(Archived document, may contain errors)
Defining A Conservative Foreign Policy
By Jeane J. Kirkpatrick Aconservative approach to foreign policy
should, of course, reflect conservative values, at- titudes, and
methods. These include a respect for history, for experience, and
for the stubborn, un predictable variability of human beings. The
conservative brings to reflection about policy- foreign and
domestic-an irreducible respect for individual freedom,' a
suspicion of government that distinguishes him (or her) from
liberals, and an irreducible c o mmitment to citizenship that
distinguishes him from libertarians. The conservative understands
that the tensions between in- dividualism and patriotism, between
self-love and love of country, between realism and idealism, are
permanent. Because conservati v es do not expect a revolution in
human nature they do not expect that the future will be very
different than the past in basic ways. A contemporary American
conservative will be as skeptical as the American founding fathers
about the probability of a futu r e free of the problems that have
dogged past generations. He will therefore be skeptical of schemes
that promise what the U.N. Charter promises, to free mankind from
the age-old scourge of war. But he will be willing to join in
prudent efforts to control a ggression. A conservative approach to
foreign policy eschews utopianism. It accepts the human capacity
for evil as for good; for indifference as well as empathy; for
selfishness as well as generosity. A conservative approach to
policy takes account of com p lexity and conflict without seeking
to deny them, and recognizes that there are real costs of
membership in communities. Above all, conservatives worry about
growth in the size and powers of government and about the problems
of holding government responsi b le. Conservatives do not love war,
though they admire some of the virtues that war elicits, espe-
cially solidarity and courage. They know that war breeds increased
powers of government, and that a successful war leaves government
bigger and more powerful . In the 20th century it has fre- quently
been noted that it is liberal Presidents that have taken the United
States into war-and that they have done so in pursuit of idealistic
goals. Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and Lyndon
Johnson ha v e made the major commitments to the major wars of the
cen- tury-World War I, World War 11, Korea, and Vietnam. It was,
however, a Republican, George Bush, who committed the U.S. to
turning back Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. The human and economic
costs of wa r are so high, and the benefits of peace so great, that
the elimination of war and the achievement of secure peace have
been an object of both conserva- tives and liberals in this
century. The fact that Democrats headed the U.S. government at the
end of Wo r ld War II meant that the post-war settlement bore the
clear stamp of liberal idealism. It is accurate, I believe, to say
that a conservative would not have designed and worked to real- ize
the United Nations- though a good many voted to ratify the Treaty.
The U.N. embodies many of the characteristics least attractive to
conservatives. It was a new idea. The United States
Jeane J. Kirkpatrick is a Senior Fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute. She spoke at The Heritage Foundation on
February 25, 1993, as part of the W.H. Brady Lecture Series on
Defining Conservatism.
ISSN 0272-1155. 01993 by The Heritage Foundation.
had never been a member of such an organization-having eschewed
League of Nations mem- bership. No such organization had ever
existed for long. It was global and universal in its aspirations.
Conservatives naturally prefered NATO and other regional alliances
to the U.N. The U.N. was based on an abstract idea about a
universal organization which would pursue utopian goals. NATO
developed out of the very practical need to defend Western Europe
and its democracies against Joseph Stalin, who was moving very
rapidly across the Continent. Expanded U.N. Aspirations. Miring the
long'Years of the Cold War', NATO was very useful and the United
Nat i ons was not. But in the two or three years since the end of
the Cold War the hopes and optimism that had been invested in the
U.N. have come back to life again. From the point of view of many,
the U.N. is once again the hope of the world. Its prestige as a
moral ar- biter of international affairs has ballooned in the last
years. So has its role in international affairs. The notion that
the United Nations should decide what is and is not legitimate in
the domain of international relations has grown more wid e spread
and more persuasive to more people. The idea that force is only
legitimate if it is authorized by the Security Council and the
Secretary General has spread. The notion that the United Nations
should develop its own military forces under the command and
control of the U.N. Secretariat finds supporters. There are now
three processes underway which broaden U.N. activities: first,
expansion of the number of traditional United Nations activities;
second, expansion of the kinds of problems regarded as app r
opriate for dealing with through the U.N.; and third, the expansion
of the discre- tionary powers of the Secretary General. All these
trends have special significance for conservatives worried about
transferring control of important decisions to an intern a tional
organization over which the U.S. government has limited power, and
over which the American people have even less influence. Getting
Permission. The first step in broadening the U.N.'s jurisdiction
was taken by George Bush, who as President helped c r eate the
impression that even self-defense and collective self- defense
require formal approval of the Security Council. When Iraq invaded
Kuwait in a clear act of aggression across an international border,
the government of Kuwait immediately invoked Art i cle 51 and
appealed to the United States and others to help mount a collective
self-defense. The Bush Administration, Arab neighbors, and others
responded not with troops but with Security Council resolutions
condemning this act of aggression, and calling for withdrawal of
Iraq's troops from Kuwait, imposing a diplomatic boycott, then an
economic embargo. The first resolution condemning the invasion of
Kuwait passed on August 2, 1990. On Novem- ber 29, 1990, the
Security Council passed an ultimatum with a d ate attached-January
15, 199 1. Eventually military action freed Kuwait from the hell of
occupation. During the months between the Iraqi invasion and the
beginning of Operation Desert Storm, Kuwait was devastated, its
people murdered, raped, and tortured, its resources sacked. Though
some of the intervening period may have been needed to assemble the
colossal forces needed to do battle, earlier U.S. air attacks
almost certainly could have interrupted Saddam Hussein's forces and
slowed their progress. But i n stead of acting under Article 51 to
assemble forces in defense of Kuwait, the Bush Ad- ministration
chose to seek specific Security Council authorization for each new
step it took. Bush himself explained this course of action because,
in addition to defen ding Kuwait, he was also committed to building
a "new world order."
