Introduction
The great struggles of the twentieth century between liberty
and totalitarianism ended with a decisive victory for the forces
of freedom—and a single sustainable model for national success:
freedom, democracy, and free enterprise. In the twenty-first
century, only nations that share a commitment to protecting
basic human rights and guaranteeing political and economic
freedom will be able to unleash the potential of their people
and assure their future prosperity. People everywhere want to be
able to speak freely; choose who will govern them; worship as
they please; educate their children—male and female; own
property; and enjoy the benefits of their labor. These values of
freedom are right and true for every person, in every
society—and the duty of protecting these values against their
enemies is the common calling of freedom-loving people across
the globe and across the ages.
Today, the United States enjoys a position of unparalleled
military strength and great economic and political influence. In
keeping with our heritage and principles, we do not use our
strength to press for unilateral advantage.We seek instead to
create a balance of power that favors human freedom: conditions
in which all nations and all societies can choose for themselves
the rewards and challenges of political and economic liberty. In
a world that is safe, people will be able to make their own
lives better.We will defend the peace by fighting terrorists and
tyrants.We will preserve the peace by building good relations
among the great powers. We will extend the peace by encouraging
free and open societies on every continent.
Defending our Nation against its enemies is the first and
fundamental commitment of the Federal Government. Today, that
task has changed dramatically. Enemies in the past needed great
armies and great industrial capabilities to endanger America.
Now, shadowy networks of individuals can bring great chaos and
suffering to our shores for less than it costs to purchase a
single tank. Terrorists are organized to penetrate open
societies and to turn the power of modern technologies against
us.
To defeat this threat we must make use of every tool in our
arsenal—military power, better homeland defenses, law
enforcement, intelligence, and vigorous efforts to cut off
terrorist financing. The war against terrorists of global reach
is a global enterprise of uncertain duration. America will help
nations that need our assistance in combating terror. And
America will hold to account nations that are compromised by
terror, including those who harbor terrorists— because the
allies of terror are the enemies of civilization. The United
States and countries cooperating with us must not allow the
terrorists to develop new home bases. Together, we will seek to
deny them sanctuary at every turn.
The gravest danger our Nation faces lies at the crossroads of
radicalism and technology. Our enemies have openly declared that
they are seeking weapons of mass destruction, and evidence
indicates that they are doing so with determination. The United
States will not allow these efforts to succeed.We will build
defenses against ballistic missiles and other means of delivery.
We will cooperate with other nations to deny, contain, and
curtail our enemies’ efforts to acquire dangerous technologies.
And, as a matter of common sense and self-defense, America will
act against such emerging threats before they are fully
formed.We cannot defend America and our friends by hoping for
the best. So we must be prepared to defeat our enemies’ plans,
using the best intelligence and proceeding with deliberation.
History will judge harshly those who saw this coming danger but
failed to act. In the new world we have entered, the only path
to peace and security is the path of action.
As we defend the peace, we will also take advantage of an
historic opportunity to preserve the peace. Today, the
international community has the best chance since the rise of
the nation-state in the seventeenth century to build a world
where great powers compete in peace instead of continually
prepare for war. Today, the world’s great powers find ourselves
on the same side— united by common dangers of terrorist violence
and chaos. The United States will build on these common
interests to promote global security.We are also increasingly
united by common values. Russia is in the midst of a hopeful
transition, reaching for its democratic future and a partner in
the war on terror. Chinese leaders are discovering that economic
freedom is the only source of national wealth. In time, they
will find that social and political freedom is the only source
of national greatness. America will encourage the advancement of
democracy and economic openness in both nations, because these
are the best foundations for domestic stability and
international order.We will strongly resist aggression from
other great powers—even as we welcome their peaceful pursuit of
prosperity, trade, and cultural advancement.
Finally, the United States will use this moment of
opportunity to extend the benefits of freedom across the
globe.We will actively work to bring the hope of democracy,
development, free markets, and free trade to every corner of the
world. The events of September 11, 2001, taught us that weak
states, like Afghanistan, can pose as great a danger to our
national interests as strong states. Poverty does not make poor
people into terrorists and murderers. Yet poverty, weak
institutions, and corruption can make weak states vulnerable to
terrorist networks and drug cartels within their borders.
The United States will stand beside any nation determined to
build a better future by seeking the rewards of liberty for its
people. Free trade and free markets have proven their ability to
lift whole societies out of poverty—so the United States will
work with individual nations, entire regions, and the entire
global trading community to build a world that trades in freedom
and therefore grows in prosperity. The United States will
deliver greater development assistance through the New
Millennium Challenge Account to nations that govern justly,
invest in their people, and encourage economic freedom.We will
also continue to lead the world in efforts to reduce the
terrible toll of HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases.
In building a balance of power that favors freedom, the
United States is guided by the conviction that all nations have
important responsibilities. Nations that enjoy freedom must
actively fight terror. Nations that depend on international
stability must help prevent the spread of weapons of mass
destruction. Nations that seek international aid must govern
themselves wisely, so that aid is well spent. For freedom to
thrive, accountability must be expected and required.
We are also guided by the conviction that no nation can build
a safer, better world alone. Alliances and multilateral
institutions can multiply the strength of freedom-loving
nations. The United States is committed to lasting institutions
like the United Nations, the World Trade Organization, the
Organization of American States, and NATO as well as other
long-standing alliances. Coalitions of the willing can augment
these permanent institutions. In all cases, international
obligations are to be taken seriously. They are not to be
undertaken symbolically to rally support for an ideal without
furthering its attainment.
Freedom is the non-negotiable demand of human dignity; the
birthright of every person—in every civilization. Throughout
history, freedom has been threatened by war and terror; it has
been challenged by the clashing wills of powerful states and the
evil designs of tyrants; and it has been tested by widespread
poverty and disease. Today, humanity holds in its hands the
opportunity to further freedom’s triumph over all these foes.
The United States welcomes our responsibility to lead in this
great mission.
George W. Bush
THE WHITE HOUSE,
September 17, 2002
I. Overview of America's International Strategy
"Our Nation's cause has always been larger
than our Nation's defense. We fight, as we always fight, for a
just peace—a peace that favors liberty. We will defend the peace
against the threats from terrorists and tyrants. We will
preserve the peace by building good relations among the great
powers. And we will extend the peace by encouraging free and
open societies on every continent."
President Bush
West Point, New York
June 1, 2002
The United States possesses unprecedented— and
unequaled—strength and influence in the world. Sustained by
faith in the principles of liberty, and the value of a free
society, this position comes with unparalleled responsibilities,
obligations, and opportunity. The great strength of this nation
must be used to promote a balance of power that favors freedom.
For most of the twentieth century, the world was divided by a
great struggle over ideas: destructive totalitarian visions
versus freedom and equality.
That great struggle is over. The militant visions of class,
nation, and race which promised utopia and delivered misery have
been defeated and discredited. America is now threatened less by
conquering states than we are by failing ones. We are menaced
less by fleets and armies than by catastrophic technologies in
the hands of the embittered few.We must defeat these threats to
our Nation, allies, and friends.
This is also a time of opportunity for America. We will work
to translate this moment of influence into decades of peace,
prosperity, and liberty. The U.S. national security strategy
will be based on a distinctly American internationalism that
reflects the union of our values and our national interests. The
aim of this strategy is to help make the world not just safer
but better. Our goals on the path to progress are clear:
political and economic freedom, peaceful relations with other
states, and respect for human dignity.
