Base Politics
Copyright 2005 Council on Foreign Relations, Inc.
Foreign Affairs
November 2005 - December 2005
SECTION: ESSAY; Pg. 79
LENGTH: 8121 words
HEADLINE: Base Politics
BYLINE: Alexander Cooley
HIGHLIGHT:
From Foreign Affairs, November/December 2005
BODY:
REDEPLOYING U.S. TROOPS
This past July, the government of Uzbekistan evicted U.S. personnel from the Karshi-Khanabad air base, which Washington had used as a staging ground for combat reconnaissance, and humanitarian missions in Afghanistan since late 2001. The government in Tashkent gave no official reason for the expulsion, but the order was issued soon after the UN airlifted 439 Uzbek refugees from Kyrgyzstan to Romania -- a move that Washington supported and Tashkent opposed. (The Uzbek government wanted the refugees to return home, but the international community did not, fearing that they would be detained and tortured by Uzbek security personnel.)
The showdown was the latest in a series of confrontations since a much-criticized
crackdown on antigovernment demonstrators in the eastern city of Andijon last
May. These events illustrate the enduring problem that U.S. defense officials
face as they try to promote democratic values abroad while maintaining U.S.
military bases in nondemocratic countries. Although some in Washington acknowledge
this tension, they generally argue that the strategic benefits of having U.S.
bases close to important theaters such as Afghanistan outweigh the political
costs of supporting unsavory host regimes. With the Pentagon now redefining
the role of the U.S. military in the twenty-first century, moreover, its officials
insist
even more on the importance of developing a vast network of U.S. bases to confront
cross-border terrorism and other regional threats. Some of them also turn the
objections of pro-democracy critics around. They claim that a U.S. military
presence in repressive countries gives Washington additional leverage to press
them to liberalize. And, they argue, relying on democratic hosts for military
cooperation can present problems
of its own -- such as the 2003 parliamentary vote in Turkey that denied the
United States the chance to launch its invasion of Iraq from there.
Such arguments have merit, but they do not tell the whole story. For one thing,
the political complications sometimes associated with dealing with democracies
are ephemeral. For another, setting up bases in nondemocratic states brings
mostly short-term benefits, rarely helps promote
liberalization, and sometimes even endangers U.S. security. Engaging authoritarian
leaders by striking basing deals with them has done little for democratization
in those states because these leaders know that, at bottom, U.S. military planners
care more about the bases' utility than about local political trends. The practice
can also imperil U.S. strategic interests. Even as authoritarian leaders flout
U.S. calls for liberalization, they often manipulate basing agreements to strengthen
their personal standing at home. And when one of these autocrats is eventually
ousted,
the democratic successor sometimes challenges the validity of the deals the
former regime had struck.
Basing agreements made with mature democracies involve far fewer risks. Such
deals come at no cost to U.S. legitimacy, and they tend to be more reliable
since security commitments approved and validated by democratic institutions
are made to last. As U.S. military planners design a
global network of smaller, more versatile military facilities abroad, they would
do well to reconsider whether the limited benefits of establishing bases in
nondemocratic countries are worth the costs those arrangements inevitably generate.
DEALS WITH DEVILS
Historically, the United States has had little success leveraging its foreign bases to promote democratic values in host countries.
After World War II, Washington established bases in both democracies and those
nondemocratic states that resisted Soviet influence. U.S. officials consistently
defended their deals with nondemocratic countries by claiming that engagement
could gradually lead
to their democratization. In fact, the United States accomplished little by
engaging dictators in this way -- except to tarnish its reputation by virtue
of the association.
Consider three basing agreements -- with Spain, Portugal, and the Philippines
-- struck in different decades and by U.S. administrations of different ideological
leanings. In 1953, the Eisenhower administration signed a bilateral defense
agreement with Spain, then under the rule of the dictator General Francisco
Franco. The agreement granted the United States the use of a network of air
bases, naval stations, pipelines, and communications facilities in Spain in
exchange for a $226 million package of military and economic assistance. It
was immediately criticized within the United States and by U.S. allies in Europe
for giving Franco legitimacy and material support just as other states were
trying to
exclude his regime from international institutions such as the UN and NATO.
