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Hillary Clinton CFR Foreign
Affairs Article: Security and Opportunity for the Twenty-first Century
Security and Opportunity for the Twenty-first Century
By Hillary Rodham
Clinton From Foreign Affairs , November/December 2007
http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20071101faessay86601/hillary-rodham-clinton/security-and-opportunity-for-the-twenty-first-century.html?mode=print
Summary: The next
U.S. president will have a moment of opportunity to reintroduce
America to the world and restore our leadership. To build a world
that is safe, prosperous, and just, we must get out of Iraq,
rediscover the value of statesmanship, and live up to the democratic
values that are the deepest source of our strength. Hillary
Rodham Clinton, a U.S. Senator from New York, is a candidate for the
Democratic presidential nomination. To lead, a great nation
must command the respect of others. America has been respected in
the past as a powerful nation, a purposeful nation, and a generous
and warm-hearted nation. In my travels around the world as senator
and as first lady, I have met people from all walks of life. I have
seen firsthand how many of our past policies have earned us respect
and gratitude.
The tragedy of the
last six years is that the Bush administration has squandered the
respect, trust, and confidence of even our closest allies and
friends. At the dawn of the twenty-first century, the United States
enjoyed a unique position. Our world leadership was widely accepted
and respected, as we strengthened old alliances and built new ones,
worked for peace across the globe, advanced nonproliferation, and
modernized our military. After 9/11, the world rallied behind the
United States as never before, supporting our efforts to remove the
Taliban in Afghanistan and go after the al Qaeda leadership. We had
a historic opportunity to build a broad global coalition to combat
terror, increase the impact of our diplomacy, and create a world
with more partners and fewer adversaries.
But we lost that
opportunity by refusing to let the UN inspectors finish their work
in Iraq and rushing to war instead. Moreover, we diverted vital
military and financial resources from the struggle against al Qaeda
and the daunting task of building a Muslim democracy in Afghanistan.
At the same time, we embarked on an unprecedented course of
unilateralism: refusing to pursue ratification of the Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, abandoning our commitment to nuclear
nonproliferation, and turning our backs on the search for peace in
the Middle East. Our withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol and refusal
to participate in any international effort to deal with the
tremendous challenges of climate change further damaged our
international standing.
Our nation has paid a
heavy price for rejecting a long-standing bipartisan tradition of
global leadership rooted in a preference for cooperating over acting
unilaterally, for exhausting diplomacy before making war, and for
converting old adversaries into allies rather than making new
enemies. At a moment in history when the world’s most pressing
problems require unprecedented cooperation, this administration has
unilaterally pursued policies that are widely disliked and
distrusted.
Yet it does not have
to be this way. Indeed, our allies do not want it to be this way.
The world still looks to the United States for leadership. American
leadership is wanting, but it is still wanted. Our friends around
the world do not want the United States to retreat. They want once
again to be allied with the nation whose values, leadership, and
strength have inspired the world for the last century.
To reclaim our proper
place in the world, the United States must be stronger, and our
policies must be smarter. The next president will have a moment of
opportunity to restore America’s global standing and convince the
world that America can lead once again. As president, I will seize
that opportunity by reintroducing ourselves to the world. I will
rebuild our power and ensure that the United States is committed to
building a world we want, rather than simply defending against a
world we fear.
We should aim to lead
our friends and allies in building a world of security and
opportunity. America has long been the land of opportunity. But as
we know at home and as we see today in Iraq and Afghanistan,
opportunity cannot flourish without basic security. We must build a
world in which security and opportunity go hand in hand, a world
that will be safer, more prosperous, and more just.
We need more than
vision, however, to achieve the world we want. We must face up to an
unprecedented array of challenges in the twenty-first century,
threats from states, nonstate actors, and nature itself.
The next president will be the first to
inherit two wars, a long-term campaign against global terrorist
networks, and growing tension with Iran as it seeks to acquire
nuclear weapons. The United States will face a resurgent
Russia whose future orientation is uncertain and a rapidly growing
China that must be integrated into the international system.