And this path is not America’s alone. It is open to all. To
achieve these goals, the United States will:
- champion aspirations for human dignity;
- strengthen alliances to defeat global terrorism and work
to prevent attacks against us and our friends;
- work with others to defuse regional conflicts;
- prevent our enemies from threatening us, our allies, and
our friends, with weapons of mass destruction;
- ignite a new era of global economic growth through free
markets and free trade;
- expand the circle of development by opening societies
and building the infrastructure of democracy;
- develop agendas for cooperative action with other main
centers of global power; and
- transform America’s national security institutions to
meet the challenges and opportunities of the twenty-first
century.
II. Champion Aspirations for Human Dignity
"Some worry that it is somehow undiplomatic
or impolite to speak the language of right and wrong. I
disagree. Different circumstances require different methods, but
not different moralities."
President Bush
West Point, New York
June 1, 2002
In pursuit of our goals, our first imperative is to clarify
what we stand for: the United States must defend liberty and
justice because these principles are right and true for all
people everywhere. No nation owns these aspirations, and no
nation is exempt from them. Fathers and mothers in all societies
want their children to be educated and to live free from poverty
and violence. No people on earth yearn to be oppressed, aspire
to servitude, or eagerly await the midnight knock of the secret
police.
America must stand firmly for the nonnegotiable demands of
human dignity: the rule of law; limits on the absolute power of
the state; free speech; freedom of worship; equal justice;
respect for women; religious and ethnic tolerance; and respect
for private property.
These demands can be met in many ways. America’s constitution
has served us well. Many other nations, with different histories
and cultures, facing different circumstances, have successfully
incorporated these core principles into their own systems of
governance. History has not been kind to those nations which
ignored or flouted the rights and aspirations of their people.
America’s experience as a great multi-ethnic democracy
affirms our conviction that people of many heritages and faiths
can live and prosper in peace. Our own history is a long
struggle to live up to our ideals. But even in our worst
moments, the principles enshrined in the Declaration of
Independence were there to guide us. As a result, America is not
just a stronger, but is a freer and more just society.
Today, these ideals are a lifeline to lonely defenders of
liberty. And when openings arrive, we can encourage change—as we
did in central and eastern Europe between 1989 and 1991, or in
Belgrade in 2000.When we see democratic processes take hold
among our friends in Taiwan or in the Republic of Korea, and see
elected leaders replace generals in Latin America and Africa, we
see examples of how authoritarian systems can evolve, marrying
local history and traditions with the principles we all cherish.
Embodying lessons from our past and using the opportunity we
have today, the national security strategy of the United States
must start from these core beliefs and look outward for
possibilities to expand liberty.
Our principles will guide our government’s decisions about
international cooperation, the character of our foreign
assistance, and the allocation of resources. They will guide our
actions and our words in international bodies.
We will:
- speak out honestly about violations of the nonnegotiable
demands of human dignity using our voice and vote in
international institutions to advance freedom;
- use our foreign aid to promote freedom and support those
who struggle non-violently for it, ensuring that nations
moving toward democracy are rewarded for the steps they
take;
- make freedom and the development of democratic
institutions key themes in our bilateral relations, seeking
solidarity and cooperation from other democracies while we
press governments that deny human rights to move toward a
better future; and
- take special efforts to promote freedom of religion and
conscience and defend it from encroachment by repressive
governments.
We will champion the cause of human dignity and oppose those
who resist it.
III. Strengthen Alliances to Defeat Global Terrorism and Work
to Prevent Attacks Against Us and Our Friends
“Just three days removed from these events,
Americans do not yet have the distance of history. But our
responsibility to history is already clear: to answer these
attacks and rid the world of evil.War has been waged against us
by stealth and deceit and murder. This nation is peaceful, but
fierce when stirred to anger. The conflict was begun on the
timing and terms of others. It will end in a way, and at an
hour, of our choosing.”
President Bush
Washington, D.C. (The National Cathedral)
September 14, 2001
The United States of America is fighting a war against
terrorists of global reach. The enemy is not a single political
regime or person or religion or ideology. The enemy is
terrorism— premeditated, politically motivated violence
perpetrated against innocents.
In many regions, legitimate grievances prevent the emergence
of a lasting peace. Such grievances deserve to be, and must be,
addressed within a political process. But no cause justifies
terror. The United States will make no concessions to terrorist
demands and strike no deals with them.We make no distinction
between terrorists and those who knowingly harbor or provide aid
to them.
The struggle against global terrorism is different from any
other war in our history. It will be fought on many fronts
against a particularly elusive enemy over an extended period of
time. Progress will come through the persistent accumulation of
successes—some seen, some unseen.
Today our enemies have seen the results of what civilized
nations can, and will, do against regimes that harbor, support,
and use terrorism to achieve their political goals. Afghanistan
has been liberated; coalition forces continue to hunt down the
Taliban and al-Qaida. But it is not only this battlefield on
which we will engage terrorists. Thousands of trained terrorists
remain at large with cells in North America, South America,
Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and across Asia.
Our priority will be first to disrupt and destroy terrorist
organizations of global reach and attack their leadership;
command, control, and communications; material support; and
finances. This will have a disabling effect upon the terrorists’
ability to plan and operate.
We will continue to encourage our regional partners to take
up a coordinated effort that isolates the terrorists. Once the
regional campaign localizes the threat to a particular state, we
will help ensure the state has the military, law enforcement,
political, and financial tools necessary to finish the task.
The United States will continue to work with our allies to
disrupt the financing of terrorism.We will identify and block
the sources of funding for terrorism, freeze the assets of
terrorists and those who support them, deny terrorists access to
the international financial system, protect legitimate charities
from being abused by terrorists, and prevent the movement of
terrorists’ assets through alternative financial networks.
However, this campaign need not be sequential to be
effective, the cumulative effect across all regions will help
achieve the results we seek. We will disrupt and destroy
terrorist organizations by:
- direct and continuous action using all the elements of
national and international power. Our immediate focus will
be those terrorist organizations of global reach and any
terrorist or state sponsor of terrorism which attempts to
gain or use weapons of mass destruction (WMD) or their
precursors;
- defending the United States, the American people, and
our interests at home and abroad by identifying and
destroying the threat before it reaches our borders.While
the United States will constantly strive to enlist the
support of the international community, we will not hesitate
to act alone, if necessary, to exercise our right of
selfdefense by acting preemptively against such terrorists,
to prevent them from doing harm against our people and our
country; and
- denying further sponsorship, support, and sanctuary to
terrorists by convincing or compelling states to accept
their sovereign responsibilities. We will also wage a war of
ideas to win the battle against international terrorism.
This includes:
- using the full influence of the United States, and
working closely with allies and friends, to make clear that
all acts of terrorism are illegitimate so that terrorism
will be viewed in the same light as slavery, piracy, or
genocide: behavior that no respectable government can
condone or support and all must oppose;
- supporting moderate and modern government, especially in
the Muslim world, to ensure that the conditions and
ideologies that promote terrorism do not find fertile ground
in any nation;
- diminishing the underlying conditions that spawn
terrorism by enlisting the international community to focus
its efforts and resources on areas most at risk; and
- using effective public diplomacy to promote the free
flow of information and ideas to kindle the hopes and
aspirations of freedom of those in societies ruled by the
sponsors of global terrorism.
While we recognize that our best defense is a good offense,
we are also strengthening America’s homeland security to protect
against and deter attack. This Administration has proposed the
largest government reorganization since the Truman
Administration created the National Security Council and the
Department of Defense. Centered on a new Department of Homeland
Security and including a new unified military command and a
fundamental reordering of the FBI, our comprehensive plan to
secure the homeland encompasses every level of government and
the cooperation of the public and the private sector.
This strategy will turn adversity into opportunity. For
example, emergency management systems will be better able to
cope not just with terrorism but with all hazards. Our medical
system will be strengthened to manage not just bioterror, but
all infectious diseases and mass-casualty dangers. Our border
controls will not just stop terrorists, but improve the
efficient movement of legitimate traffic.
