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Special Report: If I were president...
ADDRESSING THE
DEMOCRATIC DEFICIT
By John
Kerry
Democrats must resist a new orthodoxy within our party—a
politically stagnating shift that does a disservice to more than 75 years
of history. That is the new conventional wisdom of consultants, pollsters,
and strategists who argue that Democrats should be the party of domestic
issues alone.
They are wrong. As a party, Democrats need to talk about all the things
that strengthen and protect the United States. We need to have a vision
that extends to the world around us, and we should remember that this
vision is as old as our party. Woodrow Wilson was elected president during
a time of peace, but he led during a time of war. Franklin Roosevelt was
elected to tackle the Great Depression, create Social Security, and put
the United States back to work. But no one should forget that he did those
things even as he responded to Pearl Harbor and marshaled the nation’s
troops from Normandy to Iwo Jima. And John F. Kennedy didn’t try
to change the subject of the debate when Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s
vice president brought up foreign policy. Kennedy challenged the United
States globally, insisting that the country do more and better, not because
these things are easy but because they are hard. (Timeline:
Democratic presidents and foreign policy)
It’s our turn again to talk about things that are hard.
The war on terrorism is different than any war in history. Intelligence
is this nation’s most important weapon but also its greatest vulnerability.
It is now common knowledge that crucial intercepts from September 10,
2001, weren’t translated until two days later because of severe
understaffing at U.S. intelligence agencies. As of January 2002, the U.S.
Army had an average 44 percent shortfall in translators and interpreters
in five critical languages: Arabic, Korean, Mandarin-Chinese, Persian-Farsi,
and Russian. The State Department reported a 26 percent shortage of authorized
translators and interpreters.
To remedy this intelligence deficit, U.S. college campuses need to overcome
a Vietnam-era mind-set that demonizes the CIA and FBI. To respond to the
new threats, we must redouble our information-gathering efforts and make
sure proper officials heed critical information, so that when we talk about
preventing another September 11, we’re dealing in reality, not rhetoric.
We also face critical choices in the makeup and structuring of the U.S.
armed forces. Operations in Afghanistan, Kosovo, Bosnia, and the Persian
Gulf have highlighted changes in military tactics and equipment needs. Outdated
military equipment may please defense contractors, but it won’t win
tomorrow’s battles. A modern military means smarter, more versatile
equipment; better intelligence; advanced communications; long-range air
power; and highly mobile ground forces.
Predictably, the Bush administration has talked about improvements but so
far has failed to enact meaningful change. It is up to Democrats to understand
and prepare for Fourth Generation warfare (fighting unconventional forces
in unconventional ways), so our nation can be better prepared to wage and
win the new war.
We must also change the way we interact with the world. For people who have
suggested that unilateralism is “just the American way,” it’s
time to acknowledge that more and more, our allies are our eyes and ears
around the globe and will play a critical role in intelligence operations.
We need partners. We should work on our public and private diplomacy more
thoughtfully, sensitively, and intensely to develop both.
I support the Bush administration’s goal of a regime change in Iraq.
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein is a renegade and outlaw who turned his back
on the tough conditions of his surrender put in place by the United Nations
in 1991. But the administration’s rhetoric has far exceeded its plans
or groundwork. In fact, its single-mindedness, secrecy, and high-blown phrases
have alienated our allies and threatened to undermine the stability of the
region.
As both a soldier and a senator, I learned that when it comes to war, our
goal must not be just regime change but a lasting peace. The United States
has won the war in Afghanistan without securing the peace. This administration
has failed to make its case on the international stage or to the American
people for the rationale of starting the war or for the means of ending
it. We cannot afford to put the security of our allies, the region, and
ultimately ourselves at risk for the vague promises we have heard to date.
We must do better.
American leadership means we must listen to the cultures and histories of
other countries and work harder to build coalitions and partnerships. But
for two years, the Bush administration has drifted from its chosen proactive
message of disengagement to the reactive, mixed, and contradictory messages
of reluctant engagement.
We can and must engage thoughtfully, strategically, and firmly. Nowhere
is the need more clear or urgent than in North Korea.
But the Bush administration has offered only a merry-go-round policy: Bush
and his advisors got up on their high horse, whooped and hollered, rode
around in circles, and ended up right back where they’d started. By
suspending the talks initiated by the Clinton administration, asking for
talks but with new conditions, refusing to talk under the threat of nuclear
blackmail, and then reversing that refusal as North Korea’s master
of brinkmanship upped the ante, the administration sowed confusion and put
the despot Kim Jong Il in the driver’s seat. By publicly taking military
force, negotiations, and sanctions off the table, the administration tied
its own hands behind its back.
Now, finally, the Bush administration is rightly working with allies in
the region—acting multilaterally—to pressure Pyongyang. It’s
gotten off the merry-go-round; the question is why one would ever want to
be so driven by unilateralist dogma to get on in the first place. Draining
the swamps of terrorists will require much greater involvement in the world.
It must include significant investments in the education and human infrastructure
of troubled countries. The globalization of the last decade proved that
simple measures like buying books and teaching family planning can do much
to expose, rebut, isolate, and defeat apostles of hate. These and other
techniques are crucial to ensuring that children are no longer brainwashed
into becoming suicide bombers and that terrorists are denied the ideological
swamplands in which they thrive. Foreign aid must be increased and reformed
to focus on education. We must give countries in the Middle East a reason
to want peace. In the next few years, if changes aren’t made, the
potential for violence in that region will only increase. If we fail to
reach the children and the families wrecked by the violence of poverty and
seclusion, the growing population of unemployed and unemployable kids will
find in fanaticism a tragic answer to its problems. Americans’ security
depends on helping the people of the Middle East see and act on a legitimate
vision of peace.
It’s up to the United States to respond. Only the United States is
in a position to lead the effort with other governments and private-sector
partners to beat this pandemic; only the United States has the resources
to make a difference. An American president once said, “We cannot
. . . be content to rot by inches in ignoble ease within our own borders,
taking no interest in what goes on beyond them, sunk in scrambling commercialism;
heedless of the higher life, the life of aspiration, of toil and risk .
. . We cannot sit huddled within our own borders and avow ourselves merely
an assemblage of well-to-do hucksters who care nothing for what happens
beyond.”
The Republican Party has in too many ways already disavowed the lessons
of that Republican leader, Teddy Roosevelt. Our party can’t afford
to repeat those mistakes, not when national greatness hangs in the balance.
It is time for Democrats to make clear once more: We will never surrender
or submit—not on any issue, and not on any question before this country.
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