Posts

The Case Against an Isolationist Foreign Policy

The United States is in a period when isolationism is on the ascent. A decade plus of continuous warfare has drained the American people's will and sucked funds which could be used to address other pressing domestic issues. With little tangible results from our interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan,  Americans have become jaded and are driving the political narrative for a more isolationist foreign policy. I see this as a political foreign policy failure, or more accurately the lack of a transparent and strategic foreign policy. Historically, the United States has primarily had an isolationist foreign policy with limited foreign intervention. After World War II, the United States became the leading power to combat Soviet interventionism with a robust international presence. Inevitably, we became the indispensable policeman to the world. Unfortunately, military power has been (and still is) the driving force in U.S. international diplomacy. We now see U.S. military power being con...

If it is Broke, Time to Fix it - the UN at 73

The United Nations may not be completely broken, but it has a checkered peacekeeping record. A stifling bureaucracy married with Cold War alignment instead of current geopolitical reality has created an organization which has limited its efficiency and effectiveness. The days of state-on-state conventional and large scale warfare has been effectively minimized. Instead civil wars, tribal and sectarian conflict, and terrorism are the current major threats to the world order. The UN has been slow to adapt to these new threats and their enduring consequence, such as the refugee crisis caused by instability in the Levant due to the effects of the Syrian civil war. The primary purpose of the UN, as described in the Charter , is "to maintain international peace and security, and to that end: to take effective collective measures for the prevention and removal of threats to the peace, and for the suppression of acts of aggression or other breaches of the peace, and to bring about by peac...

What is next in Syria

Now the United States, France, and Great Britain have dropped their bombs on supposed critical nodes for the Assad chemical weapons industrial complexes, what is next? This is deja vu all over again. Since the 90s, bombing static known targets without an overall strategy has been the modus operandi of the politicos. Yet, it rarely moves the reality on the ground. Syria has been a particular bugaboo for the US political and military leadership. We missed an opportunity to assist the Syrians to reshape their country and the region during the Obama presidency and the Trump administration has shown not to be deft enough to navigate the precarious situation. As Syria drifted rudderless into the swirling abyss, Iran and Russia capitalized on the situation and have endeared themselves with Assad. Now any resolution to the Syrian civil war will have to go through Iran and Russia, who will ensure the continuation of the Assad regime. What are alternatives? Post World War II geopolitical struc...

Re-looking our Middle East Alliances

Image
U.S. foreign policy is steeped in the elitism and continued missed opportunities. The U.S. President is hell bent to ignore facts on the ground and unilaterally disrupt international conventions. Recently, this is evident in U.S. Middle Eastern foreign policy. President Trump, in his trip to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, reaffirmed an undying loyalty and alliance with the Saudi government while demonizing Iran.   CREDIT:  SAUDI TV Our continued unadulterated loyalty to Saudi Arabia is unnerving and naive. Abdulaziz al-Saud, the founder of Saudi Arabia, consolidated power on the peninsula backed by the Wahhabi Islamic movement, an ultra-conservative branch of Islam. Today, many national security experts point to Wahhabists as the ideological source of global terrorists (as a side note  15 of the 19 September 11th hijackers  were from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia). Even with the well documented cases of terrorism perpetrated by Saudi nationals schooled in Wahhabism...

Economics as an instrument of Foreign Policy

Diplomacy and military power are the most common and direct means to project American influence internationally but American economic power potentially produces the long-lasting influence and impact.  Traditionally, economic power leverages a nation’s wealth to influence the behavior of others. Our interpretation of economic power includes sanctions, tariffs/taxes, trade policies, economic coercion, and economic aid. These elements are limited means to influence allies and adversaries. With a globally connected world, "traditional" elements of economic power become less influential. Countries are more inclined to turn their backs on international norms and instead worry about bolstering their own internal economic advantages. Instead of an international community in lock step, countries are more apt to work in their singular self-interest. This is evident in how China continues to placate North Korean aggression and maintain economic ties even though there are s...

Syria Conundrum

Image
"Red lines" have been crossed and an embolden new administration itches to flex America's military muscle. Russian and Iranian actors continue to support a detestable Assad regime, allowing the Syrian leader to deploy chemical weapons against his adversaries. Over a six year time period, Syria is a messy and complicated quagmire befuddling "foreign policy experts" and the political leadership within both the Democrat and Republican parties, as seen in the current military/political reality on the ground. Since March 2011, when initial protests against the Assad regime began, American's attention to Syria has waxed and waned. Particularly, specific situations have influenced American public opinion on what our reaction should be. The chemical attacks in 2013 (on Ghouta area of Damascus) and the recent attack on Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib province, have invigorated the debate on a military response in Syria. Yet, the refugee crisis and a...

Transformation - Part Tres

Battles over military force structure and how the military evolves will continue for the foreseeable future. Yet to make informed decision, military leaders need to assess what long term risks and adversaries may be and anticipate potential tactics these adversaries may engage. For the most part, the military gets hung up on the last conflict and addresses the issues that created the past operational environment. Taking a napkin assessment of potential geopolitical environment, there are potentially two conventional style warfare scenarios, consisting of a large force-on-force engagement starring conventional forces. The first scenario is armed conflict with China across maritime, territory, space, and cyber-space domains. The other possible scenario is what we now call hybrid warfare with the Russians, to include direct action on a limited scale for chunks of territory. But outside of those two scenarios,...