WASHINGTON: After three months of infighting, it appears that Secretary of State Colin Powell, who was largely marginalized by Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Dick Cheney after the Sept 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, has clawed his way back into contention.
Last Friday’s unanimous approval by the UN Security Council of a new arms-inspection resolution for Iraq that omitted provisions authorising Washington to take unilateral military action if it judged that Baghdad failed to comply, marked a clear comeback for the beleaguered Powell and his fellow realists in the administration of President George W. Bush.
Powell allies include professionals in the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and much of the Pentagon’s uniformed brass, whose relations with Rumsfeld and his neo-conservative aides — never very good — have reportedly declined markedly in recent months.
Powell backers outside the administration, notably men closely associated with Bush’s father, George H.W. Bush — not to mention the former president himself — also appear to have played key roles in reducing the influence of the unilateralists in the Pentagon and Cheney’s office.
The realists’ advance is not confined to the UN resolution on Iraq. They also appear to have scored at least tentative victories in other areas, most notably on North Korea and, to a somewhat less clear extent, on China, with which Rumsfeld grudgingly resumed high-level military exchanges this past week after an 18-month hiatus.
On North Korea, the administration has not only committed itself to pursuing a multilateral response, based on consultation with North Korea’s neighbours, to Pyongyang’s declaration that it is developing nuclear weapons. It has also, reportedly under orders from the president himself, declined to declare the 1994 US-North Korean Framework Agreement dead, as administration and Congressional hawks have long demanded.
But the battle for control of Bush foreign policy is far from over and Powell’s victories may prove fleeting. Bush has made clear that he does not believe Iraqi President Saddam Hussein will comply with the terms of the Security Council resolution, even if he accepts them on paper.
And while insisting that he prefers a peaceful resolution to the disarmament question and has reduced his public references to “regime change” as his goal in Iraq, Bush has already approved a military plan for invading the country and will seize just about any non-compliance as a pretext for launching an attack, possibly without seeking another resolution from the Security Council.
But the fact that Bush yielded to Powell’s arguments in September to ask the Security Council for a new resolution on inspections and then agreed to compromise on several key elements after eight weeks of debate marked a signal defeat for the hawks.
As noted in this week’s Weekly Standard by neo-conservatives William Kristol and Robert Kagan — who are particularly close to Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz — “it is impossible to ignore the fact that the weeks of negotiations carried out by the State Department have eroded the president’s position, not terminally, but worryingly”.
“Indeed, one of the most disturbing features of the current process is the extent to which it takes control of American foreign policy out of President Bush’s hands and puts it in the hands of people who, to put it mildly, have no interest in furthering President Bush’s goal of regime change in Iraq,” argued the two neo-cons in a lengthy lead editorial entitled ‘The UN Trap?’
Powell’s apparent comeback is remarkable. By early last August, he appeared to be on the ropes, with many analysts suggesting that he had become no more than a multilateral fig leaf for the most unilateralist and belligerent administration in the past century.
The former general had lost battle after battle in internal debates since Sept 11 - from the administration’s withdrawal from the ABM treaty with Russia and the new ICC to its backing for Israeli demands that Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat be ousted from power.
By the end of August, Rumsfeld and Cheney were publicly ridiculing Powell’s notion of going to the Security Council for a new round of arms inspections as dangerous and a waste of time. But it now appears that the two men were speaking less from confidence that they were winning than in defence of their position against a furious campaign by Powell’s champions, especially those around Bush’s father.
One by one, Brent Scowcroft, James Baker, Lawrence Eagleburger, and General Norman Schwarzkoft argued publicly that the younger Bush must go through the Security Council for a new round of inspections.
Meanwhile, dissident intelligence analysts and military commanders became increasingly bold in leaking information designed to embarrass the hawks. Detailed plans for an offensive against Iraq were disclosed amid suggestions that the civilians were not heeding the military’s concerns, while a number of unidentified intelligence sources repeatedly refuted the administration’s claims that Saddam Hussein was linked to Al Qaeda.—Dawn/The InterPress News Service.