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In
times of crisis, those with psychological fortitude discover opportunities
that most people miss. A friend of mine in Houston tells me of unending piles
of tree limbs broken down by the hurricane. The homeowner laments his disaster;
the tree trimmer and the roofer order a new Mercedes. Most of the world sees
a Wall St. meltdown. Buffett takes the opening to deploy billions from his
cash hoard. They're all seeing the same thing, but they're reacting differently
based on different visions of the future.
I've included a piece today from my friend George Friedman over at Stratfor
about the landscape the next US President will face. This article is a perfect
example of why I rely on Stratfor for my geopolitical intelligence. The newspapers
and other media do better or lesser jobs of telling me about what's happening
right now. But that's not what an investor needs. What I need - and I recommend
for you - is an analysis of what we're going to be facing. That's where
George and his team absolutely excel.
For at least the next month, the public conversation is going to be completely
dominated by the November election and the political maneuvering to address
the financial crisis. There will be tremendous drama. There will be dizzying
swings back and forth in emotions, expectations, and more than likely the markets.
And if you focus on it, you'll miss the real opportunities to position yourself
for the emergence. George has made a special offer on a Stratfor Membership
available to my readers, and I strongly encourage you to click
here to take advantage of this opportunity. Now is the time to get positioned
for future opportunities, while everybody else is wallowing in the here and
now.
John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box

The New President and the Global Landscape
By George Friedman
It has often been said that presidential elections are all about the economy.
That just isn't true. Harry Truman's election was all about Korea. John Kennedy's
election focused on missiles, Cuba and Berlin. Lyndon Johnson's and Richard
Nixon's elections were heavily about Vietnam. Ronald Reagan's first election
pivoted on Iran. George W. Bush's second election was about Iraq. We won't
argue that presidential elections are all about foreign policy, but they are
not all about the economy. The 2008 election will certainly contain a massive
component of foreign policy.
We have no wish to advise you how to vote. That's your decision. What we want
to do is try to describe what the world will look like to the new president
and consider how each candidate is likely to respond to the world. In trying
to consider whether to vote for John McCain or Barack Obama, it is obviously
necessary to consider their stands on foreign policy issues. But we have to
be cautious about campaign assertions. Kennedy claimed that the Soviets had
achieved superiority in missiles over the United States, knowing full well
that there was no missile gap. Johnson attacked Barry Goldwater for wanting
to escalate the war in Vietnam at the same time he was planning an escalation.
Nixon won the 1968 presidential election by claiming that he had a secret plan
to end the war in Vietnam. What a candidate says is not always an indicator
of what the candidate is thinking.
It gets even trickier when you consider that many of the most important foreign
policy issues are not even imagined during the election campaign. Truman did
not expect that his second term would be dominated by a war in Korea. Kennedy
did not expect to be remembered for the Cuban missile crisis. Jimmy Carter
never imagined in 1976 that his presidency would be wrecked by the fall of
the Shah of Iran and the hostage crisis. George H. W. Bush didn't expect to
be presiding over the collapse of communism or a war over Kuwait. George W.
Bush (regardless of conspiracy theories) never expected his entire presidency
to be defined by 9/11. If you read all of these presidents' position papers
in detail, you would never get a hint as to what the really important foreign
policy issues would be in their presidencies.
Between the unreliability of campaign promises and the unexpected in foreign
affairs, predicting what presidents will do is a complex business. The decisions
a president must make once in office are neither scripted nor conveniently
timed. They frequently present themselves to the president and require decisions
in hours that can permanently define his (or her) administration. Ultimately,
voters must judge, by whatever means they might choose, whether the candidate
has the virtue needed to make those decisions well.
Virtue, as we are using it here, is a term that comes from Machiavelli. It
means the opposite of its conventional usage. A virtuous leader is one who
is clever, cunning, decisive, ruthless and, above all, effective. Virtue is
the ability to face the unexpected and make the right decision, without position
papers, time to reflect or even enough information. The virtuous leader can
do that. Others cannot. It is a gut call for a voter, and a tough one.
This does not mean that all we can do is guess about a candidate's nature.
There are three things we can draw on. First, there is the political tradition
the candidate comes from. There are more things connecting Republican and Democratic
foreign policy than some would like to think, but there are also clear differences.
