📄 Extracted Text (2,635 words)
10 Foreign-Policy Flashpoints in the GOP
Platform
The Republicans will present a unitedfront at the convention, but divisive issues are bubbling below
the surface.
BY URI FRIEDMAN 'AUGUST 24, 2012
Next week, at the Republican National Convention, delegates won't just be nominating a presidential
candidate; they'll be voting on a 60-page policy platform prepared earlier this week in Tampa, Florida, by
112 Republican delegates. The platform, which won't be publicly released until Monday (Politico
discovered a draft that was briefly posted online on Friday), has mainly attracted attention so far for its
anti-abortion language.
But the committee also tackled pressing foreign-policy questions -- and the debates that ensued speak
to the divisions that lurk behind the cohesive worldview the party will present to the nation next week.
Page I 1 of 7
EFTA01071073
Sure, non-binding party platforms may have a limited impact on the positions presidential candidates
take and the ways Americans vote, but they nevertheless highlight the issues at the center of a party's
effort to define its international posture; in this case, the GOP's struggle to reconcile presumptive
nominee Mitt Romney's embrace of American exceptionalism with Texas Rep. Ron Paul's considerably
more modest vision of American power.
What are the most notable takeaways from this year's platform-drafting process, beyond one eagle-
eyed delegate requesting that a reference to "Czechoslovakia," which ceased to exist in 1993, be
changed to the "Czech Republic?" Here's a deeper look at what one committee member has called the
"most conservative platform in modern history."
Israeli-Palestinian conflict
Far and away, the most controversial part of the GOP's foreign-policy platform was the section
tentatively titled, "Our Unequivocal Support for Israel," which stated that Republicans "envision two
democratic states -- Israel with Jerusalem as its capital and Palestine -- living in peace and security" --
language that is nearly identical to wording used in the party's 2008 platform. The passage provoked a
raft of amendments arguing that, in endorsing the two-state solution, the Republicans were dictating
the terms of a peace agreement to the Israeli government.
"The overwhelming majority of Republicans don't support the creation of another terror state like the
ones that have since been created in southern Lebanon and Gaza," declared South Carolina delegate
Randy Page. "We cannot continue to endorse [President Barad] Obama's policy of forcing Israel to
negotiate in the face of suicidal risk." Page complained that the party's Israel plank was "a nearly
identical copy of the Democrats' Israel platform" (the 2008 Democratic platform also supports a two-
state solution).
In fact, it was President George W. Bush, who in 2002 became the first U.S. president to explicitly call for
an independent Palestinian state and in 2007 hosted a conference that, as the Wall Street Journal put it,
"enshrine[d] the two-state solution as the mutually agreed-upon desired outcome of the Israeli-
Palestinian conflict."
But the Republican Party has grown more reluctant to spell out the parameters of Israeli-Palestinian
peace ever since last year, when Obama backed a two-state solution roughly based on the pre-1967
borders. Romney and his running mate Paul Ryan have criticized that decision, though both have
expressed support for a two-state solution as well.
A resolution at the RNC's winter meeting this year appeared to reject the two-state solution --
proclaiming "that peace can be afforded the region only through a united Israel governed under one law
for all people" -- though party officials hinted at the time that the language would not find its way into
the platform adopted at the presidential convention.
They were right. At the platform committee deliberations, Jim Talent, a Mitt Romney surrogate and
former Missouri senator, ultimately fended off the flurry of amendments, arguing that Israeli Prime
Page 12 of 7
EFTA01071074
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly endorsed the two-state solution as Israeli government
policy.
Defense spending
The Republican pledge to cut government spending has not extended to the military, driving a wedge
between Ron Paul supporters, who want to scale back costly foreign adventures, and the Republican
base. Romney and Ryan have called for increasing defense spending, though Ryan voted for defense
cuts back in 2011.
At the platform committee meeting, Christopher Stearns, a Paul supporter and delegate from Virginia,
raised concerns about language opposing impending automatic cuts to defense spending, known as
sequestration. "These cuts are not cuts," he explained. "They are cuts out of proposed increases over
the course of a decade. We need to be honest with ourselves when we're addressing these issues."
The effort failed, however, and the plank resisting sequestration remains in the platform. The document
also calls for a constitutional amendment requiring a supermajority in Congress "for any tax increase
with exceptions for only war and national emergencies."
Gays and women in the military
Romney has a complicated position on the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" (DADT) policy that until recently
governed homosexuality in the military. He expressed support for gays and lesbians serving openly in
the armed forces in 1994, defended DADT in 2007 (because, he said, it was wartime), and suggested he
would not restore DADT after Obama scrapped the policy in 2011.