Moreover, the next administration will have to confront an
unpredictable and dangerous situation in the Middle East that
threatens Israel and could potentially bring down the global economy
by disrupting oil supplies. Finally, the next president will have to
address the looming long-term threats of climate change and a new
wave of global health epidemics.
To meet these
challenges, we will have to replenish American power by getting out
of Iraq, rebuilding our military, and developing a much broader
arsenal of tools in the fight against terrorism. We must learn once
again to draw on all aspects of American power, to inspire and
attract as much as to coerce. We must return to a pragmatic
willingness to look at the facts on the ground and make decisions
based on evidence rather than ideology.
POWER AND PRINCIPLE
Leadership requires a
blend of strategy, persuasion, inspiration, and motivation. It is
based on respect more than fear. America’s founders wrote the
Declaration of Independence to explain our actions to the world out
of a decent respect for the opinions of mankind. Gaining the respect
of other nations today requires that we harness our might to a set
of guiding principles.
Avoid false choices
driven by ideology. The Bush administration has presented the
American people with a series of false choices: force versus
diplomacy, unilateralism versus multilateralism, hard power versus
soft. Seeing these choices as mutually exclusive reflects an
ideologically blinkered vision of the world that denies the United
States the tools and the flexibility it needs to lead and succeed.
There is a time for force and a time for diplomacy; when properly
deployed, the two can reinforce each other. U.S. foreign policy must
be guided by a preference for multilateralism, with unilateralism as
an option when absolutely necessary to protect our security or avert
an avoidable tragedy.
Use our military not
as the solution to every problem but as one element in a
comprehensive strategy. As president, I will never hesitate to use
force to protect Americans or to defend our territory and our vital
interests. We cannot negotiate with individual terrorists; they must
be hunted down and captured or killed. Nor can diplomacy alone stop
the perpetrators of genocide and crimes against humanity in places
such as Darfur. But soldiers are not the answer to every problem.
Using force in lieu of diplomacy compels our young men and women in
uniform to carry out missions that they may not be trained or
prepared for. And it ignores the value of simply carrying a big
stick, rather than using it.
Make international
institutions work, and work through them when possible. Contrary to
what many in the current administration appear to believe,
international institutions are tools rather than traps. The United
States must be prepared to act on its own to defend its vital
interests, but effective international institutions make it much
less likely that we will have to do so. Both Republican and
Democratic presidents have understood this for decades. When such
institutions work well, they enhance our influence. When they do not
work, their procedures serve as pretexts for endless delays, as in
the case of Darfur, or descend into farce, as in the case of Sudan’s
election to the UN Commission on Human Rights. But instead of
disparaging these institutions for their failures, we should bring
them in line with the power realities of the twenty-first century
and the basic values embodied in such documents as the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights.
Ensure that democracy
delivers on its promises. Gnawing hunger, poverty, and the absence
of economic prospects are a recipe for despair. Globalization is
widening the gap between the haves and the have-nots within
societies and between them. Today, there are more than two billion
people living on less than $2 a day. These people risk becoming a
vast permanent underclass. Calls for expanding civil and political
rights in countries plagued by mass poverty and ruled by tiny
wealthy elites will fall on deaf ears unless democracy actually
delivers enough material benefits to improve people’s lives. The
Bush administration’s policy in Iraq has temporarily given democracy
a bad name, but over the long term the value of democracy will
continue to inspire the world.
Stand for and live up
to our values. The values that our founders embraced as universal
have shaped the aspirations of millions of people around the world
and are the deepest source of our strength — but only as long as we
live up to them ourselves. As we seek to promote the rule of law in
other nations, we must accept it ourselves. As we counsel liberty
and justice for all, we cannot support torture and the indefinite
detention of individuals we have declared to be beyond the law.
A STRONGER AMERICA
Ending the war in
Iraq is the first step toward restoring the United States’ global
leadership. The war is sapping our military strength, absorbing our
strategic assets, diverting attention and resources from
Afghanistan, alienating our allies, and dividing our people. The war
in Iraq has also stretched our military to the breaking point. We
must rebuild our armed services and restore them body and soul.
