Here is a good article that outlines what a Kerry foreign policy might look like. Unfortunately, it was written for NY Times Magazine. It is way too long, meandering and finally gets to the meat of the topic in the last few pages. Below are relevant excerpts. The permalink has the whole article for those purests and for those who want concrete comparisons with Bush's policies...there are good ones.
Kerry has a much more reassuring view of the world. There are sound pragmatic reasons for that. Terrorism works by scaring a lot of people. Responding to terrorism with a Jihad of our own simply played into Al Qaeda hands. His recruiting depends upon convincing Muslims that America in on a new crusade with Israel to dominate and impose a Judeo-Christian culture on the Middle East. Bush's actions have played right into that view.
We are not in a war between countries or between civilizations as the Christian Right-wing fanatics suggest. We have a loose network of political criminals who have been emboldened by the events of the last few years to believe a new Muslim empire will rise from the ashes of Iraq. And they may well be right. An Iranian dominated Iraq will stiffle any hope of democracy in the Middle East.
Clearly Sistani is set to come to power in the election, if not in person, by surrogate. We have no idea what he will do. We do know his ties to Iran are strong. For all we know, Sadr may be his surrogate, acting as a foil to counter balence the power of the US and the flegling Iraqi government and to build his own stature in Iraq.
We are in a war of ideology. We can't win without changing the minds of millions of Muslims worldwide. We have been changing minds alright, but in the wrong direction. Bush's policies have enboldened Iran, pushed our Arab friends as far away as they have been in 40 years. We are no longer seen as a beacon of Democracy worldwide. How can we win a ideological war? Only with new leadership.
The New York Times > Magazine > Kerry's Undeclared War
''I think we can do a better job,'' Kerry said, ''of cutting off financing, of exposing groups, of working cooperatively across the globe, of improving our intelligence capabilities nationally and internationally, of training our military and deploying them differently, of specializing in special forces and special ops, of working with allies, and most importantly -- and I mean most importantly -- of restoring America's reputation as a country that listens, is sensitive, brings people to our side, is the seeker of peace, not war, and that uses our high moral ground and high-level values to augment us in the war on terror, not to diminish us.''...
More senior members of the foreign-relations committee, like Joe Biden and Richard Lugar, were far more visible and vocal on the emerging threat of Islamic terrorism. But through his BCCI investigation, Kerry did discover that a wide array of international criminals -- Latin American drug lords, Palestinian terrorists, arms dealers -- had one thing in common: they were able to move money around through the same illicit channels. And he worked hard, and with little credit, to shut those channels down.
In 1988, Kerry successfully proposed an amendment that forced the Treasury Department to negotiate so-called Kerry Agreements with foreign countries. Under these agreements, foreign governments had to promise to keep a close watch on their banks for potential money laundering or they risked losing their access to U.S. markets. Other measures Kerry tried to pass throughout the 90's, virtually all of them blocked by Republican senators on the banking committee, would end up, in the wake of 9/11, in the USA Patriot Act; among other things, these measures subject banks to fines or loss of license if they don't take steps to verify the identities of their customers and to avoid being used for money laundering....
In other words, Kerry was among the first policy makers in Washington to begin mapping out a strategy to combat an entirely new kind of enemy. Americans were conditioned, by two world wars and a long standoff with a rival superpower, to see foreign policy as a mix of cooperation and tension between civilized states. Kerry came to believe, however, that Americans were in greater danger from the more shadowy groups he had been investigating -- nonstate actors, armed with cellphones and laptops -- who might detonate suitcase bombs or release lethal chemicals into the subway just to make a point. They lived in remote regions and exploited weak governments. Their goal wasn't to govern states but to destabilize them.
The challenge of beating back these nonstate actors -- not just Islamic terrorists but all kinds of rogue forces -- is what Kerry meant by ''the dark side of globalization.'' He came closest to articulating this as an actual foreign-policy vision in a speech he gave at U.C.L.A. last February. ''The war on terror is not a clash of civilizations,'' he said then. ''It is a clash of civilization against chaos, of the best hopes of humanity against dogmatic fears of progress and the future.''...
Kerry's view, on the other hand, suggests that it is the very premise of civilized states, rather than any one ideology, that is under attack. And no one state, acting alone, can possibly have much impact on the threat, because terrorists will always be able to move around, shelter their money and connect in cyberspace; there are no capitals for a superpower like the United States to bomb, no ambassadors to recall, no economies to sanction. The U.S. military searches for bin Laden, the Russians hunt for the Chechen terrorist Shamil Basayev and the Israelis fire missiles at Hamas bomb makers; in Kerry's world, these disparate terrorist elements make up a loosely affiliated network of diabolical villains, more connected to one another by tactics and ideology than they are to any one state sponsor. The conflict, in Kerry's formulation, pits the forces of order versus the forces of chaos, and only a unified community of nations can ensure that order prevails....
One can infer from this that if Kerry were able to speak less guardedly, in a less treacherous atmosphere than a political campaign, he might say, as some of his advisers do, that we are not in an actual war on terror. Wars are fought between states or between factions vying for control of a state; Al Qaeda and its many offspring are neither. If Kerry's foreign-policy frame is correct, then law enforcement probably is the most important, though not the only, strategy you can employ against such forces, who need passports and bank accounts and weapons in order to survive and flourish. Such a theory suggests that, in our grief and fury, we have overrated the military threat posed by Al Qaeda, paradoxically elevating what was essentially a criminal enterprise, albeit a devastatingly sophisticated and global one, into the ideological successor to Hitler and Stalin -- and thus conferring on the jihadists a kind of stature that might actually work in their favor, enabling them to attract more donations and more recruits....
This critical difference between the two men running for the presidency, over what kind of enemy we are fighting and how best to defeat it, is at the core of a larger debate over how the United States should involve itself in the Muslim world. Bush and Kerry are in agreement, as is just about every expert on Islamic culture you can find, that in order for Americans to live and travel securely, the United States must change the widespread perception among many Muslims worldwide that America is morally corrupt and economically exploitative. It is this resentment, felt especially strongly among Arab Muslims, that makes heroes of suicide bombers. The question vexing the foreign-policy establishment in W
ashington is how you market freedom. Is the establishment of a single, functioning democracy in the Middle East enough to win the ''hearts and minds'' of ordinary Muslims, by convincing them that America is in fact the model for a free, more open society? Or do you need to somehow strike at the underlying conditions -- despotism, hopelessness, economic and social repression -- that breed fundamentalism and violence in the first place?...
Biden, who is perhaps Kerry's closest friend in the Senate, suggests that Kerry sees Bush's advisers as beholden to the same grand and misguided theories. ''John and I never believed that, if you were successful in Iraq, you'd have governments falling like dominoes in the Middle East,'' he told me. ''The neo-cons of today are 'the best and the brightest' who brought us Vietnam. They have taken a construct that's flawed and applied it to a world that isn't relevant.''
