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30 march 2007
The Pragmatic Ideologue
Meet Zalmay Khalilzad, your new UN ambassador.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the
Describing Khalilzad as a "neoconservative" may be simplistic.
In an interview published on Monday to mark Khalilzad's departure from
To be branded "pragmatic" by a political realist such as
Brzezinski demonstrates that Khalilzad is difficult to pin down with reductionist
labels. If anything, his path in recent years has underlined how well he has
grasped the impossibility of being an unyielding neocon amid the complexities
of the
It is not hard to see why the foreign-born allies of American neocons
have often been those whose causes benefited from greater American
combativeness and interventionism. Their agendas and merits, or demerits,
notwithstanding, whether we are talking about the Iraqi Ahmad Chalabi, the
Syrian Farid Ghadry, or the anti-Syrian March 14 coalition in Lebanon, all
these groups or individuals have sided with the neocons and their more
traditional confederates in the Bush administration mainly to take advantage of
Washington's willingness after 9/11 to challenge the debilitating status quo in
their own countries.
In many ways that's how Khalilzad, too, began his career. While teaching
political science at
Throughout the 1980s and the early 1990s, Khalilzad drifted in and out
of government, working mostly on Afghan and Middle Eastern issues, before
serving between 1990 and 1992 at the Pentagon as deputy under-secretary for
policy planning. It was in that role, as an assistant to Wolfowitz, that
Khalilzad played a major part in drafting a document whose ideas would return
to shape policy under President George W. Bush. When then-Defense Secretary
Dick Cheney asked for an overhaul of American defense thinking in light of the
deep changes taking place in the world, Wolfowitz was tasked with preparing a
Defense Planning Guidance. The document's most controversial assertion was that
the
Khalilzad would remain active in the anterooms of foreign affairs during
the 1990s, from his perch at the Rand Corporation and as a signatory of the
January 26, 1998 Project for the New American Century letter urging President
Bill Clinton to remove Saddam Hussein from power. When Bush was elected in
2000, Khalilzad was through warming the bench. After a short stint at Donald
Rumseld's Pentagon, he was appointed senior director for
Peter Galbraith, a former
Throughout his ambassadorship, Khalilzad was an informal, and
inveterate, backroom arm bender. His main achievement was persuading the Iraqis
to ratify their Constitution. He also sought to enhance Sunni participation in
the political process--a decision that angered the Shiite groups that had come
to dominate the Iraqi government. This juggling act was skillful, but ultimately
Khalilzad has left behind a country even more unstable than when he first moved
into the Green Zone. And what will linger in people's minds is that the former
ambassador backhandedly confirmed that the
During that time, Bush administration officials were saying there could
be no negotiations with the insurgents, who were killing American soldiers on a
daily basis. Yet through his admission, Khalilzad legitimized a more adaptable
approach to events in
Khalilzad will be replacing a more austere neocon, John Bolton, at the
U.N. Bolton may have been one tough bastard, but he could be the
personification of practicality when haggling over resolutions with the other
permanent members of the Security Council, particularly on Middle Eastern
matters. Maybe there are no neocons in the slippery trenches of international diplomacy.
If so, Khalilzad is our Exhibit One.
Reason contributing editor Michael Young is opinion editor of the Daily
Star newspaper in Lebanon
http://www.reason.com/news/printer/119364.html
Date: Sun,
1 Apr 2007 15:10:25 EDT
"Khalilzad will be replacing a more
austere neocon, John Bolton"
Or put more accurately: A Neocon failure
replacing a bigger Neocon failure.
G.
Kronfli.