WHAT ‘REAGAN DEMOCRATS’ REALLY CARE ABOUT: SAFEGUARDING AMERICA’S INTERESTS IN A DANGEROUS WORLD

(Washington, D.C.): Amid mounting
evidence that Bill Clinton has made a
first-class hash-up of U.S. security
policy, his Republican challenger has yet
to capitalize on this evident
vulnerability. By so doing, Mr. Dole
risks repeating an error that contributed
to George Bush’s defeat four years ago.
Worse yet, he is denying the
Nation an urgently needed opportunity for
stock-taking and course-correction in
areas certain adversely to affect vital
national interests in the years — and
possibly even the weeks and months —
ahead.

It’s Not Just the Economy,
Stupid

In 1992, President Bush’s handlers
persuaded him that foreign and defense
policy were not politically potent
issues. Instead, Mr. Bush found himself
waging the campaign almost entirely on
his opponent’s terms — notably the
Clinton campaign’s contention that
“It’s the economy, stupid.” To
the extent that security policy questions
featured at all, Governor Clinton
shrewdly portrayed his positions as being
to the right of the Bush
Administration, notably with respect to
its “coddling” of dictators
from China to Iraq to Yugoslavia. Only
after the election did the insincerity of
those Clinton stances become apparent.

Today, Senator Dole is clearly trying
to stay “on message” with
respect to tax-cuts and the war on drugs.
In the process, however, he is not
adequately making the case that in an
increasingly dangerous world, he would be
a more competent guardian of U.S.
national interests — to say nothing of
Commander-in-Chief — than the incumbent.
As a result, the myriad problems
besetting American security policy are
going largely unremarked and the
alternative approaches that Mr. Dole
would adopt as President are not being
laid fully before the public.

Ticking Time Bombs

Consider three ticking time-bombs that
the Clinton Administration has put
squarely in the laps of the U.S. armed
forces but would prefer not to discuss
this fall:

  • Iraq: The
    Clinton Administration’s inept
    handling of Saddam Hussein’s
    latest aggressive behavior
    invites more of the same — if
    not before the United
    States’ November election, then
    surely afterwards. The American
    people should be offered a clear
    alternative to the present policy
    of muddling along with symbolic,
    if expensive, U.S. responses to
    Iraqi actions that are
    symptomatic in nature and certainly
    not the cause
    of the problem
    there. Specifically, a strategy
    must be enunciated that would
    have as its aim the destruction
    of the police-state apparatus
    that keeps Saddam Hussein’s
    brutal dictatorship in power.
  • Bosnia: This
    weekend’s elections in Bosnia
    were neither free nor fair. Their
    principal effect seems to have
    been to legitimate and empower
    three of the most xenophobic
    leaders of the Muslim, Serb and
    Croat factions. The unworkability
    of the co-presidency arrangement
    is giving rise to a not-so-secret
    Clinton plan to extend the U.S.
    troop deployment in Bosnia well
    beyond its promised end-point of
    1996.
  • In fact, such an outcome was
    inevitable given the profound
    defects of the Dayton Peace
    Accord, notably its failure to
    bring to justice those like
    Serbian dictator Slobodan
    Milosevic who were responsible
    for initiating the conflict and
    who profited most from its
    genocidal “ethnic
    cleansing.” President
    Clinton needs to be held
    accountable for the part he has
    played in this tragedy and for
    the costs that will be incurred
    when, inevitably, those who have
    gone unpunished and/or those who
    seek revenge will cause the
    region to explode in a renewed
    spasm of violence.

  • Haiti: The
    tenuous nature of the democracy
    installed in Haiti two years ago
    by thousands of American
    “peacekeepers” is
    evident in the fact that U.S.
    troops have now been returned to
    Port au Prince to serve as a
    Praetorian Guard for the recently
    elected president. While this
    action may have served
    temporarily to keep a lid on the
    festering Haitian crisis, it must
    not be confused with the creation
    of a viable and durable
    democracy. The American people
    deserve the truth about not only
    the billions that have been spent
    to postpone the day of reckoning
    in Haiti but what will be the
    U.S. response when it comes.

Meanwhile, the United States faces
emerging challenges from Russia to Iran,
from North Africa to North Korea, from
China to Cuba — challenges that may well
jeopardize important American equities.
Similarly, it refuses to reckon with the
need for effective, near-term
anti-missile defenses in light of the
global proliferation of ballistic
missile-borne weapons of mass
destruction. The Clinton
Administration has seriously
under-invested in the military resources
that may be required to meet these
potential problems, let alone deal
with them
in addition to those that
are already in evidence.

The Clinton Response? Cut
Defense

In fact, Leon Panetta, the
White House Chief of Staff, is demanding
that Congress reduce the FY1997 Defense
appropriations bill by some $2.5 billion
if it is to enjoy Mr. Clinton’s support.

While it is not clear at the moment just
where the Administration would like the
legislative branch to make such cuts,
chances are that it will have to come out
of discretionary funding added by the
Congress to rectify identified shortfalls
in the Pentagon’s readiness, research and
development and procurement accounts. The
upshot will be to exacerbate present
deficiencies that affect the fighting
trim and morale of today’s forces and to
degrade the ability of tomorrow’s forces
to perform their missions safely and
effectively.

The Bottom Line

The Clinton Administration has set the
United States up for a series of falls
around the world. That reality is a
legitimate subject for debate and
national decision-making at the polls
this November. In order for it to be so,
however, the Republican nominee
will have to engage Mr. Clinton on these
subjects frontally, repeatedly and
forthwith
.
While Mr. Dole’s
call today for a national missile defense
capability and the critique of what
passes for a U.S. Iraq policy offered
last week by his running mate, Jack Kemp,
are welcome, they are no
substitute for making security policy a
major campaign focus
.
Not
least, Mr. Dole should be heard from on
the question of President Clinton’s
latest bid to reduce military spending
even as his Administration is busily
committing the U.S. armed forces to
various expensive and often dangerous
missions around the world.

As a non-partisan organization, the
Center for Security Policy believes that
it is imperative that security policy be
given the prominence in this election
cycle that it deserves. To the extent
that swing voters President Clinton has
identified as “Reagan
Democrats” continue to recognize
peace requires American strength, the
candidates’ respective records and
positions in this area may even prove to
be determinative of the outcome.

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Center for Security Policy

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