Unlike the 2008 GOP platform, which emphasized the "incompatibility of homosexuality with military
service," the 2012 platform does not explicitly reference gays in the military at all, perhaps in a nod to
the middle ground that Romney has staked out on the issue. Without calling for reinstituting DADT, the
document dismisses the "use of the military as a platform for social experimentation," opposes
"anything that might weaken team cohesion, including intra-military special interest demonstrations" (a
reference to wearing military uniforms in gay pride parades). and promises to "enforce and defend in
court the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), in the armed forces as well as in the civilian world" (a
reference to same-sex marriage ceremonies performed on military bases).
The platform also pushes back against the Obama administration's decision in February to open up more
combat positions to women -- a move former Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum criticized
because "men have emotions when you see a woman in harm's way." While the GOP applauds the
"advancement of women in the military," the platform notes, it also supports "women's exemption from
direct ground combat units and infantry battalions" (women are still banned from serving in the infantry
under the Pentagon's new rules).
Page 13 of 7
EFTA01071075
Immigration
The GOP finds itself in a difficult position on this hot-button issue, desiring to both win over Hispanic
voters in swing states and project itself as tougher on illegal immigration than Obama. That bind is
reflected in the Republican platform, which both calls for a "legal and reliable source of foreign labor
through a new guest-worker program" -- a first for the party's platform -- and embraces hard-line
language on immigration. "We recognize that if you really want to create a job tomorrow, you can
remove an illegal alien today," Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, told the committee.
Kobach, an architect of the controversial immigration laws in Alabama and Arizona, persuaded
delegates to add language supporting the state immigration laws that are now the subject of federal
lawsuits, calling for the completion of a double-layer border fence with Mexico, withholding federal
funding for "sanctuary cities" and universities that offer in-state tuition rates for undocumented
students, and backing the mandatory national use of E-Verify, an Internet database administered by the
federal government, to confirm workers' legal status.
The changes, which were adopted over the objections of delegates who contend that the measures will
hurt small businesses, bring this year's platform in line with its predecessor in 2008. The platform also
throws party support behind "humane procedures to encourage illegal aliens to return home
voluntarily" -- an endorsement of the "self-deportation" scheme that Romney floated during the
primary.
Kobach -- who also ushered through an amendment prohibiting U.S. courts from considering foreign
legal traditions such as sharia law -- argued that his suggestions were consistent with Romney's
immigration stance, despite the fact that the initial 2012 platform draft, which did not include Kobach's
provisions, was drafted in consultation with a Romney campaign that has toned down its tough
immigration rhetoric since the primary. To which a Romney campaign advisor responded, "The platform
is a RNC document, not a Romney for President document."
Cuba
As the Los Angeles Times reports, the GOP's language on Cuba closely mirrors the tough rhetoric the
party employed in 2008 (to the point of repeating the florid description of Cuba as a "mummified relic of
the age of totalitarianism"). Here's some of this year's wording, as obtained by the LA Times:
We will stand with the true democracies of the region against both Marxist subversion and the drug
lords, helping them to become prosperous alternatives to the collapsing model of Venezuela and Cuba.
We affirm our friendship with the people of Cuba and look toward their reunion with the rest of our
hemispheric family. The anachronistic regime in Havana which rules them is a mummified relic of the
age of totalitarianism, a state-sponsor of terrorism. We reject any dynastic succession of power within
the Castro family and affirm the principles codified in U.S. law as conditions for the lifting of trade,
travel, and financial sanctions: the legalization of political parties, an independent media, and free and
fair internationally-supervised elections.
Page 14 of 7
EFTA01071076
But here's the catch: There's no explicit mention of rolling back Obama's efforts to make it easier for
Cuban Americans to travel to Cuba and send money back to relatives on the island. Outside the
platform, however, Romney has denounced Obama's Cuba policies, while noting that he would "thank
heavens" when Fidel Castro "returned to his maker." Ryan initially opposed the Cuban embargo in the
name of free trade, though he has since reversed that position.
Detention of enemy combatants
Against the backdrop of Obama's unexpectedly aggressive national security policies, the GOP platform
committee meeting featured a fascinating conversation about detainee rights and counterterrorism. Pat
Kerby, a delegate from Nevada, offered an amendment opposing the indefinite detention of American
citizens under the National Defense Authorization Act. "It's not beyond [the Obama administration] to
use things like the IRS to go after donors for conservatives," he argued. "The idea of granting this power
to government is in defiance of the constitution." Minnesota delegate Kevin Erickson agreed on the
broader point, declaring, "The fact that we have a president who has ... an assassination czar and a kill
list is an abomination to our constitution." (Erickson may have been referring to recent reports on
Obama's intimate involvement in the targeted killings of suspected terrorists.)
