17 January 2001
Five Foreign Policy Steps Recommended to Incoming Bush Team
National Security Advisor Sandy Berger has recommended several foreign
policy steps that the incoming Bush administration could immediately
take, "both to seize the opportunities so plainly ahead, and to signal
to the world that there will be no fundamental shift in America's
purpose" as the new administration reviews the global role of the
United States.
In a speech January 17 in Washington at the United States Institute of
Peace, Berger recommended that the Bush administration:
- "Give our European allies a clear sign that there will be no change
in our commitment to NATO, its missions, and its next round of
expansion."
- "Make clear to our allies in Asia that we will explore the
opportunity presented by North Korea's emergence from isolation."
- "Tell our partners in the Hemisphere that we want to finish
negotiations on a Free Trade Area of the Americans by 2003, so it can
enter into force by 2005."
- "In preparing your first budget, signal the world that our
contributions to win the fight against global poverty will continue to
rise."
- "Finally, seize the chance to work with Russia to reduce nuclear
arsenals without abandoning negotiated agreements. One good way would
be to move with the Congress to repeal legislation that prevents us
from going below the START I level of 6000 warheads while we bring
START II into force and negotiate much lower levels in START III."
Berger said "the overriding reality for the new team will remain that
American leadership, in cooperation with our friends and allies, is
essential to a more secure, peaceful, and prosperous world."
Following is the text of Berger's remarks, as prepared for delivery:
The White House
Office of the Press Secretary
January 17, 2001
As Prepared for Delivery
Remarks by Samuel R. Berger
Assistant to the President ror National Security Affairs
The United States Institute of Peace Washington, D.C.
A FOREIGN POLICY FOR THE GLOBAL AGE
In three days, I will end my tenure as National Security Advisor,
grateful for the opportunity President Clinton and the American people
have given me to serve at this extraordinary moment in our history. I
appreciate this forum to look back on these past eight years and, just
as important, to look forward to the challenges ahead.
Let me begin with the extraordinary year just ended. There was China's
agreement to join the WTO, the victory of an opposition party in
Mexico, the downfall of Milosevic, the peace we helped broker between
Ethiopia and Eritrea, the President's historic visits to India and
Vietnam, our success in funding debt relief and reforming the UN dues
structure so we could finally repair our relationship with that
institution.
Of course, the year past had its share of tragedies and
disappointments. Sitting at the Norfolk Naval Base with survivors from
the USS Cole only reinforced the reality that America is in a deadly
struggle with a new breed of anti-Western jihadists. And despite all
the progress we have made in the Middle East, it will be sad if the
promise of this moment in history slips into the abyss of violence.
But I know this: sooner or later, hopefully before too much more
bloodshed and tears, Israelis and Palestinians will return to the same
questions they confront today, and, the same inescapable choices. They
can postpone the moment of truth, but they cannot escape the reality
that they must find a way to live side by side.
The scope of events over this past year reflects the range of
challenges and opportunities for America that sometimes appears
overwhelming. It is tempting to step back from robust engagement, to
simplify our presence in a complex world, to limit our definition of
what is important to America to what seems most easily achievable.
That would be a profound mistake. For the threats to America's
interests only will grow more dangerous if neglected. More important,
this is a time of unprecedented opportunity for us, as we stand at the
height of our power and prosperity.
Any honest assessment of how we've used that strength must begin with
an acknowledgment of what has changed since Bill Clinton was first
elected. Consider the conventional wisdom about America in the fall of
1992: Time Magazine -- reflecting the widespread view -- asked: "is
the U.S. in an irreversible decline as the world's premier power"?
Today, as President Clinton leaves office, America is by any measure
the world's unchallenged military, economic and political power. The
world counts on us to be a catalyst of coalitions, a broker of peace,
a guarantor of global financial stability. We are widely seen as the
country best placed to benefit from globalization.
President Clinton understood before most the challenges globalization
posed to how we think about the world. Let me describe just two.
