[Salon] Ron DeSantis's foreign policy speech was a real dud - Responsible Statecraft



Title: Ron DeSantis's foreign policy speech was a real dud - Responsible Statecraft
I’ve always been an admirer of Daniel Larson for his foreign policy analysis, until The American Conservative magazine “gave him the boot,” perhaps for his foreign policy analysis which had gotten out of step with the Straussian editors who had been brought in over the last 8 years or so. But this article is a “real dud!” Not that I don’t agree with it, I agree with every fact he presents here. Where it is a “dud”though is in refusing to identify and denounce DeSantis, and Kevin Roberts, as the Militaristic Extremist/Fanatics that they are, which would be “real” political analysis. And not calling out the “third way in foreign policy,” of Heritage that other Responsible Statecraft panegyrics to Roberts praise so effusively, and to which the “New Right” adheres to, with no one, of course, on the “Right” willing to acknowledge that it is as, or even (much) more, militaristic than Neoconservatism! As we see with Israel/Gaza! Adhering as they all do to the same ultra-militaristic worldview as Roberts, Trump, DeSantis, et al., while selling themselves as the "anti-Neocons,” in their efforts to get Trump or DeSantis elected in 2024!

We’ll never have the slightest chance of ending this path of "national suicide by a thousand self-inflicted cuts,” through militarism, if we continue to refuse to recognize and denounce its proponents. Or worse, pay any attention to those who continuously, disingenuously, promote its advocates; like Kevin Roberts, et al., all whom I denounce regularly in rebuttal to their “cognitive warfare" campaign of deception of the American people, which people don’t like to hear, I guess. But see the RJC conference speakers this past weekend and tell me differently!

Roberts: ". . .  And that is, yeah, at Heritage we're very serious about what we call the third way in foreign policy. We call ourselves conservatives, no adjective. No disrespect to our friends who call themselves national conservatives, or fiscal conservatives, or Reagan conservatives. We're conservatives, period."

So we get soft-soap on Michael Anton as well: 
As with all fascist rhetoric, this must be “decoded”: 
“Twenty years in the Middle East and we have nothing to show for it,” he said, except trillions in sunk taxpayer funds and untold numbers of civilian Iraqi and and Afghan lives.” Having omitted: "and Israel still has to put up with those goddamned Palestinians on their Land, which God gave to Israeli Fascists!"

Jewish Insider is one of the better rebuttals to the soft-soaping of the New Right on these militaristic fanatics, as follows: 

"Anton explained that the Trump administration’s approach to the U.S.-Israel relationship fits within such a mold in part because of Israel’s critical position in the U.S.’s security strategy.

“But so many foreign relationships can’t be reduced to dollars and cents,” he added. 

Anton characterized the recent normalization of relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates as one of a litany of major Trump administration foreign policy accomplishments.

. . . 

Anton acknowledged that the Trump administration’s peace proposal is not, and cannot be, a final peace deal, but laid blame on the Palestinians for the lack of progress — criticizing Palestinian leaders for walking away from the negotiating table after the U.S. moved its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

“What I had hoped for at the time was that it was a demonstration of displeasure… that would last a finite amount of time… and then the Palestinians would come back knowing that that recognition really didn’t change anything,” he said. “I don’t think that they’re helping themselves by staying away and not talking. I don’t see what that gains them.” (Paraphrasing perhaps a German General commanding the Battle of Warsaw: "I don’t see what that Jewish resistance gains them."

Anton said he does not believe there is anything specific the U.S. can do to incentivize the Palestinians to return to the table, but it can push Arab states to encourage the Palestinians to reengage in negotiations.

In a second term, Anton predicted that Trump would continue to work toward a Middle East peace deal — although he acknowledged that is contingent on the Palestinians returning to the negotiating table. Anton also suggested that the administration would continue to pursue talks with North Korea and focus on the U.S.-China relationship. 

. . .