In fact, Kerry and his advisers contend that the occupation of Iraq is creating a reverse contagion in the region; they say the fighting -- with its heavy civilian casualties and its pictures, beamed throughout the Arab world, of American aggression -- has been a boon to Al Qaeda recruiters. They frequently cite a Pentagon memo, leaked to the media last year, in which Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld wondered whether Al Qaeda was recruiting new terrorists faster than the U.S. military could capture or kill them. ''God help us if we damage the shrine in Najaf,'' Richard Holbrooke told me on a day when marines surrounded insurgent Shiites inside the shrine, ''and we create a new group of Shiites who some years from now blow up the Statue of Liberty or something like that, all because we destroyed the holiest site in Shiism.''...
If forced democracy is ultimately Bush's panacea for the ills that haunt the world, as Kerry suggests it is, then Kerry's is diplomacy. Kerry mentions the importance of cooperating with the world community so often that some of his strongest supporters wish he would ease up a bit. (''When people hear multilateral, they think multi-mush,'' Biden despaired.) But multilateralism is not an abstraction to Kerry, whose father served as a career diplomat during the years after World War II. The only time I saw Kerry truly animated during two hours of conversation was when he talked about the ability of a president to build relationships with other leaders.
''We need to engage more directly and more respectfully with Islam, with the state of Islam, with religious leaders, mullahs, imams, clerics, in a way that proves this is not a clash with the British and the Americans and the old forces they remember from the colonial days,'' Kerry told me during a rare break from campaigning, in Seattle at the end of August. ''And that's all about your diplomacy.''
When I suggested that effecting such changes could take many years, Kerry shook his head vehemently and waved me off.
''Yeah, it is long-term, but it can be dramatically effective in the short term. It really can be. I promise you.'' He leaned his head back and slapped his thighs. ''A new presidency with the right moves, the right language, the right outreach, the right initiatives, can dramatically alter the world's perception of us very, very quickly.
''I know Mubarak well enough to know what I think I could achieve in the messaging and in the press in Egypt,'' Kerry went on. ''And, similarly, with Jordan and with King Abdullah, and what we can do in terms of transformation in the economics of the region by getting American businesspeople involved, getting some stability and really beginning to proactively move in those ways. We just haven't been doing any of this stuff. We've been stunningly disengaged, with the exception of Iraq.
''I mean, you ever hear anything about the 'road map' anymore?'' he asked, referring to the international plan for phasing in peace between Israel and the Palestinians, which Kerry supports. ''No. You ever hear anything about anything anymore? No. Do you hear anything about this greater Middle East initiative, the concepts or anything? No. I think we're fighting a very narrow, myopic kind of war.''
It is not a coincidence that Kerry's greatest success in the Senate came not during his long run of investigations but in the realm of diplomacy. He and John McCain worked for several years to settle the controversy over P.O.W.-M.I.A.'s and to normalize relations with Vietnam -- an achievement that Kerry's Senate colleagues consider his finest moment. ''He should talk about it more,'' Bob Kerrey said. ''He transformed the region.'' In the same way, John Kerry sees himself as a kind of ambassador-president, shuttling to world capitals and reintegrating America, by force of personality, into the world community.
He would begin, if sworn into office, by going immediately to the United Nations to deliver a speech recasting American foreign policy. Whereas Bush has branded North Korea ''evil'' and refuses to negotiate head on with its authoritarian regime, Kerry would open bilateral talks over its burgeoning nuclear program. Similarly, he has said he would rally other nations behind sanctions against Iran if that country refuses to abandon its nuclear ambitions. Kerry envisions appointing a top-level envoy to restart the Middle East peace process, and he's intent on getting India and Pakistan to adopt key provisions of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. (One place where Kerry vows to take a harder line than Bush is Pakistan, where Bush has embraced the military ruler Pervez Musharraf, and where Kerry sees a haven for chaos in the vast and lawless region on the border with Afghanistan.) In all of this, Kerry intends to use as leverage America's considerable capacity for economic aid; a Kerry adviser told me, only slightly in jest, that Kerry's most tempting fantasy is to attend the G-8 summit.
erry's view, that the 21st century will be defined by the organized world's struggle against agents of chaos and lawlessness, might be the beginning of a compelling vision. The idea that America and its allies, sharing resources and using the latest technologies, could track the movements of terrorists, seize their bank accounts and carry out targeted military strikes to eliminate them, seems more optimistic and more practical than the notion that the conventional armies of the United States will inevitably have to punish or even invade every Islamic country that might abet radicalism.
And yet, you can understand why Kerry has been so tentative in advancing this idea. It's comforting to think that Al Qaeda might be as easily marginalized as a bunch of drug-running thugs, that an ''effective'' assault on its bank accounts might cripple its twisted campaign against Americans. But Americans are frightened -- an emotion that has benefited Bush, and one that he has done little to dissuade -- and many of them perceive a far more existential threat to their lives than the one Kerry describes. In this climate, Kerry's rather dry recitations about money-laundering laws and intelligence-sharing agreements can sound oddly discordant. We are living at a time that feels historically consequential, where people seem to expect -- and perhaps deserve -- a theory of the world that matches the scope of their insecurity.
Theoretically, Kerry could still find a way to wrap his ideas into some bold and cohesive construct for the next half-century -- a Kerry Doctrine, perhaps, or a campaign against chaos, rather than a war on terror -- that people will understand and relate to. But he has always been a man who prides himself on appreciating the subtleties of public policy, and everything in his experience has conditioned him to avoid unsubtle constructs and grand designs. His aversion to Big Think has resulted in one of the campaign's oddities: it is Bush, the man vilified by liberals as intellectually vapid, who has emerged as the de facto visionary in the campaign, trying to impose some long-term thematic order on a dangerous and disord
erly world, while Kerry carves the globe into a series of discrete problems with specific solutions.
When Kerry first told me that Sept. 11 had not changed him, I was surprised. I assumed everyone in America -- and certainly in Washington -- had been changed by that day. I assumed he was being overly cautious, afraid of providing his opponents with yet another cheap opportunity to call him a flip-flopper. What I came to understand was that, in fact, the attacks really had not changed the way Kerry viewed or talked about terrorism -- which is exactly why he has come across, to some voters, as less of a leader than he could be. He may well have understood the threat from Al Qaeda long before the rest of us. And he may well be right, despite the ridicule from Cheney and others, when he says that a multinational, law-enforcement-like approach can be more effective in fighting terrorists. But his less lofty vision might have seemed more satisfying -- and would have been easier to talk about in a political campaign -- in a world where the twin towers still stood.
Complete Article
Kerry's Undeclared War
October 10, 2004
By MATT BAI
As New York and Washington were under attack on Sept. 11,
2001, a film crew happened to come upon John Kerry leaving
the Capitol. The brief moment of footage, included in a BBC
documentary called ''Clear the Skies,'' tells us something,
perhaps, about Kerry in a crisis. The camera captures
Congressional aides and visitors, clearly distraught and
holding onto one another, streaming down the back steps of
the Capitol building in near panic, following the bellowed
instructions of anxious police. Off to one side of the
screen, there is Kerry, alone, his long legs carrying him
calmly down the steps, his neck craning toward the sky, as
if he were watching a gathering rainstorm. His face and
demeanor appear unworried. Kerry could be a man lost in his
thoughts who just happens to have wandered onto the set of
a disaster film.
