By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Foreign Policy Consensus
US foreign policy is
adrift between the old order and one that has yet to be defined. Donald Trump’s
victory in the 2016 U.S. presidential election awakened many in Washington to
the reality that despite the political elite’s presumption of an unassailable
foreign policy consensus, many Americans questioned the assumptions that had
guided decades of the U.S. approach to the world—in particular, the idea that
an international order backed by American military hegemony was self-evidently
worth maintaining, no matter the cost. The 2024 election has confirmed that
2016 was not an anomaly. The old Washington consensus is dead.
But Trump’s “America
first” approach is not a viable alternative. Despite often being mislabeled as
isolationism, what Trump offers is aggressive unilateralism, also
called “illiberal hegemony”; a vision of the United States unbound by
rules and unashamedly self-interested, no longer getting ripped off by a
self-dealing and entrenched Washington political establishment and free-riding
international allies and clients. In his speech to the Republican convention,
Vice President-elect JD Vance built on this theme, weaving his own story of
disillusionment with the Iraq war, in which he served, into a broader narrative
of elite failure and impunity. Democrats neglected to respond adequately (even
bafflingly touting the endorsement of one of the Iraq war’s key architects,
former Vice President Dick Cheney), leaving a lane wide open for Trump to
present himself, however cynically, as the antiwar candidate.
Americans need an
alternative to the choice between “America First” unilateralism or “America is
back” nostalgia. Putting a new coat of paint on the old liberal
internationalism will not do—neither for Americans nor for most of the world’s
countries and peoples, who understandably see U.S. leaders’ appeals to a
“rules-based” order as a thin varnish for an order ruled, and often bent or
broken, with impunity by the United States and its friends. Progressives and
Democrats now have an opportunity—and obligation—to map a better way forward.
The goal of any
country’s foreign policy is to promote the security and prosperity of its
people. In today’s deeply interconnected world, however, where key challenges
such as climate change and pandemics are shared, the United States’ global
approach needs to include another priority: the common good. This will require
a United States that acts in solidarity with others, considers the effects of
American foreign policy on people around the world, and seeks to promote U.S.
security and prosperity while not exporting insecurity and economic precarity
onto them. Such an approach will benefit Americans more as well.
Americans need an
alternative to the choice between “America First” unilateralism or “America is
back” nostalgia. Putting a new coat of paint on the old liberal
internationalism will not do—neither for Americans nor for most of the world’s
countries and peoples, who understandably see U.S. leaders’ appeals to a
“rules-based” order as a thin varnish for an order ruled, and often bent or
broken, with impunity by the United States and its friends. Progressives and
Democrats now have an opportunity—and obligation—to map a better way forward.
The goal of any
country’s foreign policy is to promote the security and prosperity of its
people. In today’s deeply interconnected world, however, where key challenges
such as climate change and pandemics are shared, the United States’ global
approach needs to include another priority: the common good. This will require
a United States that acts in solidarity with others, considers the effects of
American foreign policy on people around the world, and seeks to promote U.S.
security and prosperity while not exporting insecurity and economic precarity
onto them. Such an approach will benefit Americans more as well.
The Washington Monument in Washington, D.C., January
2024
Any benefits yielded
by a break from neoliberal economics would be squandered, however, if the
United States continues to filter its approach through the lens of strategic
competition. Nowhere has this been demonstrated more graphically than in the
Middle East, where Washington’s rhetoric of peace and normalization masks a
frantic effort to sustain American hegemony. In its struggle to prevent inroads
by China and counter the pernicious roles of Iran and Russia in the region, the
United States fed the very dynamic that those actors exploit. Witness the U.S.
role as broker in the Abraham Accords, in which the United States offered arms
for normalization of ties between Israel and Arab partners, or how the United
States backed a catastrophic war waged by Israel on the captive people of Gaza
in response to Hamas’s October 2023 attack. Rather than embrace a shift from
bad policy and use its considerable leverage to rein in Israel’s assault, the
United States has spent the past year mainly trying (and failing) to contain
the spread of the conflict beyond Gaza,
hemorrhaging resources and international credibility while abetting a
humanitarian catastrophe. Instead of offering a genuine foreign policy for the
middle class, let alone the working class, Washington has pursued global
military hegemony for the ruling class.
The United States can
advance a more equitable global order, or it can try to maintain global
primacy, but it can’t do both. A global order that seeks to entrench American
primacy is undemocratic on a global scale and will not benefit the populations
most disenfranchised within the international system. Many in Washington,
invested as they are in the old order, will wrongly equate calls for drawing
back from U.S. military hegemony as retrenchment or, worse, isolationism. But
the reality is that the projects of political elites in the 21st
century—defined by militarism and the embrace of global economic and trade
systems that prioritize corporate profits over economic and social
well-being—have had vast costs. They have contributed not only to global instability
but also to the slide toward authoritarianism and the reactionary anger on
display in recent democratic elections. Americans’ safety and prosperity
require Washington to participate in every possible international
arena. But U.S. leaders must put people over governments—especially over the
authoritarian ones that Washington has long considered partners and allies—and
over corporate and plutocratic elites.