Anton said that, despite four years of a Trump presidency, the U.S. remains in a precipitous situation because of the influence of the federal bureaucracy and other institutional powers like the media, academia and the corporate world. “Every other power center in the country is held by people who oppose the president’s agenda,” he said

And America will find itself on the brink of disaster every four years, Anton continued, “until and unless we can get back to something like a real politics of give and take in this country.” (As if he and Trump didn’t lead the opposition to that since Trump took office.) Stop

 

 

 

 

Only W. James Antle III could go so far over the top into insanity as this (let’s hope like hell there is never a IV!)

"Soon there were reports that the conservative-libertarian coalition that has for over a decade sought to defang the GOP hawks are seeing this as their big moment. And they have as unlikely allies some of the biggest guns in the conservative movement, including new Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts. 

“Heritage is consciously shifting gears on foreign policy, with an eye toward less military involvement in Europe and more attention on China in particular," Roberts told Axios in an interview saying the venerable think tank that helped arm the Ronald Reagan revolution was shifting its gears closer to those of the Cato Institute and Koch network.

“Roberts said Heritage's rank and file donors have generally come down firmly on the restraint side of the foreign policy fight,” Axios stated." 

Insane! See below. 

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2022/11/11/the-battle-for-who-owns-conservative-statecraft/ “As a rule, conservatives should not be looking for ways to destabilize other countries because they understand how fragile order can be and how devastating the breakdown of order is to the well-being of the people living there.” (Conservatives have been destabilizing other countries and peoples as our "Lead Imperialists,”ever since the end of the Revolutionary War when they  began scooping up land west of the new 13 states, and continued ever since the “Frontier was closed” and they led the way to destabilizing the Pacific region, beginning with annexing Hawaii after Marines helped overthrow the Hawaiian Queen, and then the Philippines under McKinley, etc.  

Ron DeSantis's foreign policy speech was a real dud

He wants to invoke a weariness of war and anti-neocon sentiment, but ends up promoting the policies of both.

Ron DeSantis's foreign policy speech was a real dud

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis attempted to revitalize his flagging presidential campaign with a major foreign policy speech at the Heritage Foundation on Friday.

Casting his foreign policy vision as the desirable middle ground between “post-9/11 neoconservatism” and the supposed fecklessness of Obama, DeSantis presented a familiar playbook of much higher military spending and hardline posturing mixed with some rhetoric aimed at appealing to Americans weary of constant foreign wars. Promising to make the 21st century an “American century,” the governor endorsed a costly and dangerous China policy that would put the U.S. on course for a ruinous conflict in the Pacific.

The governor gave the impression that he wanted nothing to do with Bush era foreign policy with his denunciation of “Wilsonian abstractions” and his criticism of nation-building projects, but when it came to the larger “war on terror” that Bush launched he had no substantive objections. He had nothing to say about reforming or repealing the 2001 AUMF, and he explicitly mentioned the Iraq war only once when he referred to his own service in it. He spoke in general terms about avoiding “murky missions” and “misguided agendas,” but he chose not to identify examples of these things.

The governor took his usual shots at Biden’s foreign policy, predictably accusing it of being “rudderless” and “weak.” This is a standard attack that hawkish opponents of an incumbent president make, and in DeSantis’s case it reflects his instinct to take the more hardline position on almost every issue. He also faults Biden’s foreign policy for being “solicitous” of adversaries, but this is based on a caricature of Biden’s record that makes it much harder to take the rest of DeSantis’s speech seriously.

Among other things, he claimed that Biden “empowered Iran with sanctions relief.” This is a cruel joke to anyone who has paid close attention to what the president’s Iran policy has been. Far from granting sanctions relief, the administration won’t even honor the terms of the prisoner exchange agreement that it reached with Iran earlier this year.

The $6 billion of Iran’s own money that was supposed to be released via a Qatari bank is still inaccessible in response to Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel. There is no evidence that Iran “orchestrated” the attack, but DeSantis stated this as if it were certain. Pretending that non-existent sanctions relief “fueled” the Hamas attack on Israel is another one of DeSantis’s false claims.

