A Conservative Framing Coup - Threat Assessment
Posted by Marc Grinberg
I was recently discussing the North Korea nuclear test with a fellow liberal friend. I noted that the prospect of a nuclear North Korea was somewhat unnerving, given Kim Jong-Il's personality and the country's development of ICBMs. "Do you really think we should bomb North Korea?" he responded.
Excuse me? From where in the statement "a nuclear North Korea makes me nervous" did he infer that I was advocating military action?
While his response was out of left field, his reaction was not entirely uncommon. I recently co-authored a political article titled "A Progressive Battle Plan for National Security" for The Democratic Strategist. Among the critiques we received was that our message proposal for Iran was a call for "bombs away."
Our (partial) messaging proposal for Iran was as follows:
"If any issue should arouse the passion of Democrats, it is the spread of nuclear weapons to a radical Iranian government. Iran is a nation that stones women, publicly executes homosexuals, suppresses its minorities, and has violated the most basic human rights we fight for as Democrats. Allowing Iran to build a nuclear weapon would strengthen this government's hand against their own people. And nuclear proliferation--which would spread from Iran to the rest of the region--poses the greatest human rights abuse of all: threatening to destroy millions of lives in a war or a nuclear accident."
Can someone please tell me where in that paragraph we advocated military action against Iran? I'll give you a hint - nowhere. What we did do was spend a paragraph listing just some of the reasons why liberals should oppose Iranian nuclear proliferation.
What concerns me is the increasing tendency among liberals (of all stripes) to confuse taking a security threat (or a moral travesty) seriously, with advocating an armed response to that threat. The Bush Administration has already stolen democracy promotion and a moral foreign policy from liberals. Has it now taken ownership of the ability to assess threats to American security? If so, conservatives have succeeded in defining the terms of the national security debate to a degree I never thought possible.
Liberals are, after all, the ones that understand that addressing the challenges America faces requires us to use all the tools in our toolkit. If even the most hardcore of us now intuitively think that those who address threats are advocating military action, then the Republicans have succeeded framing the debate - in convincing the public that the use of force is the only legitimate response to security threats. This was, of course, always their goal. If they could get Americans to think like this, then liberal policies would never be seen as credible.
Instead of questioning the existence (or, at least, seriousness) of threats, liberals need to change the way the American people think about national security policy: the military shouldn't be the only thing that comes to mind - economic development, education, democracy, diplomacy and countless other tools are, in most situations, more powerful than our armed forces. I'm preaching to the choir, of course, you all know this.
And yet the trend has not been to advocate for smarter uses of American power, but to deny the reality of threats to American security. Not only is this dangerous (there are serious threats out there), but it is also a political dead-end. Even if the public agrees with us on policy, they will never trust us with their security if they do not believe we understand their fears.
As much as we oppose the Bush Administration's tendency to take the debate directly from security threat to military response, it should not blind us of the fact that there are real security (and moral) threats in the world. If we are to change the way the American public sees national security, we have to do it by convincing them that our approach to threats is the better one, not by denying the existence of these threats altogether.