We must withdraw from
Iraq in a way that brings our troops home safely, begins to restore
stability to the region, and replaces military force with a new
diplomatic initiative to engage countries around the world in
securing Iraq’s future. To that end, as president, I will convene
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the secretary of defense, and the
National Security Council and direct them to draw up a clear, viable
plan to bring our troops home, starting within the first 60 days of
my administration.
While working to
stabilize Iraq as our forces withdraw, I will focus U.S. aid on
helping Iraqis, not propping up the Iraqi government. Financial
resources will go only where they will be used properly, rather than
to government ministries or ministers that hoard, steal, or waste
them.
As we leave Iraq
militarily, I will replace our military force with an intensive
diplomatic initiative in the region. The Bush administration has
belatedly begun to engage Iran and Syria in talks about the future
of Iraq. This is a step in the right direction, but much more must
be done. As president, I will convene a regional stabilization group
composed of key allies, other global powers, and all the states
bordering Iraq. Working with the newly appointed UN special
representative for Iraq, the group will be charged with developing
and implementing a strategy for achieving a stable Iraq that
provides incentives for Iran, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Turkey to
stay out of the civil war.
Finally, we need to
engage the world in a global humanitarian effort to confront the
human costs of this war. We must address the plight of the two
million Iraqis who have fled their country and the two million more
who have been displaced internally. This will require a
multibillion-dollar international effort under the direction of the
Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees. Meanwhile, the
United States, along with governments in Europe and the Middle East,
must agree to accept asylum seekers and help them return to Iraq
when it is safe for them to do so.
As we redeploy our
troops from Iraq, we must not let down our guard against terrorism.
I will order specialized units to engage in targeted operations
against al Qaeda in Iraq and other terrorist organizations in the
region. These units will also provide security for U.S. troops and
personnel in Iraq and train and equip Iraqi security services to
keep order and promote stability in the country, but only to the
extent that such training is actually working. I will also consider
leaving some forces in the Kurdish area of northern Iraq in order to
protect the fragile but real democracy and relative peace and
security that have developed there, but with the clear understanding
that the terrorist organization the PKK (Kurdistan Workers’ Party)
must be dealt with and the Turkish border must be respected.
Getting out of Iraq
will enable us to play a constructive role in a renewed Middle East
peace process that would mean security and normal relations for
Israel and the Palestinians. The fundamental elements of a final
agreement have been clear since 2000: a Palestinian state in Gaza
and the West Bank in return for a declaration that the conflict is
over, recognition of Israel’s right to exist, guarantees of Israeli
security, diplomatic recognition of Israel, and normalization of its
relations with Arab states. U.S. diplomacy is critical in helping to
resolve this conflict. In addition to facilitating negotiations, we
must engage in regional diplomacy to gain Arab support for a
Palestinian leadership that is committed to peace and willing to
engage in a dialogue with the Israelis. Whether or not the United
States makes progress in helping to broker a final agreement,
consistent U.S. involvement can lower the level of violence and
restore our credibility in the region.
To help our forces
recover from Iraq and prepare them to confront the full range of
twenty-first-century threats, I will work to expand and modernize
the military so that fighting wars no longer comes at the expense of
deployments for long-term deterrence, military readiness, or
responses to urgent needs at home. As the only senator serving on
the Transformation Advisory Group established by the U.S. Joint
Forces Command, I have had the chance to explore these issues in
detail. Ongoing military innovation is essential, but the Bush
administration has undermined this goal by focusing obsessively on
expensive and unproven missile defense technology while making the
tragically misguided assumption that light invasion forces could not
only conquer the Taliban and Saddam Hussein but also stabilize
Afghanistan and Iraq.
Our brave soldiers
who are wounded in Afghanistan and Iraq must receive the health
care, benefits, training, and support they deserve. The treatment of
wounded soldiers at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center was a
travesty. Those convalescing or struggling to build new lives after
grievous injuries need an expanded version of the Family and Medical
Leave Act to enable their families to provide the support they need.
Beyond health care, it is also time to develop a modern GI Bill of
Rights in order to expand professional and entrepreneurial
opportunities as well as access to education and home ownership.