Since each candidate comes from a different political tradition -- as do his
advisers -- these traditions can point to how each candidate might react to
events in the world. Second, there are indications in the positions the candidates
take on ongoing events that everyone knows about, such as Iraq. Having pointed
out times in which candidates have been deceptive, we still believe there is
value in looking at their positions and seeing whether they are coherent and
relevant. Finally, we can look at the future and try to predict what the world
will look like over the next four years. In other words, we can try to limit
the surprises as much as possible.
In order to try to draw this presidential campaign into some degree of focus
on foreign policy, we will proceed in three steps. First, we will try to outline
the foreign policy issues that we think will confront the new president, with
the understanding that history might well throw in a surprise. Second, we will
sketch the traditions and positions of both Obama and McCain to try to predict
how they would respond to these events. Finally, after the foreign policy debate
is over, we will try to analyze what they actually said within the framework
we created.
Let me emphasize that this is not a partisan exercise. The best guarantee
of objectivity is that there are members of our staff who are passionately
(we might even say irrationally) committed to each of the candidates. They
will be standing by to crush any perceived unfairness. It is Stratfor's core
belief that it is possible to write about foreign policy, and even an election,
without becoming partisan or polemical. It is a difficult task and we doubt
we can satisfy everyone, but it is our goal and commitment.
The Post 9/11 World
Ever since 9/11 U.S. foreign policy has focused on the Islamic world. Starting
in late 2002, the focus narrowed to Iraq. When the 2008 campaign for president
began a year ago, it appeared Iraq would define the election almost to the
exclusion of all other matters. Clearly, this is no longer the case, pointing
to the dynamism of foreign affairs and opening the door to a range of other
issues.
Iraq remains an issue, but it interacts with a range of other issues. Among
these are the future of U.S.-Iranian relations; U.S. military strategy in Afghanistan
and the availability of troops in Iraq for that mission; the future of U.S.-Pakistani
relations and their impact on Afghanistan; the future of U.S.-Russian relations
and the extent to which they will interfere in the region; resources available
to contain Russian expansion; the future of the U.S. relationship with the
Europeans and with NATO in the context of growing Russian power and the war
in Afghanistan; Israel's role, caught as it is between Russia and Iran; and
a host of only marginally related issues. Iraq may be subsiding, but that simply
complicates the world facing the new president.
The list of problems facing the new president will be substantially larger
than the problems facing George W. Bush, in breadth if not in intensity. The
resources he will have to work with, military, political and economic, will
not be larger for the
first year at least. In terms of military capacity, much will hang on the
degree to which Iraq continues to bog down more than a dozen U.S. brigade combat
teams. Even thereafter, the core problem facing the next president will be
the allocation of limited resources to an expanding number of challenges. The
days when it was all about Iraq is over. It is now all about how to make the
rubber band stretch without breaking.
Iraq remains the place to begin, however, since the shifts there help define
the world the new president will face. To understand the international landscape
the new president will face, it is essential to begin by understanding what
happened in Iraq, and why Iraq is no longer the defining issue of this campaign.
A Stabilized Iraq and the U.S. Troop Dilemma
In 2006, it appeared that the situation in Iraq was both out of control and
hopeless. Sunni insurgents were waging war against the United States, Shiite
militias were taking shots at the Americans as well, and Sunnis and Shia were
waging a war against each other. There seemed to be no way to bring the war
to anything resembling a satisfactory solution.
When the Democrats took control of Congress in the 2006 elections, it appeared
inevitable that the United States would begin withdrawing forces from Iraq.
U.S expectations aside, this was the expectation by all parties in Iraq. Given
that the United States was not expected to remain a decisive force in Iraq,
all Iraqi parties discounted the Americans and maneuvered for position in anticipation
of a post-American Iraq. The Iranians in particular saw an opportunity to limit
a Sunni return to Iraq's security forces, thus reshaping the geopolitics of
the region. U.S. fighting with Iraqi Sunnis intensified in preparation for
the anticipated American withdrawal.
Bush's decision to increase forces rather than withdraw them dramatically
changed the psychology of Iraq. It was assumed he had lost control of the situation. Bush's
decision to surge forces in Iraq, regardless by how many troops, established
two things. First, Bush remained in control of U.S. policy. Second, the assumption
that the Americans were leaving was untrue. And suddenly, no one was certain
that there would be a vacuum to be filled.