While our focus is protecting America, we know that to defeat
terrorism in today’s globalized world we need support from our
allies and friends.Wherever possible, the United States will
rely on regional organizations and state powers to meet their
obligations to fight terrorism. Where governments find the fight
against terrorism beyond their capacities, we will match their
willpower and their resources with whatever help we and our
allies can provide.
As we pursue the terrorists in Afghanistan, we will continue
to work with international organizations such as the United
Nations, as well as non-governmental organizations, and other
countries to provide the humanitarian, political, economic, and
security assistance necessary to rebuild Afghanistan so that it
will never again abuse its people, threaten its neighbors, and
provide a haven for terrorists.
In the war against global terrorism, we will never forget
that we are ultimately fighting for our democratic values and
way of life. Freedom and fear are at war, and there will be no
quick or easy end to this conflict. In leading the campaign
against terrorism, we are forging new, productive international
relationships and redefining existing ones in ways that meet the
challenges of the twenty-first century.
IV. Work with others to Defuse Regional Conflicts
"We build a world of justice, or we will
live in a world of coercion. The magnitude of our shared
responsibilities makes our disagreements look so small."
President Bush
Berlin, Germany
May 23, 2002
Concerned nations must remain actively engaged in critical
regional disputes to avoid explosive escalation and minimize
human suffering. In an increasingly interconnected world,
regional crisis can strain our alliances, rekindle rivalries
among the major powers, and create horrifying affronts to human
dignity.When violence erupts and states falter, the United
States will work with friends and partners to alleviate
suffering and restore stability.
No doctrine can anticipate every circumstance in which U.S.
action—direct or indirect—is warranted.We have finite political,
economic, and military resources to meet our global priorities.
The United States will approach each case with these strategic
principles in mind:
- The United States should invest time and resources into
building international relationships and institutions that
can help manage local crises when they emerge.
- The United States should be realistic about its ability
to help those who are unwilling or unready to help
themselves.Where and when people are ready to do their part,
we will be willing to move decisively.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is critical because of the
toll of human suffering, because of America’s close relationship
with the state of Israel and key Arab states, and because of
that region’s importance to other global priorities of the
United States. There can be no peace for either side without
freedom for both sides. America stands committed to an
independent and democratic Palestine, living beside Israel in
peace and security. Like all other people, Palestinians deserve
a government that serves their interests and listens to their
voices. The United States will continue to encourage all parties
to step up to their responsibilities as we seek a just and
comprehensive settlement to the conflict.
The United States, the international donor community, and the
World Bank stand ready to work with a reformed Palestinian
government on economic development, increased humanitarian
assistance, and a program to establish, finance, and monitor a
truly independent judiciary. If Palestinians embrace democracy,
and the rule of law, confront corruption, and firmly reject
terror, they can count on American support for the creation of a
Palestinian state.
Israel also has a large stake in the success of a democratic
Palestine. Permanent occupation threatens Israel’s identity and
democracy. So the United States continues to challenge Israeli
leaders to take concrete steps to support the emergence of a
viable, credible Palestinian state. As there is progress towards
security, Israel forces need to withdraw fully to positions they
held prior to September 28, 2000. And consistent with the
recommendations of the Mitchell Committee, Israeli settlement
activity in the occupied territories must stop. As violence
subsides, freedom of movement should be restored, permitting
innocent Palestinians to resume work and normal life. The United
States can play a crucial role but, ultimately, lasting peace
can only come when Israelis and Palestinians resolve the issues
and end the conflict between them.
In South Asia, the United States has also emphasized the need
for India and Pakistan to resolve their disputes. This
Administration invested time and resources building strong
bilateral relations with India and Pakistan. These strong
relations then gave us leverage to play a constructive role when
tensions in the region became acute.With Pakistan, our bilateral
relations have been bolstered by Pakistan’s choice to join the
war against terror and move toward building a more open and
tolerant society. The Administration sees India’s potential to
become one of the great democratic powers of the twentyfirst
century and has worked hard to transform our relationship
accordingly. Our involvement in this regional dispute, building
on earlier investments in bilateral relations, looks first to
concrete steps by India and Pakistan that can help defuse
military confrontation.
Indonesia took courageous steps to create a working democracy
and respect for the rule of law. By tolerating ethnic
minorities, respecting the rule of law, and accepting open
markets, Indonesia may be able to employ the engine of
opportunity that has helped lift some of its neighbors out of
poverty and desperation. It is the initiative by Indonesia that
allows U.S. assistance to make a difference.
In the Western Hemisphere we have formed flexible coalitions
with countries that share our priorities, particularly Mexico,
Brazil, Canada, Chile, and Colombia. Together we will promote a
truly democratic hemisphere where our integration advances
security, prosperity, opportunity, and hope.We will work with
regional institutions, such as the Summit of the Americas
process, the Organization of American States (OAS), and the
Defense Ministerial of the Americas for the benefit of the
entire hemisphere.
Parts of Latin America confront regional conflict, especially
arising from the violence of drug cartels and their accomplices.
This conflict and unrestrained narcotics trafficking could
imperil the health and security of the United States. Therefore
we have developed an active strategy to help the Andean nations
adjust their economies, enforce their laws, defeat terrorist
organizations, and cut off the supply of drugs, while—as
important—we work to reduce the demand for drugs in our own
country.
In Colombia, we recognize the link between terrorist and
extremist groups that challenge the security of the state and
drug trafficking activities that help finance the operations of
such groups. We are working to help Colombia defend its
democratic institutions and defeat illegal armed groups of both
the left and right by extending effective sovereignty over the
entire national territory and provide basic security to the
Colombian people.
In Africa, promise and opportunity sit side by side with
disease, war, and desperate poverty. This threatens both a core
value of the United States— preserving human dignity—and our
strategic priority—combating global terror. American interests
and American principles, therefore, lead in the same direction:
we will work with others for an African continent that lives in
liberty, peace, and growing prosperity. Together with our
European allies, we must help strengthen Africa’s fragile
states, help build indigenous capability to secure porous
borders, and help build up the law enforcement and intelligence
infrastructure to deny havens for terrorists.
An ever more lethal environment exists in Africa as local
civil wars spread beyond borders to create regional war zones.
Forming coalitions of the willing and cooperative security
arrangements are key to confronting these emerging transnational
threats.
Africa’s great size and diversity requires a security
strategy that focuses on bilateral engagement and builds
coalitions of the willing. This Administration will focus on
three interlocking strategies for the region:
- countries with major impact on their neighborhood such
as South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, and Ethiopia are anchors
for regional engagement and require focused attention;
- coordination with European allies and international
institutions is essential for constructive conflict
mediation and successful peace operations; and
- Africa’s capable reforming states and sub-regional
organizations must be strengthened as the primary means to
address transnational threats on a sustained basis.
Ultimately the path of political and economic freedom
presents the surest route to progress in sub-Saharan Africa,
where most wars are conflicts over material resources and
political access often tragically waged on the basis of ethnic
and religious difference. The transition to the African Union
with its stated commitment to good governance and a common
responsibility for democratic political systems offers
opportunities to strengthen democracy on the continent.
V. Prevent Our Enemies from Threatening Us, Our Allies, and
Our Friends with Weapons of Mass Destruction
“The gravest danger to freedom lies at the
crossroads of radicalism and technology. When the spread of
chemical and biological and nuclear weapons, along with
ballistic missile technology—when that occurs, even weak states
and small groups could attain a catastrophic power to strike
great nations. Our enemies have declared this very intention,
and have been caught seeking these terrible weapons. They want
the capability to blackmail us, or to harm us, or to harm our
friends—and we will oppose them with all our power.”
