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Foreign Policy
Articles
Flirting
with evil: The limits of coalition building

By Rand H. Fishbein,
Ph.D.
©2001 WorldNetDaily.com
If politics makes
for strange bedfellows, then the specter of the United States aligned
with some of the world's most notorious terrorist states is an oddity
indeed.
What has occasioned
this bizarre association is the Bush administration's desire to build
a global coalition against terrorism, one that includes countries with
a long and nefarious history of hostility, even violence, toward the United
States?
To make this coalition
possible, the president has asked Congress to support his proposal for
a five-year waiver of all laws that prohibit the chief executive from
providing military assistance to countries defined as being either state
sponsors of terrorism or those having egregious human rights records.
Under the law, these countries currently are ineligible to receive U.S.
military aid. The request forms part of the administration's anti-terrorist
offensive, a package of legislative proposals rushed to the Hill with
little analysis immediately following the Sept. 11 attacks.
According to the White
House proposal, granting the president unrestricted arms sales authority
is "important to the U.S. effort to respond to, deter or prevent
acts of international terrorism or other actions threatening international
peace and security."
If this waiver request
seems peculiar, it is, and it should be resoundingly denied by Congress.
Approval would mean that countries such as Syria, Iran, China, Pakistan,
Libya, Sudan, North Korea, Iraq and Yemen, all now under U.S. sanction,
could become eligible for U.S. aid. Yet these are some of the most unsavory
regimes on the planet. Many of them have given their support, either directly
or indirectly, to Osama Bin Laden and his al-Qaida organization.
Countries like Syria
and Iran have long terrorist pedigrees and for most of the last 20 years
have waged war against the U.S. through surrogates in Lebanon, Europe
and the Palestinian territories. The U.S. has no business aligning itself
with any of these countries, regardless of the administration's desire
for 100 percent participation in its coalition.
Under the Bush proposal,
the administration would no longer be required to notify Congress prior
to initiating arms sales to either Pakistan or India. This is quite a
change from just two years ago when heavy sanctions were levied on both
countries for their detonation of nuclear weapons.
The last time an administration
tried to eviscerate U.S. laws against rogue regimes was in September 1993.
Then, it was President Bill Clinton who tried unsuccessfully to overturn
all statutory prohibitions against dealings with the Palestinian Liberation
Organization.
Flush with the afterglow
of the White House ceremony at which Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin signed
the Oslo Accords, Clinton asked Congress to immediately, and unconditionally,
repeal all laws that in any way encumbered U.S. relations with the PLO.
These included antiterrorist laws, immigration laws, banking laws, and
PLO-specific restrictions that prevented the U.S. from conducting full
and unfettered diplomatic relations with Arafat and his organization.
Congress had enacted
the laws over a 20-year period specifically to protect the American public
from a growing terrorist menace in the 1970s and 1980s. As leader of one
of the world's premier terrorist organizations, Arafat engineered some
of the most dramatic attacks against America, Israel and the West that
had ever been seen up until that time. Airplane hijackings in Beirut and
Brussels, the murder of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympic games in
Munich and the assassination of the U.S. Ambassador and Charge d'Affairs
to Khartoum in 1973 were all attributable directly to the PLO or to its
many splinter groups.
But in the heady days
of Oslo, history was of little concern to the Clinton administration.
A day after the signing, the White House dispatched Ambassador Dennis
Ross, the president's Middle East coordinator, to Capitol Hill with instructions
to persuade Congress to end all restrictions on American involvement with
the PLO. For the organization, this meant full diplomatic recognition,
the movement of PLO representatives beyond a 25-mile radius of New York,
and access to U.S. economic assistance. It was a brash and dangerous move.
For without so much
as a hearing, a floor debate or an analysis of how these changes in law
would affect other pressing interests of the U.S., the president was prepared
to nullify 20 years of statute that had protected American citizens from
the ravages of the PLO and other terrorist organizations.
When asked by congressional
staff why Arafat was not to be held accountable for the deaths of American
citizens, Ross could only shake his head and admit that this was the new
policy. He acknowledged there was no statute of limitations on the murder
of Americans.
Fortunately for the
nation, Ross' efforts met with limited success. Instead of a full-fledged
repeal of the antiterrorist laws relating to the PLO, Congress granted
the president a temporary, 90-day waiver, on only three laws. Amidst the
euphoria of Oslo, prudence triumphed over recklessness.
Eight years later,
President Bush finds himself in much the same predicament as his predecessor.
While wishing to form a broad alliance of antiterrorist states, he has
chosen a path that will, in the end, only undermine U.S. credibility in
the fight against terrorism. It will weaken American resolve and compromise
the very laws that may be needed to prosecute those responsible for terrorist
crimes against the U.S.
It is both brazen
and reckless for the president to believe that he can lure Syria and Iran
into assisting the U.S. in its fight against terrorism any more than Ronald
Reagan was able to garner their assistance during the Iran-Contra debacle.