The deployment of forces proved helpful, as did the change in how the troops
were used; recent leaks indicate that new weapon systems also played a key
role. The most important factor, however, was the realization that the Americans
were not leaving on Bush's watch. Since no one was sure who the next U.S. president
would be, or what his policies might be, it was thus uncertain that the Americans
would leave at all.
Everyone in Iraq suddenly
recalculated. If the Americans weren't leaving, one option would be to
make a deal with Bush, seen as weak and looking for historical validation.
Alternatively, they could wait for Bush's successor. Iran
remembers -- without fondness -- its decision not to seal a deal with Carter,
instead preferring to wait for Reagan. Similarly, seeing foreign jihadists
encroaching in Sunni regions and the Shia shaping the government in Baghdad,
the Sunni insurgents began a fundamental reconsideration of their strategy.
Apart from reversing Iraq's expectations about the United States, part of
Washington's general strategy was supplementing military operations with previously
unthinkable political negotiations. First, the United
States began talking to Iraq's Sunni nationalist insurgents, and found
common ground with them. Neither the Sunni nationalists nor the United States
liked the jihadists, and both wanted the Shia to form a coalition government.
Second, back-channel
U.S.-Iranian talks clearly took place. The Iranians realized that the possibility
of a pro-Iranian government in Baghdad was evaporating. Iran's
greatest fear was a Sunni Iraqi government armed and backed by the United States,
recreating a version of the Hussein regime that had waged war with Iran for
almost a decade. The Iranians decided that a neutral, coalition government
was the best they could achieve, so they reined in the Shiite militia.
The net result of this was that the jihadists were marginalized and broken,
and an uneasy coalition government was created in Baghdad, balanced between
Iran and the United States. The Americans failed to create a pro-American government
in Baghdad, but had blocked the emergence of a pro-Iranian government. Iraqi
society remained fragmented and fragile, but a degree of peace unthinkable
in 2006 had been created.
The first problem facing the next U.S. president will be deciding when and
how many U.S. troops will be withdrawn from Iraq. Unlike 2006, this issue will
not be framed by Iraq alone. First, there will be the urgency of increasing
the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan. Second, there will be the need
to create a substantial strategic reserve to deal with potential requirements
in Pakistan, and just as important, responding to events in the former Soviet
Union like the recent conflict
in Georgia.
At the same time, too precipitous a U.S. withdrawal not only could destabilize
the situation internally in Iraq, it could convince Iran that its dream of
a pro-Iranian Iraq is not out of the question. In short, too rapid a withdrawal
could lead to resumption of war in Iraq. But too slow a withdrawal could make
the situation in Afghanistan untenable and open the door for other crises.
The foreign policy test for the next U.S. president will be calibrating three
urgent requirements with a military force that is exhausted by five years of
warfare in Iraq and seven in Afghanistan. This force was not significantly
expanded since Sept. 11, making this the first global war the United States
has ever fought without a substantial military expansion. Nothing the new president
does will change this reality for several years, so he will be forced immediately
into juggling insufficient forces without the option of precipitous withdrawal
from Iraq unless he is prepared to accept the consequences, particularly of
a more powerful Iran.
The Nuclear Chip and a Stable U.S.-Iranian Understanding
The
nuclear issue has divided the United States and Iran for several years.
The issue seems
to come and go depending on events elsewhere. Thus, what was enormously
urgent just prior to the Russo-Georgian war became much less pressing during
and after it. This is not unreasonable in our point of view, because we regard
Iran as much farther from nuclear weapons than others might, and we suspect
that the Bush administration agrees given its recent indifference to the
question.
Certainly, Iran is enriching uranium, and with that uranium, it could possibly
explode a nuclear device. But the
gap between a nuclear device and weapon is substantial, and all the enriched
uranium in the world will not give the Iranians a weapon. To have a weapon,
it must be ruggedized and miniaturized to fit on a rocket or to be carried
on an attack aircraft. The technologies needed for that range from material
science to advanced electronics to quality assurance. Creating a weapon is
a huge project. In our view, Iran does not have the depth of integrated technical
skills needed to achieve that goal.