''I remember looking up at the sky as I walked down the
steps,'' Kerry told me recently, when I asked him about the
film clip. He said that he and other members of the
Senate's Democratic leadership had just watched on
television as the second plane hit the World Trade Center,
and shortly after that they heard the sonic boom of an
explosion and saw, through a large window, the black smoke
rise from the Pentagon. ''We'd had some warning that there
was some airplane in the sky. And I remember seeing a great
big plane -- I think it was a 747 or something -- up there,
but it wasn't moving in a way that, you know, I was
particularly concerned. I remember feeling a rage, a huge
anger, and I remember turning to somebody and saying, 'This
is war.' I said, 'This is an act of war.'''
After leaving the Capitol on that terrible day, Kerry
walked across the street to his office in the Russell
Senate building, where he made sure that his staff had been
evacuated and was safe. Reluctant to leave Capitol Hill, he
watched TV coverage in his office and saw the second tower
fall. He called his older daughter, Alexandra, who was
living in New York, and his wife, Teresa, who was in
Washington. Those who saw Kerry that morning recall mainly
that he was furious, an emotion, those close to him say,
that comes easily to him in times of trial. He thought it
was a mistake to shut down the Capitol, to show terrorists
that they had the power to send the United States
government into hiding.
''You know, my instinct was, Where's my gun?'' Kerry told
me. ''How do you fight back? I wanted to do something.''
That evening, sitting at home, he called an aide and said
he wanted to go to New York that very night to help the
rescuers; he was ultimately convinced that such a trip was
logistically impossible. In the days ahead, Kerry would
make two trips to ground zero to see what remained of the
carnage.
With the terrorist attacks of 9/11, the geopolitical
currents that Washington had spent half a century mastering
shifted all at once. It isn't clear how long it took Kerry
-- a senator for nearly 20 years and, in September 2001, an
undeclared candidate for the presidency -- to understand
the political magnitude of that change. George W. Bush and
his advisers got it almost instantly. Few men get to be
president, and far fewer get to be president at a critical,
transformative moment; Bush, seizing the opportunity,
recast himself as the accidental protagonist of a new and
dramatic national narrative. Less than a year removed from
a disputed election, he set about elbowing his way into the
small pantheon of modern presidents -- F.D.R. after Pearl
Harbor, Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis -- who led
the nation in profound moments of peril.
Before the smoke had even dissipated over Manhattan, Bush
presented the country with an ambitious, overarching
construct for a new era in foreign relations. ''The war on
terror,'' as he put it, was this generation's test of
military and ideological resolve, different from the ones
that came before with regard to tactics, perhaps, but not
in the magnitude of the challenges or the ambition of the
enemy. Bush explained that Al Qaeda and its allies and
imitators would constitute a new kind of menace in the
years ahead, stealthier and less predictable than past
enemies. And yet, in their opposition to American
principles and the threat they posed to the nation, he
suggested, the Islamic terrorists were the equivalent of
Hitler and Stalin, and defeating them would require the
same steel and the same conviction that guided America in
the last century's campaigns.
While Bush and much of the country seemed remade by the
historic events of 9/11, Democrats in Washington were slow
to understand that the attacks had to change them in some
way too. What adjustments they made were, at first,
defensive. Spooked by Bush's surging popularity and the
nation's suddenly ascendant mood of patriotism, Democrats
stifled their instinctive concerns over civil liberties;
and whatever their previous misgivings about intervention,
many Congressional Democrats, a year after the terrorist
attacks, voted to give Bush the authority to invade Iraq.
What few Democrats did at the time was think creatively
about the new world of foreign policy. The candidates who
began their runs for the presidency last year, from Dennis
Kucinich and his peace platform on the left to Joe
Lieberman and Dick Gephardt on the other side of the
spectrum, attacked the president's foreign policy from
different directions, but if any new ideas emerged during
those months, they were soon drowned out by the booming
anti-war voice of Howard Dean. When Kerry emerged as the
most palatable alternative, he at first ran mostly on the
viability of his personal story, focusing more on his
combat experience in Vietnam than on any plan to fight Al
Qaeda or remake Iraq. Only since Labor Day has Kerry begun
to sharpen his distinctions with Bush on national security
and foreign policy. In a series of combative speeches and
statements, and in a crisp performance at the first
head-to-head debate, Kerry has argued that Bush's war in
Iraq is a disaster, that troops should be brought home
before the end of the next presidential term and that the
Iraq war is a ''profound diversion'' from the war on terror
and the real showdown with Al Qaeda.
What Kerry still has not done is to articulate clearly a
larger foreign-policy vision, his own overarching
alternative to Bush's global war on terror. The difference
between the two men was clear during the foreign-policy
debate in Florida 10 days ago. Kerry seemed dominant for
much of the exchange, making clear arguments on a range of
specific challenges -- the war in Iraq, negotiations with
North Korea, relations with Russia. But while Kerry bore in
on ground-level details, Bush, in defending his policies,
seemed, characteristica
lly, to be looking at the world from
a much higher altitude, repeating in his brief and
sometimes agitated statements a single unifying worldview:
America is the world's great force for freedom, unsparing
in its use of pre-emptive might and unstinting in its
determination to stamp out tyranny and terrorism. Kerry
seemed to offer no grand thematic equivalent.
Inside liberal think-tanks, there are Democratic
foreign-policy experts who are challenging some of Bush's
most basic assumptions about the post-9/11 world --
including, most provocatively, the very idea that we are,
in fact, in a war. But Kerry has tended to steer clear of
this conversation, preferring to attack Bush for the way he
is fighting terrorism rather than for the way in which he
perceives and frames the threat itself.
The argument going on in Washington has its roots in the
dark years of the cold war. Just about everyone agrees that
many factors contributed to America's triumph over world
communism -- but people differ on which of those factors
were most important. The neo-conservatives who shaped
Reagan's anti-Soviet policy and now shape Bush's war on
terror have long held that the ''twilight struggle'' with
the Soviet empire was won primarily as a result of U.S.
military intervention in several hemispheres and of
Reagan's massive arms buildup, without which democracy and
free markets could not have taken hold. Many liberals, on
the other hand, have never been comfortable with that
premise; while they acknowledge that American military
power played a role, they contend that the long ideological
struggle with communism ended chiefly because the stifling
economic and social tenets of Marxism were unsustainable,
and because a new leader emerged -- Mikhail Gorbachev --
who understood that. They see Islamic fanaticism,
similarly, as a repressive ideology, born of complex
societal conditions, that won't be defeated by any
predominately military solution.
In the liberal view, the enemy this time -- an entirely new
kind of ''non-state actor'' known as Al Qaeda -- more
closely resembles an especially murderous drug cartel than
it does the vaunted Red Army. Instead of military might,
liberal thinkers believe, the moment calls for a
combination of expansive diplomacy abroad and interdiction
at home, an effort more akin to the war on drugs than to
any conventional war of the last century.