U.S. officials long insisted that the U.S. military presence in Spain did not
imply official support for his regime. But the Spanish politicians who succeeded
Franco after his death in 1975 accused Washington of having tacitly condoned
his repressive policies and his secrecy.
In the 1960s, even the idealistic Kennedy administration was quick to temper
its calls for decolonization throughout Africa once the prime minister of Portugal,
Antonio de Oliveira Salazar, threatened to curtail U.S. access to important
bases in the Azores (Portuguese islands in the mid-Atlantic). Lisbon was concerned
about calls for self-determination in its African colonies, including Angola
and Mozambique. Salazar considered the counterinsurgency in Angola a matter
of domestic politics, and he was incensed when in 1961 Washington backed a UN
Security Council resolution calling for reform and a UN inquiry. Under mounting
pressure from the Pentagon, which did not want to lose the mid-Atlantic
facilities, the White House changed its position in early 1962. But the Portuguese
government kept the bases' status in abeyance throughout the 1960s to keep its
leverage over Washington.
This pattern repeated itself elsewhere in the 1970s and the early 1980s, perhaps most visibly in the Philippines under strongman Ferdinand Marcos. The presence of two major U.S. military installations in the Philippines, Clark Air Base and the Subic Bay naval station, kept U.S. criticism of Marcos in check. Even the Carter administration, despite its determination to promote human rights abroad, softened its stance when the time came to renew a base agreement in 1979. As Marcos asked for ever more U.S. economic and military assistance, Washington complied, effectively helping to prop up the dictator and his cronies until their ouster in 1986.
In all these cases, U.S. engagement did little to promote genuine political reform because the host governments correctly calculated that Washington cared more about its bases than about political liberalization. At the same time, by repeatedly ignoring violations of democratic principles in order to preserve its outposts, the United States exposed itself to charges of opportunism and hypocrisy. Throughout the Cold War, pragmatists in the White House might have answered the accusations by pointing to an overriding strategic purpose: defeating the Soviet Union. But now that the war on terrorism has replaced the war on communism, the costs of such a bargain are much greater.
INSECURITY SYSTEM
If the first problem with establishing bases in nondemocratic states is that doing so can interfere with local democratization, the second -- and less appreciated -- problem is that it has serious strategic costs for the United States.
First, U.S. support for authoritarian governments can breed just the kind of opposition or radicalism that U.S. bases are indirectly designed to stem. Basing agreements offer propaganda opportunities for both legitimate opposition groups and extremists. And the presence of a U.S. base in an nondemocratic state can generate more extremists than it stops. Take, for example, the case of Saudi Arabia. The 1996 terrorist attack on the Khobar Towers, where U.S. troops were housed, emboldened Islamic extremists to call for the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces from the Arabian Peninsula. The attack raised security concerns for Washington but also suggested to the Saudi government that the U.S. military presence was a domestic political threat. Ultimately, in 2003, Washington was compelled the withdraw 5,000 troops from Saudi Arabia.
Second, nondemocratic regimes are inherently unreliable hosts. It is sometimes
assumed that entering into agreements with dictators
guarantees the deals' longevity because such regimes are less vulnerable than
democracies to shifts in public opinion. But many political scientists now believe
that operating without the restrictions of a constitution, an independent judiciary,
and an elected legislature actually makes it easier for authoritarian regimes
to violate treaties such as military basing agreements. Agreements with an authoritarian
state last only as long as the ruling regime does -- if even that long -- because
the status of such treaties is subject to the regime's fortunes rather than
to a lasting institutional framework. In the past, the United States has been
expelled when its autocratic allies have been toppled from within: Washington
lost access to Wheelus Air Base in Libya in 1969 when Colonel Muammar al-Qaddafi
took power, as it did to electronic listening posts in northern Iran when Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi's regime collapsed in 1979. Even when authoritarian governments
do honor basing agreements, they can revise the terms of the deals unilaterally,
on a whim, to better serve their domestic purposes or extract material concessions
from Washington.