As for North Korea, for
Iran a very public nuclear program is a bargaining chip designed to extract
concessions, particularly from the Americans. The Iranians have continued
the program very publicly in spite of threats of Israeli and American attacks
because it made the United States less likely to dismiss Iranian wishes in
Tehran's true area of strategic interest, Iraq.
The United States must draw down its forces in Iraq to fight in Afghanistan. The
Iranians have no liking for the Taliban, having nearly gone to war with
them in 1998, and having aided the United States in Afghanistan in 2001.
The United States needs Iran's commitment to a neutral Iraq to withdraw U.S.
forces since Iran could destabilize Iraq overnight, though Tehran's ability
to spin up Shiite proxies in Iraq has declined over the past year.
Therefore, the next president very quickly will face the question of how to
deal with Iran. The Bush administration solution -- relying on quiet understandings
alongside public hostility -- is one model. It is not necessarily a bad one,
so long as forces remain in Iraq to control the situation. If the first decision
the new U.S. president will have to make is how to transfer forces in Iraq
elsewhere, the second decision will be how to achieve a more stable understanding
with Iran.
This is particularly pressing in the context of a more
assertive Russia that might reach out to Iran. The United States will
need Iran more than Iran needs the United States under these circumstances.
Washington will need Iran to abstain from action in Iraq but to act in Afghanistan.
More significantly, the United States will need Iran not to enter into an
understanding with Russia. The next president will have to figure out how
to achieve all these things without giving away more than he needs to, and
without losing his domestic political base in the process.
Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Taliban
The U.S. president also will have to come up with an Afghan
policy, which really doesn't exist at this moment. The United States
and its NATO allies have deployed about 50,000 troops in Afghanistan. To
benchmark this, the Russians deployed around 120,000 by the mid-1980s, and
were unable to pacify the country. Therefore the possibility of 60,000 troops
-- or even a few additional brigades on top of that -- pacifying Afghanistan
is minimal. The primary task of troops in Afghanistan now is to defend the
Kabul regime and other major cities, and to try to keep the major roads open.
More troops will make this easier, but by itself, it will not end the war.
The problem in Afghanistan is twofold. First, the Taliban defeated their rivals
in Afghanistan during the civil war of the 1990s because they were the most
cohesive force in the country, were politically adept and enjoyed Pakistani
support. The Taliban's victory was not accidental; and all other things being
equal, without the U.S. presence, they could win again. The
United States never defeated the Taliban. Instead, the Taliban refused
to engage in massed warfare against American airpower, retreated, dispersed
and regrouped. In most senses, it is the same force that won the Afghan civil
war.
The United States can probably block the Taliban from taking the cities, but
to do more it must do three things. First, it must deny the
Taliban sanctuary and lines of supply running from Pakistan. These two
elements allowed the mujahideen to outlast the Soviets. They helped bring the
Taliban to power. And they are fueling the Taliban today. Second, the United
States must form effective coalitions with tribal groups hostile to the Taliban.
To do this it needs the help of Iran, and more important, Washington must convince
the tribes that it will remain in Afghanistan indefinitely -- not an easy task.
And third -- the hardest task for the new president -- the
United States will have to engage the Taliban themselves, or at least important
factions in the Taliban movement, in a political process. When we recall that
the United States negotiated with the Sunni insurgents in Iraq, this is not
as far-fetched as it appears.
The most challenging
aspect to deal with in all this is Pakistan. The United States has two
issues in the South Asian country. The first is the presence of al Qaeda
in northern Pakistan. Al Qaeda has not carried out a successful operation
in the United States since 2001, nor in Europe since 2005. Groups who use
the al Qaeda label continue to operate in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan,
but they use the name to legitimize or celebrate their activities -- they
are not the same people who carried out 9/11. Most of al Qaeda prime's operatives
are dead or scattered, and its main leaders, Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri,
are not functional. The United States would love to capture bin Laden so
as to close the books on al Qaeda, but the level of effort needed -- assuming
he is even alive -- might outstrip U.S. capabilities.
The most difficult step politically for the new U.S. president will be to
close the book on al Qaeda. This does not mean that a new group of operatives
won't grow from the same soil, and it doesn't mean that Islamist
terrorism is dead by any means. But it does mean that the particular entity
the United States has been pursuing has effectively been destroyed, and the
parts regenerating under its name are not as dangerous. Asserting victory will
be extremely difficult for the new U.S. president. But without that step, a
massive friction point between the United States and Pakistan will persist
-- one that isn't justified geopolitically and undermines a much more pressing
goal.