First, for a half century of Cold War struggle, we viewed the world
largely through a zero-sum prism. We advance, they retreat. We
retreat, they advance. Today, zero-sum increasingly must give way to
win-win. A stronger Europe does not necessarily mean a weaker U.S.
Indeed, a stronger Russia and a stronger China -- if they develop in
the right way -- could be a lesser threat than if they unravel from
internal strains. Second, while globalization is an inexorable fact,
it is not an elixir for all the world's problems. What is important is
that we can harness the desire of most nations to benefit from
globalization in a way that advances our objectives of democracy,
shared prosperity and peace.
Some of the most hopeful recent developments in the world have come
about because of how we sought to do that, not because globalization
preordained them. For example, if China has begun to dismantle its
command and control economy despite the huge risk, is it simply
meeting the demands of global markets? In part, yes. But it also has
decided to fulfill the terms we negotiated for its entry into the WTO.
If people from Croatia to Macedonia are rejecting hard line
nationalists and embracing democracy, is it because they've reached
the end of history? No, but they have concluded that this is the best
way to join NATO and the EU -- an opportunity made possible by our
expansion of NATO and more attractive by NATO's victory in Kosovo.
If the dividing line of the Cold War was the Berlin Wall, the dividing
line of the global age is between those who seek to live within the
international community of nations -- respecting its rules and norms
-- and those who live outside of it, either by choice or circumstance.
We must ensure those international systems are open to all who adhere
to accepted standards. We must defend those standards when they are
threatened. And we must isolate those who choose to live outside the
system and disrupt it.
The foundations of a foreign policy for the global age are reflected
in the principles that have guided us there and hopefully will serve
as a touchstone as our next president takes office.
The first principle is that our alliances with Europe and Asia are
still the cornerstone of our national security, but they must be
constantly adapted to meet emerging challenges.
Eight years ago in Asia, it was far from certain that we would
maintain our military presence at the end of the Cold War, or that
allies there would continue to see its legitimacy. In Europe, NATO's
continued relevance was seriously questioned, ironically at the very
same time that the security and the values it defends were threatened
by an out-of-control war in Bosnia.
So in Asia, we formally updated our strategic alliance with Japan. We
stood with South Korea to meet nuclear and missile threats while we
moved together to test new opportunities with North Korea. We
dispatched naval forces to ease tensions in the Taiwan Strait, and
helped our allies deploy an unprecedented coalition to East Timor.
In Europe, we revitalized NATO with new partners, new members and new
missions. After agonizing differences with our allies over Bosnia, we
came together to end a ghastly war and later acted decisively to end
the carnage in Kosovo. Today, we are closer than ever to building a
Europe that is peaceful, democratic, and undivided for the first time
in history.
Southeast Europe, which has been a flashpoint for European conflict
throughout the 20th Century, now has the potential to become a full
partner in a peaceful Europe -- if we don't snatch defeat from the
jaws of victory. Our European allies already are carrying the
overwhelming share of this burden, 85 percent of the peacekeeping
troops and 80 percent of the funds. But we can't cut and run, or we
will forfeit our leadership of NATO.
NATO's future, and that of Europe's new democracies, also depends on
the answer to another question: will more of Europe's new democracies
be invited to walk through NATO's open door at its next summit in
2002? To stop at Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic would defeat
the very purpose of NATO enlargement -- which is to erase arbitrary
dividing lines and to use the magnet of NATO membership to strengthen
the forces of democracy in Europe.
A second principle is that peace and security for America depends on
building principled, constructive relations with our former great
power adversaries, Russia and China.
With Russia, it is tempting to focus on what this troubled country has
failed to do in the last decade. It has not developed a full feathered
democracy, or demonstrated consistent respect for the rule of law. It
has not rooted out corruption, or learned that brute force cannot hold
an ethnically diverse country together. But we should not forget what
it has done. The Russian people have rejected a return to communism or
a turn toward fascism; in five straight elections they have voted for
a democratic society that is part of the life of the modern world. And
it is in large part for that reason that we have been able to work
with Russia to safeguard its nuclear arsenal, to secure the exit of
its troops from the Baltic States, and to cooperate in the Balkans.