Even Democrats who stress that combating terrorism should
include a strong military option argue that the ''war on
terror'' is a flawed construct. ''We're not in a war on
terror, in the literal sense,'' says Richard Holbrooke, the
Clinton-era diplomat who could well become Kerry's
secretary of state. ''The war on terror is like saying 'the
war on poverty.' It's just a metaphor. What we're really
talking about is winning the ideological struggle so that
people stop turning themselves into suicide bombers.''
These competing philosophies, neo-conservative and liberal,
aren't mutually exclusive, of course. Neo-cons will agree
that military operations are just one facet, albeit the
main one, of their response to terrorism. And liberals are
almost unanimous in their support for military force when
the nation or its allies face an imminent and preventable
threat; not only did the vast majority of liberal policy
makers support the invasion of Afghanistan, but many also
thought it should have been pursued more aggressively.
Still, the philosophical difference between the two camps,
applied to a conflict that may well last a generation, is
both deep and distinct. Fundamentally, Bush sees the war on
terror as a military campaign, not simply to protect
American lives but also to preserve and spread American
values around the world; his liberal critics see it more as
an ideological campaign, one that will turn back a tide of
resentment toward Americans and thus limit the peril they
face at home.
Perhaps the most pressing question of the presidential
campaign is where John Kerry stands in this debate. The man
who would be the first Vietnam veteran to occupy the Oval
Office has doggedly tried to merge both worldviews,
repeatedly vowing to fight both a more fierce and a more
restrained, multifaceted war on terror. Aides say this is
evidence of his capacity to envision complex solutions for
a complex world; voters, through the summer and early fall,
seemed less impressed. In a typical poll conducted by The
Washington Post and ABC News just before the first
presidential debate, only 37 percent of the respondents
agreed with the statement that Kerry would make the country
safer. A New York Times/CBS News poll conducted in
mid-September found that half the respondents thought Bush
would make the right decisions to protect the nation from
terrorism, compared with only 26 percent who said the same
thing about Kerry.
More surprising than the poll numbers, though, is the sense
of frustration, expressed not just by voters but by some in
Kerry's own party, that even at this late hour, Kerry's
long-term strategy for defeating the terrorists remains so
ethereal. ''You will lose, and we will win,'' Kerry told
America's enemies in the most memorable line of his
convention speech in late July. ''The future doesn't belong
to fear. It belongs to freedom.'' But how will we win? How
do you root out and destroy Islamic radicals while at the
same time capturing the ''hearts and minds'' of Islamic
students? When John Kerry said, on Sept. 11, 2001, ''This
is war,'' what precisely did he mean?
On an evening in August, just after a campaign swing
through the Southwest, Kerry and I met, for the second of
three conversations about terrorism and national security,
in a hotel room overlooking the Ferris wheel on the Santa
Monica pier. A row of Evian water bottles had been
thoughtfully placed on a nearby table. Kerry frowned.
''Can we get any of my water?'' he asked Stephanie Cutter,
his communications director, who dutifully scurried from
the room. I asked Kerry, out of sheer curiosity, what he
didn't like about Evian.
''I hate that stuff,'' Kerry explained to me. ''They pack
it full of minerals.''
''What kind of water do you drink?'' I asked, trying to
make conversation.
''Plain old American water,'' he said.
''You mean tap
water?''
''No,'' Kerry replied deliberately. He seemed now to sense
some kind of trap. I was left to imagine what was going
through his head. If I admit that I drink bottled water,
then he might say I'm out of touch with ordinary voters.
But doesn't demanding my own brand of water seem even more
aristocratic? Then again, Evian is French -- important to
stay away from anything even remotely French.
''There are all kinds of waters,'' he said finally. Pause.
''Saratoga Spring.'' This seemed to have exhausted his
list. ''Sometimes I drink tap water,''
he added.
After months of having his every word scrutinized by
reporters and mocked by Republicans, Kerry appeared to
sense danger in the most mundane of places. Interviewing
him reminded me at times of what I'd read in ''Tour of
Duty,'' the historian Douglas Brinkley's flattering account
of Kerry's service in Vietnam. The Swift boat crews on the
Mekong Delta and the Ca Mau Peninsula did not aspire to be
heroic, although they were. Kerry and the young sailors
were given patrol missions that seemed unnecessarily
dangerous; their job was essentially to prove the point
that Americans could traverse the windy rivers of the
delta, rife with Vietcong, and lure the enemy out into the
open. They traveled slowly and kept watch in all
directions, and if their leader got them from point A to
point B and back again without serious casualties, he had
done his job.
Kerry seems to find presidential politics in the era of
Karl Rove as treacherous as riverine warfare, and he has
run for the presidency in much the same way. From the
beginning, Kerry's advisers said that the election would be
principally a referendum on Bush, whose approval ratings,
reflecting public anxiety over Iraq and a sluggish economy,
were consistently low for a president seeking re-election.
All Kerry had to do to win, the thinking went, was to meet
a basic threshold of acceptability with voters and avoid
doing or saying anything that might be fatally stupid. The
riverbanks were lined with hostile Republicans and
reporters, lying in wait for him, and Kerry's goal as he
sailed upriver was simple: Stay down. Exercise caution. Get
to November in one piece.
Which is exactly what it's like to interview Kerry as he
runs for the presidency; he acts as if you've been sent to
destroy him, and he can't quite figure out why in the world
he should be sitting across from you. When I met him for
our first conversation, in his cabin aboard the 757 that
shuttles his campaign around the country, Kerry didn't
extend his hand or even look up to greet me when I entered,
and he grew so quickly and obviously exasperated with my
questions about his thoughts and votes on Iraq that he cut
the interview short. (Embarrassed aides later told me he
had been abruptly roused from a nap.) He was far more
gracious in our subsequent conversations about terrorism
and foreign policy, but he still spent a lot of the time
repeating phrases from his stump speech. (''You will lose,
we will win,'' and so on.) What some politicians -- Bill
Clinton comes to mind -- might have considered an
opportunity to persuade and impress voters, Kerry seemed to
regard only as an invitation to do himself harm.
Kerry's guardedness has contributed to the impression that
he does not think clearly or boldly about foreign policy.
In his short but fascinating book titled ''Surprise,
Security and the American Experience,'' the Yale historian
John Lewis Gaddis suggests that Bush's framework for
fighting terrorism has its roots in the lofty, idealistic
tradition of John Quincy Adams and Woodrow Wilson. (The
book was so popular in the White House that Gaddis was
invited over for a discussion.) ''What Bush is proposing is
quite long-term, quite radical and quite Wilsonian,''
Gaddis told me when we spoke; when I asked him about Kerry,
he said: ''I don't know where Kerry is on this. I don't
have the slightest clue.''