Third, when democratic governments eventually take over in authoritarian countries,
U.S. bases there are vulnerable to various forms of backlash. In post-authoritarian
elections in Thailand (in 1975), Greece (in 1981), and South Korea (in 1997
and 2002), for example, opposition leaders
won office by campaigning against the U.S. military presence, explicitly linking
U.S. bases to Washington's support for previous nondemocratic regimes. Sometimes,
too, civic groups and media outlets in a state undergoing a democratic transition
denounce basing agreements signed with the authoritarian government as symbols
of the previous regime's abuses. Worse, in some cases, new democratic governments
challenge the validity of preexisting basing agreements, precipitating a severe
curtailment of U.S. rights, sometimes leading to expulsion. In the late 1980s,
the Spanish Socialist Party (known as the PSOE) refused to extend a basing agreement
with the United States for access to the Torrejon air base, near Madrid. And
in 1991, the newly empowered post-Marcos Philippine Senate rejected a plan to
extend the lease of Subic Bay, terminating the long-standing U.S. military presence
there. In these and other cases, the domestic backlash against the U.S. basing
presence
inflicted considerable operational costs on the U.S. military.
These types of strategic costs all relate to the political difficulties that arise from concluding agreements with nondemocratic regimes. Although U.S. officials have often believed that the United States was unfairly accused of supporting its authoritarian hosts, such perceptions became commonplace in countries where it maintained a military presence. From a practical perspective, separating operational military needs from the local political context has proved difficult.
In consolidated democracies, on the other hand, governments continue to honor
their commitments to basing agreements because those deals are guaranteed by
an established legal order. Even though the government of Prime Minister Jose
Luis Rodriguez Zapatero withdrew Spanish
troops from Iraq shortly after he was elected in March 2004, it continued to
honor a preexisting agreement, which effectively allowed the United States unhindered
use of its naval station at Rota and its air base in Moron in support of the
Iraq campaign. The same is true of other base-hosting democratic allies, such
as Germany and Greece, which also opposed the invasion of Iraq and yet allowed
operations connected
to the war to take place on their soil. Some have argued that Turkey's refusal
to let U.S. troops use its territory to launch an offensive in northern Iraq
in 2003 is proof that democracies can be fickle partners. In fact, however,
the episode revealed the institutional weaknesses that characterize democratizing
states or young democracies. Although Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called
the Turkish parliament's close vote against granting the United States access
into Iraq a victory for democracy, it was largely the product of his party's
relative
inexperience at managing its new parliamentary majority and its antagonistic
relationship with the country's influential military. (Erdogan was in favor
of granting access, and the military reportedly wanted to see his party embarrassed.)
The Turkish vote mirrored the uncertainty that characterized Turkish domestic
politics at the time. But as democracies become increasingly consolidated and
institutionalized, they are able to commit more credibly to their external agreements.
Over the long term, democracies make for more predictable and stable base hosts
than authoritarian states.
INSTALLATION ART
The question of how the United States can best use military bases abroad to
ensure its security has resurfaced since the Defense Department started rethinking
the overseas deployment of U.S. troops after the attacks of September 11, 2001.
To support Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, the United States established
air bases in Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, and Uzbekistan and signed agreements for
refueling rights and airspace access throughout Central Asia. In 2003, to compensate
for the loss of access to Turkey, the United States used airfields and ports
in Bulgaria and Romania to support its military campaign in Iraq. And over the
next few years, the Pentagon will implement the 2004 Global Defense Posture
Review (GDPR), which outlined plans for the most fundamental change in U.S.