WINNING THE REAL WAR
ON TERROR
We must be
unrelenting in the prosecution of the war on al Qaeda (CIA)
and a growing number of like-minded extremist organizations (like
the Bilderberg Group). These terrorists are as determined as ever to
strike the United States. If they think they can carry out another
9/11, I have no doubt that they will try. To stop them, we must use
every tool we have.
In the cities of
Europe and Asia — such as Hamburg and Kuala Lumpur, which were the
springboards for 9/11 — terrorist cells are preparing for future
attacks. We must understand not only their methods but their
motives: a rejection of modernity, women’s rights, and democracy, as
well as a dangerous nostalgia for a mythical past. We must develop a
comprehensive strategy focusing on education, intelligence, and law
enforcement to counter not only the terrorists themselves but also
the larger forces fueling support for their extremism.
The forgotten
frontline in the war on terror is Afghanistan, where our military
effort must be reinforced. The Taliban cannot be allowed to regain
power in Afghanistan; if they return, al Qaeda will return with
them. Yet current U.S. policies have actually weakened President
Hamid Karzai’s government and allowed the Taliban to retake many
areas, especially in the south. A largely unimpeded heroin trade
finances the very Taliban fighters and al Qaeda terrorists who are
attacking our troops. In addition to engaging in counternarcotics
efforts, we must seek to dry up recruiting opportunities for the
Taliban by funding crop-substitution programs, a large-scale
road-building initiative, institutions that train and prepare
Afghans for honest and effective governance, and programs to enable
women to play a larger role in society.
We must also
strengthen the national and local governments and resolve the
problems along Afghanistan’s border. Terrorists are increasingly
finding safe havens in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of
Pakistan. Redoubling our efforts with Pakistan would not only help
root out terrorist elements there; it would also signal to our NATO
partners that the war in Afghanistan and the broader fight against
extremism in South Asia are battles that we can and must win. Yet we
cannot succeed unless we design a strategy that treats the entire
region as an interconnected whole, where crises overlap with one
another and the danger of a chain reaction of disasters is real.
Combating terrorism
around the world will require better intelligence and a clandestine
service that is out on the street, not sitting behind desks. As
president, I will work to restore morale in our intelligence
community, increase the number of agents and analysts proficient in
Arabic and other key languages, and raise the profile and status of
intelligence analysis. Most of the terrorists apprehended for
plotting attacks against the United States, both before and after
9/11, were arrested in other countries as a result of cooperation
between intelligence and law enforcement agencies.
To maximize our
effectiveness, we have to rebuild our alliances. The problem we face
is global; we must therefore be attentive to the values, concerns,
and interests of our allies and partners. That means doing a better
job of building counterterrorist capacity around the world. We must
help strengthen police, prosecutorial, and judicial systems abroad;
improve intelligence; and implement more stringent border controls,
especially in developing countries.
We must also keep our
guard up at home. As a senator from New York, I have long advocated
full investment in our first responders and in protecting our
critical infrastructure. I have pushed for new strategies and new
technologies, such as a new federal interoperable communications and
safety system. After years of Bush administration neglect, 80
percent of the 9/11 Commission’s recommendations on homeland
security have now been enacted, principally as a result of the
Democratic Congress’ work. But there is more to do. We must match
the resources to the stakes and help the most vulnerable and at-risk
cities prepare for an attack. We must improve health-care delivery
systems in order to manage the consequences of attacks. Finally, we
must improve the security of chemical plants and safeguard the
transportation of hazardous materials so that terrorists do not have
easy targets.
SECURITY THROUGH
STATESMANSHIP
The Bush
administration has opposed talks with our adversaries, seeming to
believe that we are not strong enough to defend our interests
through negotiations. This is a misleading and counterproductive
strategy. True statesmanship requires that we engage with our
adversaries, not for the sake of talking but because robust
diplomacy is a prerequisite to achieving our aims.
The case in point is
Iran. Iran poses a long-term strategic challenge to the United
States, our NATO allies, and Israel. It is the country that most
practices state-sponsored terrorism, and it uses its surrogates to
supply explosives that kill U.S. troops in Iraq. The Bush
administration refuses to talk to Iran about its nuclear program,
preferring to ignore bad behavior rather than challenge it.