It’s going to require
a true overhaul of foreign policy paradigms and personnel. U.S. policymakers
should start with a decisive break with the era of the global war on terror.
Biden deserves credit for the courageous step of ending the Afghanistan war, although
the shambles of the final 2021 withdrawal, combined with the United States’
failure to honor its commitments to Afghan allies seeking a safe exit, is an
enduring shame. His administration also dramatically reduced drone strikes, and
with them the civilian casualties that too often accompanied those strikes. But
there is so much more to be done. Despite Biden’s false claim to be “the first
president in this century to report to the American people that the United
States is not at war anywhere in the world,” American forces remain engaged in
multiple countries in the Middle East and elsewhere under two different
congressional authorizations for the use of military force, passed in 2001 and
2002. These authorizations should be repealed. The proposed National Security
Powers Act, introduced in 2021 by Senators Bernie Sanders, Mike Lee, and Chris
Murphy, is an excellent, comprehensive bill that would not only accomplish this
but also aim to restore Congress’s authority over war-making, a role that has
been allowed to ebb in the face of years of executive branch overreach. In
addition, the bill proposes to reform the arms export control process,
requiring an affirmative vote in both houses to approve certain types of arms
sales, and it would adjust the process around declaring a national emergency to
prevent the president from exploiting a crisis to increase executive authority.
Stark Choices
Once Washington has truly
closed the book on the global war on terror, however, it should not simply look
to slot in a new enemy. Embracing a worldview of a great-power competition, the
Trump and Biden administrations and much of the U.S. foreign policy
establishment are fixated on reducing China’s presence and influence around the
world. U.S. leaders should not understate the challenges posed by the
government of China. Yet their dangerously unquestioned need to counter or even
beat China in region after region across the globe is not only reactionary but
also subordinates U.S. interests to a fight that drains resources and goodwill
while foreclosing opportunities for cooperation and peaceful coexistence.
Great-power competition will not revitalize democracy in a global or domestic
context. By fostering international hostility and xenophobia, it will more
likely empower those domestic political forces unfriendly to democracy.
The United States
needs to recognize and secure its interests in the reality of a multipolar
world rather than futilely attempting to forestall multipolarity through a
costly and self-defeating effort to disadvantage China. The challenges that the
United States faces globally—among them climate change, irregular
migration, unregulated artificial intelligence, nuclear proliferation,
political instability, and pandemics—require global cooperation; they cannot be
solved militarily. The United States should approach cooperation on climate
change—such as working with China to leverage non-debt-creating climate finance
investments and to provide critical technical assistance to developing
countries—as an opportunity to build trust and identify areas of mutual benefit
on other issues.
To break out of the
zero-sum competition that dominates strategic thinking on both sides, a new
approach to defining success in global influence is required. Washington and
Beijing should both focus on global public goods, such as universal public
health infrastructure and green energy. They must marshal greater and more
responsible development investment in countries and regions that have been
starved of capital for decades. And they need to consistently protect human,
political, and labor rights globally. Building international cooperation around
such a transformation of the global economy would reestablish U.S.–Chinese
relations on a new foundation, begin to c international norms by applying them
to people of all countries, and address the truly existential threats humanity
faces today.
Finally, it will be
impossible to repair U.S. foreign policy without repairing U.S. politics. No
foreign policy agenda, however well defined, can long endure amid the country’s
current polarization, in which every issue becomes yet another weapon in the culture
wars between left and right. Overcoming this challenge means confronting the
fact that American democracy is constrained, if not torpedoed, by a campaign
finance system that is tantamount to legalized bribery. The Biden
administration rhetorically elevated anticorruption as a major national
security goal, but corruption is not primarily a foreign policy problem. It is
very much an American domestic problem, entrenching elite control and depriving
the country of the opportunity for leadership by diverse and talented minds in
fair debate. The reason why extreme nationalists get traction with claims that
the system is rigged is because the system is, in fact, rigged—though often by
the very interests funding those nationalists’ campaigns.
Another core
political challenge is the need for accountability, domestically and
internationally, which is crucial for the success of any reforms. The
perception that a foreign policy that privileges diplomacy is weak stems from a
misunderstanding—namely, the idea that diplomacy seeks to end conflicts without
demanding reparations or accountability, thereby seeding future conflicts.
Fortunately, as laid out above, there is an alternative that transcends the
antiquated left-right divide. The vision described here is unlikely to take
shape in the short term, but the time to set out on this alternative path is
now. Americans must choose between integrity or corruption, accountability or
complicity, impunity or the rule of law. These choices are stark, and making
the right ones will require real political courage, leadership, and
coalition-building. But ultimately, this is the only way to ensure the future
of the United States and a world that is safer, more prosperous, and freer.
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