THE MORNING AFTER: MID-TERM ELECTIONS SET STAGE FOR NEW DIRECTION IN U.S. SECURITY POLICY

(Washington, D.C.): Yesterday’s astounding victories
for Republicans in the U.S. Senate and House of
Representatives should produce more than a mere
transformation of the power structure in Washington and
widespread changes in the domestic political agenda. With
the Congress firmly in the hands of a new, conservative
majority, the most dramatic changes of all may be
seen in the role the legislative branch plays in the
formulation and implementation of effective defense and
foreign policies.

The Center for Security Policy
welcomes this prospect and the electoral changes that
make it possible. The Center is, by law, a non-partisan
organization; it nonetheless regards the election of
legislators — of both parties — committed to
principled, common-sensical security policies as a most
salutary development.

In particular, the Center believes that the results of
the mid-term elections should clear the way for dramatic
course corrections in a number of areas in which it has
been actively involved over the past few years. These
include the following:

  • With Republicans elected on platforms (notably,
    the Contract with America) that promise to provide
    protection for the people of the United States,
    their forces overseas and their allies against
    missile attack
    , the next Congress can be
    expected to take concrete steps to end what is
    the single, most egregious national security
    problem facing the Nation today. The Center for
    Security Policy and the blue-ribbon Coalition
    to Defend America
    of which it is a part
    look forward to working with the legislative
    branch to accomplish this urgent task.
  • The Center also expects that the new Congress
    will take a critical look at the Clinton
    Administration’s policy of
    “denuclearizing” the United States and
    its budgets that are grievously eroding the
    readiness of today’s U.S. military and
    imperilling the technological superiority of
    tomorrow’s armed forces
    . Corrective
    action is needed on both scores.
  • Similarly, Administration initiatives in the arms
    control arena should receive far closer scrutiny
    than has be the case in recent years. Even before
    the Senate changed hands, Clinton efforts
    to expand and exacerbate what the Washington
    Post
    has called the “obsolete notion of
    arms control” codified by the 1972
    Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
    were in
    trouble. On 19 September, 39 U.S. Senators,
    including then-Minority Leader Robert Dole and
    the rest of the Senate’s Republican leadership,
    wrote President Clinton, warning: “In our
    view, any agreement that hinders our advanced TMD
    [theater missile defense] programs would
    constitute a bad agreement.”
  • If the old Senate already had five more votes
    than would be needed to block ratification of any
    new treaty — or amendment to the existing 1972
    Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty — that had the
    effect of “hindering our advanced TMD
    programs,” the new Senate will be even more
    hostile to such an idea. Certainly, as the
    signatories pointedly reminded President Clinton
    on 19 September, thanks to Section 232 of the
    Fiscal Year 1995 National Defense Authorization
    Act, U.S. law now demands that “any
    agreement that substantively modifies the ABM
    Treaty” be submitted to the Senate for its
    formal advice and consent. They served notice
    that what the Clinton Administration has in mind
    would represent such a substantive modification.
    As a result of yesterday’s outcome, the
    Administration would be well-advised to cease and
    desist its efforts to negotiate such
    modifications.

  • It is to be hoped that, under the new leadership
    of the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed
    Services Committees, the Senate will be similarly
    ill-disposed to other, equally reckless
    arms control initiatives
    , notably: the
    fatally flawed Chemical Weapons Convention, a
    Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban and the effort
    permanently to extend the Nuclear
    Non-Proliferation Treaty, irrespective of the
    price that might be exacted for doing so (e.g.,
    in terms of adopting verifiable provisions or
    making diplomatic, economic and/or strategic
    concessions). The prospect that such ideas might
    be subjected, at last, to thorough, balanced
    hearings in a Republican Senate should prove most
    therapeutic.
  • The new Congress will have to engage in no less
    rigorous oversight of other dubious
    Clinton foreign policies
    . For example,
    the new Senate will have as members Jon Kyl,
    Republican of Arizona, and Daniel Patrick
    Moynihan, Democrat of New York, both of whom have
    expressed opposition to the idea of deploying
    U.S. forces on the Golan Heights
    in
    connection with an Israeli-Syrian agreement.
    Certainly, the days when Mr. Clinton can ignore
    congressional concerns about the unauthorized
    overseas commitment of significant numbers of
    U.S. forces in non-emergency situations (e.g.,
    Haiti and Macedonia) are now over.
  • The election of Jon Kyl — a distinguished
    member of the Center for Security Policy’s Board
    of Advisors and recipient of its 1994
    “Keeper of the Flame” Award — to the
    Senate also means that that body will have a
    formidable new voice for discipline and
    transparency in foreign assistance to the former
    Soviet Union
    . The re-election of Sen.
    Joseph Lieberman and the new Republican majority
    suggests, moreover, that a legislated end to the
    odious arms embargo against Bosnia
    is
    finally at hand.