President Bush
West Point, New York
June 1, 2002
The nature of the Cold War threat required the United
States—with our allies and friends—to emphasize deterrence of
the enemy’s use of force, producing a grim strategy of mutual
assured destruction.With the collapse of the Soviet Union and
the end of the Cold War, our security environment has undergone
profound transformation.
Having moved from confrontation to cooperation as the
hallmark of our relationship with Russia, the dividends are
evident: an end to the balance of terror that divided us; an
historic reduction in the nuclear arsenals on both sides; and
cooperation in areas such as counterterrorism and missile
defense that until recently were inconceivable.
But new deadly challenges have emerged from rogue states and
terrorists. None of these contemporary threats rival the sheer
destructive power that was arrayed against us by the Soviet
Union. However, the nature and motivations of these new
adversaries, their determination to obtain destructive powers
hitherto available only to the world’s strongest states, and the
greater likelihood that they will use weapons of mass
destruction against us, make today’s security environment more
complex and dangerous.
In the 1990s we witnessed the emergence of a small number of
rogue states that, while different in important ways, share a
number of attributes. These states:
- brutalize their own people and squander their national
resources for the personal gain of the rulers;
- display no regard for international law, threaten their
neighbors, and callously violate international treaties to
which they are party;
- are determined to acquire weapons of mass destruction,
along with other advanced military technology, to be used as
threats or offensively to achieve the aggressive designs of
these regimes;
- sponsor terrorism around the globe; and
- reject basic human values and hate the United States and
everything for which it stands.
At the time of the Gulf War, we acquired irrefutable proof
that Iraq’s designs were not limited to the chemical weapons it
had used against Iran and its own people, but also extended to
the acquisition of nuclear weapons and biological agents. In the
past decade North Korea has become the world’s principal
purveyor of ballistic missiles, and has tested increasingly
capable missiles while developing its own WMD arsenal. Other
rogue regimes seek nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons as
well. These states’ pursuit of, and global trade in, such
weapons has become a looming threat to all nations.
We must be prepared to stop rogue states and their terrorist
clients before they are able to threaten or use weapons of mass
destruction against the United States and our allies and
friends. Our response must take full advantage of strengthened
alliances, the establishment of new partnerships with former
adversaries, innovation in the use of military forces, modern
technologies, including the development of an effective missile
defense system, and increased emphasis on intelligence
collection and analysis.
Our comprehensive strategy to combat WMD includes:
- Proactive counterproliferation efforts. We must
deter and defend against the threat before it is
unleashed.We must ensure that key capabilities—detection,
active and passive defenses, and counterforce
capabilities—are integrated into our defense transformation
and our homeland security systems. Counterproliferation must
also be integrated into the doctrine, training, and
equipping of our forces and those of our allies to ensure
that we can prevail in any conflict with WMD-armed
adversaries.
- Strengthened nonproliferation efforts to prevent
rogue states and terrorists from acquiring the materials,
technologies, and expertise necessary for weapons of mass
destruction. We will enhance diplomacy, arms control,
multilateral export controls, and threat reduction
assistance that impede states and terrorists seeking WMD,
and when necessary, interdict enabling technologies and
materials.We will continue to build coalitions to support
these efforts, encouraging their increased political and
financial support for nonproliferation and threat reduction
programs. The recent G-8 agreement to commit up to $20
billion to a global partnership against proliferation marks
a major step forward.
- Effective consequence management to respond to the
effects of WMD use, whether by terrorists or hostile states.
Minimizing the effects of WMD use against our people will
help deter those who possess such weapons and dissuade those
who seek to acquire them by persuading enemies that they
cannot attain their desired ends. The United States must
also be prepared to respond to the effects of WMD use
against our forces abroad, and to help friends and allies if
they are attacked.
It has taken almost a decade for us to comprehend the true
nature of this new threat. Given the goals of rogue states and
terrorists, the United States can no longer solely rely on a
reactive posture as we have in the past. The inability to deter
a potential attacker, the immediacy of today’s threats, and the
magnitude of potential harm that could be caused by our
adversaries’ choice of weapons, do not permit that option.We
cannot let our enemies strike first.
In the Cold War, especially following the Cuban missile
crisis, we faced a generally status quo, risk-averse adversary.
Deterrence was an effective defense. But deterrence based only
upon the threat of retaliation is less likely to work against
leaders of rogue states more willing to take risks, gambling
with the lives of their people, and the wealth of their nations.
- In the Cold War, weapons of mass destruction were
considered weapons of last resort whose use risked the
destruction of those who used them. Today, our enemies see
weapons of mass destruction as weapons of choice. For rogue
states these weapons are tools of intimidation and military
aggression against their neighbors. These weapons may also
allow these states to attempt to blackmail the United States
and our allies to prevent us from deterring or repelling the
aggressive behavior of rogue states. Such states also see
these weapons as their best means of overcoming the
conventional superiority of the United States.
- Traditional concepts of deterrence will not work against
a terrorist enemy whose avowed tactics are wanton
destruction and the targeting of innocents; whose so-called
soldiers seek martyrdom in death and whose most potent
protection is statelessness. The overlap between states that
sponsor terror and those that pursue WMD compels us to
action.
For centuries, international law recognized that nations need
not suffer an attack before they can lawfully take action to
defend themselves against forces that present an imminent danger
of attack. Legal scholars and international jurists often
conditioned the legitimacy of preemption on the existence of an
imminent threat—most often a visible mobilization of armies,
navies, and air forces preparing to attack.
We must adapt the concept of imminent threat to the
capabilities and objectives of today’s adversaries. Rogue states
and terrorists do not seek to attack us using conventional
means. They know such attacks would fail. Instead, they rely on
acts of terror and, potentially, the use of weapons of mass
destruction—weapons that can be easily concealed, delivered
covertly, and used without warning.
The targets of these attacks are our military forces and our
civilian population, in direct violation of one of the principal
norms of the law of warfare. As was demonstrated by the losses
on September 11, 2001, mass civilian casualties is the specific
objective of terrorists and these losses would be exponentially
more severe if terrorists acquired and used weapons of mass
destruction.
The United States has long maintained the option of
preemptive actions to counter a sufficient threat to our
national security. The greater the threat, the greater is the
risk of inaction— and the more compelling the case for taking
anticipatory action to defend ourselves, even if uncertainty
remains as to the time and place of the enemy’s attack. To
forestall or prevent such hostile acts by our adversaries, the
United States will, if necessary, act preemptively.
The United States will not use force in all cases to preempt
emerging threats, nor should nations use preemption as a pretext
for aggression. Yet in an age where the enemies of civilization
openly and actively seek the world’s most destructive
technologies, the United States cannot remain idle while dangers
gather. We will always proceed deliberately, weighing the
consequences of our actions. To support preemptive options, we
will:
- build better, more integrated intelligence capabilities
to provide timely, accurate information on threats, wherever
they may emerge;
- coordinate closely with allies to form a common
assessment of the most dangerous threats; and
- continue to transform our military forces to ensure our
ability to conduct rapid and precise operations to achieve
decisive results.
The purpose of our actions will always be to eliminate a
specific threat to the United States or our allies and friends.
The reasons for our actions will be clear, the force measured,
and the cause just.
VI. Ignite a New Era of Global Economic Growth through Free
Markets and Free Trade
"When nations close their markets and
opportunity is hoarded by a privileged few, no amount-no
amount-of development aid is ever enough. When nations respect
their people, open markets, invest in better health and
education, every dollar of aid, every dollar of trade revenue
and domestic capital is used more effectively."
President Bush
Monterrey, Mexico
March 22, 2002
A strong world economy enhances our national security by
advancing prosperity and freedom in the rest of the world.