basing strategy since World War II. The GDPR calls for increasing the number
of overseas U.S. facilities by replacing and supplementing large Cold War-era
bases in Germany, Japan, and South Korea with smaller facilities known as forward
operating sites, or FOSs (small installations that can be rapidly built up),
and cooperative security locations, or CSLs (host-nation facilities with little
U.S. personnel but with equipment and logistical capabilities), both of which
can be activated when necessary. These FOSs and CSLs will be used against sources
of regional instability, covering areas where the United States has traditionally
been absent. They are likely to be established in eastern Europe (Bulgaria,
Poland, and Romania) and Africa (Algeria, Djibouti, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Mali,
Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, and Uganda), although the exact location of
these facilities is still under negotiation. The U.S. expansion in Africa is
especially noteworthy, as it is accompanied by increased military-to-military
cooperation, such as the
Pan Sahel Initiative, under which the U.S. military is assisting Chad, Niger,
Mali, and Mauritania in efforts to stem local terrorism. These FOSs and CSLs
will be designed to have maximal operational flexibility with minimal political
downsides and few limitations on U.S. access. The hope is that by maintaining
a lighter footprint, Washington will avoid some of the problems that have periodically
arisen in connection with the large U.S. deployments in South Korea and Okinawa,
Japan, such as traffic accidents and crimes involving U.S. military personnel.
The GDPR's reforms have already been criticized, especially for their cost, their impracticality, and the dampening effect they could have on traditional U.S. alliances. Yet few critics have pointed out that a considerable number of new facilities are planned in countries with weak or nondemocratic political systems. Washington planners envision that even a small U.S. military presence will help guard against terrorist threats, secure important U.S. economic and energy interests, stabilize the countries hosting bases, and normalize regional politics. More likely, however, the governments of these countries will label both extreme and democratic opposition groups as regional security threats and embroil the United States in domestic political disputes and low-intensity clashes in which it has no compelling interest. Before it sets up more bases in authoritarian countries, the Defense Department would do well to consider some of its recent experiences.
THE K2 PROBLEM
Since the September 11 attacks, Washington seems to be repeating some of its old mistakes. When, in October 2001, it set up the Karshi-Khanabad air base (also known as K2) in southern Uzbekistan to launch operations into Afghanistan, it was hardly concerned by its host's democratic deficit. In March 2002, President Bush and Uzbek President Islam Karimov signed a broader strategic cooperation agreement, calling for a partnership in the war on terrorism and establishing ties between U.S. and Uzbek military and security services. In addition to paying $15 million for use of the airfield, as a tacit quid pro quo, in 2002 the United States provided $120 million in military hardware and surveillance equipment to the Uzbek army, $82 million to the country' security services, and $55 million in credits from the U.S. Export-Import Bank.
The Uzbek government, for its part, pledged to speed up democratization, improve
its human rights record, and promote greater press freedoms. With the exception
of some human rights organizations, few in the West criticized the agreement;
it was widely hailed as a necessary step in the Afghan campaign. While operations
in Afghanistan continued throughout 2002 and 2003, U.S. officials largely ignored
the Uzbek government's
failure to fulfill its commitments. In January 2002, Karimov arbitrarily extended
his term until 2007, but U.S. authorities held back from denouncing him and
praised the new cooperative relationship. They turned a blind eye to the steady
increase in political jailings that Uzbek security services were conducting
in the name of counterterrorism. And as part of the Bush administration's practice
of "extraordinary rendition," they ordered dozens of terrorist suspects
shipped to Uzbekistan knowing that law enforcement officials there routinely
employ torture.
Signs of open discomfort within the U.S. policy community began to surface in the summer of 2004. In July of that year, the State Department rescinded $18 million in aid to Uzbekistan because of human rights violations. But a month later, during a visit to Tashkent by General Richard Meyers, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Department of Defense awarded Uzbekistan $21 million in weapons transfers and military assistance.
Matters came to a head with the Andijon crackdown of last May, which highlighted
the political compromises Washington was making to maintain access to K2. Uzbek
security forces attacked thousands of demonstrators, led by armed militants,
who were protesting the conviction of 23 Uzbek businessmen accused of being
Muslim extremists. Uzbek government officials claimed that the militants led
a prison break, captured a local police station and a military barracks, and
took several hostages. But human rights organizations have reported that the
demonstration
comprised mostly unarmed citizens protesting local political and economic policies.
According to witnesses, Uzbek security forces fired indiscriminately into the
crowd, mowing down waves of civilians as they tried to flee the scene. International
nongovernmental organizations such as the International Crisis Group and Human
Rights Watch have estimated the death toll at 700 to 800, well above the official
figure of 180, and have accused the Uzbek government of covering up details
of the incident by intimidating
journalists and witnesses.