Kerry's adversaries have found it easy to ridicule his
views on foreign policy, suggesting that his idea of
counterterrorism is simply to go around arresting all the
terrorists. This is what Dick Cheney was getting at when he
said last month that there was a danger, should Kerry be
elected, that ''we'll fall back into the pre-9/11 mind-set,
if you will, that in fact these terrorist attacks are just
criminal acts, and that we're not really at war.'' These
barbs have some resonance, largely because Kerry is so
obviously defensive about them; talking to him, you
sometimes get the sense that he would gladly throw on a
pair of night-vision goggles and abduct a member of his own
staff if he thought it would prove he could be as tough on
terror as his opponent. (When I asked one Kerry adviser
what it was that voters needed to know about Kerry and
terrorism, he replied without hesitation. ''That he's
strong and tough,'' he said. ''In the case of John Kerry,
unlike Dick Cheney and George W. Bush, he's looked people
in the face and shot them dead.'')
It's perhaps not surprising, then, that Kerry hasn't been
eager to challenge Bush's grand notion of a war on terror;
such a distinction might sound weak, equivocal or, worse
yet, nuanced. It's equally unsurprising that, in the recent
Times poll, 57 percent of the respondents said Kerry hadn't
made his plans for the country clear, and 63 percent
believed he said what he thought people wanted to hear,
rather than what he actually thought. This reflected savage
Republican attacks on Kerry's character, to be sure, but it
probably also had something to do with the fact that he
hadn't made his plans clear and seemed to be saying what he
thought people wanted to hear.
When I asked Kerry's campaign advisers about these poll
numbers, what I heard from some of them in response was
that Kerry's theories on global affairs were just too
complex for the electorate and would have been ignored --
or, worse yet, mangled -- by the press. ''Yes, he should
have laid out this issue and many others in greater detail
and with more intellectual creativity, there's no
question,'' one adviser told me. ''But it would have had no
effect.''
This is, of course, a common Democratic refrain:
Republicans sound more coherent because they see the world
in such a rudimentary way, while Democrats, 10 steps ahead
of the rest of the country, wrestle with profound policy
issues that don't lend themselves to slogans. By this
reasoning, any proposal that can be explained concisely to
voters is, by definition, ineffective and lacking in
gravitas. Other Kerry aides blame the candidate and his
coterie of message makers, most of whom are legendary for
their attack ads but less adept at thinking about broad
policy arguments. ''If you talk about this the right way,
then the American people, or most of them, will get it,''
one of Kerry's informal advisers told me. ''But you've got
to have guts.''
This is the Republican line on Kerry -- that he lacks guts.
Kerry's often wobbly attempt to be both like and unlike
Bush in his approach to terrorism and the war in Iraq
enabled the Bush team, by the time Kerry and I spoke in
August, to portray him, devastatingly, as a
''flip-flopper'' who careens from one position to another.
In our conversation, Kerry seemed unusually sensitive to
these allegations, to the point where he seemed unwilling
to admit to having evolved or grown in the way that
politi
cians -- or human beings, for that matter --
generally do. When I asked Kerry how Sept. 11 had changed
him, either personally or politically, he seemed to freeze
for a moment.
''It accelerated -- '' He paused. ''I mean, it didn't
change me much at all. It just sort of accelerated,
confirmed in me, the urgency of doing the things I thought
we needed to be doing. I mean, to me, it wasn't as
transformational as it was a kind of anger, a frustration
and an urgency that we weren't doing the kinds of things
necessary to prevent it and to deal with it.''
Kerry did allow that he, like other Americans, felt less
safe after 9/11. ''Look, until a few months ago,'' he said,
referring to the time before he was enveloped in a Secret
Service escort and whisked around on charter planes, ''I
was flying like everybody else, you know, going through
things. Absolutely, I've looked at people very carefully on
an airplane. I'd look at shoes. I'd check people who I
thought might be a little squirrelly. Going into crowded
events, I feel very much on the alert.''
Bush attacked Kerry earlier in the campaign over this
question of whether the war on terror was really a war.
(''My opponent indicated that he's not comfortable using
the word 'war' to describe the struggle we're in,'' Bush
said, although whether Kerry had actually said that is
debatable.) Now that I'd heard Holbrooke and others say
flat out that we weren't in an actual war, I wanted to hear
what Kerry thought. Is this a real war, or a metaphorical
one? I asked him. Is ''war'' the right word to use?
''There's a danger in it,'' Kerry said, nodding. ''But it's
real,'' he went on, meaning the war itself. ''You know,
when your buildings are bombed and 3,000 people get killed,
and airplanes are hijacked, and a nation is terrorized the
way we were, and people continue to plot to do you injury,
that's an act of war, and it's serious business. But it's a
different kind of war. You have to understand that this is
not the sands of Iwo Jima. This is a completely new,
different kind of war from any we've fought previously.''
Kerry told me he would stop terrorists by going after them
ruthlessly with the military, and he faulted Bush, as he
often does, for choosing to use Afghan militias, instead of
American troops, to pursue Osama bin Laden into the
mountains of Tora Bora, where he disappeared. ''I'm
certainly, you know, not going to take second seat to
anybody, to nobody, in my willingness to seek justice and
set America on a course -- to make America safe,'' Kerry
told me. ''And that requires destroying terrorists. And I'm
committed to doing that. But I think I have a better way of
doing it. I can do it more effectively.''
This was a word that Kerry came back to repeatedly in our
discussions; he told me he would wage a more ''effective''
war on terror no less than 18 times in two hours of
conversations. The question, of course, was how.
''I think we can do a better job,'' Kerry said, ''of
cutting off financing, of exposing groups, of working
cooperatively across the globe, of improving our
intelligence capabilities nationally and internationally,
of training our military and deploying them differently, of
specializing in special forces and special ops, of working
with allies, and most importantly -- and I mean most
importantly -- of restoring America's reputation as a
country that listens, is sensitive, brings people to our
side, is the seeker of peace, not war, and that uses our
high moral ground and high-level values to augment us in
the war on terror, not to diminish us.''
This last point was what Kerry seemed to be getting at with
his mantra of ''effectiveness,'' and it was in fact the
main thrust of his campaign pitch about terrorism. By
infuriating allies and diminishing the country's
international esteem, Kerry argued, Bush had made it
impossible for America to achieve its goals abroad. By the
simple act of changing presidents, the country would
greatly increase its chances of success in the global war
on terror. Both candidates, in fact, were suggesting that
the main difference between them was one of leadership
style and not policy; just as Bush had taken to arguing
that Kerry was too inconstant to lead a nation at war,
Kerry's critique centered on the idea that Bush had proved
himself too stubborn and arrogant to represent America to
the rest of the world.
