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American
Foreign Policy A Threat To American Security?
"America's exclusively
self-regarding outlook, its arrogant unilateralism, its unwise and untrustworthy
rhetoric and its belligerent posture, is alienating and angering people in the
East and the West."
By Muqtedar Khan, Ph.D., June 17, 2003
The world is becoming
anti-American. Not only do most people across the planet look upon the US with
disfavor, they also dislike President Bush, who is not the most popular leader
even in America where Tony Blair is more trusted and admired than him. More and
more people are less keen on cooperating with the US in foreign policy or in the
war on terror. Growing anti-Americanism will not only undermine the war on
terror, but its extreme manifestations in the Muslim World is attracting new and
numerous recruits to the ranks of Al Qaeda and their associates. Experts are in
agreement that the primary reason why people now hate America is American
foreign policy. Its exclusively self-regarding outlook, its arrogant
unilateralism, its unwise and untrustworthy rhetoric and its belligerent
posture, is alienating and angering people in the East and the West.
A recent poll of people’s
perceptions of America taken by the Pew Research Center in 20 countries (online
at
http://www.people-press.org/), indicates that since last year America’s
popularity has declined considerably across the globe. Even in traditional
allies such as Turkey, 83% of the population views the United States negatively.
Last year this number was only 55%. In Europe, America’s, long time ally and
cultural mate, majorities of people disfavor the US. According to the Pew study,
there are two basic reasons why anti-Americanism is becoming a global culture;
they are US foreign policy and the persona of President Bush.
September 11, 2001 essentially
identified two goals for American foreign policy - eliminating immediate
security threats to the nation and its interests and winning the hearts and
minds of the Muslim World. This essentially translated into taking care of Al
Qaeda and the Al Qaeda phenomenon. While Al Qaeda posed grave threats in the
short term, Al Qaeda phenomenon – the rise of anti-Americanism in the Muslim
World, which attracted recruits to Al Qaeda and associates – posed a more severe
and long-term challenge. President Bush and his foreign policy team were correct
in their initial diagnosis, but unfortunately the policy decisions that they
have made since have merely contributed to enlarging rather than shrinking the
Al Qaeda phenomenon.
The Pew study essentially confirms
the claims of most policy analysts outside the government. The war on Iraq has
conveyed the impression that the US is determined to exercise force against Arab
and Muslim nations more as a revenge for September 11 than as a strategy to
prevent more attacks. The problems that Iraqis have faced during the continuing
US occupation and the failure to find the huge stockpiles of weapons of mass
destruction that Bush and Powell claimed Iraq possessed has hurt American
credibility and raised serious questions about its motives and its policy
objectives. The continuing chaos in Afghanistan and the post Iraq-war threats to
first Syria and then Iran has created a climate of apprehension and resentment
against America.
Citizens of Pakistan, America’s
primary ally in the war on terror, Nigeria and Indonesia feel that their country
is next on the US list. The fear that the US is out to attack other countries
makes the global security environment less stable. It discourages cooperation,
makes the world unsafe for Americans to travel and do business and radicalizes
moderates. It increases the flow of material and moral support to militant
groups, weakens and places American allies and pro-democracy intellectuals and
groups on the defensive. In general anti-Americanism makes it difficult to
promote peace and stability and fight extremism.
Rather than ensuring American
security, it seems that American foreign policy, particularly its invasion and
now occupation of Iraq, have created conditions which put the US and its
interests at greater risk.
President Bush is surrounded by
policy hawks that view September 11 as an opportunity to reassert the
prerogatives of the American Empire through unilateral use of force. They wish
to reshape the world to perpetuate America’s imperial aspirations. Unfortunately
for them the world is unwilling to cooperate. The harder they push the more
resentment they will generate and the more difficult it will become to save the
empire and its interests at minimal costs.
It is time to take the world
seriously and reassess the tactics that have been employed until now. Perhaps
the President may do well to change his foreign policy team as he did with his
economic policy team. At the least he must return the foreign policy portfolio
to the State Department and insist that the Department of Defense execute, not
make foreign policy. The President might also do well to focus on allaying the
fears of the global community and reassure them that the US is neither
threatening them nor is it going to pursue interests at the expense of everyone
else.
It is time the US once gain became
the invisible empire, managing the world through multilateralism, diplomacy and
leadership and by defining self interest as shared interests. The current
strategy of in your face politics is seriously damaging US reputation and
alliances and undermining US security.
Muqtedar Khan, Ph.D.
Director of International Studies, Adrian College, MI
Association of Muslim Social Scientists
Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy.
Muqtedar Khan is currently a
Visiting Fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Saban Center for Middle East
Policy. He is the author of American Muslims: Bridging Faith and Freedom.
Read other articles by Muqtedar
Khan here.
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