Economic growth supported by free trade and free markets creates
new jobs and higher incomes. It allows people to lift their
lives out of poverty, spurs economic and legal reform, and the
fight against corruption, and it reinforces the habits of
liberty.
We will promote economic growth and economic freedom beyond
America’s shores. All governments are responsible for creating
their own economic policies and responding to their own economic
challenges.We will use our economic engagement with other
countries to underscore the benefits of policies that generate
higher productivity and sustained economic growth, including:
- pro-growth legal and regulatory policies to encourage
business investment, innovation, and entrepreneurial
activity;
- tax policies—particularly lower marginal tax rates—that
improve incentives for work and investment;
- rule of law and intolerance of corruption so that people
are confident that they will be able to enjoy the fruits of
their economic endeavors;
- strong financial systems that allow capital to be put to
its most efficient use;
- sound fiscal policies to support business activity;
- investments in health and education that improve the
well-being and skills of the labor force and population as a
whole; and
- free trade that provides new avenues for growth and
fosters the diffusion of technologies and ideas that
increase productivity and opportunity.
The lessons of history are clear: market economies, not
command-and-control economies with the heavy hand of government,
are the best way to promote prosperity and reduce poverty.
Policies that further strengthen market incentives and market
institutions are relevant for all economies—industrialized
countries, emerging markets, and the developing world.
A return to strong economic growth in Europe and Japan is
vital to U.S. national security interests. We want our allies to
have strong economies for their own sake, for the sake of the
global economy, and for the sake of global security. European
efforts to remove structural barriers in their economies are
particularly important in this regard, as are Japan’s efforts to
end deflation and address the problems of non-performing loans
in the Japanese banking system.We will continue to use our
regular consultations with Japan and our European
partners—including through the Group of Seven (G-7)—to discuss
policies they are adopting to promote growth in their economies
and support higher global economic growth.
Improving stability in emerging markets is also key to global
economic growth. International flows of investment capital are
needed to expand the productive potential of these economies.
These flows allow emerging markets and developing countries to
make the investments that raise living standards and reduce
poverty. Our long-term objective should be a world in which all
countries have investment-grade credit ratings that allow them
access to international capital markets and to invest in their
future.
We are committed to policies that will help emerging markets
achieve access to larger capital flows at lower cost. To this
end, we will continue to pursue reforms aimed at reducing
uncertainty in financial markets.We will work actively with
other countries, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the
private sector to implement the G-7 Action Plan negotiated
earlier this year for preventing financial crises and more
effectively resolving them when they occur.
The best way to deal with financial crises is to prevent them
from occurring, and we have encouraged the IMF to improve its
efforts doing so.We will continue to work with the IMF to
streamline the policy conditions for its lending and to focus
its lending strategy on achieving economic growth through sound
fiscal and monetary policy, exchange rate policy, and financial
sector policy.
The concept of "free trade" arose as a moral principle even
before it became a pillar of economics. If you can make
something that others value, you should be able to sell it to
them. If others make something that you value, you should be
able to buy it. This is real freedom, the freedom for a
person—or a nation—to make a living. To promote free trade, the
Unites States has developed a comprehensive strategy:
- Seize the global initiative. The new global trade
negotiations we helped launch at Doha in November 2001 will
have an ambitious agenda, especially in agriculture,
manufacturing, and services, targeted for completion in
2005. The United States has led the way in completing the
accession of China and a democratic Taiwan to the World
Trade Organization.We will assist Russia’s preparations to
join the WTO.
- Press regional initiatives. The United States and
other democracies in the Western Hemisphere have agreed to
create the Free Trade Area of the Americas, targeted for
completion in 2005. This year the United States will
advocate market-access negotiations with its partners,
targeted on agriculture, industrial goods, services,
investment, and government procurement.We will also offer
more opportunity to the poorest continent, Africa, starting
with full use of the preferences allowed in the African
Growth and Opportunity Act, and leading to free trade.
- Move ahead with bilateral free trade agreements.
Building on the free trade agreement with Jordan enacted in
2001, the Administration will work this year to complete
free trade agreements with Chile and Singapore. Our aim is
to achieve free trade agreements with a mix of developed and
developing countries in all regions of the world. Initially,
Central America, Southern Africa, Morocco, and Australia
will be our principal focal points.
- Renew the executive-congressional partnership.
Every administration’s trade strategy depends on a
productive partnership with Congress. After a gap of 8
years, the Administration reestablished majority support in
the Congress for trade liberalization by passing Trade
Promotion Authority and the other market opening measures
for developing countries in the Trade Act of 2002. This
Administration will work with Congress to enact new
bilateral, regional, and global trade agreements that will
be concluded under the recently passed Trade Promotion
Authority.
- Promote the connection between trade and development.
Trade policies can help developing countries strengthen
property rights, competition, the rule of law, investment,
the spread of knowledge, open societies, the efficient
allocation of resources, and regional integration—all
leading to growth, opportunity, and confidence in developing
countries. The United States is implementing The Africa
Growth and Opportunity Act to provide market-access for
nearly all goods produced in the 35 countries of sub-
Saharan Africa.We will make more use of this act and its
equivalent for the Caribbean Basin and continue to work with
multilateral and regional institutions to help poorer
countries take advantage of these opportunities. Beyond
market access, the most important area where trade
intersects with poverty is in public health.We will ensure
that the WTO intellectual property rules are flexible enough
to allow developing nations to gain access to critical
medicines for extraordinary dangers like HIV/AIDS,
tuberculosis, and malaria.
- Enforce trade agreements and laws against unfair
practices. Commerce depends on the rule of law;
international trade depends on enforceable agreements. Our
top priorities are to resolve ongoing disputes with the
European Union, Canada, and Mexico and to make a global
effort to address new technology, science, and health
regulations that needlessly impede farm exports and improved
agriculture. Laws against unfair trade practices are often
abused, but the international community must be able to
address genuine concerns about government subsidies and
dumping. International industrial espionage which undermines
fair competition must be detected and deterred.
- Help domestic industries and workers adjust.
There is a sound statutory framework for these transitional
safeguards which we have used in the agricultural sector and
which we are using this year to help the American steel
industry. The benefits of free trade depend upon the
enforcement of fair trading practices. These safeguards help
ensure that the benefits of free trade do not come at the
expense of American workers. Trade adjustment assistance
will help workers adapt to the change and dynamism of open
markets.
- Protect the environment and workers. The United
States must foster economic growth in ways that will provide
a better life along with widening prosperity.We will
incorporate labor and environmental concerns into U.S. trade
negotiations, creating a healthy “network” between
multilateral environmental agreements with the WTO, and use
the International Labor Organization, trade preference
programs, and trade talks to improve working conditions in
conjunction with freer trade.
- Enhance energy security. We will strengthen our
own energy security and the shared prosperity of the global
economy by working with our allies, trading partners, and
energy producers to expand the sources and types of global
energy supplied, especially in the Western Hemisphere,
Africa, Central Asia, and the Caspian region.We will also
continue to work with our partners to develop cleaner and
more energy efficient technologies.
Economic growth should be accompanied by global efforts to
stabilize greenhouse gas concentrations associated with this
growth, containing them at a level that prevents dangerous human
interference with the global climate. Our overall objective is
to reduce America’s greenhouse gas emissions relative to the
size of our economy, cutting such emissions per unit of economic
activity by 18 percent over the next 10 years, by the year 2012.
