Rice and Power bring liberal interventionism back to the heart of U.S. foreign policy

samanthapower

U.S. president Barack Obama will shake up his national security team today with the announcement that national security adviser Tom Donilon will be stepping down.  In his place will come Susan Rice, the current U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, and in Rice’s place will come Samantha Power as the new UN ambassador (so long as Power is confirmed by the U.S. Senate). USflag

That will place Rice and Power at the vanguard of the administration’s foreign policy for the next three and a half years, and it will anoint both of them as potential U.S. secretaries of state in future Democratic presidential administrations — Rice was considered a frontrunner to succeed Hillary Clinton as secretary of state earlier this year, though she ultimately lost out to former U.S. senator John Kerry after Senate Republicans made clear that they would hold up Rice’s nomination over her role in the administration’s handling of the attack on U.S. diplomats in Benghazi.

Both women share a perspective that the United States has a role to play to boost human rights around the world, including through the use of military force.  Rice, who served in the administration of U.S. president Bill Clinton, ultimately as assistant secretary for African affairs, has often said that U.S. failure to intervene in Rwanda during the 1994 genocide and the Hutu massacre of 800,000 Tutsis was a defining moment.  Power (pictured above), a former journalist who covered the fighting in the Balkans and the ‘ethnic cleansing’ of Bosnia-Herzegovina in the early 1990s, has been even more outspoken on the role of U.S. policymaking and its impact on human rights.  Before joining the Obama administration as the senior director for multilateral affairs and human rights, Power won a Pulitzer Prize for her 2002 book, A Problem from Hell’: America and the Age of Genocide, which takes the U.S. government and others to task for standing by as genocide occurred in Armenia, Cambodia and Rwanda.

As such, Libya plays a central role in the careers of both officials who, along with Hillary Clinton, were among the proponents arguing for the Obama administration to take an active role in Libya to assist rebels trying to overthrow longtime strongman Muammar Gaddafi.  That placed them at contretemps with more traditional foreign policy realists like Donilon and Bob Gates, the U.S. defense secretary at the time.  Their success led to a NATO-backed no-fly-zone in Libya and, later, the arming of anti-Gaddafi rebels by NATO allies.  The NATO efforts accomplished the goal, and Gaddafi lost control of Libya in August 2011 and he was executed by rebels in October 2011.

In the tradition of U.S. foreign policy, party labels like Democrat and Republican often matter less than where officials fall on the line between liberals and realists (as the terms are commonly understood in international relations theory).  So as Donilon leaves the White House and Rice and Power ascend, the big story today is less about any one individual than the shift of the Obama administration much further toward the liberal IR perspective.

Though Senate Republicans will not have the opportunity to question Rice because her role doesn’t require Senate confirmation, they will have an opportunity to question Power and will almost certainly bring the discussion back to Benghazi.  But Benghazi’s relevance as a ‘scandal’ is somewhat dubious, especially when there are at least two more important fundamental issues about the administration’s approach to Libya.

The first has to do with U.S. constitutionality and the separation of powers.  Whereas the Bush administration sought a vote in the U.S. Congress authorizing its military action in Iraq back in 2002, the Obama administration controversially argued that its military engagement in Libya, at a cost of over $1 billion, never reached the level required to notify the U.S. legislature and seek congressional approval under the Vietnam-era War Powers Resolution.  Critics claim that the law required the Obama administration to obtain authorization to continue the Libya operation within 60 days of its inception.

More significantly for world politics, however, are the adverse, unintended consequences of arming the anti-Gaddafi rebels.  Some of those arms ended up in the hands of Libyan jihadists, and many more ended up in the hands of all sorts of rebels in northern Mail, including jihadists, Islamists and Tuareg separatists, triggering a crisis that toppled Mali’s government and required French military intervention to stabilize the country.  There’s a strong argument that U.S. military intervention in Libya in 2011 prioritized the short-term political rights of anti-Gaddafi rebels at the expense of the human rights of northern Malians and, potentially, the human rights of everyone within the African Sahel, which remains a precarious new security challenge.