Still, fearful of losing access to U.S. bases, some U.S. officials were reluctant to criticize the Uzbek government.
The Bush administration initially balked at any condemnation; U.S. defense officials at NATO opposed the alliance's issuing a joint communique calling for an international probe. Soon after, however, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice publicly backed an international inquiry, and a bipartisan group of U.S. senators launched an investigation to determine whether any of the Uzbek security troops involved in the crackdown had received U.S. training or equipment. In response to the scrutiny, Uzbek authorities began to limit nighttime and cargo flights to and from K2 and to complain about payment issues and environmental damage relating to use of the base.
Last July, the relationship finally soured for good. After the United States backed the UN effort to airlift Uzbek refugees from neighboring Kyrgyzstan to Romania against the wishes of the Uzbek government, Tashkent activated a termination clause in the K2 base agreement that required the U.S. military to close the facility within 180 days -- dispelling any lingering illusion that the Uzbek regime was a reliable security partner. By ordering the shutdown, Karimov subordinated his commitment to the United States to other geopolitical and domestic goals: expelling the United States ingratiated him with Moscow and
Beijing and may have given him a chance to consolidate public support in the face of U.S. meddling in local affairs.
Washington's decision to establish a base in Kyrgyzstan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom has proved similarly complicated. U.S. officials have faced tricky political tradeoffs related to the operation of Ganci Air Base, established in 2001 with the consent of then President Askar Akayev. Prior to the basing agreement, Akayev had increasingly entrenched his rule and let democratization efforts backslide. The basing agreement gave Akayev's regime new international credibility by distracting Western attention from his political abuses and anointing him as a partner in the U.S.-led war on terrorism. The small Kyrgyz economy also significantly benefited from the fees and business generated by the air base, which account for five to ten percent of Kyrgyzstan's GDP.
Meanwhile, Kyrgyz security services, who obtained military hardware and surveillance
equipment as a result of the deal, began emphasizing -- and exaggerating --
the threat of Islamic extremism to secure continued U.S. assistance. In November
2003, they claimed to have uncovered a plot to bomb Ganci Air Base and allegedly
caught three members of a radical Islamic organization with explosives and blueprints
of the base. But U.S. officials and Kyrgyz political observers are skeptical
about the details of the plot and the circumstances of the arrests. Now that
the Akayev regime has fallen, Washington may face difficulties with his successors.
After Akayev was swept out of power in March 2005 by public demonstrations following
disputed parliamentary elections the question of the U.S. military presence
was suddenly thrust onto the political
agenda of the new Kyrgyz government. In a joint statement issued on July 5,
2005, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which consists of China, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, declared that the U.S. military
bases in Central Asia had outlived their purpose of supporting the Afghan campaign
and should be closed. In his first press conference, a week later, President
Kurmanbek Bakiyev
announced that the Kyrgyz government would press Washington about the necessity
of keeping the base; later, he pledged that he would pursue an "independent"
foreign policy. Questions about the orientation of the new regime in Kyrgyzstan
remain, but it is already clear that the loss of K2 in Uzbekistan has made Ganci
Air Base all the more important to U.S. planners.
In addition to possibly relocating some activities from K2 to Kyrgyzstan, U.S. officials are exploring other options in Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan, where the United States has occasionally used airfields for refueling stops. A visit by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld to Azerbaijan in August 2005 increased speculation that Washington may be considering establishing a military presence there, too. In its determination to maintain a strategic foothold in Central Asia, the United States is once again considering striking deals with nondemocratic regimes -- thus giving material support and legitimacy to autocrats and exposing its operational presence to local politics.
FANNING OUT
While Washington struggles with political difficulties in Central Asia, its future presence in the Black Sea region -- negotiations are under way for bases in Bulgaria and Romania -- promises to be more stable politically. Bulgaria and Romania offer a number of attractive large-scale facilities, such as ports on the Black Sea, airfields, and training ranges. Future bases in these countries would not only help safeguard U.S. security interests in the Black Sea region but also serve as important staging grounds for operations in the Middle
East and Central Asia.
