Beyond bin Laden Stephen M. Walt Reshaping U.S. Foreign Policy
T he terrorist attacks that destroyed the World Trade Center and damaged the Pentagon triggered the most rapid and dramatic change in the history of U.S. foreign policy. 1 On September 10, 2001, there was not the slightest hint that the United States was about to embark on an all-out campaign against “global terrorism.” Indeed, apart from an explicit disdain for certain multilateral agreements and a ªxation on missile defense, the foreign policy priorities of George W. Bush and his ad -ministration were not radically different from those of their predecessors. Bush had already endorsed continued NATO expansion, reluctantly agreed to keep U.S. troops in the Balkans, reafªrmed the existing policy of wary engagement with Russia and China, and called for further efforts to liberalize global mar -kets. The administration’s early attention focused primarily on domestic is -sues, and newinternational initiatives were notably absent. This business-as-usual approach to foreign policy vanished on September 11. Instead of education reform and tax cuts, the war on terrorism dominated the administration’s agenda. The United States quickly traced the attacks to al-Qaeda—the network of Islamic extremists led by Saudi exile Osama bin Laden—whose leaders had been operating from Afghanistan since 1996. When the Taliban government in Afghanistan rejected a U.S. ultimatum to turn over bin Laden, the United States began military efforts to eradicate al-Qaeda and
Stephen M. Walt is Robert and Renée Belfer Professor of International Affairs at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
I thank Robert Art, MatthewBunn, Ian Lustick, John Mearsheimer, Rebecca Stone, and Stephen Van Evera for comments and suggestions on this article. Kate Regnier provided timely research as -sistance, for which I am also grateful.
overthrowthe Taliban itself. 2 The United States also began a sustained diplo -matic campaign to enlist foreign help in rooting out any remaining terrorist or -ganizations “with global reach.” U.S. ofªcials emphasized that this campaign would be prolonged and warned that military action against suspected terror -ist networks might continue after the initial assault on al-Qaeda and its Taliban hosts 3 . This article analyzes howthe campaign against global terrorism alters the broad agenda of U.S. foreign policy. I focus primarily on the diplomatic aspects of this campaign and do not address military strategy, homeland defense, or the need for improved intelligence in much detail. These issues are obviously important but lie outside the bounds this essay. I proceed in three stages. The ªrst section considers what the events of Sep -tember 11 tell us about the U.S. position in the world and identiªes four les-sons that should inform U.S. policy in the future. The second section explores howthe campaign on terrorism should alter the foreign policy agenda in the near-to-medium term: What newpolicies should the United States pursue, and what prior goals should be downgraded or abandoned? The third section ad-dresses the long-term implications, focusing on whether the United States will be willing to accept the increased costs of its current policy of global engage-ment. I argue that this decision will depend in part on the success of the cur-rent campaign, but also on whether the United States can make its dominant global position more palatable to other countries. What Did We Learn on September 11? The attack on the United States did not alter every aspect of world politics, but it did underscore several aspects of U.S. foreign policy that have received insufªcient attention in recent years. Understanding these lessons will be es -sential both to the immediate campaign against al-Qaeda and to any subse -Be q yond b u in Lad e n nt effort to reduce the overall danger from global terrorism. 2. In an apparent effort to split the Taliban and to accommodate Pakistan’s desire that any postwar Afghani regime be friendly to Pakistan, U.S. ofªcials have indicated that “moderate” members of the current regime might be incorporated into a postwar coalition government. See “U.S. and Paki -stan ‘Share Afghan Goal,’” BBC News Online/South Asia, October 16, 2001, http://www.news.bbc. co.uk/english/world/south_asia; and “Afghan King Said to Agree to Role in Kabul for Taliban,” New York Times, October 19, 2001, p. B4. 3. In a letter to the United Nations Security Council, U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte stated that the U.S. inquiry into the September 11 attacks was “in the early stages” and noted that “we may ªnd that our self-defense requires further actions with respect to other organizations and other states.” See Christopher S. Wren, “U.S. Advises U.N. Council More Strikes Could Come,” New York Times, October 9, 2001, p. B5.