the White House in December to brief the senior 
foreign-policy staff. "One point he made is, Look, in that part of 
the world, nothing matters more than resolute will and force," the 
senior official I had lunch with told me”in other words, the 
United States needn't proceed gingerly for fear of inflaming the 
"Arab street," as long as it is prepared to be strong. The senior 
official also recommended as interesting thinkers on the Middle 
East Charles Hill, of Yale, who in a recent essay declared, "Every 
regime of the Arab-Islamic world has proved a failure," and Reuel 
Marc Gerecht, of the American Enterprise Institute, who 
published an article in The Weekly Standard about the need for a 
change of regime in Iran and Syria. (Those goals, Gerecht told me 
when we spoke, could be accomplished through pressure short of 
an invasion.)
Several people I spoke with predicted that most, or even all, of the 
nations that loudly oppose an invasion of Iraq would privately 
cheer it on, if they felt certain that this time the Americans were 
really going to finish the job. One purpose of Vice-President 
Cheney's recent diplomatic tour of the region was to offer 
assurances on that matter, while gamely absorbing all the public 
criticism of an Iraq operation. In any event, the Administration 
appears to be committed to acting forcefully in advance of the 
world's approval. When I spoke to Condoleezza Rice, she said that 
the United States should assemble "coalitions of the willing" to 
support its actions, rather than feel it has to work within the 
existing infrastructure of international treaties and organizations. 
An invasion of Iraq would test that policy in more ways than one: 
the Administration would be betting that it can continue to 
eliminate Al Qaeda cells in countries that publicly opposed the 
Iraq operation.
When the Administration submitted its budget earlier this year, it 
asked for a forty-eight-billion-dollar increase in defense spending 
for fiscal 2003, which begins in October, 2002. Much of that sum 
would go to improve military pay and benefits, but ten billion 
dollars of it is designated as an unspecified contingency fund for 
further operations in the war on terrorism. That's probably at least 
the initial funding for an invasion of Iraq.
This spring, the Administration will be talking to other countries 
about the invasion, trying to secure basing and overflight 
privileges, while Bush builds up a rhetorical case for it by giving 
speeches about the unacceptability of developing weapons of 
mass destruction. A drama involving weapons inspections in Iraq 
will play itself out over the spring and summer, and will end with 
the United States declaring that the terms that Saddam offers for 
the inspections, involving delays and restrictions, are 
unacceptable. Then, probably in the late summer or early fall, the 
enormous troop positioning, which will take months, will begin. 
The Administration obviously feels confident that the United 
States can effectively parry whatever aggressive actions Saddam 
takes during the troop buildup, and hopes that its moves will 
destabilize Iraq enough to cause the Republican Guard, the 
military key to the country, to turn against Saddam and topple him 
on its own. But the chain of events leading inexorably to a full-
scale American invasion, if it hasn't already begun, evidently will 
begin soon.
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
Lewis (Scooter) Libby, who was the principal drafter of Cheney's 
future-of-the-world documents during the first Bush 
Administration, now works in an office in the Old Executive 
Office Building, overlooking the West Wing, where he has a 
second, smaller office. A packet of public-relations material 
prompted by the recent paperback publication of his 1996 novel, 
"The Apprentice," quotes the Times' calling him "Dick Cheney's 
Dick Cheney," which seems like an apt description: he appears 
absolutely sure of himself, and, whether by coincidence or as a 
result of the influence of his boss, speaks in a tough, confidential, 
gravelly rumble. Like Condoleezza Rice and Bush himself, he 
gives the impression of having calmly accepted the idea that the 
project of war and reconstruction which the Administration has 
now taken on may be a little exhausting for those charged with 
carrying it out but is unquestionably right, the only truly prudent 
course.
When I went to see Libby, not long ago, I asked him whether, 
before September 11th, American policy toward terrorism should 
have been different. He went to his desk and got out a large black 
loose-leaf binder, filled with typewritten sheets interspersed with 
foldout maps of the Middle East. He looked through it for a long 
minute, formulating his answer.
"Let us stack it up," he said at last. "Somalia, 1993; 1994, the 
discovery of the Al Qaeda-related plot in the Philippines; 1993, 
the World Trade Center, first bombing; 1993, the attempt to 
assassinate President Bush, former President Bush, and the lack of 
response to that, the lack of a serious response to that; 1995, the 
Riyadh bombing; 1996, the Khobar bombing; 1998, the Kenyan 
embassy bombing and the Tanzanian embassy bombing; 1999, the 
plot to launch millennium attacks; 2000, the bombing of the Cole. 
Throughout this period, infractions on inspections by the Iraqis, 
and eventually the withdrawal of the entire inspection regime; and 
the failure to respond significantly to Iraqi incursions in the 
Kurdish areas. No one would say these challenges posed easy 
problems, but if you take that long list and you ask, 'Did we 
respond in a way which discouraged people from supporting 
terrorist activities, or activities clearly against our interests? Did 
we help to shape the environment in a way which discouraged 
further aggressions against U.S. interests?,' many observers 
conclude no, and ask whether it was then easier for someone like 
Osama bin Laden to rise up and say credibly, 'The Americans 
don't have the stomach to defend themselves. They won't take 
casualties to defend their interests. They are morally weak.' "
Libby insisted that the American response to September 11th has 
not been standard or foreordained. "Look at what the President 
has done in Afghanistan," he said, "and look at his speech to the 
joint session of Congress"”meaning the State of the Union 
Message, in January. "He made it clear that it's an important area. 
He made it clear that we believe in expanding the zone of 
democracy even in this difficult part of the world. He made it 
clear that we stand by our friends and defend our interests. And he 
had the courage to identify those states which present a problem, 
and to begin to build consensus for action that would need to be 
taken if there is not a change of behavior on their part. Take the 
Afghan case, for example. There are many other courses that the 
President could have taken. He could have waited for juridical 
proof before we responded. He could have engaged in long 
negotiations with the Taliban. He could have failed to seek a new 
relationship with Pakistan, based on its past nuclear tests, or been 
so afraid of weakening Pakistan that we didn't seek its help. This 
list could go on to twice or three times the length I've mentioned 
so far. But, instead, the President saw an opportunity to refashion 
relations while standing up for our interests. The problem is 
complex, and we don't know yet how it will end, but we have 
opened new prospects for relations not only with Afghanistan, as 
important as it was as a threat, but with the states of Central Asia, 
Pakistan, Russia, and, as it may develop, with the states of 
Southwest Asia more generally."
We moved on to Iraq, and the question of what makes Saddam 
Hussein unacceptable, in the Administration's eyes. "The issue is 
not inspections," Libby said. "The issue is the Iraqis' promise not 
to have weapons of mass destruction, their promise to recognize 
the boundaries of Kuwait, their promise not to threaten other 
countries, and other promises that they made in '91, and a number 
of U.N. resolutions, including all the other problems I listed. 
Whether it was wise or not”and that is the subject of 
debate”Iraq was given a second chance to abide by international 
norms. It failed to take that chance then, and annually for the next 
ten years."
"What's your level of confidence," I asked him, "that the current 
regime will, in fact, change its behavior in a way that you will be 
satisfied by?"
He ran his hand over his face and then gave me a direct gaze and 
spoke slowly and deliberately. "There is no basis in Iraq's past 
behavior to have confidence in good-faith efforts on their part to 
change their behavior." {PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Wed Sep 25 2002 - 13:28:55 MDT