On Ukraine, DeSantis repeated his previous criticisms of Biden for alleged “weakness” that “invited” the Russian invasion. He added a new twist by pretending that non-existent sanctions relief for Iran is somehow going towards funding the Russian side of the war.

DeSantis boasted about his opposition to the Iran nuclear deal, which he somewhat misleadingly called the “Obama-Khamenei Iran nuclear deal.” The JCPOA wasn’t just a bargain between the U.S. and Iran or their respective leaders, but rather involved all permanent members of the Security Council and Germany. It was the most extensive and successful nonproliferation agreement to have ever been negotiated, and it substantially and verifiably restricted Iran’s nuclear program more effectively than anything before or since. DeSantis’s knee-jerk hostility to the deal and to diplomacy with Iran isn’t news, but the fact that he still thinks opposing the agreement is something to be proud of tells us that his foreign policy judgment remains quite poor.

DeSantis is nothing if not a China hawk, and the second half of his speech was dedicated to hyping the threat from China and making every other problem seem like an extension of that purported threat. The governor said China has “grand ambitions” and “seek[s] to be the dominant power in the entire world.” This is a common claim from China hawks, but it is one that has remarkably little evidence to back it up. It’s more of an article of faith among supporters of rivalry and containment than a well-founded assessment of Chinese goals.

The governor assumes that the Chinese government wants to export its political system to other parts of the world, but there is scant evidence that the Chinese are intent on reproducing their system elsewhere. While the Chinese government does try to expand its political and economic influence, this is no different from how any other major power has operated. Treating China as if it were the Soviet Union 2.0 in terms of its ideological goals is a serious mistake that exaggerates the threat to U.S. and allied security.

Because he believes that the Chinese government is “marshalling” its society to pursue these ambitions, DeSantis proposes that the U.S. should have a “whole of society” approach in response. That suggests a degree of mobilization and regimentation in American life that would make Americans less free. It would certainly require pouring huge resources into the military-industrial complex and the national security state.

Like the China hawks that have been advising him, DeSantis insists that the U.S. should prioritize the “Indo-Pacific” above all else and allocate resources accordingly. DeSantis argues that deterring China will be achieved simply through strength and that Beijing will respect strength, “especially strength in their region.”

It doesn’t seem to occur to the governor that increasing U.S. military power in China’s vicinity will be viewed as a growing threat and will cause China to grow its military to keep pace. He has nothing to say about reassuring the Chinese government about U.S. intentions, but instead he focuses entirely on trying to intimidate them. That is a guaranteed path to an arms race and puts our countries on track for war.

It is true that resources are scarce, as he says, but that makes the decision to squander those resources on a massive military buildup that U.S. security does not require all the more foolish. The huge surge in shipbuilding he proposes to create, first a 355-ship, and eventually a 600-ship navy would be very expensive and unnecessary. This “four-ocean navy” would be an extravagant waste of national wealth, and it is no surprise that the governor didn’t tell the audience how he would pay for it.

Copying a line of Reagan, DeSantis defines the end of U.S.-China rivalry in simplistic terms: “We win and they lose.” If we take DeSantis at his word, that implies either regime collapse or forcible regime change, but the governor didn’t bother to spell out how that might happen or what the dangers of such an outcome might be. He proposes pursuing an intense great power rivalry with a nuclear-armed opponent, and he defines that rivalry in zero-sum terms. That is a recipe for a major war that would have catastrophic effects on America, China, and the rest of the world.

DeSantis talks a good game about not wanting the U.S. to enter “into any ill-defined or unnecessary conflicts,” but his China policy would put the U.S. on a collision course for the biggest unnecessary conflict of all.

Finally, the governor says that Americans must “arrest our country’s decline,” but embracing militarized rivalry against China is one of the surest ways of hastening it.



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