Trusting the likes of radical regimes and their duplicitous leaders is
a recipe for humiliation and ultimately, defeat. If the logic driving
this new policy approach is "to catch a terrorist you need to employ
a terrorist," then the administration is sorely mistaken monumentally
so. To catch a criminal you need a cop.
The history of the
Middle East is littered with the vain attempts by Western powers to court
leaders whose very legitimacy stems from a hatred of Occidental civilization.
It is a hatred rooted deep in the paranoia of their own Arab-Islamic societies
and fierce, intolerant nationalism. For liberal democracies, an alliance
with such states is nothing less than a betrayal of their Enlightenment
ideals. For America, the leader of the free world, it is a formula for
failure.
Just ask former Secretary
of State Warren Christopher, who made nearly 30 trips to Damascus in an
effort to persuade its autocratic leader, Hafez Assad, to join in a peace
deal with Israel. No other world leader had such attention lavished upon
him by the slavish secretary.
Even after proposing
an Israeli withdrawal from the Golan Heights, Syria's central demand since
June 1967, Christopher could not get Assad to move one scintilla toward
a reconciliation with Israel. All the while, Syria continued to supply
its surrogates in Lebanon with weapons used in an unrelenting terrorist
war against Israel and the West.
Yet what is the response
of the State Department? In the words of one official, "We view Syria
as small potatoes in terms of terrorism. Syrian participation in the coalition
could tip the balance and finally remove Damascus from the terrorism list."
This is likely to prove small comfort to the families of the 241 Marines
who lost their lives when a terrorist bomber, most likely with Syrian
assistance, blew up the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut where they were
stationed in 1983.
Every patriotic American
is committed to the fight against terrorism. The horrors witnessed in
New York, Washington and Pennsylvania will be forever emblazoned on our
national consciousness. But to ask that Americans put aside their sense
of outrage, turn their back on core values and embrace one group of terrorists
so that we can catch others is both shameful and outrageous. Our people
should no more buy into the president's plan than they should agree to
suspend the Constitution so that we can catch a few more bank robbers.
True, the U.S. government
used the Mafia to gather intelligence on potential Axis saboteurs and
provide security on American docks during World War II. And yes, Washington
looked to the Mafia again in the early '60s to assist in bringing down
Castro. But organized crime, for all of its evils, pales against the backdrop
of countries like Iran and Syria that have written new chapters in the
book of state terror. What could they possibly contribute to the terrorist
fight that would warrant giving them guns and training?
A quick perusal of
the State Department's annual terrorism report reveals that Syria and
Iran are home to a veritable alphabet soup of terrorist groups
groups that have long histories of murder and mayhem committed against
Americans and their allies. Both countries are believed to have been instrumental
in the kidnapping and murder of Americans in Lebanon in the 1980s. Each
is reputed to hold captured Israelis and for years has refused all requests
of the international community to allow the Red Cross to verify the condition
of the captives.
Adding insult to injury,
the Bush administration is even considering removing Syria from its list
of terrorist states. Though demanded by Damascus, this major concession
comes with no commitment that Syria will refrain from terrorist acts against
American or Israeli targets in the future.
So what does the administration
hope to gain from its proposed flirtation with evil? The answer is unclear
given the disdain with which those regimes hold the U.S. and their close
identification with the views and methods of bin Laden and his backers.
To obtain their assent, the administration is not only prepared to provide
them with the instruments of war, but also to deny Israel a place at the
coalition table.
When the devil's price
is so high that it means forsaking your friends, that should be a clear
signal that a policy has gone awry. For a president who has staked his
reputation on knowing right from wrong, he should not now confuse the
victims of terrorism with those who perpetrate it.
For at least the last
10 years, both Syria and Iran have been among the world's most active
drug producers. They have thumbed their noses at Western counter-narcotics
efforts and continue to amass hundreds-of-millions of dollars annually
through the illicit trade in cocaine and other substances. Syria has gone
a step further by establishing a counterfeiting operation that is in large
part responsible for the U.S. Treasury being forced to substantially alter
the face of American currency.
Neither Syria nor
Iran has the desire, or the capacity, to renounce terrorism any more than
it would contemplate renouncing its Ba'athist or revolutionary Islamic
ideology. To believe otherwise is foolish and signals to the world that
the administration lacks any idea as to what it is up against in this
new war. The first lesson of any conflict is "Know your enemy."
It would seem that the Bush administration has failed this first test.
Rand H.
Fishbein, Ph.D., is president of Fishbein Associates, Inc., a public-policy
consulting firm based in Potomac, Md. He is a former professional staff
member (majority) of both the U.S. Senate Defense Appropriations and Foreign
Operations Appropriations subcommittees. Dr. Fishbein also served as a
foreign policy/intelligence analyst on the Senate Iran-Contra Investigating
Committee and as special assistant for national security affairs to Sen.
Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii.
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