Our strategies for attaining this goal will be to:
- remain committed to the basic U.N. Framework Convention
for international cooperation;
- obtain agreements with key industries to cut emissions
of some of the most potent greenhouse gases and give
transferable credits to companies that can show real cuts;
- develop improved standards for measuring and registering
emission reductions;
- promote renewable energy production and clean coal
technology, as well as nuclear power—which produces no
greenhouse gas emissions, while also improving fuel economy
for U.S. cars and trucks;
- increase spending on research and new conservation
technologies, to a total of $4.5 billion—the largest sum
being spent on climate change by any country in the world
and a $700 million increase over last year’s budget; and
- assist developing countries, especially the major
greenhouse gas emitters such as China and India, so that
they will have the tools and resources to join this effort
and be able to grow along a cleaner and better path.
VII. Expand the Circle of Development by Opening Societies
and Building the Infrastructure of Democracy
"In World War II we fought to make the
world safer, then worked to rebuild it. As we wage war today to
keep the world safe from terror, we must also work to make the
world a better place for all its citizens."
President Bush
Washington, D.C. (Inter-American Development Bank)
March 14, 2002
A world where some live in comfort and plenty, while half of
the human race lives on less than $2 a day, is neither just nor
stable. Including all of the world’s poor in an expanding circle
of development—and opportunity—is a moral imperative and one of
the top priorities of U.S. international policy.
Decades of massive development assistance have failed to spur
economic growth in the poorest countries.Worse, development aid
has often served to prop up failed policies, relieving the
pressure for reform and perpetuating misery. Results of aid are
typically measured in dollars spent by donors, not in the rates
of growth and poverty reduction achieved by recipients. These
are the indicators of a failed strategy.
Working with other nations, the United States is confronting
this failure.We forged a new consensus at the U.N. Conference on
Financing for Development in Monterrey that the objectives of
assistance—and the strategies to achieve those objectives—must
change.
This Administration’s goal is to help unleash the productive
potential of individuals in all nations. Sustained growth and
poverty reduction is impossible without the right national
policies. Where governments have implemented real policy
changes, we will provide significant new levels of assistance.
The United States and other developed countries should set an
ambitious and specific target: to double the size of the world’s
poorest economies within a decade.
The United States Government will pursue these major
strategies to achieve this goal:
- Provide resources to aid countries that have met the
challenge of national reform. We propose a 50 percent
increase in the core development assistance given by the
United States.While continuing our present programs,
including humanitarian assistance based on need alone, these
billions of new dollars will form a new Millennium Challenge
Account for projects in countries whose governments rule
justly, invest in their people, and encourage economic
freedom. Governments must fight corruption, respect basic
human rights, embrace the rule of law, invest in health care
and education, follow responsible economic policies, and
enable entrepreneurship. The Millennium Challenge Account
will reward countries that have demonstrated real policy
change and challenge those that have not to implement
reforms.
- Improve the effectiveness of the World Bank and other
development banks in raising living standards. The
United States is committed to a comprehensive reform agenda
for making the World Bank and the other multilateral
development banks more effective in improving the lives of
the world’s poor.We have reversed the downward trend in U.S.
contributions and proposed an 18 percent increase in the
U.S. contributions to the International Development
Association (IDA)—the World Bank’s fund for the poorest
countries—and the African Development Fund. The key to
raising living standards and reducing poverty around the
world is increasing productivity growth, especially in the
poorest countries.We will continue to press the multilateral
development banks to focus on activities that increase
economic productivity, such as improvements in education,
health, rule of law, and private sector development. Every
project, every loan, every grant must be judged by how much
it will increase productivity growth in developing
countries.
- Insist upon measurable results to ensure that
development assistance is actually making a difference in
the lives of the world’s poor. When it comes to economic
development, what really matters is that more children are
getting a better education, more people have access to
health care and clean water, or more workers can find jobs
to make a better future for their families.We have a moral
obligation to measure the success of our development
assistance by whether it is delivering results. For this
reason, we will continue to demand that our own development
assistance as well as assistance from the multilateral
development banks has measurable goals and concrete
benchmarks for achieving those goals. Thanks to U.S.
leadership, the recent IDA replenishment agreement will
establish a monitoring and evaluation system that measures
recipient countries’ progress. For the first time, donors
can link a portion of their contributions to IDA to the
achievement of actual development results, and part of the
U.S. contribution is linked in this way.We will strive to
make sure that the World Bank and other multilateral
development banks build on this progress so that a focus on
results is an integral part of everything that these
institutions do.
- Increase the amount of development assistance that is
provided in the form of grants instead of loans. Greater
use of results-based grants is the best way to help poor
countries make productive investments, particularly in the
social sectors, without saddling them with ever-larger debt
burdens. As a result of U.S. leadership, the recent IDA
agreement provided for significant increases in grant
funding for the poorest countries for education, HIV/AIDS,
health, nutrition, water, sanitation, and other human needs.
Our goal is to build on that progress by increasing the use
of grants at the other multilateral development banks.We
will also challenge universities, nonprofits, and the
private sector to match government efforts by using grants
to support development projects that show results.
- Open societies to commerce and investment. Trade and
investment are the real engines of economic growth. Even
if government aid increases, most money for development must
come from trade, domestic capital, and foreign investment.
An effective strategy must try to expand these flows as
well. Free markets and free trade are key priorities of our
national security strategy.
- Secure public health. The scale of the public
health crisis in poor countries is enormous. In countries
afflicted by epidemics and pandemics like HIV/AIDS, malaria,
and tuberculosis, growth and development will be threatened
until these scourges can be contained. Resources from the
developed world are necessary but will be effective only
with honest governance, which supports prevention programs
and provides effective local infrastructure. The United
States has strongly backed the new global fund for HIV/AIDS
organized by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan and its focus
on combining prevention with a broad strategy for treatment
and care. The United States already contributes more than
twice as much money to such efforts as the next largest
donor. If the global fund demonstrates its promise, we will
be ready to give even more.
- Emphasize education. Literacy and learning are
the foundation of democracy and development. Only about 7
percent of World Bank resources are devoted to education.
This proportion should grow. The United States will increase
its own funding for education assistance by at least 20
percent with an emphasis on improving basic education and
teacher training in Africa. The United States can also bring
information technology to these societies, many of whose
education systems have been devastated by HIV/AIDS.
- Continue to aid agricultural development. New
technologies, including biotechnology, have enormous
potential to improve crop yields in developing countries
while using fewer pesticides and less water. Using sound
science, the United States should help bring these benefits
to the 800 million people, including 300 million children,
who still suffer from hunger and malnutrition.
VIII. Develop Agendas for Cooperative Action with the Other
Main Centers of Global Power
“We have our best chance since the rise of
the nation-state in the 17th century to build a world where the
great powers compete in peace instead of prepare for war.”
President Bush
West Point, New York
June 1, 2002
America will implement its strategies by organizing
coalitions—as broad as practicable— of states able and willing
to promote a balance of power that favors freedom. Effective
coalition leadership requires clear priorities, an appreciation
of others’ interests, and consistent consultations among
partners with a spirit of humility.
There is little of lasting consequence that the United States
can accomplish in the world without the sustained cooperation of
its allies and friends in Canada and Europe. Europe is also the
seat of two of the strongest and most able international
institutions in the world: the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO), which has, since its inception, been the
fulcrum of transatlantic and inter-European security, and the
European Union (EU), our partner in opening world trade.
The attacks of September 11 were also an attack on NATO, as
NATO itself recognized when it invoked its Article V
self-defense clause for the first time. NATO’s core
mission—collective defense of the transatlantic alliance of
democracies —remains, but NATO must develop new structures and
capabilities to carry out that mission under new circumstances.
NATO must build a capability to field, at short notice, highly
mobile, specially trained forces whenever they are needed to
respond to a threat against any member of the alliance.