  • Another area where substantial improvement should
    be forthcoming as a result of the Republican tsunami
    involves re-establishing effective
    controls over the export of strategic
    technologies
    . Thanks to the dangerously
    short-sighted actions of the executive branch in
    recent years that have encouraged — and facilitated
    — the dismantling of multilateral export control
    arrangements, this job will be made vastly more
    difficult. At the very least, however, it is to
    be hoped that the weakened power (if not outright
    defeat) of legislators like Rep. Sam Gejdenson
    (D-CT), who have repeatedly championed misguided
    export liberalization schemes on Capitol Hill,
    will allow the legislature to play a constructive
    rather than destructive role.

Time for Clinton to Clean House

If the Clinton Administration means what it says about
wanting to “heal the wounds” and work with the
new Republican-controlled Congress, it would be
well-advised to purge its ranks of left-wing and
like-minded officials whose policy recommendations are
anathema to the new congressional majority. Such
officials include; Secretary of Energy Hazel
O’Leary
(the leading advocate of U.S.
“denuclearization”); Secretary of State
Warren Christopher, his Deputy, Strobe Talbott, and
Assistant Secretaries Robert Gallucci and
Winston
Lord
(responsible, among other things, for
outrageous appeasement policies in Korea, Vietnam and
elsewhere); National Security Advisor Anthony
Lake and his Senior Director for Democracy Morton
Halperin
(responsible, among other things, for
implicating the U.S. in ill-advised U.N.-run peacekeeping
operations and “nation-building exercises” in
Haiti and beyond); Assistant Secretary of Defense
Ashton Carter
(an important contributor within
the Defense Department to the
“denuclearization” impetus) and Deputy
Assistant Secretary Mitch Wallerstein

(substantially responsible for the reckless dismantling
of U.S. and multilateral export controls);
Lieutenant General Wesley Clark, Director for Strategy,
Plans and Policy on the Joint Chiefs of Staff

(who, as President Clinton’s favorite military officer —
thanks to his being a fellow Arkansan and Rhodes Scholar
— has played a major and very counterproductive role in
politicizing and undermining sensible military positions
on such issues as missile defense and related
negotiations, the Bosnian arms embargo and Haiti
operation); and Secretary of Commerce Ron Brown
(under whose leadership the Commerce Department has
proven even more irresponsible than usual with respect to
the export of critical technology to U.S. defenses).

Whether Mr. Clinton has the wisdom and courage to
unburden himself of such “Old Democrats” — and
those who are otherwise unworthy of public trust —
remains to be seen. At a minimum, however, it is clear
that these individuals have little future in
government, at least in positions requiring Senate
confirmation
.

The Bottom Line

The Center for Security Policy very much hopes that
yesterday’s elections will produce a new
“correlation of forces” in Washington
reminiscent of those that prevailed in the late 1970s
when, under the bipartisan leadership of the late
Senators Henry M. Jackson and John Tower, a major course
correction was effected in U.S. security policy. Indeed,
several years before Ronald Reagan became President, this
coalition stopped the hollowing out of the U.S. military,
defeated a “fatally flawed” arms control treaty
(SALT II) and created conditions under which American
power would once again be respected around the world.

As Center Director Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. noted in his
column in the Washington Times last Monday, such
a desirable course correction was inevitable;
the only question was how soon would it occur:

[The] list of prematurely declared [Clinton
foreign policy] “successes” is illustrative
of the larger problem with the Clinton security
policy record. In due course, if not [on 8 November],
the critical swing group of voters — the Reagan
Democrats — are going to vote against Clinton and
Company. These voters will do so for the same reasons
they rejected the last southern Democratic president,
Jimmy Carter: they have no use for leaders who
squander America’s prestige and reduce its power and
who, in the process, embolden U.S. adversaries at the
expense of our interests overseas.

The Center is delighted that this sea change has taken
place now, before the costs of correcting the damage
already done to America’s prestige, power and interests
become even greater. It looks forward to working with the
new Congress toward that end.

Center for Security Policy

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