But when you listen carefully to what Bush and Kerry say,
it becomes clear that the differences between them are more
profound than the matter of who can be more effective in
achieving the same ends. Bush casts the war on terror as a
vast struggle that is likely to go on indefinitely, or at
least as long as radical Islam commands fealty in regions
of the world. In a rare moment of either candor or
carelessness, or perhaps both, Bush told Matt Lauer on the
''Today'' show in August that he didn't think the United
States could actually triumph in the war on terror in the
foreseeable future. ''I don't think you can win it,'' he
said -- a statement that he and his aides tried to disown
but that had the ring of sincerity to it. He and other
members of his administration have said that Americans
should expect to be attacked again, and that the constant
shadow of danger that hangs over major cities like New York
and Washington is the cost of freedom. In his rhetoric,
Bush suggests that terrorism for this generation of
Americans is and should be an overwhelming and frightening
reality.
When I asked Kerry what it would take for Americans to feel
safe again, he displayed a much less apocalyptic worldview.
''We have to get back to the place we were, where
terrorists are not the focus of our lives, but they're a
nuisance,'' Kerry said. ''As a former law-enforcement
person, I know we're never going to end prostitution. We're
never going to end illegal gambling. But we're going to
reduce it, organized crime, to a level where it isn't on
the rise. It isn't threatening people's lives every day,
and fundamentally, it's something that you continue to
fight, but it's not threatening the fabric of your life.''
This analogy struck me as remarkable, if only because it
seemed to throw down a big orange marker between Kerry's
philosophy and the president's. Kerry, a former prosecutor,
was suggesting that the war, if one could call it that,
was, if not winnable, then at least controllable. If
mobsters could be chased into the back rooms of seedy
clubs, then so, too, could terrorists be sent scurrying for
their lives into remote caves where they wouldn't harm us.
Bush had continually cast himself as the optimist in the
race, asserting that he alone saw the liberating potential
of American might, and yet his dark vision of unending war
suddenly seemed far less hopeful than Kerry's notion that
all of this horror -- planes flying into buildin
gs, anxiety
about suicide bombers and chemicals in the subway -- could
somehow be made to recede until it was barely in our
thoughts.
Kerry came to his worldview over the course of a Senate
career that has been, by any legislative standard, a quiet
affair. Beginning in the late 80's, Kerry's Subcommittee on
Terrorism, Narcotics and International Operations
investigated and exposed connections between Latin American
drug dealers and BCCI, the international bank that was
helping to launder drug money. That led to more
investigations of arms dealers, money laundering and
terrorist financing.
Kerry turned his work on the committee into a book on
global crime, titled ''The New War,'' published in 1997. He
readily admitted to me that the book ''wasn't exclusively
on Al Qaeda''; in fact, it barely mentioned the rise of
Islamic extremism. But when I spoke to Kerry in August, he
said that many of the interdiction tactics that cripple
drug lords, including governments working jointly to share
intelligence, patrol borders and force banks to identify
suspicious customers, can also be some of the most useful
tools in the war on terror.
''Of all the records in the Senate, if you don't mind my
saying, I think I was ahead of the curve on this entire
dark side of globalization,'' he said. ''I think that the
Senate committee report on contras, narcotics and drugs, et
cetera, is a seminal report. People have based research
papers on it. People have based documents on it, movies on
it. I think it was a significant piece of work.''
More senior members of the foreign-relations committee,
like Joe Biden and Richard Lugar, were far more visible and
vocal on the emerging threat of Islamic terrorism. But
through his BCCI investigation, Kerry did discover that a
wide array of international criminals -- Latin American
drug lords, Palestinian terrorists, arms dealers -- had one
thing in common: they were able to move money around
through the same illicit channels. And he worked hard, and
with little credit, to shut those channels down.
In 1988, Kerry successfully proposed an amendment that
forced the Treasury Department to negotiate so-called Kerry
Agreements with foreign countries. Under these agreements,
foreign governments had to promise to keep a close watch on
their banks for potential money laundering or they risked
losing their access to U.S. markets. Other measures Kerry
tried to pass throughout the 90's, virtually all of them
blocked by Republican senators on the banking committee,
would end up, in the wake of 9/11, in the USA Patriot Act;
among other things, these measures subject banks to fines
or loss of license if they don't take steps to verify the
identities of their customers and to avoid being used for
money laundering.
Through his immersion in the global underground, Kerry made
connections among disparate criminal and terrorist groups
that few other senators interested in foreign policy were
making in the 90's. Richard A. Clarke, who coordinated
security and counterterrorism policy for George W. Bush and
Bill Clinton, credits Kerry with having seen beyond the
national-security tableau on which most of his colleagues
were focused. ''He was getting it at the same time that
people like Tony Lake were getting it, in the '93 -'94 time
frame,'' Clarke says, referring to Anthony Lake, Clinton's
national security adviser. ''And the 'it' here was that
there was a new nonstate-actor threat, and that
nonstate-actor threat was a blended threat that didn't fit
neatly into the box of organized criminal, or neatly into
the box of terrorism. What you found were groups that were
all of the above.''
In other words, Kerry was among the first policy makers in
Washington to begin mapping out a strategy to combat an
entirely new kind of enemy. Americans were conditioned, by
two world wars and a long standoff with a rival superpower,
to see foreign policy as a mix of cooperation and tension
between civilized states. Kerry came to believe, however,
that Americans were in greater danger from the more shadowy
groups he had been investigating -- nonstate actors, armed
with cellphones and laptops -- who might detonate suitcase
bombs or release lethal chemicals into the subway just to
make a point. They lived in remote regions and exploited
weak governments. Their goal wasn't to govern states but to
destabilize them.
The challenge of beating back these nonstate actors -- not
just Islamic terrorists but all kinds of rogue forces -- is
what Kerry meant by ''the dark side of globalization.'' He
came closest to articulating this as an actual
foreign-policy vision in a speech he gave at U.C.L.A. last
February. ''The war on terror is not a clash of
civilizations,'' he said then. ''It is a clash of
civilization against chaos, of the best hopes of humanity
against dogmatic fears of progress and the future.''
This stands in significant contrast to the Bush doctrine,
which holds that the war on terror, if not exactly a clash
of civilizations, is nonetheless a struggle between those
states that would promote terrorism and those that would
exterminate it. Bush, like Kerry, accepts the premise that
America is endangered mainly by a new kind of adversary
that claims no state or political entity as its own. But he
does not accept the idea that those adversaries can
ultimately survive and operate independently of states; in
fact, he asserts that terrorist groups are inevitably the
subsidiaries of irresponsible regimes. ''We must be
prepared to stop rogue states and their terrorist
clients,'' the National Security Strategy said, in a
typical passage, ''before they are able to threaten or use
weapons of mass destruction against the United States and
our allies and friends.''
By singling out three states in particular- Iraq, North
Korea and Iran -- as an ''axis of evil,'' and by invading
Iraq on the premise that it did (or at least might) sponsor
terrorism, Bush cemented the idea that his war on terror is
a war against those states that, in the president's words,
are not with us but against us. Many of Bush's advisers
spent their careers steeped in cold-war strategy, and their
foreign policy is deeply rooted in the idea that states are
the only consequential actors on the world stage, and that
they can -- and should -- be forced to exercise control
over the violent groups that take root within their
borders.