What now? I believe that President Putin wants to build a modern
Russia plugged into the global economy and that he realizes the only
outlet lies to the West. What we don't know yet is whether he will do
that while tolerating opposition, respecting the independence of his
neighbors and conducting a foreign policy that does not revert to the
Soviet era mentality .
What can we do? If Russia seeks to exert coercive pressure against
neighboring states like Georgia or Ukraine, we must do all we can to
strengthen their independence. If it continues to provide military
technology to nations like Iran, we must use our leverage to change
its behavior. But at the same time, when Russia seeks partnership with
the international community and membership in international
institutions, we should welcome it, insisting that Russia accept the
rules as well as the benefits that go with integration. And when the
Russian people work at home to build a free media, to start their own
businesses, to protect human rights and their environment, we must
continue to support that in dollars and deeds. For little else will be
possible in our relationship with Russia unless it builds a
pluralistic, prosperous society inexorably linked to the West.
With China, our challenge has been and will remain to steer between
the extremes of uncritical engagement and untenable confrontation.
That balance has helped maintain peace in the Taiwan Straits, secured
China's help in maintaining stability on the Korean Peninsula.
The passage of PNTR represents the most constructive breakthrough in
U.S.-China relations since normalization in 1979. For China, it is a
declaration of interdependence, and a commitment to start dismantling
the command and control economy through which the communist party
exercises much of its power.
Can China manage this economic transition at a time of uncertain
political transition? For a country seized by a history of
intermittent disintegration, will China seek stability in greater
control over its people, or in giving its people greater control? Only
China can decide. But we can help it make the right choice -- by
holding it to the commitments it made to join the WTO, and continuing
to make clear that we believe China is more likely to succeed in this
information age by unleashing the creative potential of its 1.2
billion people than by trying to suppress it.
A third principle that must guide American foreign policy is that
local conflicts can have global consequences. I don't believe any
previous President has devoted more of his presidency to peacemaking
-- whether in the Middle East, the Balkans or Northern Ireland,
between Turkey and Greece, Peru and Ecuador, India and Pakistan, or
Ethiopia and Eritrea.
It is more important than ever that America remain an energetic
peacemaker
-- not a meddler, but a force for reconciliation even, at times, where
our interests are not directly involved. Why? Because the challenge of
foreign policy in any age is to defuse conflicts before, not after,
they escalate and harm our vital interests. Because in this global
age, as we witness distant atrocities, we can choose not to act, but
we can no longer choose not to know.
While we should never send troops into conflict where our national
interests are not at stake, when our interests and values are
challenged, the American people increasingly expect their government
to do what we reasonably can. Those who ignore America's idealism are
lacking in realism. What's more, the disproportionate power America
enjoys today is more likely to be accepted by other nations if we use
it for something more than self-protection. When our president goes
the extra mile for peace -- as he has been doing in the Middle East,
as he did in Belfast last month, or in Africa last August when he
joined a fractious conference seeking peace in Burundi -- it defies
preconceptions that an all-powerful America is a self-absorbed
America. It earns us influence that raw power alone cannot purchase.
A fourth principle is that, while old threats have not all
disappeared, new dangers, accentuated by technological advances and
the permeability of borders, require expanded national security
priorities. Indeed, I believe one of the biggest changes we have
brought about in the way America relates to the world has been to
expand what we consider important.
We intensified the battle against proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction, from the complete denuclearization of Ukraine, Belarus
and Kazakhstan, to the Agreed Framework with North Korea, which has
frozen the production of plutonium for nuclear weapons there, to the
effort that to this day is diverting billions of dollars in Iraqi oil
revenues from the purchase of weaponry to the provision of food and
medicine. We persuaded the Senate to ratify the Chemical Weapons
Convention. I hope President Bush will work with the Senate to address
the concerns raised in the debate over the Comprehensive Test Ban
Treaty, as General Shalikashvili has suggested.