2
Bush explained his motive to Newsweek magazine, "The civilized
world is now in the process of fashioning the rules that will
govern the new world order beginning to emerge in the after - math
of the Cold War....When we succeed ... we will have demonstrated
that aggression will not be tolerated. We will have invigorated a
United Nations that contributes as its founders dreamed. We will
have established principles for acceptable internati o nal conduct
and the means to en- force them." The disadvantage of this approach
became clear when U.S. forces stopped at the Kuwaiti bor- der and
left Saddam Hussein's militarv forces intact. The grounds
-that-were given for permitting Saddam's forces to w ithdraw
without destroying them was that the U.N. Security Council resolu-
tion had not authorized the pursuit of Iraq's forces outside of
Kuwait. It had authorized only the action to secure the withdrawal
of Iraq's forces. The decision was also shaped by the views of
regional governments that destroying Saddam's military forces would
create a vacuum into which Iran might move. Still, it was clear
that the Bush Administration took seriously the precise terms of
the Security Council's mandate. At that point some of the problems
became apparent of risking men and money on decisions in which we
were but one voice. Complicated Civil War. Problems of committing
U.S. forces on the basis of Security Council mandates became more
obvious in the case of Somalia. The p roblem to which the United
States responded in Somalia is very different. It was not a case of
international aggression but of starva- tion caused by the
deliberate use of hunger as a weapon in a complicated. civil war.
The initial goal of the U.S., and p r esumably of the U.N., was to
save hundreds of thousands of Somalians, from starvation by
delivering the food that rival gangs were blocking. Soon, however,
it became clear that the enemy in Somalia was not just starvation,
but also civil war and anarchy. T he right of U.N. forces to become
involved in this civil war is compli- cated by the existence in the
U.N. Charter of a very specific provision asserting "thai nothing
contained in the present Charter shall authorize the United Nations
to intervene in mat t ers which are essentially within the domestic
jurisdiction of any state, nor shall require members to submit such
matters to settlement in the international body." No one much
worried about whether the action to feed the starving in Somalia
was a violatio n of the U.N. Charter. There had already been a
resolution by the Security Council asserting a right to intervene
in case of massive violations of human rights dealings with Kurds
in Iraq. The Kurds, however, were on an international border with
Iran and T u rkey, so the Security Council could and did cite a
threat to international peace and security while proposing a right
to intervene in that case of massive human rights violations.
Unprecedented Expansion. In Somalia no threat to international
peace and se c urity was cited or existed. However terrible, the
problem in Somalia was not and is not an issue which involves a
threat to international peace and security. Therefore, the use of
force in Somalia must be seen as a very substantial, unprecedented
expansio n of U.N. jurisdiction. It is a kind of problem that has
never been dealt with by the Security Council in the context of use
of military force. Massive efforts in humanitarian assistance had
been undertaken by the United Nations, in Ethiopia, for example, d
uring the Cold War. That action was undertaken, not under Chapter
VII, authorizing military forces, but by the United Nations
Development Program (U.N.D.P.). or by the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees, who have undertaken massive feeding in s
i tuations of starvation and great misery. The authorization of the
use of force in Somalia was something new-no matter how ambiguous.