Kerry's view, on the other hand, suggests that it is the
very premise of civilized states, rather than any one
ideology, that is under attack. And no one state, acting
alone, can possibly have much impact on the threat, because
terrorists will always be able to move around, shelter
their money and connect in cyberspace; there are no
capitals for a superpower like the United States to bomb,
no ambassadors to recall, no
economies to sanction. The
U.S. military searches for bin Laden, the Russians hunt for
the Chechen terrorist Shamil Basayev and the Israelis fire
missiles at Hamas bomb makers; in Kerry's world, these
disparate terrorist elements make up a loosely affiliated
network of diabolical villains, more connected to one
another by tactics and ideology than they are to any one
state sponsor. The conflict, in Kerry's formulation, pits
the forces of order versus the forces of chaos, and only a
unified community of nations can ensure that order
prevails.
One can infer from this that if Kerry were able to speak
less guardedly, in a less treacherous atmosphere than a
political campaign, he might say, as some of his advisers
do, that we are not in an actual war on terror. Wars are
fought between states or between factions vying for control
of a state; Al Qaeda and its many offspring are neither. If
Kerry's foreign-policy frame is correct, then law
enforcement probably is the most important, though not the
only, strategy you can employ against such forces, who need
passports and bank accounts and weapons in order to survive
and flourish. Such a theory suggests that, in our grief and
fury, we have overrated the military threat posed by Al
Qaeda, paradoxically elevating what was essentially a
criminal enterprise, albeit a devastatingly sophisticated
and global one, into the ideological successor to Hitler
and Stalin -- and thus conferring on the jihadists a kind
of stature that might actually work in their favor,
enabling them to attract more donations and more recruits.
This critical difference between the two men running for
the presidency, over what kind of enemy we are fighting and
how best to defeat it, is at the core of a larger debate
over how the United States should involve itself in the
Muslim world. Bush and Kerry are in agreement, as is just
about every expert on Islamic culture you can find, that in
order for Americans to live and travel securely, the United
States must change the widespread perception among many
Muslims worldwide that America is morally corrupt and
economically exploitative. It is this resentment, felt
especially strongly among Arab Muslims, that makes heroes
of suicide bombers. The question vexing the foreign-policy
establishment in Washington is how you market freedom. Is
the establishment of a single, functioning democracy in the
Middle East enough to win the ''hearts and minds'' of
ordinary Muslims, by convincing them that America is in
fact the model for a free, more open society? Or do you
need to somehow strike at the underlying conditions --
despotism, hopelessness, economic and social repression --
that breed fundamentalism and violence in the first place?
''You've got to do something to acknowledge the gulf that
exists between the dispossessed Arab world and us, because
it's huge,'' says Bob Kerrey, the former Democratic senator
who is now president of New School University and who
served on the independent 9/11 commission. ''We don't have
enough money, we don't have enough parents who are willing
to give up their sons and daughters, to win this with our
Army, Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard. We
don't have the bodies to do it. So if you don't have a real
agenda of hope that's as hard-headed and tough as your
military and law-enforcement agenda, we're not going to win
this thing.''
The neo-conservatives have advanced a viral theory of
democracy. In their view, establishing a model democracy in
the Arab world, by force if necessary, no matter how many
years and lives it takes, would ultimately benefit not only
the people of that country but also America too. A free and
democratic Iraq, to take the favorite example, will cause
the people of other repressive countries in the region to
rise up and demand American-style freedom, and these
democratic nations will no longer be breeding pools for
nihilistic terrorists. Like so much of Bush's policy, this
kind of thinking harks directly back to the cold war. The
domino theory that took hold during the 1950's maintained
that an ideological change in one nation -- ''going''
communist or democratic -- could infect its neighbor; it
was based in part on the idea that ideologies could be
contagious.
Bush crystallized the new incarnation of this idea in his
convention speech last month, notable for the unapologetic
sweep and clarity of its vision. ''The terrorists know that
a vibrant, successful democracy at the heart of the Middle
East will discredit their radical ideology of hate,'' the
president said. ''I believe in the transformational power
of liberty. As the citizens of Afghanistan and Iraq seize
the moment, their example will send a message of hope
throughout a vital region. Palestinians will hear the
message that democracy and reform are within their reach,
and so is peace with our good friend Israel. Young women
across the Middle East will hear the message that their day
of equality and justice is coming. Young men will hear the
message that national progress and dignity are found in
liberty, not tyranny and terror.''
Kerry, too, envisions a freer and more democratic Middle
East. But he flatly rejects the premise of viral democracy,
particularly when the virus is introduced at gunpoint. ''In
this administration, the approach is that democracy is the
automatic, easily embraced alternative to every ill in the
region,'' he told me. Kerry disagreed. ''You can't impose
it on people,'' he said. ''You have to bring them to it.
You have to invite them to it. You have to nurture the
process.''
Those who know Kerry say this belief is in part a reaction
to his own experience in Vietnam, where one understanding
of the domino theory (''if Vietnam goes communist, all of
Asia will fall'') led to the death of 58,000 Americans, and
another (''the South Vietnamese crave democracy'') ran up
against the realities of life in a poor, long-war-ravaged
country. The people of Vietnam, Kerry found, were
susceptible neither to the dogma of communism nor the
persuasiveness of American ''liberation.'' As the young
Kerry said during his 1971 testimony to the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee: ''We found most people didn't even
know the difference between communism and democracy. They
only wanted to work in rice paddies without helicopters
strafing them and bombs with napalm burning their villages
and tearing their country apart. They wanted everything to
do with the war, particularly with this foreign presence of
the United States of America, to leave them alone in
peace.''
Biden, who is perhaps Kerry's closest friend in the Senate,
suggests that Kerry sees Bush's advisers as beholden to the
same grand and misguided theories. ''John and I never
believed that, if you were successful in Iraq, you'd have
governments falling like dominoes in the Middle Eas
t,'' he
told me. ''The neo-cons of today are 'the best and the
brightest' who brought us Vietnam. They have taken a
construct that's flawed and applied it to a world that
isn't relevant.''
In fact, Kerry and his advisers contend that the occupation
of Iraq is creating a reverse contagion in the region; they
say the fighting -- with its heavy civilian casualties and
its pictures, beamed throughout the Arab world, of American
aggression -- has been a boon to Al Qaeda recruiters. They
frequently cite a Pentagon memo, leaked to the media last
year, in which Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld wondered
whether Al Qaeda was recruiting new terrorists faster than
the U.S. military could capture or kill them. ''God help us
if we damage the shrine in Najaf,'' Richard Holbrooke told
me on a day when marines surrounded insurgent Shiites
inside the shrine, ''and we create a new group of Shiites
who some years from now blow up the Statue of Liberty or
something like that, all because we destroyed the holiest
site in Shiism.''
If forced democracy is ultimately Bush's panacea for the
ills that haunt the world, as Kerry suggests it is, then
Kerry's is diplomacy. Kerry mentions the importance of
cooperating with the world community so often that some of
his strongest supporters wish he would ease up a bit.