One of the most important decisions America must make is how to meet
the future ballistic missile threat from hostile nations. The emerging
threat is real. But National Missile Defense is a complex issue --
technically, internationally and strategically. I hope the new
Administration will not be driven by artificial deadlines. And it is
inconceivable to me that we would make a decision on NMD without fully
exploring the initiative with North Korea and the potential of curbing
the missile program at the leading edge of the threat driving the NMD
timetable today.
A fifth principle that should continue to drive our foreign policy is
that economic integration advances both our interests and our values,
but also increases the need to alleviate economic disparity. During
the last eight years, America has led the greatest expansion in world
trade in history, with the completion of the Uruguay Round, the
creation of the WTO, and the approval of NAFTA and PNTR with China.
Our conscious decision to keep our markets open during the Asian
financial crisis in no small measure is responsible for Asia's
recovery.
In the last two decades, more people than ever before have been lifted
from poverty around the world. And yet, three billion people still
struggle to survive on less than $2 a day. Globalization did not
create the gap between the rich and poor nations. But there is a gap
in globalization.
To dismiss global poverty and disease as "soft" issues is to ignore
hard realities. Few nations can survive the onslaught of AIDS that
already has hit southern Africa, where half of all 15 year olds are
expected to die of the disease. And this epidemic has no natural
boundaries -- its fastest rate of growth is now in Russia.
Working to bridge the global divide is not merely a matter of national
empathy; it is a matter of national interest. That is why we have
lowered barriers to African and Caribbean imports, tripled funding for
global AIDS prevention and care, and launched international
initiatives to stimulate vaccine research and get children into
school. That is why we have led the global effort to relieve the debts
of poor countries that invest the savings in their people. Keeping
these issues at the top of the global agenda can only be done with
Presidential leadership.
These are basic principles that I believe must define the contours of
America's role in a global age, and some of the specific challenges we
will continue to face. Many are daunting. But the new Administration
takes the reins of a country at the zenith of its power, with the wind
at its back, and clear objectives to steer toward. And there are
several steps it could immediately take, both to seize the
opportunities so plainly ahead, and to signal the world that there
will be no fundamental shift in America's purpose as it reviews our
global role.
Let me respectfully mention just a few. You might call them "five easy
pieces" for the next Administration: Give our European allies a clear
sign that there will be no change in our commitment to NATO, its
missions, and its next round of expansion. Make clear to our allies in
Asia that we will explore the opportunity presented by North Korea's
emergence from isolation. Tell our partners in the Hemisphere that we
want to finish negotiations on a Free Trade Area of the Americans by
2003, so it can enter into force by 2005. In preparing your first
budget, signal the world that our contributions to win the fight
against global poverty will continue to rise. Finally, seize the
chance to work with Russia to reduce nuclear arsenals without
abandoning negotiated agreements. One good way would be to move with
the Congress to repeal legislation that prevents us from going below
the START I level of 6000 warheads while we bring START II into force
and negotiate much lower levels in START III.
The overriding reality for the new team will remain that American
leadership, in cooperation with our friends and allies is essential to
a more secure, peaceful, and prosperous world.
Our extraordinary strength is a blessing. But it comes with a
responsibility to carry our weight, instead of merely throwing it
around. That means meeting our responsibilities to alliances like NATO
and institutions like the UN. It means shaping treaties from the
inside, as President Clinton recently did with the International
Criminal Court, instead of packing up our marbles and going home.
Otherwise, we will find the world resisting our power instead of
respecting it.
There is a difference between power and authority. Power is the
ability to compel by force and sanctions, and there are times we must
use it, for there will always be interests and values worth fighting
for. Authority is the ability to lead, and we depend on it for almost
everything we try to achieve. Our authority is built on qualities very
different from our power: on the attractiveness of our values, on the
force of our example, on the credibility of our commitments, and on
our willingness to listen to and stand by others.
In the last eight years, I believe President Clinton's most
fundamental achievement is that he steered America into a new era of
globalization in a way that enhanced not only our power but our
authority in the world. I have been proud to be part of this journey.
I can promise you this: as the new Administration builds on that
achievement, nobody will work harder than its predecessors to turn
common goals to reality.
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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