If sending arch-unilateralist John Bolton to the
United Nations sent a message of contempt for multilateralism, what does U.S.
President George W. Bush mean by sending that ardent advocate of "hard
power," Paul Wolfowitz, to the planet's single biggest purveyor of "soft
power," the World Bank?
Bush's confirmation at a press conference Wednesday that he had chosen the
deputy defense secretary, best known for being the administration's earliest
and most outspoken advocate of war with Iraq, caused general consternation among
both the national security elite and Bank-watchers in the development community.
"I've been trying to get my head around the logic of Wolfowitz being the
head of the Bank, and I just can't get there," said the director of one
U.S. development group who asked not to be identified.
Wolfowitz's 35-year public and academic career, notably lacking in direct experience
either with banking or development, let alone the Bank's supposed core mission
of poverty reduction, has also steered a wide berth around both Africa and Latin
America, two regions of enormous importance to the Bank.
Aside from a two-year stint in the late 1980s as ambassador to Indonesia, the
post where he reportedly gained his interest in Islam, Wolfowitz has never lived
in a developing country.
When his possible nomination was first brought up two weeks ago, the reaction
was overwhelmingly skeptical, and the Pentagon almost instantly knocked it down.
In a Mar. 7 op-ed entitled "Clueless on the World Bank," Washington
Post international economics columnist Sebastian Mallaby expressed relief,
noting that, while Wolfowitz has some qualities that might recommend him for
the job, "his association with the Iraq war makes him
anathema to
most World Bank shareholders" a consideration that, depending on
the reaction of European governments, could still kill his nomination.
Despite his being regarded as the administration's highest-ranking neoconservative,
his temperament and ideas often defy the stereotype. While neoconservatives
tend to be socially somewhat incestuous and intellectually dogmatic on key issues,
for example, Wolfowitz is seen as intellectually curious with a much broader
array of social contacts.
His closest female companion over the last several years has been a Tunisian-born
Bank official who has fueled his interest in democratic change in the Arab world.
As with all neoconservatives, Wolfowitz sees the rise of Adolph Hitler as the
defining event of the 20th century from which critical foreign policy lessons
above all, the importance of overriding military power and preempting
threats before they fully materialize must be learned. The family of
his father, a Polish mathematician who immigrated to the U.S. in 1920, perished
in the Holocaust.
As with other neoconservatives, Wolfowitz also believes in a "Pax Americana";
indeed, his 1992 draft of the "Defense Planning Guidance" under then-Defense
Secretary Richard Cheney almost got him fired when parts of its were leaked
to the New York Times.
That paper, which urged a doctrine of preemption against rogue states seeking
weapons of mass destruction; the prevention of the emergence of any potential
competing regional or global power; and "constant" U.S. military intervention
to preserve global peace and security, was repudiated by the administration
of former President George H.W. Bush, only to be codified by the younger Bush
in his National Security Strategy of September 2002.
And, as with his fellow neoconservatives, Wolfowitz also has special concerns
about the fate of Israel, where he lived during part of his teenage years and
which now is his sister's home.
But unlike his ideological fellow travelers, whose politics generally identify
closely with the views of the right-wing Likud Party in Israel, Wolfowitz has
long expressed sensitivity to the plight of Palestinians, support for their
national aspirations, and opposition to the Jewish settler movement.
Unlike many leading neoconservatives, including former Defense Policy Board
chairman Richard Perle, with whom he first began working in 1970, Wolfowitz
also has shown little taste for polemics or the media spotlight.
He is unique among the most prominent neoconservatives for working in government
for 27 of the past 35 years, as opposed to journalism, law, privately-funded
think tanks, lobbying, or business consultancies, often for arms industries.
During the eight years of the Bill Clinton administration, he served as president
of the Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International Studies (SAIS), where
he recruited, among others, Francis Fukuyama, a close friend from college days
at Cornell, who also worked under Wolfowitz when the latter was director of
policy planning at the State Department in the early 1980s.
Wolfowitz is also considered the most idealistic of the neoconservatives whose
support for democracy and human rights, especially in the Arab world, is a relatively
recent development for many of them.
As assistant secretary of state for East Asian affairs, he worked with former
Secretary of State George Shultz in persuading Ronald Reagan to abandon former
Philippines dictator Ferdinand Marcos during the "people power" uprising
in 1986.
Wolfowitz later encouraged far-reaching political reforms in South Korea that
eventually removed the military from power, and was the first U.S. ambassador
to Jakarta to meet publicly with opposition leaders despite the disapproval
of former President Suharto.
"He is a serious and thoughtful person who is genuinely interested in
the promotion of democracy and human rights around the world, and someone who
understands that very few interests can be advanced without paying attention
to the way people are being governed," said Tom Malinowski, the head of
the Washington office of Human Rights Watch (HRW).
Indeed, another neoconservative expressed concern that Wolfowitz's departure
from the Pentagon could dilute the administration's proclaimed commitment to
democratic change.
"The president has sent pretty clear messages about that, but the number
of senior administration officials who truly believe in the [democratic] tenets
of the Bush Doctrine is relatively small," Tom Donnelly, a national-security
analyst at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) told IPS. "I for one
am a little nervous about how policy itself may change."
"He might rather have been secretary of state, but that job was already
taken," Donnelly added. "This is an administration that has been sort
of inbred and has relatively few individuals to move around to these jobs."
The White House had been under growing pressure to nominate a prominent individual
to the World Bank post by the Bank's annual spring meetings next month, two
months before the scheduled departure of the incumbent, James Wolfensohn.
On the other hand, according to Donnelly, Wolfowitz is certain to take his
democratic ideals with him. "It's not quite like John Bolton going to the
UN, but you're going to get someone who's really devoted to president's agenda.
[T]he World Bank could be a useful tool of American statecraft, that
would be great."
One former official said he thought Wolfowitz, who had most wanted to be secretary
of state or defense, had finally despaired of achieving those goals, not only
because the posts are still occupied, but also because, given Wolfowitz's over-optimistic
predictions about the aftermath of the Iraq invasion and his part in exaggerating
the threat allegedly posed by Saddam Hussein before the war, his confirmation
by a majority of the Senate would be uncertain at best.
His move to the Bank thus made good professional sense, according to this source.
"Despite the war in Iraq, the Pentagon is increasingly consumed by the
[military] 'transformation' process, and is turning inward," he said. "By
going to the Bank, where he has a guaranteed five-year term, he can keep doing
things he feels passionate about."
(Inter Press Service)