The amendment was ultimately defeated. "It doesn't matter if the enemy combatant is a U.S. citizen or
not," noted Jim Bopp, co-chairman of a platform subcommittee on constitutional government. "If they
are fighting for a foreign country or foreign interest, they can be so held."
National security leaks
On the campaign trail, Romney has repeatedly accused the Obama administration of boasting about the
killing of Osama bin Laden and opportunistically leaking classified information
But Erickson, the Minnesota delegate and Ron Paul supporter, took issue with that approach at the
platform committee meeting, urging the party to remove an entire section condemning Obama's leaks
"for political purposes."
"If you're in activist circles, this may be really great to talk about over coffee, but it does not play well
with middle-class America," he explained, noting that he hailed from a "very blue area of a very blue
state." The response to a request for a second to Erickson's amendment? Crickets.
Nation-building
Romney has criticized Obama for announcing a withdrawal timetable for Afghanistan, though both
candidates have been pretty downbeat about the unpopular war. But at the platform committee
meeting, Richard Ford, a delegate from Rhode Island and Ron Paul supporter, went one step further,
proposing that the party add a line in the document declaring, "the Obama administration has made the
mistake of following the failed and dangerous policy of nation-building."
Page 15 of 7
EFTA01071077
"Nation-building is a failed policy of the Democrats and we Republicans need to go back to the humble
foreign policy of George Bush before 9/11," he stated. "We need to go back to not creating democracies
overseas that create Islamic regimes, and go back to the goal of getting our enemies and bringing our
troops home as soon as possible."
Former senator Talent batted down the amendment. "I'm very concerned it would be read, and may be
intended to be read, as getting out a whole range of tools that we regularly use in foreign policy in order
to protect American security at as inexpensive a cost as possible -- tools by which we assist other
countries in developing grassroots democratic and economic institutions," he observed. "[We) ought to
be trying to assist Libya as it emerges as a democracy. That doesn't mean we have to go in and build a
nation."
Foreign aid
At the committee deliberations, Ford, the Rhode Island delegate, also requested a motion to strike the
platform's entire section on international assistance, explaining, as Ron Paul has often argued, that the
United States should halt costly and ineffectual foreign aid. Again, Talent preserved the language, which,
as displayed at the committee meeting, reads:
Foreign aid should serve our national interest, an essential part of which is the peaceful development of
less advanced and vulnerable societies in critical parts of the world. Assistance should be seen as an
alternative means of keeping the peace, far less costly in both dollars and human lives than military
engagement. The economic success and political progress of former aid recipients, from Latin America
to East Asia, has justified our investment in their future. U.S. aid should be based on the model of the
Millennium Challenge Corporation, for which foreign governments must, in effect, compete for the
dollars by showing respect for the rule of law, free enterprise, and measurable results.
Romney, for his part, has expressed disdain for foreign aid in the past, once remarking, "I happen to
think it doesn't make a lot of sense for us to borrow money from the Chinese to go give to another
country for humanitarian aid." Ryan's "Path to Prosperity" budget plan doesn't mention international
development once and proposes slashing funding for entities such as the State Department and USAID
by nearly $5 billion for fiscal year 2013.
Internet freedom
Ron Paul and his son Rand joined a push to defend the Internet from government regulation back in
July, and the issue now appears to have made its way into the Republican platform. The Daily Caller has
received language that would amount to the first GOP plank on "Internet freedom." The section reads,
in part:
We will resist any effort to shift control away from the successful multi-stakeholder approach of
Internet governance and toward governance by international or other intergovernmental organizations.
Page 16 of 7
EFTA01071078
The Democrats may not be far behind, however. As Rebecca MacKinnon recently pointed out in Foreign
Policy, there is a growing bipartisan consensus in Washington "around the idea that a free and open
global Internet is in the United States' strategic interest." Earlier this month, U.S. News & World Report
noted that the Democrats might also adopt a plank supporting Internet freedom globally in order to woo
"Internet voters."
Taken together, these contentious issues highlight the divisions between the Republican Party's
Romney-style internationalists and Paul-style noninterventionists heading into the convention. The
congressman from Texas scored some successes during the platform-drafting process, including calls for
an audit of the Federal Reserve and a commission to consider a return to the gold standard. But while
Paul will get a video tribute in Tampa, his differences with Romney on foreign policy will be downplayed
-- for a few days, at least.
Page 17 of 7
EFTA01071079
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
a059f0b0b52045ac919d93f315a183c5880c67e2072170e745ac7ba8b82d4723
Bates Number
EFTA01071073
Dataset
DataSet-9
Document Type
document
Pages
7
Comments 0