The alliance must be able to act wherever our interests are
threatened, creating coalitions under NATO’s own mandate, as
well as contributing to mission-based coalitions. To achieve
this, we must:
- expand NATO’s membership to those democratic nations
willing and able to share the burden of defending and
advancing our common interests;
- ensure that the military forces of NATO nations have
appropriate combat contributions to make in coalition
warfare;
- develop planning processes to enable those contributions
to become effective multinational fighting forces;
- take advantage of the technological opportunities and
economies of scale in our defense spending to transform NATO
military forces so that they dominate potential aggressors
and diminish our vulnerabilities;
- streamline and increase the flexibility of command
structures to meet new operational demands and the
associated requirements of training, integrating, and
experimenting with new force configurations; and
- maintain the ability to work and fight together as
allies even as we take the necessary steps to transform and
modernize our forces.
If NATO succeeds in enacting these changes, the rewards will
be a partnership as central to the security and interests of its
member states as was the case during the Cold War.We will
sustain a common perspective on the threats to our societies and
improve our ability to take common action in defense of our
nations and their interests. At the same time, we welcome our
European allies’ efforts to forge a greater foreign policy and
defense identity with the EU, and commit ourselves to close
consultations to ensure that these developments work with
NATO.We cannot afford to lose this opportunity to better prepare
the family of transatlantic democracies for the challenges to
come.
The attacks of September 11 energized America’s Asian
alliances. Australia invoked the ANZUS Treaty to declare the
September 11 was an attack on Australia itself, following that
historic decision with the dispatch of some of the world’s
finest combat forces for Operation Enduring Freedom. Japan and
the Republic of Korea provided unprecedented levels of military
logistical support within weeks of the terrorist attack.We have
deepened cooperation on counterterrorism with our alliance
partners in Thailand and the Philippines and received invaluable
assistance from close friends like Singapore and New Zealand.
The war against terrorism has proven that America’s alliances
in Asia not only underpin regional peace and stability, but are
flexible and ready to deal with new challenges. To enhance our
Asian alliances and friendships, we will:
- look to Japan to continue forging a leading role in
regional and global affairs based on our common interests,
our common values, and our close defense and diplomatic
cooperation;
- work with South Korea to maintain vigilance towards the
North while preparing our alliance to make contributions to
the broader stability of the region over the longer term;
- build on 50 years of U.S.-Australian alliance
cooperation as we continue working together to resolve
regional and global problems—as we have so many times from
the Battle of the Coral Sea to Tora Bora;
- maintain forces in the region that reflect our
commitments to our allies, our requirements, our
technological advances, and the strategic environment; and
- build on stability provided by these alliances, as well
as with institutions such as ASEAN and the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation forum, to develop a mix of regional and
bilateral strategies to manage change in this dynamic
region.
We are attentive to the possible renewal of old patterns of
great power competition. Several potential great powers are now
in the midst of internal transition—most importantly Russia,
India, and China. In all three cases, recent developments have
encouraged our hope that a truly global consensus about basic
principles is slowly taking shape.
With Russia, we are already building a new strategic
relationship based on a central reality of the twenty-first
century: the United States and Russia are no longer strategic
adversaries. The Moscow Treaty on Strategic Reductions is
emblematic of this new reality and reflects a critical change in
Russian thinking that promises to lead to productive, long-term
relations with the Euro-Atlantic community and the United
States. Russia’s top leaders have a realistic assessment of
their country’s current weakness and the policies—internal and
external—needed to reverse those weaknesses. They understand,
increasingly, that Cold War approaches do not serve their
national interests and that Russian and American strategic
interests overlap in many areas.
United States policy seeks to use this turn in Russian
thinking to refocus our relationship on emerging and potential
common interests and challenges.We are broadening our already
extensive cooperation in the global war on terrorism. We are
facilitating Russia’s entry into the World Trade Organization,
without lowering standards for accession, to promote beneficial
bilateral trade and investment relations.We have created the
NATO-Russia Council with the goal of deepening security
cooperation among Russia, our European allies, and ourselves.We
will continue to bolster the independence and stability of the
states of the former Soviet Union in the belief that a
prosperous and stable neighborhood will reinforce Russia’s
growing commitment to integration into the Euro-Atlantic
community.
At the same time, we are realistic about the differences that
still divide us from Russia and about the time and effort it
will take to build an enduring strategic partnership. Lingering
distrust of our motives and policies by key Russian elites slows
improvement in our relations. Russia’s uneven commitment to the
basic values of free-market democracy and dubious record in
combating the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction
remain matters of great concern. Russia’s very weakness limits
the opportunities for cooperation. Nevertheless, those
opportunities are vastly greater now than in recent years—or
even decades.
The United States has undertaken a transformation in its
bilateral relationship with India based on a conviction that
U.S. interests require a strong relationship with India.We are
the two largest democracies, committed to political freedom
protected by representative government. India is moving toward
greater economic freedom as well.We have a common interest in
the free flow of commerce, including through the vital sea lanes
of the Indian Ocean. Finally, we share an interest in fighting
terrorism and in creating a strategically stable Asia.
Differences remain, including over the development of India’s
nuclear and missile programs, and the pace of India’s economic
reforms. But while in the past these concerns may have dominated
our thinking about India, today we start with a view of India as
a growing world power with which we have common strategic
interests. Through a strong partnership with India, we can best
address any differences and shape a dynamic future.
The United States relationship with China is an important
part of our strategy to promote a stable, peaceful, and
prosperous Asia-Pacific region.We welcome the emergence of a
strong, peaceful, and prosperous China. The democratic
development of China is crucial to that future. Yet, a quarter
century after beginning the process of shedding the worst
features of the Communist legacy, China’s leaders have not yet
made the next series of fundamental choices about the character
of their state. In pursuing advanced military capabilities that
can threaten its neighbors in the Asia-Pacific region, China is
following an outdated path that, in the end, will hamper its own
pursuit of national greatness. In time, China will find that
social and political freedom is the only source of that
greatness.
The United States seeks a constructive relationship with a
changing China.We already cooperate well where our interests
overlap, including the current war on terrorism and in promoting
stability on the Korean peninsula. Likewise, we have coordinated
on the future of Afghanistan and have initiated a comprehensive
dialogue on counterterrorism and similar transitional concerns.
Shared health and environmental threats, such as the spread of
HIV/AIDS, challenge us to promote jointly the welfare of our
citizens.
Addressing these transnational threats will challenge China
to become more open with information, promote the development of
civil society, and enhance individual human rights. China has
begun to take the road to political openness, permitting many
personal freedoms and conducting village-level elections, yet
remains strongly committed to national one-party rule by the
Communist Party. To make that nation truly accountable to its
citizen’s needs and aspirations, however, much work remains to
be done. Only by allowing the Chinese people to think, assemble,
and worship freely can China reach its full potential.
Our important trade relationship will benefit from China’s
entry into the World Trade Organization, which will create more
export opportunities and ultimately more jobs for American
farmers, workers, and companies. China is our fourth largest
trading partner, with over $100 billion in annual two-way trade.
The power of market principles and the WTO’s requirements for
transparency and accountability will advance openness and the
rule of law in China to help establish basic protections for
commerce and for citizens. There are, however, other areas in
which we have profound disagreements. Our commitment to the
self-defense of Taiwan under the Taiwan Relations Act is one.
Human rights is another.We expect China to adhere to its
nonproliferation commitments.We will work to narrow differences
where they exist, but not allow them to preclude cooperation
where we agree.
The events of September 11, 2001, fundamentally changed the
context for relations between the United States and other main
centers of global power, and opened vast, new opportunities.With
our long-standing allies in Europe and Asia, and with leaders in
Russia, India, and China, we must develop active agendas of
cooperation lest these relationships become routine and
unproductive.