(''When people hear multilateral, they think multi-mush,''
Biden despaired.) But multilateralism is not an abstraction
to Kerry, whose father served as a career diplomat during
the years after World War II. The only time I saw Kerry
truly animated during two hours of conversation was when he
talked about the ability of a president to build
relationships with other leaders.
''We need to engage more directly and more respectfully
with Islam, with the state of Islam, with religious
leaders, mullahs, imams, clerics, in a way that proves this
is not a clash with the British and the Americans and the
old forces they remember from the colonial days,'' Kerry
told me during a rare break from campaigning, in Seattle at
the end of August. ''And that's all about your diplomacy.''
When I suggested that effecting such changes could take
many years, Kerry shook his head vehemently and waved me
off.
''Yeah, it is long-term, but it can be dramatically
effective in the short term. It really can be. I promise
you.'' He leaned his head back and slapped his thighs. ''A
new presidency with the right moves, the right language,
the right outreach, the right initiatives, can dramatically
alter the world's perception of us very, very quickly.
''I know Mubarak well enough to know what I think I could
achieve in the messaging and in the press in Egypt,'' Kerry
went on. ''And, similarly, with Jordan and with King
Abdullah, and what we can do in terms of transformation in
the economics of the region by getting American
businesspeople involved, getting some stability and really
beginning to proactively move in those ways. We just
haven't been doing any of this stuff. We've been stunningly
disengaged, with the exception of Iraq.
''I mean, you ever hear anything about the 'road map'
anymore?'' he asked, referring to the international plan
for phasing in peace between Israel and the Palestinians,
which Kerry supports. ''No. You ever hear anything about
anything anymore? No. Do you hear anything about this
greater Middle East initiative, the concepts or anything?
No. I think we're fighting a very narrow, myopic kind of
war.''
It is not a coincidence that Kerry's greatest success in
the Senate came not during his long run of investigations
but in the realm of diplomacy. He and John McCain worked
for several years to settle the controversy over
P.O.W.-M.I.A.'s and to normalize relations with Vietnam --
an achievement that Kerry's Senate colleagues consider his
finest moment. ''He should talk about it more,'' Bob Kerrey
said. ''He transformed the region.'' In the same way, John
Kerry sees himself as a kind of ambassador-president,
shuttling to world capitals and reintegrating America, by
force of personality, into the world community.
He would begin, if sworn into office, by going immediately
to the United Nations to deliver a speech recasting
American foreign policy. Whereas Bush has branded North
Korea ''evil'' and refuses to negotiate head on with its
authoritarian regime, Kerry would open bilateral talks over
its burgeoning nuclear program. Similarly, he has said he
would rally other nations behind sanctions against Iran if
that country refuses to abandon its nuclear ambitions.
Kerry envisions appointing a top-level envoy to restart the
Middle East peace process, and he's intent on getting India
and Pakistan to adopt key provisions of the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty. (One place where Kerry vows to
take a harder line than Bush is Pakistan, where Bush has
embraced the military ruler Pervez Musharraf, and where
Kerry sees a haven for chaos in the vast and lawless region
on the border with Afghanistan.) In all of this, Kerry
intends to use as leverage America's considerable capacity
for economic aid; a Kerry adviser told me, only slightly in
jest, that Kerry's most tempting fantasy is to attend the
G-8 summit.
Kerry's view, that the 21st century will be defined by the
organized world's struggle against agents of chaos and
lawlessness, might be the beginning of a compelling vision.
The idea that America and its allies, sharing resources and
using the latest technologies, could track the movements of
terrorists, seize their bank accounts and carry out
targeted military strikes to eliminate them, seems more
optimistic and more practical than the notion that the
conventional armies of the United States will inevitably
have to punish or even invade every Islamic country that
might abet radicalism.
And yet, you can understand why Kerry has been so tentative
in advancing this idea. It's comforting to think that Al
Qaeda might be as easily marginalized as a bunch of
drug-running thugs, that an ''effective'' assault on its
bank accounts might cripple its twisted campaign against
Americans. But Americans are frightened -- an emotion that
has benefited Bush, and one that he has done little to
dissuade -- and many of them perceive a far more
existential threat to their lives than the one Kerry
describes. In this climate, Kerry's rather dry recitations
about money-laundering laws and intelligence-sharing
agreements can sound oddly discordant. We are living at a
time that feels historically consequential, where people
seem to expect -- and perhaps deserve -- a theory of the
world that matches the scope of their insecurity.
Theoretically, Kerry could still find a way to wrap his
ideas into some bold and cohesive construct for the next
half-century -- a Kerry Doctrine, perhaps, or a campaign
against chaos, rather than a
war on terror -- that people
will understand and relate to. But he has always been a man
who prides himself on appreciating the subtleties of public
policy, and everything in his experience has conditioned
him to avoid unsubtle constructs and grand designs. His
aversion to Big Think has resulted in one of the campaign's
oddities: it is Bush, the man vilified by liberals as
intellectually vapid, who has emerged as the de facto
visionary in the campaign, trying to impose some long-term
thematic order on a dangerous and disorderly world, while
Kerry carves the globe into a series of discrete problems
with specific solutions.
When Kerry first told me that Sept. 11 had not changed him,
I was surprised. I assumed everyone in America -- and
certainly in Washington -- had been changed by that day. I
assumed he was being overly cautious, afraid of providing
his opponents with yet another cheap opportunity to call
him a flip-flopper. What I came to understand was that, in
fact, the attacks really had not changed the way Kerry
viewed or talked about terrorism -- which is exactly why he
has come across, to some voters, as less of a leader than
he could be. He may well have understood the threat from Al
Qaeda long before the rest of us. And he may well be right,
despite the ridicule from Cheney and others, when he says
that a multinational, law-enforcement-like approach can be
more effective in fighting terrorists. But his less lofty
vision might have seemed more satisfying -- and would have
been easier to talk about in a political campaign -- in a
world where the twin towers still stood.
Matt Bai, a contributing writer, is covering the
presidential campaign for the magazine.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/10/magazine/10KERRY.html?ex=1098438583&ei=1&en=327366b4847f6675
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October 10, 2004
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quite a post, and you lay out what his foreign policy would be quite well. And his policy is that of the 1990's: a law enforcement and diplomatic problem.I read a Victor Davis Hanson article once when he said that the liberals see the entire concept of a "War on Terror" as a distraction from their domestic policy objectives. It's not so much that they have a different view of how to fight it, they don't see it as a big problem at all. I think Hanson hit the nail on the head.
You've missed the point. Take another look: "...in our grief and fury, we have overrated the military threat posed by Al Qaeda, paradoxically elevating what was essentially a criminal enterprise, albeit a devastatingly sophisticated and global one, into the ideological successor to Hitler and Stalin -- and thus conferring on the jihadists a kind of stature that might actually work in their favor, enabling them to attract more donations and more recruits...."
[...] cannot possibly win the war in Afghanistan. The only solution is a fundamental change in US policy. John Kerry’s 2004 campaign white paper for foreign policy appears to be the best hope for [...]
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