These questions are especially relevant in light of the ongoing two-year civil war in Syria.  With over 20 million people, Syria is more than three times as populous as Libya.  The death and destruction in Syria has been much wider than in Libya, and recent allegations of the use of chemical weapons are credible enough to fear even wider war crimes violations.  Syria’s civil war has routinely threatened to inflame not only neighboring Turkey but more tragically, Lebanon, whose politics have been dominated by Syria since the end of its own civil war in the 1970s and 1980s.  Lebanon seems increasingly drawn into sectarian schisms that lie at the heart of the Syrian conflict, with the Shi’a group Hezbollah becoming ever bolder in support of Bashar al-Assad and with Lebanese Sunnis, especially in the northern city of Tripoli, likewise supporting Sunni rebels against the Assad administration.

Libya was the first country in the Arab World where the Arab Spring revolts of early 2011 turned into a protracted state of civil war.  If Syria had come first, though, would Rice and Power have argued as strongly for intervention?  To the extent that humanitarian reasons should justify U.S. military action abroad, isn’t the case for Syria more pressing?  From a more realist perspective, to the extent that the United States had a national interest in bringing down the Gaddafi regime, isn’t regional security in the Levant a much more pressing rationale for Syrian intervention?

In some ways, Rice and Power have more in common with the neoconservatives that dominated the first half of the presidency of George W. Bush than traditional realists.  Both neoconservatives and liberal interventionists have been willing to use U.S. military force to enact international outcomes that were not necessarily vital to U.S. national interests.  Horrible as he may have been for Libya, Gaddafi thrived for over 40 years without posing an existential threat to U.S. security, despite the fact that he was viewed as a U.S. enemy through much of his tenure.  Likewise, the rationale for the Iraq War morphed into a floundering puddle of phantom WMDs, generic democracy-building and denunciations of former Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein.

If you doubt that the neoconservative and humanitarian liberal strains of interventionism are quite so similar, you can see how the same instincts led former United Kingdom prime minister Tony Blair to champion both the Clinton administration’s humanitarian NATO action in 1999 against Serbian leader Slobodan Milošević over Kosovo and the Bush administration’s tragic misadventure in Iraq.

Obama, who came to office in 2009 with a promise to end the U.S. war in Iraq, and who is working to wind down the 12-year war in Afghanistan, is obviously mindful that there’s little appetite for yet another U.S. action in Syria, especially in light of the fact that U.S. forces were so powerless to stop the same kind of sectarian violence during Iraq’s own civil war that raged through the last half of the U.S. occupation.  But U.S. senator John McCain, who visited Syrian rebels a couple of weeks ago, is already agitating for a more muscular policy to help arm Syrian rebels, despite the fact that the Sunni rebels are an even more disparate lot than the anti-Gaddafi rebels in Libya, and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel last year pointedly asked Obama why Assad is still in power.  But if and when the violence in Syria escalates further out of control or tumbles across the Syrian border, there will be even wider calls for the United States to ‘do something.’

Today’s announcement means that Rice and Power will largely be the ones crafting the Obama administration’s foreign policy response.

 

 

 

4 thoughts on “Rice and Power bring liberal interventionism back to the heart of U.S. foreign policy”

  1. Hi Kevin. You’ve made some generally good (yet debatable) points. It’s also the first time I’ve come across the term “humanitarian liberal”.

    Importantly, what’s missing here is a discussion – and airing – of the key difference between neo-cons and liberal interventionists: the former go it alone whenever possible (extending only to build instrumental ‘coalitions of the willing), while the latter try to work within international organisations such as the UN and within institutions such as the framework of international law.

    I support neither paradigm/ideological position, but find myself slightly sympathetic to the latter, and none at all for the former.

    Also – and I’m sure academic and non-academic writing has covered this – some of the sources of both paradigms are different, and will likely lead to different outcomes.

    Unfortunately, events like the Iraq invasion were led by the neo-cons (who were in power and called the shots materially and ideologically), and supported by many liberal interventionists (who perhaps truly believed that Saddam Hussein had to be removed, regardless of his spurious links to AQ).

    As for Tony Blair – he’s a strange one. I don’t know where to place him. He’s somewhat in the middle of the continuum between hardcore neo-con and hardcore lib interventionist positions (and yes there IS a continuum), swinging one way or the other in different times or circumstances. Or we can just call him an opportunist; one wonders how many British MNCs and state-affiliated commercial conglomerates were awarded lucrative business contracts during the post-invasion ‘reconstruction’.

    There’s a piece in Foreign Affairs that focuses on a different aspect, that of Power’s work with the UN to prevent mass atrocity crimes; well worth a read:
    http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/139437/suzanne-nossel/how-samantha-power-could-change-us-diplomacy

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