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<TITLE>2001Book - Final</TITLE>
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<HR SIZE="2"><P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="7" FACE="Palatino">
Chapter 1
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Promoting Peace and Stability
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
The Honorable William S. Cohen<BR>
Former U.S. Secretary of Defense
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<BR>
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>OPENING REMARKS</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
<FONT COLOR="#000000" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="7">I</FONT> come to you all the way from Hawaii, where my wife and I had the pleasure
 of witnessing the premiere of the movie Pearl Harbor. The movie recaptures
 a moment in our history, indeed in world history&#151;the moment that Tom Brokaw,
 the NBC newscaster and successful author, calls the time lived by the &#147;greatest
 generation.&#148; That generation was also the wisest, because they understood
 that we need to have military capability, to be sure, but we also must
 develop the institutions that preserve and promote peace and stability,
 and indeed prosperity. So we look back and say they were the greatest and
 the wisest, because they realized that we have to have both military might
 and peace and prosperity.
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You also have to have ideals and technique. A professor I once had said,
 &#147;You know, if you have ideals without technique, you have a mess. But if
 you have technique without ideals, you have a menace.&#148; So you have to have
 both: you must have military capability and you also must have diplomacy.
 You cannot have one without the other. If you have diplomacy without military
 capability, you have a dangling conversation. But if you have only military
 power without diplomacy, then you run the risk of having a very dangerous,
 chauvinistic situation&#151;a menace, which we have seen in the past.
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When I met with Kim Dae Jung, the South Korean President, in the summer
 of 2000, I asked him what sustained him during those moments when he was
 in prison. He indicated that he is a deeply religious man, but he also
 said, &#147;I used to read Toffler.&#148; I thought that rather strange. But those
 of us who grew up reading Toffler during the late &#145;60s and early &#145;70s know
 that he talked about the age of &#147;future shock,&#148; in which time itself would
 be speeded up by events, in which we would see technology miniaturize the
 globe.
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If you think about it, the vast oceans are mere lakes today. And those
 distant countries are neighboring counties. Today, I would describe the
 world as not much bigger than a small ball, spinning on the finger of science.
 Events come rushing at political leaders and military leaders with an almost
 terrifying velocity. So we must spend as much time as we can at conferences
 such as this and in deliberation to prepare ourselves for this age of future
 shock, when events come at us with great speed.
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
You may remember reading the words of Francis Fukiyama back in the &#145;90s,
 at the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Empire. He
 wrote a thesis called &#147;The End of History&#148; in which he predicted that democratic
 capitalism was going to spread across the globe. And that prompted Peter
 Vale, a South African academician, to write, &#147;Rejoice, my friends, or weep
 with sorrow/What California is today, the world will be tomorrow.&#148; Now,
 if you think about the rolling blackouts that occurred in California, we
 hope that they will not spread to the rest of the United States, and certainly
 not to the rest of the world. But Fukiyama&#146;s thesis was immediately challenged.
 Samuel Huntington came out with his own theory. He said, &#147;Fukiyama has
 it all wrong; he&#146;s looking through rose-tinted glasses. He has forgotten
 that you&#146;re going to have fault lines between the Confucian, the Islamic,
 and the Christian societies, that we have these ethnic hatreds that are
 boiling up and bubbling over, and we are going to see a clash of civilizations.&#148;

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Well, who was right? Both men were right. Fukiyama was right because if
 you look across the world, you see that democratic capitalism has taken
 root and spread virtually throughout every part of it. If you look at Europe,
 Asia, and South America, you see that the seeds of democratic capitalism
 have taken root and spread. But Huntington was also correct, and we have
 seen that in Bosnia and Kosovo, in Afghanistan and in parts of Africa.
 We still see the violent hatreds and people who would rather dig fresh
 graves than heal old wounds. We have to contend with both of these dynamics:
 the spread of democratic capitalism and the spread of ethnic rivalries,
 hatreds, and conflict.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>PREPARING TO HANDLE THE NEW THREATS</B>
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This is where NATO and the EU come into play: whither NATO, or shall NATO
 wither. We have talked about &#147;top-down examination,&#148; and tried to determine
 the threats that will be out there five, ten, and fifteen years from now.
 How will we recognize them, and how can we prepare for them? Yogi Berra,
 the famous catcher for the Yankees and a man renowned for his aphorisms,
 said, &#147;You know, predictions are hard, especially about the future.&#148; But
 we have to make those predictions. We have to try to look into the opaque
 windows of the future and see what poses a threat to our security, our
 democracy, and our prosperity. That&#146;s precisely what the Bush administration
 is doing right now.
