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- <text id=92TT1127>
- <title>
- May 18, 1992: America Abroad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- May 18, 1992 Roger Keith Coleman:Due to Die
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AMERICA ABORAD, Page 54
- Peacekeeping Loves Company
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott
- </p>
- <p> Two months ago, a highly classified Pentagon document
- known as the Defense Planning Guidance found its way into the
- New York Times. A front-page headline proclaimed that the Bush
- Administration had a secret plan to "thwart challenges to the
- primacy of America" in a "one-superpower world." The nation's
- top brass appeared to have endorsed "global unilateralism," the
- doctrine promoted by conservatives who believe that the U.S.
- essentially must go it alone in enforcing world peace. The Times
- called the suddenly famous Pentagon paper "the clearest
- rejection to date of collective internationalism" -- a competing
- view, favored by liberals, that coalitions, especially ones
- sanctioned by the U.N., are the way to keep global order.
- </p>
- <p> The leak caused an uproar on Capitol Hill, where
- legislators are looking to cut costs and share burdens. Senator
- Joseph Biden, a Democrat, scoffed at the idea of "America as
- `Globocop.'" At a recent international conference in Lisbon,
- I found Europeans and Japanese still fretting about the Times's
- scoop, which they took as proof that the U.S. is bent on giving
- new meaning to old cliches like Pax Americana and Uncle Sam as
- the world's policeman.
- </p>
- <p> A few days later, back in Washington, I had an opportunity
- to get a clearer sense of Pentagon thinking. Along with several
- other curious civilians, I spent most of a day listening to
- American military officers explain how they are adjusting to the
- budgetary stringencies and geopolitical complexities of the
- post-cold war era. They are under orders to reduce the size of
- the U.S. military 25% in the next three years and cut by more
- than half the number of G.I.s in Europe.
- </p>
- <p> All this is happening, of course, because the Soviet Union
- and the Warsaw Pact no longer exist. In place of the devil we
- knew is a threat represented on the briefers' charts by an
- eerie phrase: THE UNKNOWN AND THE UNCERTAIN. Instead of
- preparing to fight World War III, the Pentagon is planning to
- deal with what the charts call MRCS, or major regional
- conflicts. The National Security Agency, which eavesdrops on
- real and potential enemies around the world, is retiring Russian
- speakers to make room for specialists in Farsi and Swahili. One
- of the few categories of procurement that are growing is air-
- and sea-lift transports so the U.S. can rush troops to the scene
- of an MRC -- or perhaps to two scenes at once. For example,
- North Korea might attack the South just when the U.S. is
- preoccupied with a new flare-up in the Persian Gulf.
- </p>
- <p> After listening to the generals and admirals for several
- hours, I realized that many of us on the outside have
- oversimplified the terms of the debate that is going on within
- the defense establishment. In "the Tank," the mahogany-paneled
- room where the Joint Chiefs of Staff meet regularly to thrash
- out their problems, global unilateralism and collective
- internationalism do not seem quite so much like a strategic
- dichotomy, an either-or choice that the U.S. must make now and
- live with for decades. Instead, the chiefs want to keep all
- options open. When necessary, they want the U.S. to be the Lone
- Ranger who can go after a bandido like Manuel Noriega of Panama.
- But whenever possible, they would prefer to play the sheriff who
- leads a posse against the likes of Saddam Hussein.
- </p>
- <p> However, there is a trickier third contingency. It is all
- too easy to imagine a local conflict -- in the Balkans, the
- Horn of Africa, Southeast Asia -- threatening to become an MRC.
- Foreign intervention is urgently required. The U.S. may not feel
- its vital interests are sufficiently threatened to take the
- lead, but American participation would increase the credibility
- and effectiveness of the operation. In such a case, the U.S.
- should be prepared to join a posse led by someone else.
- </p>
- <p> That prospect clearly made our briefers uneasy. There was
- no mention of the U.N. on their many charts, so my fellow
- visitor, Samuel Lewis, kept raising the issue. A former American
- ambassador to Israel, he is now president of the U.S. Institute
- of Peace, a congressionally funded foundation and think tank
- devoted to conflict resolution. At his probing, our hosts were
- willing to allow that U.S. military units might participate in
- a multinational peacekeeping mission under a non-American
- general in a U.N. blue beret. But their lack of enthusiasm for
- the idea was palpable.
- </p>
- <p> At the end of our stay, we met with General Colin Powell,
- the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. He was much less grudging
- about multilateral operations in general and the U.N. in
- particular. In response to more questions from Lewis, Powell
- recalled that the U.N.'s founders established a Military Staff
- Committee, composed of representatives of the five permanent
- members of the Security Council, to direct peacekeeping
- activities. Noting that the committee had been "moribund"
- through the cold war, Powell said he would now like to see it
- made "more relevant."
- </p>
- <p> In addition, the U.N. as a whole needs more power and
- resources for peacekeeping, including an ability to call on
- American troops to serve under the world body's flag. Powell's
- subordinates might wince at the thought. But they need not
- worry. Since the U.S. has a veto on the Security Council, the
- President would not be giving up his ultimate authority or
- responsibility as Commander in Chief.
- </p>
- <p> Powell is still a long way from trading in his green Army
- cap for a blue beret, but he is no Globocop either. It is
- encouraging that the American soldier who is most willing to
- work the U.N. into the Pentagon's plans is also the highest
- ranking.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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