Meanwhile, Iran has enhanced its nuclear-enrichment capabilities,
armed Iraqi Shiite militias, funneled arms to Hezbollah, and
subsidized Hamas, even as the government continues to hurt its own
citizens by mismanaging the economy and increasing political and
social repression.
As a result, we have
lost precious time. Iran must conform to its nonproliferation
obligations and must not be permitted to build or acquire nuclear
weapons. If Iran does not comply with its own commitments and the
will of the international community, all options must remain on the
table.
On the other hand, if
Iran is in fact willing to end its nuclear weapons program, renounce
sponsorship of terrorism, support Middle East peace, and play a
constructive role in stabilizing Iraq, the United States should be
prepared to offer Iran a carefully calibrated package of incentives.
This will let the Iranian people know that our quarrel is not with
them but with their government and show the world that the United
States is prepared to pursue every diplomatic option.
Like Iran, North
Korea responded to the Bush administration’s effort to isolate it by
accelerating its nuclear program, conducting a nuclear test, and
building more nuclear weapons. Only since the State Department
returned to diplomacy have we been able, belatedly, to make
progress.
Neither North Korea
nor Iran will change course as a result of what we do with our own
nuclear weapons, but taking dramatic steps to reduce our nuclear
arsenal would build support for the coalitions we need to address
the threat of nuclear proliferation and help the United States
regain the moral high ground. Former Secretaries of State George
Shultz and Henry Kissinger, former Defense Secretary William Perry,
and former Senator Sam Nunn have called on the United States to
“rekindle the vision,” shared by every president from Dwight
Eisenhower to Bill Clinton, of reducing reliance on nuclear weapons.
To reassert our
nonproliferation leadership, I will seek to negotiate an accord that
substantially and verifiably reduces the U.S. and Russian nuclear
arsenals. This dramatic initiative would send a strong message of
nuclear restraint to the world, while we retain enough strength to
deter others from trying to match our arsenal. I will also seek
Senate approval of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty by 2009, the
tenth anniversary of the Senate’s initial rejection of the
agreement. This would enhance the United States’ credibility when
demanding that other nations refrain from testing. As president, I
will support efforts to supplement the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty. Establishing an international fuel bank that guaranteed
secure access to nuclear fuel at reasonable prices would help limit
the number of countries that pose proliferation risks.
In the Senate, I have
introduced legislation to accelerate and reinvigorate U.S. efforts
to prevent nuclear terrorism. As president, I will do everything in
my power to ensure that nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons
and the materials needed to make them are kept out of terrorists’
hands. My first goal would be to remove all nuclear material from
the world’s most vulnerable nuclear sites and effectively secure the
remainder during my first term in office.
Statesmanship is also
necessary to engage countries that are not adversaries but that are
challenging the United States on many fronts. Russian President
Vladimir Putin has thwarted a carefully crafted UN plan that would
have put Kosovo on a belated path to independence, attempted to use
energy as a political weapon against Russia’s neighbors and beyond,
and tested the United States and Europe on a range of
nonproliferation and arms reduction issues. Putin has also
suppressed many of the freedoms won after the fall of communism,
created a new class of oligarchs, and interfered deeply in the
internal affairs of former Soviet republics.
It is a mistake,
however, to see Russia only as a threat. Putin has used Russia’s
energy wealth to expand the Russian economy, so that more ordinary
Russians are enjoying a rising standard of living. We need to engage
Russia selectively on issues of high national importance, such as
thwarting Iran’s nuclear ambitions, securing loose nuclear weapons
in Russia and the former Soviet republics, and reaching a diplomatic
solution in Kosovo. At the same time, we must make clear that our
ability to view Russia as a genuine partner depends on whether
Russia chooses to strengthen democracy or return to authoritarianism
and regional interference.
Our relationship with
China will be the most important bilateral relationship in the world
in this century. The United States and China have vastly different
values and political systems, yet even though we disagree profoundly
on issues ranging from trade to human rights, religious freedom,
labor practices, and Tibet, there is much that the United States and
China can and must accomplish together. China’s support was
important in reaching a deal to disable North Korea’s nuclear
facilities. We should build on this framework to establish a
Northeast Asian security regime.