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&nbsp;This has caused some angst, however, and I would even say some anger,
 in European circles and other parts of the world. But I think back to Justice
 Holmes, one of our great justices, who said, &#147;I find it pathetic that we
 should simply endorse rules that were enacted at the time of Henry V, and
 act out of blind loyalty to the past.&#148; I believe we must constantly examine
 our rules, the threats to us, and our responsibilities. I think that is
 what the Bush administration is doing, just as the Clinton administration
 did when I served as Secretary of Defense.
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Some critics look at the Bush administration and say, &#147;There&#146;s too much
 focus on adversaries and not enough on allies, and too much focus on power
 and not enough on influence&#151;power being the ability to act either militarily
 or to renounce new or old international agreements and influence being
 the ability to use both power and the power of persuasion. These comments
 on power refer to discussions on National Missile Defense, and those on
 influence to the U.S.&#146;s relationship to NATO and the European Union.
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<B>ESDP AS A COMPLEMENTARY CAPABILITY</B>
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With respect to ESDP, many Europeans are saying, &#147;Look, you have been beating
 us up for years, saying we have not been carrying our share of the load.
 Suddenly we are doing more and offering to do more, and now you are critical!
 How is it possible? How can you have it both ways?&#148; That reminds me of
 what I once said to George Robertson when I was at a NATO meeting. I said,
 &#147;George, first you accuse the United States of being arrogant toward our
 European friends, and then call us indifferent. Which is it?&#148; And he said,
 in his own inimitable Scottish brogue, &#147;Bill, if you can&#146;t ride two horses
 at the same time, what the hell are you doing in the circus in the first
 place?&#148;
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
That more or less applies to how Europeans are looking at the United States
 now. And so you&#146;re seeking to construct a European security defense policy.
 Frankly, I and those in the Clinton administration heartily endorsed the
 creation of this ESDP (or ESDI, as it was known). But we did so with a
 great caveat and proviso: namely, that we supported strengthening the European
 pillar provided we were not supporting something competitive. Something
 complementary, something open and transparent&#151;yes, we could support that.
 We supported the notion that you can create a 60,000-person force that
 is quickly deployable within 60 days and sustainable for a year. We could
 support that.
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But there is apprehension on the part of the United States that Europeans,
 given their predilections, are very good at creating bureaucracies but
 not at creating capabilities. And so I made the statement at a NATO meeting
 that we do not want to see this process of ESDP degenerate into the political-military
 equivalent of trichonosis. While you have apprehensions that the United
 States may suddenly oppose the creation of a European pillar, we have apprehensions
 that the pillar will be more a pillar of salt: it will not be substantive.

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So what we need to do is to make sure we work in concert. I think you will
 find that the Bush administration will raise the same questions the Clinton
 administration did, but as long as Europeans are prepared to create a capability
 that is complementary and not competitive, then I think you will find strong
 support for the concept going forward.
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During the eight years of the Clinton administration, Americans looked
 over to Europe and your response to Bosnia and, frankly, saw a lack of
 capability. And you looked back at us and said, &#147;Here is a country that
 is inward and lacking in commitment.&#148; It took us a few years to get it
 right, but the situation in Bosnia and Kosovo actually strengthened NATO.
 As we move into the new era, we must not focus on words that you may misconstrue.
 You rightfully can raise the question, &#147;How can you complain that Europeans
 need to take more responsibility if you say that Europe is not as important
 as Asia, that your focus is going to be on Asia?&#148; This is a legitimate
 question that has to be answered, and answered very directly, openly, and
 candidly. That is the way we should proceed into the future.
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<B>CONCLUDING REMARKS</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
At the end of the Constitutional Convention, when the United States formed
 its Congress and its Constitution, someone asked Benjamin Franklin, &#147;What
 have you given us?&#148; He said, &#147;A Republic, if you can keep it.&#148; If you were
 to ask the question, &#147;What has NATO given the North Atlantic/European Alliance?
 What has it given us, the Euro-Atlantic Alliance?&#148;, we would say it has
 given us peace, stability, democracy, and prosperity. And we can keep it
 if we care to. That is precisely the reason that we all gather at these
 meetings: to reaffirm the strong bonds not only of friendship but of security
 that promote peace, democracy, and stability. So it is a pleasure for me
 to be here as a private citizen. I think I say the same things privately
 that I said publicly. And I say them with the same degree of passion. It
 is a wonderful relationship that we have; we need to continue to nurture
 it as we all move forward into this nanosecond world that Toffler described
 so many decades ago.
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