The United States needs the Pakistani army to attack the Taliban in Pakistan,
or failing that, permit the United States to attack them without hindrance
from the Pakistani military. Either of these are nightmarishly difficult things
for a Pakistani government to agree to, and harder still to carry out. Nevertheless,
without cutting the line of supply to Pakistan, like Vietnam and the Ho Chi
Minh Trail, Afghanistan cannot be pacified. Therefore, the new president will
face the daunting task of persuading or coercing the Pakistanis to carry out
an action that will massively destabilize their country without allowing the
United States to get bogged down in a Pakistan it cannot hope to stabilize.
At the same time, the United States must begin the political process of creating
some sort of coalition in Afghanistan that it can live with. The fact of the
matter is that the United States has no long-term interest in Afghanistan except
in ensuring that radical jihadists with global operational reach are not given
sanctuary there. Getting an agreement to that effect will be hard. Guaranteeing
compliance will be virtually impossible. Nevertheless, that is the task the
next president must undertake.
There are too many moving parts in Afghanistan to be sanguine about the outcome.
It is a much more complex situation than Iraq, if for no other reason than
because the Taliban are a far more effective fighting force than anything the
United States encountered in Iraq, the terrain far more unfavorable for the
U.S. military, and the political actors much more cynical about American capabilities.
The next U.S. president will have to make a painful decision. He must either
order a long-term holding action designed to protect the Karzai government,
launch a major offensive that includes Pakistan but has insufficient forces,
or withdraw. Geopolitically, withdrawal makes a great deal of sense. Psychologically,
it could unhinge the region and regenerate al Qaeda-like forces. Politically,
it would not be something a new president could do. But as he ponders Iraq,
the future president will have to address Afghanistan. And as he ponders Afghanistan,
he will have to think about the Russians.
The Russian Resurgence
When the United States invaded Afghanistan in 2001, the Russians were allied
with the United States. They facilitated the U.S. relationship with the Northern
Alliance, and arranged for air bases in Central Asia. The American view of
Russia was formed in the 1990s. It was seen as disintegrating, weak and ultimately
insignificant to the global balance. The United States expanded NATO into the
former Soviet Union in the Baltic states and said it wanted to expand it into
Ukraine and Georgia. The Russians made it clear that they regarded this as
a direct threat to their national security, resulting in the 2008
Georgian conflict.
The question now is where U.S.-Russian
relations are going. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin called the
collapse of the Soviet Union a geopolitical catastrophe. After Ukraine and
Georgia, it is clear he does not trust the United States and that he intends
to reassert his sphere of influence in the former Soviet Union. Georgia was
lesson one. The
current political crisis in Ukraine is the second lesson unfolding.
The re-emergence of a Russian empire in some form or another represents a
far greater threat to the United States than the Islamic world. The Islamic
world is divided and in chaos. It cannot coalesce into the caliphate that al
Qaeda wanted to create by triggering a wave of revolutions in the Islamic world.
Islamic terrorism remains a threat, but the geopolitical threat of a unifying
Islamic power is not going to happen.
Russia is a different matter. The Soviet Union and the Russian empire both
posed strategic threats because they could threaten Europe, the Middle East
and China simultaneously. While this overstates the threat, it does provide
some context. A united Eurasia is always powerful, and threatens to dominate
the Eastern Hemisphere. Therefore, preventing Russia from reasserting its power
in the former Soviet Union should take precedence over all other considerations.
The problem is that the United States and NATO together presently do not have
the force needed to stop the Russians. The
Russian army is not particularly powerful or effective, but it is facing
forces that are far less powerful and effective. The United States has its
forces tied down in Iraq and Afghanistan so that when the war in Georgia broke
out, sending ground forces was simply not an option. The Russians
are extremely aware of this window of opportunity, and are clearly taking
advantage of it.