But China’s rise is
also creating new challenges. The Chinese have finally begun to
realize that their rapid economic growth is coming at a tremendous
environmental price. The United States should undertake a joint
program with China and Japan to develop new clean-energy sources,
promote greater energy efficiency, and combat climate change. This
program would be part of an overall energy policy that would require
a dramatic reduction in U.S. dependence on foreign oil.
We must persuade
China to join global institutions and support international rules by
building on areas where our interests converge and working to narrow
our differences. Although the United States must stand ready to
challenge China when its conduct is at odds with U.S. vital
interests, we should work for a cooperative future.
STRENGTHENING
ALLIANCES
It is important to
engage our adversaries but even more important to reassure our
allies. We must reestablish our traditional relationship of
confidence and trust with Europe. Disagreements are inevitable, even
among the closest friends, but we can never forget that on most
global issues we have no more trusted allies than those in Europe.
The new administration will have a chance to reach out across the
Atlantic to a new generation of leaders in France, Germany, and the
United Kingdom. When America and Europe work together, global
objectives are within our means.
In Asia, India has a
special significance both as an emerging power and as the world’s
most populous democracy. As co-chair of the Senate India Caucus, I
recognize the tremendous opportunity presented by India’s rise and
the need to give the country an augmented voice in regional and
international institutions, such as the UN. We must find additional
ways for Australia, India, Japan, and the United States to cooperate
on issues of mutual concern, including combating terrorism,
cooperating on global climate control, protecting global energy
supplies, and deepening global economic development.
At our peril, the
Bush administration has neglected our neighbors to the south. We
have witnessed the rollback of democratic development and economic
openness in parts of Latin America. We must return to a policy of
vigorous engagement; this is too critical a region for the United
States to stand idly by. We must support the largest developing
democracies in the region, Brazil and Mexico, and deepen economic
and strategic cooperation with Argentina and Chile. We must also
continue to cooperate with our allies in Colombia, Central America,
and the Caribbean to combat the interconnected threats of drug
trafficking, crime, and insurgency. Finally, we must work with our
allies to provide sustainable-development programs that promote
economic opportunity and reduce inequality for the citizens of Latin
America.
Equally important are
the growing ranks of democracies in Africa — some established, some
new — which will be the engines of Africa’s future. We should target
these countries for aid and other forms of support and work with
them to strengthen regional institutions such as the African Union.
The AU seeks to emulate the European Union by requiring and
supporting democracy among its members, but it has a long way to go.
It has thus far failed even to denounce the blatant political
corruption and brutality of Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe. It must also
develop the ability to act with sufficient strength and speed to
stop mass atrocities, such as those in Darfur.
Our interests in
Africa are strategic, not just humanitarian. They include al Qaeda’s
efforts to seek safe havens in failed states in the Horn of Africa
and the growing competition with other global players, including
China, for Africa’s natural resources. The long-term solution, for
us as well as for Africa, is to help Africans develop both the will
and the capability to address their own problems and help the
continent live up to its vast potential.
BUILDING THE WORLD WE
WANT
To build the world we
want, we must begin by speaking honestly about the problems we face.
We will have to talk about the consequences of our invasion of Iraq
for the Iraqi people and others in the region. We will have to talk
about Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib. We will also have to take concrete
steps to enhance security and spread opportunity throughout the
world.
Education is the
foundation of economic opportunity and should lie at the heart of
America’s foreign assistance efforts. More than 100 million children
in the developing world are not in school. Another 150 million drop
out before they finish grade school. By failing these children, we
sow the seeds of lost generations. As president, I will press for
quick passage of the Education for All Act, which would provide $10
billion over a five-year period to train teachers and build schools
in the developing world. This program would channel funds to those
countries that provide the best plans for how to use them and
rigorously measure performance to ensure that our dollars deliver
results for children.
The fight against
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and other dreaded diseases is both
a moral imperative and a practical necessity. These diseases have
created a generation of orphans and set back economic and political
progress by decades in many countries.
These problems often
seem overwhelming, but we can solve them with the combined resources
of governments, the private sector, nongovernmental organizations,
and charities such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. We can
set specific targets in areas such as expanding access to primary
education, providing clean water, reducing child and maternal
mortality, and reversing the spread of HIV/AIDS and other diseases.