The ambiguity of the Somalia operation produced misunderstanding
between President Bush and Secretary General Boutros Bout ros-Ghali
as soon as the agreement had been signed. Presi- dent Bush believed
he had agreed to deliver food to starving people. He expected U.S.
forces
3
would then leave. Boutros-Ghali s aw the mandate as laying the fou
ndation for a viable govern- ment of Somalia, which is something
that Somalia has never had. One aspect of the Somalia operation was
unambiguous: it constituted an expansion of the U.N.'s
jurisdiction, and of the Secretary General's power. The Secretary G
e neral defined the mandate and then announced that forces were
being placed under the command and control of the Secretary
General. Though that idea was new then, Boutros-Ghali has ever
since proposed placing of forces under his command and control each
ti m e he has proposed a new operation or a new phase of an
operation. Re has suggested that it is somehow better to have
forces operating under U.N. authorization work directly under the
Secretary General's command and control. But this is a new and a
strange idea. The U.N. Charter is quite clear that military forces
should be under the command and control of contributing members and
a military staff committee made up of the Chiefs of Staff of each
of the permanent members of the Security Council. This is very
different than the notion that the Secretary General should command
the forces. There is also no reason the Secretary General's
judgment about U.N. action and priorities should take precedence
over the judgments of the Security Council. Yet Boutros-Ghali h as
in- sisted again and again, even as he assumes new commitments,
that the United Nations lacks the resources to disarm combatants in
Bosnia, lacks the resources to ensure delivery of humanitarian
assistance, lacks the resources to monitor the Serbian bo r der, or
the Croatian border, or the safe havens, or do anything effective.
Each effort by the Security Council to modify the terms under which
U.N. forces operate in Bosnia has met with resistance from the
Secretariat. When the U.N. Commander for Bosnia, G en. Philippe
Morillon, demonstrated extraordinary courage to expedite delivery
of food and medicine to Serebrenica last winter, for example, the
Secretariat requested his recall. It is not clear why the Secretary
General has doggedly opposed effective act i on in Bosnia. It is
clear he has done so. Unwelcome and Disturbing. The expansion of
the U.N.'s jurisdiction and the Secretary General's powers are
particularly unwelcome and disturbing from the perspective of
conserva- tives. The United Nations embodies a lmost all of the
characteristics that conservatives find unappealing and
dysfunctional in political life. It is remote. It is bureaucratic.
It operates on the basis of abstract principles rather than
precedent. It is difficult to hold it accountable. It i s not an
effective instrument for dealing with many problems of foreign
policy. It lacks the unity and dispatch often necessary in crises.
Aggressors usually act quickly, while the Security Council needs a
consensus that takes longer to build. Nine of the f ifteen-member
Security Council must vote affirmatively on a course of action, and
all five permanent members must at least acquiesce. A single veto
can block action. Assembling the necessary support may prove
time-consuming-or even impossible-as happened l ast week when an
effort to lift the arms embargo against Bosnia failed in the
Security Council for lack of nine votes. Supporters of collective
security are often reluctant to face the difficulties that are
common to multilateral decision-making, not just in the United
Nations but in smaller multinational organiza- tions as well. Even
in the European Community-all of whose members are European,
industrial democracies-achieving a needed consensus is often
laborious, difficult, and time-consuming. Clashing i n terests and
preferences and divergent priorities make the decisive, rapid
action re- quired for an effective response to an armed attack
wholly impossible. Conservatives worry a lot about controlling
governments. They are right to do so and never more tha n in regard
to foreign policy.
4
When the United States acts militarily in a U.N. context, it asks
American soldiers to risk their lives for causes without direct
relation to their identifications and interests. When the U.N. com-
mits forces, the U.S. a cquires approximately 30 percent of the
bill. When a commitment of forces is made, the American government
cannot guarantee the quality of the commander, the weapons, the
intelligence, or the forces. Protecting Fundamental Values and
Interests. I believe t he United States can work with others
through the U.N. as long as we preserve the veto and the Security
Council preserves the authority which -is-vested In
4t..T..hen.-wehave some@ assurance..of representation of the views
and values of American and U.N. d ecisions. If we don't like its
policies then we can take that up with our own government. If the
Security Council is not the ultimate authority we are without chan-
nels for accountability. As long as decisions are made in the
Security Council, we can pro t ect our fundamental values
and'interests. There are problems which are more effectively dealt
with through the U.N. than simply bilaterally. The United States
can cooperate in a U.N. framework for these purposes. Nonethe-
less, I believe it is very import a nt to be clear that the U.N.
should not frequently be the institution of choice for persons of
conservative values. It is too bureaucratic, too remote, and too
difficult to hold accountable, too involved in issues unrelated to
our interests. As conserva- t ives and as Americans we should avoid
falling into the habit of speaking and thinking as if the
legitimacy of our policies depended on the United Nations. The
ultimate test of the legitimacy of U.S. actions is not a temporary
majority of the Security Coun cil; it is the U.S. Constitution.
Con- servatives have special reason to be clear about that.
}}