The Russians have two main advantages in this aside from American resource
deficits. First, the Europeans
are heavily dependent on Russian natural gas; German
energy dependence on Moscow is particularly acute. The Europeans are in
no military or economic position to take any steps against the Russians, as
the resulting disruption would be disastrous. Second, as the United States
maneuvers with Iran, the Russians can provide support to Iran, politically
and in terms of military technology, that not only would challenge the United
States, it might embolden the Iranians to try for a better deal in Iraq by
destabilizing Iraq again. Finally, the
Russians can pose lesser challenges in the Caribbean with Venezuela, Nicaragua
and Cuba, as well as potentially supporting Middle Eastern terrorist groups
and left-wing Latin American groups.
At this moment, the Russians have far more options than the Americans have.
Therefore, the new U.S. president will have to design a policy for dealing
with the Russians with few options at hand. This is where his decisions on
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan will intersect and compete with his decisions
on Russia. Ideally, the United States would put forces in the Baltics -- which
are part of NATO -- as well as in Ukraine and Georgia. But that is not an option
and won't be for more than a year under the best of circumstances.
The United States therefore must attempt a diplomatic solution with Russia
with very few sticks. The new president will need to try to devise a package
of carrots -- e.g., economic incentives -- plus the long-term threat of a confrontation
with the United States to persuade Moscow not to use its window of opportunity
to reassert Russian regional hegemony. Since regional hegemony allows Russia
to control its own destiny, the carrots will have to be very tempting, while
the threat has to be particularly daunting. The president's task will be crafting
the package and then convincing the Russians it has value.
European Disunity and Military Weakness
One of the problems the United States will face in these negotiations will
be the Europeans. There is no such thing as a European foreign policy; there
are only the foreign policies of the separate countries. The
Germans, for example, do not want a confrontation with Russia under any
circumstances. The United Kingdom, by contrast, is more willing to take a confrontational
approach to Moscow. And the European military capability, massed and focused,
is meager. The Europeans have badly neglected their military over the past
15 years. What deployable, expeditionary forces they have are committed to
the campaign in Afghanistan. That means that in dealing with Russia, the Americans
do not have united European support and certainly no meaningful military weight.
This will make any diplomacy with the Russians extremely difficult.
One of the issues the new president eventually will have to face is the value
of NATO and the Europeans as a whole. This was an academic matter while the
Russians were prostrate. With the Russians becoming active, it will become
an urgent issue. NATO expansion -- and NATO itself -- has lived in a world
in which it faced no military threats. Therefore, it did not have to look at
itself militarily. After Georgia, NATO's military power becomes very important,
and without European commitment, NATO's military power independent of the United
States -- and the ability to deploy it -- becomes minimal. If Germany opts
out of confrontation, then NATO will be paralyzed legally, since it requires
consensus, and geographically. For the United States alone cannot protect the
Baltics without German participation.
The president really will have one choice affecting Europe: Accept the resurgence
of Russia, or resist. If the president resists, he will have to limit his commitment
to the Islamic world severely, rebalance the size and shape of the U.S. military
and revitalize and galvanize NATO. If he cannot do all of those things, he
will face some stark choices in Europe.
Israel, Turkey, China, and Latin America
Russian pressure is already reshaping aspects of the global system. The Israelis
have approached Georgia very differently from the United States. They halted
weapon sales to Georgia the week before the war, and have made it clear to
Moscow that Israel does not intend to challenge Russia. The
Russians met with Syrian President Bashar al Assad immediately after the
war. This signaled the Israelis that Moscow was prepared to support Syria with
weapons and with Russian naval ships in the port of Tartus if Israel supports
Georgia, and other countries in the former Soviet Union, we assume. The
Israelis appear to have let the Russians know that they would not do so,
separating themselves from the U.S. position. The next president will have
to re-examine the U.S. relationship with Israel if this breach continues to
widen.
In the same way, the United States will have to address its relationship with
Turkey. A long-term ally, Turkey has participated logistically in the Iraq
occupation, but has not been enthusiastic. Turkey's economy is booming, its
military is substantial and Turkish
regional influence is growing. Turkey
is extremely wary of being caught in a new Cold War between Russia and
the United States, but this will be difficult to avoid. Turkey's interests
are very threatened by a Russian resurgence, and Turkey
is the U.S. ally with the most tools for countering Russia. Both sides
will pressure Ankara mercilessly. More than Israel, Turkey will be critical
both in the Islamic world and with the Russians. The new president will have
to address U.S.-Turkish relations both in context and independent of Russia
fairly quickly.