We can strengthen the International Labor Organization in order to
enforce labor standards, just as we strengthened the World Trade
Organization to enforce trade agreements. Such policies demonstrate
that by doing good we can do well. This sort of investment and
diplomacy will yield results for the United States, building
goodwill even in places where our standing has suffered.
We must also take
threats and turn them into opportunities. The seemingly overwhelming
challenge of climate change is a prime example. Far from being a
drag on global growth, climate control represents a powerful
economic opportunity that can be a driver of growth, jobs, and
competitive advantage in the twenty-first century. As president, I
will make the fight against global warming a priority. We cannot
solve the climate crisis alone, and the rest of the world cannot
solve it without us. The United States must reengage in
international climate change negotiations and provide the leadership
needed to reach a binding global climate agreement. But we must
first restore our own credibility on the issue. Rapidly emerging
countries, such as China, will not curb their own carbon emissions
until the United States has demonstrated a serious commitment to
reducing its own through a market-based cap-and-trade approach.
We must also help
developing nations build efficient and environmentally sustainable
domestic energy infrastructures. Two-thirds of the growth in energy
demand over the next 25 years will come from countries with little
existing infrastructure. Many opportunities exist here as well: Mali
is electrifying rural communities with solar power, Malawi is
developing a biomass energy strategy, and all of Africa can provide
carbon credits to the West.
Finally, we must
create formal links between the International Energy Agency and
China and India and create an “E-8″ international forum modeled on
the G-8. This group would be comprised of the world’s major
carbon-emitting nations and hold an annual summit devoted to
international ecological and resource issues.
The world we want is
also a world where human rights are respected. By surrendering our
values in the name of our safety, the Bush administration has left
Americans wondering whether its rhetoric about freedom around the
world still applies back home. We have undercut international
support for fighting terrorism by suggesting that the job cannot be
done without humiliation, infringements on basic rights to privacy
and free speech, and even torture. We must once again make human
rights a centerpiece of U.S. foreign policy and a core element of
our conception of democracy.
Human rights will
never truly be realized as long as a majority of the world’s
population is still treated as second-class citizens. Twelve years
ago, the UN convened a historic conference on women in Beijing,
where I was proud to represent our country and to proclaim that
women’s rights are human rights. Since then, women have been elected
heads of state in countries on nearly every continent. Thanks to the
United States, many, but not yet all, Afghan women have been
liberated from one of the most tyrannical and repressive regimes of
our day and are now in schools, in the work force, and in
parliament.
Yet progress in key
areas has lagged, as evidenced by the continuing spread of
trafficking in women, the ongoing use of rape as an instrument of
war, the political marginalization of women, and persistent gender
gaps in employment and economic opportunity. U.S. leadership,
including a commitment to incorporate the promotion of women’s
rights in our bilateral relationships and international aid
programs, is essential not just to improving the lives of women but
to strengthening the families, communities, and societies in which
they live.
REVIVING THE AMERICAN
IDEA
Seasoned, clear-eyed
leadership can take us far. We must draw on all the dimensions of
American power and reject false choices driven by ideology rather
than facts. An America that rebuilds its strength and recovers its
principles will be an America that can spread the blessings of
security and opportunity around the world.
In 1825, 50 years
after the Battle of Bunker Hill, the great secretary of state Daniel
Webster laid the cornerstone of the Bunker Hill Monument that stands
today in Boston. He exulted in the simple fact that America had
survived and flourished, and he celebrated “the benefit which the
example of our country has produced, and is likely to produce, on
human freedom and human happiness.” He gloried not in American power
but rather in the power of the American idea, the idea that “with
wisdom and knowledge men may govern themselves.” And he urged his
audience, and all Americans, to maintain this example and “take care
that nothing may weaken its authority with the world.”
Two centuries later,
our economic power and military might have grown beyond anything
that our forefathers could have imagined. But that power and might
can only be sustained and renewed if we can regain our authority
with the world, the authority not simply of a large and wealthy
nation but of the American idea. If we can live up to that idea, if
we can exercise our power wisely and well, we can make America great
again.
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