Every agency of the United States Government shares the
challenge.We can build fruitful habits of consultation, quiet
argument, sober analysis, and common action. In the long-term,
these are the practices that will sustain the supremacy of our
common principles and keep open the path of progress.
IX. Transform America's National Security Institutions to
Meet the Challenges and Opportunities of the Twenty-First
Century
"Terrorists attacked a symbol of American
prosperity. They did not touch its source. America is successful
because of the hard work, creativity, and enterprise of our
people."
President Bush
Washington, D.C. (Joint Session of Congress)
September 20, 2001
The major institutions of American national security were
designed in a different era to meet different requirements. All
of them must be transformed.
It is time to reaffirm the essential role of American
military strength.We must build and maintain our defenses beyond
challenge. Our military’s highest priority is to defend the
United States. To do so effectively, our military must:
- assure our allies and friends;
- dissuade future military competition;
- deter threats against U.S. interests, allies, and
friends; and
- decisively defeat any adversary if deterrence fails.
The unparalleled strength of the United States armed forces,
and their forward presence, have maintained the peace in some of
the world’s most strategically vital regions. However, the
threats and enemies we must confront have changed, and so must
our forces. A military structured to deter massive Cold War-era
armies must be transformed to focus more on how an adversary
might fight rather than where and when a war might occur. We
will channel our energies to overcome a host of operational
challenges.
The presence of American forces overseas is one of the most
profound symbols of the U.S. commitments to allies and friends.
Through our willingness to use force in our own defense and in
defense of others, the United States demonstrates its resolve to
maintain a balance of power that favors freedom. To contend with
uncertainty and to meet the many security challenges we face,
the United States will require bases and stations within and
beyond Western Europe and Northeast Asia, as well as temporary
access arrangements for the long-distance deployment of U.S.
forces.
Before the war in Afghanistan, that area was low on the list
of major planning contingencies. Yet, in a very short time, we
had to operate across the length and breadth of that remote
nation, using every branch of the armed forces.We must prepare
for more such deployments by developing assets such as advanced
remote sensing, long-range precision strike capabilities, and
transformed maneuver and expeditionary forces. This broad
portfolio of military capabilities must also include the ability
to defend the homeland, conduct information operations, ensure
U.S. access to distant theaters, and protect critical U.S.
infrastructure and assets in outer space.
Innovation within the armed forces will rest on
experimentation with new approaches to warfare, strengthening
joint operations, exploiting U.S. intelligence advantages, and
taking full advantage of science and technology.We must also
transform the way the Department of Defense is run, especially
in financial management and recruitment and retention. Finally,
while maintaining near-term readiness and the ability to fight
the war on terrorism, the goal must be to provide the President
with a wider range of military options to discourage aggression
or any form of coercion against the United States, our allies,
and our friends.
We know from history that deterrence can fail; and we know
from experience that some enemies cannot be deterred. The United
States must and will maintain the capability to defeat any
attempt by an enemy—whether a state or non-state actor—to impose
its will on the United States, our allies, or our friends.We
will maintain the forces sufficient to support our obligations,
and to defend freedom. Our forces will be strong enough to
dissuade potential adversaries from pursuing a military build-up
in hopes of surpassing, or equaling, the power of the United
States.
Intelligence—and how we use it—is our first line of defense
against terrorists and the threat posed by hostile states.
Designed around the priority of gathering enormous information
about a massive, fixed object—the Soviet bloc—the intelligence
community is coping with the challenge of following a far more
complex and elusive set of targets.
We must transform our intelligence capabilities and build new
ones to keep pace with the nature of these threats. Intelligence
must be appropriately integrated with our defense and law
enforcement systems and coordinated with our allies and
friends.We need to protect the capabilities we have so that we
do not arm our enemies with the knowledge of how best to
surprise us. Those who would harm us also seek the benefit of
surprise to limit our prevention and response options and to
maximize injury.
We must strengthen intelligence warning and analysis to
provide integrated threat assessments for national and homeland
security. Since the threats inspired by foreign governments and
groups may be conducted inside the United States, we must also
ensure the proper fusion of information between intelligence and
law enforcement.
Initiatives in this area will include:
- strengthening the authority of the Director of Central
Intelligence to lead the development and actions of the
Nation’s foreign intelligence capabilities;
- establishing a new framework for intelligence warning
that provides seamless and integrated warning across the
spectrum of threats facing the nation and our allies;
- continuing to develop new methods of collecting
information to sustain our intelligence advantage;
- investing in future capabilities while working to
protect them through a more vigorous effort to prevent the
compromise of intelligence capabilities; and
- collecting intelligence against the terrorist danger
across the government with allsource analysis.
As the United States Government relies on the armed forces to
defend America’s interests, it must rely on diplomacy to
interact with other nations. We will ensure that the Department
of State receives funding sufficient to ensure the success of
American diplomacy. The State Department takes the lead in
managing our bilateral relationships with other governments. And
in this new era, its people and institutions must be able to
interact equally adroitly with non-governmental organizations
and international institutions. Officials trained mainly in
international politics must also extend their reach to
understand complex issues of domestic governance around the
world, including public health, education, law enforcement, the
judiciary, and public diplomacy.
Our diplomats serve at the front line of complex
negotiations, civil wars, and other humanitarian catastrophes.
As humanitarian relief requirements are better understood, we
must also be able to help build police forces, court systems,
and legal codes, local and provincial government institutions,
and electoral systems. Effective international cooperation is
needed to accomplish these goals, backed by American readiness
to play our part.
Just as our diplomatic institutions must adapt so that we can
reach out to others, we also need a different and more
comprehensive approach to public information efforts that can
help people around the world learn about and understand America.
The war on terrorism is not a clash of civilizations. It does,
however, reveal the clash inside a civilization, a battle for
the future of the Muslim world. This is a struggle of ideas and
this is an area where America must excel.
We will take the actions necessary to ensure that our efforts
to meet our global security commitments and protect Americans
are not impaired by the potential for investigations, inquiry,
or prosecution by the International Criminal Court (ICC), whose
jurisdiction does not extend to Americans and which we do not
accept.We will work together with other nations to avoid
complications in our military operations and cooperation,
through such mechanisms as multilateral and bilateral agreements
that will protect U.S. nationals from the ICC.We will implement
fully the American Servicemembers Protection Act, whose
provisions are intended to ensure and enhance the protection of
U.S. personnel and officials.
We will make hard choices in the coming year and beyond to
ensure the right level and allocation of government spending on
national security. The United States Government must strengthen
its defenses to win this war. At home, our most important
priority is to protect the homeland for the American people.
Today, the distinction between domestic and foreign affairs
is diminishing. In a globalized world, events beyond America’s
borders have a greater impact inside them. Our society must be
open to people, ideas, and goods from across the globe. The
characteristics we most cherish—our freedom, our cities, our
systems of movement, and modern life—are vulnerable to
terrorism. This vulnerability will persist long after we bring
to justice those responsible for the September 11 attacks. As
time passes, individuals may gain access to means of destruction
that until now could be wielded only by armies, fleets, and
squadrons. This is a new condition of life.We will adjust to it
and thrive—in spite of it.
In exercising our leadership, we will respect the values,
judgment, and interests of our friends and partners. Still, we
will be prepared to act apart when our interests and unique
responsibilities require.When we disagree on particulars, we
will explain forthrightly the grounds for our concerns and
strive to forge viable alternatives.We will not allow such
disagreements to obscure our determination to secure together,
with our allies and our friends, our shared fundamental
interests and values.
Ultimately, the foundation of American strength is at home.
It is in the skills of our people, the dynamism of our economy,
and the resilience of our institutions. A diverse, modern
society has inherent, ambitious, entrepreneurial energy. Our
strength comes from what we do with that energy. That is where
our national security begins.