In some ways, China is the great beneficiary of all of this. In the early
days of the Bush administration, there were some confrontations with China.
As the war in Iraq calmed down, Washington seemed to be increasing its criticisms
of China, perhaps even tacitly supporting Tibetan independence. With the re-emergence
of Russia, the United States is now completely distracted. Contrary to perceptions,
China is not a global military power. Its army is primarily locked in by geography
and its navy is in no way an effective blue-water force. For its part, the
United States is in no position to land troops on mainland China. Therefore,
there is no U.S. geopolitical competition with China. The next president will
have to deal with economic issues with China, but in the end, China will sell
goods to the United States, and the United States will buy them.
Latin America has been a region of minimal interest to the United States in
the last decade or longer. So long as no global power was using its territory,
the United States did not care what presidents Hugo
Chavez in Venezuela, Evo Morales in Bolivia and Daniel
Ortega in Nicaragua -- or even the Castros
in Cuba -- were doing. But with the Russians back in the Caribbean, at
least symbolically, all of these countries suddenly become more important.
At the moment, the United States has no Latin American policy worth noting;
the new president will have to develop one.
Quite apart from the Russians, the future U.S. president will need to address
Mexico. The security situation in Mexico is deteriorating substantially, and
the U.S.-Mexican border remains porous. The cartels stretch from Mexico to
the streets of American cities where their customers live. What happens in
Mexico, apart from immigration issues, is obviously of interest to the United
States. If the current trajectory continues, at some point in his administration, the
new U.S. president will have to address Mexico -- potentially in terms
never before considered.
The U.S. Defense Budget
The single issue touching on all of these is the
U.S. defense budget. The focus of defense spending over the past eight
years has been the Army and Marine Corps -- albeit with great reluctance.
Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was not an advocate of a heavy Army,
favoring light forces and air power, but reality forced his successors to
reallocate resources. In spite of this, the size of the Army remained the
same -- and insufficient for the broader challenges emerging.
The focus of defense spending was Fourth Generation warfare, essentially counterinsurgency.
It became dogma in the military that we would not see peer-to-peer warfare
for a long time. The re-emergence of Russia, however, obviously raises the
specter of peer-to-peer warfare, which in turn means money for the Air Force
as well as naval rearmament. All of these programs will take a decade or more
to implement, so if Russia is to be a full-blown challenge by 2020, spending
must begin now.
If we assume that the United States will not simply pull out of Iraq and Afghanistan,
but will also commit troops to allies on Russia's periphery while retaining
a strategic reserve -- able to, for example, protect the U.S.-Mexican border
-- then we are assuming substantially increased spending on ground forces.
But that will not be enough. The budgets for the Air Force and Navy will also
have to begin rising.
U.S. national strategy is expressed in the defense budget. Every strategic
decision the president makes has to be expressed in budget dollars with congressional
approval. Without that, all of this is theoretical. The next president will
have to start drafting his first defense budget shortly after taking office.
If he chooses to engage all of the challenges, he must be prepared to increase
defense spending. If he is not prepared to do that, he must concede that some
areas of the world are beyond management. And he will have to decide which
areas these are. In light of the foregoing, as we head toward the debate, 10
questions should be asked of the candidates:
- If the United States removes its forces from Iraq slowly as both of you
advocate, where will the troops come from to deal with Afghanistan and protect
allies in the former Soviet Union?
- The Russians sent 120,000 troops to Afghanistan and failed to pacify the
country. How many troops do you think are necessary?
- Do you believe al Qaeda prime is still active and worth pursuing?
- Do you believe the Iranians are capable of producing a deliverable nuclear
weapon during your term in office?
- How do you plan to persuade the Pakistani government to go after the Taliban,
and what support can you provide them if they do?
- Do you believe the United States should station troops in the Baltic states,
in Ukraine and Georgia as well as in other friendly countries to protect
them from Russia?
- Do you feel that NATO remains a viable alliance, and are the Europeans
carrying enough of the burden?
- Do you believe that Mexico represents a national security issue for the
United States?
- Do you believe that China represents a strategic challenge to the United
States?
- Do you feel that there has been tension between the United States and Israel
over the Georgia issue?
John F. Mauldin
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