The recent democratic consolidations of Bulgaria and Romania and the countries'
integration into Western international institutions
are also likely to create a favorable operating environment for years to come.
Both countries supported the U.S.-led campaign in Iraq over the objections of
some other European states (confirming their allegiance to Washington) and then
in 2004 became NATO members (formalizing their strategic alignment with the
West). To secure NATO membership, Sofia and Bucharest had to implement important
domestic institutional
reforms: they strengthened civilian control over their militaries, downsized
and modernized their armed forces, and improved transparency in defense-related
matters.
Although some political parties in both countries, including the recently elected Socialist Party in Bulgaria, have promised to take a tougher line with the United States, no party with a significant share of the vote actually opposes the idea of a U.S. presence. The Bulgarian and Romanian publics appear to back strongly the prospect of U.S. bases, and many people view these bases as an important political counterweight to the EU's influence.
Any negative reaction that may arise in Bulgaria or Romania to the U.S. bases
is most likely to result from unfulfilled expectations about the benefits of
the United States' presence there. Consistent with the Defense Department's
new basing posture, permanent U.S. deployments will likely be relatively small
-- no more than 1,000 troops per country -- and so the overall economic impact
of future bases may not meet the lofty expectations that now prevail. Although
both countries' political systems are consolidated, moreover, their media are
relatively new and fiercely competitive. Base-relateds incidents and scandals
involving U.S. personnel are sure to draw media attention, as well as public
scrutiny over criminal procedures and other legal aspects governing U.S. bases.
Nevertheless, given their advanced state of democratization and their
integration into the West, Bulgaria and Romania are unlikely to generate the
type of internal political pressures that have threatened the U.S. presence
elsewhere.
With so much of the United States' international legitimacy now tied to how well it promotes democracy abroad, resolving the tension between its commitment to democratic values and its need for overseas bases must become a priority for Washington. Some U.S. officials have tried to characterize the expulsion from K2 in Uzbekistan as proof of Washington's commitment to democracy, but it was too little too late: the ouster followed several years of apparent unconcern about the abuses of Karimov's regime, and the damage to U.S. credibility had already been done. Additional Uzbekistan-type imbroglios related to basing rights would only hurt Washington more. If the Defense Department is serious about best preparing the United States for a new type of war by redeploying its troops, it would do well to pick stable and democratic places to root.
Planners might object that a threat's location often forces the United States
to establish a presence in areas where it otherwise would not choose to go.
Even in such extreme cases, however, there is a difference between establishing
a base out of necessity and maintaining it after
major combat operations are over. Take the case of Uzbekistan. Although the
U.S. military has insisted since the fall of 2001 that K2 is vital to U.S. operations
in Central Asia, the base's strategic value has considerably diminished over
the past several years. Yet at no point between 2001 and the first talk of ousting
the United States from K2 this summer did the Pentagon publicly reexamine the
base's purpose. The Pentagon's failure to distinguish the strategic justification
for establishing a base from the organizational reasons for maintaining one
is another
impediment to assessing the real costs of various U.S. basing strategies.
Full-on operations such as the war in Afghanistan are less likely in the future,
and so as the United States sets out to establish a vaster but lighter presence
in various regions, it has more freedom about where exactly to set up its bases.
In deciding where to redeploy troops, Pentagon
officials should seriously consider the political implications of their choices.
They must recognize that by setting up military bases abroad, Washington will
inevitably become enmeshed in the domestic politics of its hosts, even if it
intends to kee a low profile and a light footprint. Setting up bases in nondemocratic
states can be accomplished relatively quickly and easily, but in the long term
it undermines
Washington's commitment to democratization abroad and its strategic interests.
Setting up bases in democracies may generate some media scrutiny, political debate, and public criticism at first, but democracies invariably turn out to be more reliable hosts in the end. Understanding these tradeoffs is essential, especially now that even within strategically important regions the Pentagon has real choices about where to establish its outposts.
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