By Mehdi Hasan
Bernie Sanders, now the most popular politician in the United States
by a country mile, has long been obsessed with breaking up big banks
and getting Medicare for all Americans. He can speak for hours about the
evils of income inequality and the grotesquerie of the “billionaire
class.”
On foreign policy? Not so much.
Yet this
week, the independent senator from Vermont finally delivered his major
foreign affairs speech at Westminster College, in Fulton, Missouri, part
of the Green Foundation Lecture series. Winston Churchill gave his “Sinews of Peace” speech
at Westminster College — in which he famously introduced the world to
the concept of “The Iron Curtain” — as part of this lecture series in
1946. Mikhail Gorbachev’s memorable 1992 account
of how the Cold War ended was also part of this series. Thus, on the
basis of his appearance in Fulton, you might say that Sanders is now
playing in the Foreign Policy Big Leagues.
Beforehand, he sat down with me to talk through his thinking on global affairs.
“I think what we have to do is take a
hard look at where we are today in terms of foreign policy, and where we
have been for many years,” Sanders tells me when I go to meet with him
in his Senate office in Washington, D.C. the day before his big speech
in Missouri. “And I think the main point to be made is that no country,
not the United States or any other country, can do it alone. That if
we’re going to address the very deep and complicated international
issues that exist, we need to do it in cooperation.”
The senator is tieless, in a crumpled
navy suit and light blue shirt. His shock of white hair is, as usual,
unruly. He looks distracted and exhausted, perhaps the result of having
spent the previous week pitching his landmark Medicare for All single-payer bill to Congress and to the country.
“Many of my colleagues, Republican
colleagues, here in the Senate, for example, disparage the United
Nations,” he says, sitting across the table from me, in front of a wall
of Vermont tourism posters. “While clearly the United Nations could be
more effective, it is imperative that we strengthen international
institutions, because at the end of the day, while it may not be sexy,
it may not be glamorous, it may not allow for great soundbites, simply
the idea … of people coming together and talking and arguing is a lot
better than countries going to war.”
I ask him how such rhetoric differs
from past statements in defense of the U.N. and of international
cooperation offered by leading Democrats, such as Barack Obama, Hillary
Clinton, and John Kerry.
“Excuse me.” Sanders doesn’t like to be interrupted. “Let me just talk a little bit about where I want to go.”
The senator makes clear that
“unilateralism, the belief that we can simply overthrow governments that
we don’t want, that has got to be re-examined.” After referencing the
Iraq War — “one of the great foreign policy blunders in the history of
this country” — the senator touches on another historic blunder which,
to his credit, few of his fellow senators would be willing to discuss,
let alone critique. “In 1953, the United States, with the British,
overthrew [Mohammed] Mossadegh, the prime minister of Iran – and this
was to benefit British oil interests,” he reminds me. “The result was
the shah came into power, who was a very ruthless man, and the result of
that was that we had the Iranian Revolution, which takes us to where we
are right now.”
Does he regret not speaking with such
passion, bluntness, and insight on international affairs during his
failed primary campaign against Clinton? He shakes his head. “No, I
think we ran the kind of campaign that we wanted to run.” There’s a
pause. “But I think that foreign policy is clearly very, very
important.”
During the Democratic presidential primaries, politicians and pundits alike agreed that Sanders had a foreign policy deficit. “Foreign policy,” wrote David Ignatius,
the Washington Post’s foreign affairs doyen, “is the hole in Sanders’s
political doughnut.” Patrick Leahy, Sanders’s fellow senator from
Vermont, was only a tad more diplomatic in an interview with the New York Times. “It’s not the subject he gravitates to, that’s fair to say,” acknowledged Leahy.
A long-promised set piece speech on foreign policy during the campaign never came, and the Sanders campaign website lacked a foreign policy page
for the first few months of his candidacy. Some of the figures
identified by the senator as outside advisers on national security
issues later claimed to hardly know him.
His discomfort with the topic is
palpable, but the truth is that the 76-year-old Sanders is far from a
foreign policy neophyte. In the 1980s, as mayor of Burlington, Vermont,
he was an outspoken critic
of U.S. interventions in Latin America, becoming the highest-ranking
elected U.S. official to visit Nicaragua and meet with President Daniel
Ortega (which earned him the soubriquet “Sandernista”). He even went on honeymoon to the Soviet Union in 1988, as part of his effort to establish a sister city program between Burlington and Yaroslavl.
Since 1991, Sanders has served in
Congress, as a member of the House and then the Senate, debating and
voting on military action, foreign treaties, trade deals, arms sales,
international aid, and climate change agreements. Few critics have
paused to consider the fact that a President Sanders would have arrived
in the White House in January 2017 with far more foreign policy
experience under his belt than Obama, George W. Bush, and Bill Clinton.
(Oh, and of course former reality TV star Donald J. Trump.)
Nevertheless the impression persists
that Sanders is out of his depth when it comes to the outside world.
Perhaps in anticipation of another presidential bid in three years time,
the Vermont senator has been taking steps to correct that impression.
So far this year, Sanders has hired Matt Duss,
a respected foreign affairs analyst and former president of the
Foundation for Middle East Peace (FMEP), as his foreign policy adviser,
and has given speeches at the liberal Jewish lobbying group, J Street,
where he condemned
“Israel’s continued occupation of Palestinian territories” as being
“contrary to fundamental American values,” and at the centrist Carnegie
Endowment of International Peace, where he rebuked Russian President Vladimir Putin for “trying to weaken the transatlantic alliance.”
Last week, my colleague Glenn Greenwald penned a column in The Intercept headlined, “The Clinton Book Tour Is Largely Ignoring the Vital Role of Endless War in the 2016 Election Result.” Greenwald
argued that Clinton’s “advocacy of multiple wars and other military
actions” pushed some swing voters into the arms of both Donald Trump and
third-party candidates, such as Jill Stein. I ask Sanders whether he
agrees with this analysis.
“I mean, that’s a whole other issue. And I don’t know the answer to that.”
I persist. Surely he’d concede that foreign policy was a factor in Clinton’s defeat?
He doesn’t budge. “I want to talk about my speech, not about Hillary Clinton.”
So foreign policy plays no role in elections?
“The answer is, I don’t know,” he
responds wearily. “You can argue that somebody would say, ‘Well Bernie
Sanders was too soft on defense, I’m not gonna vote for him because he’s
not prepared to bomb every country in the world.’ Do you know how many
voters I’ve lost because of that? We don’t know, that’s speculation.”
(Not quite: Greenwald cited an academic study
published earlier this year which argued “that had the U.S. fought
fewer wars, or at least experienced fewer casualties, Clinton would have
… won the election.”)
I ask him if there is a foreign policy
equivalent to Medicare for All — that is, a radical progressive policy
proposal that Sanders intends to campaign on and make mainstream.
“I wouldn’t look at it like that,” he
tells me. “Anyone who thinks there is a simple solution in dealing with
all of the horrific and longstanding conflicts in the world would be
mistaken … Where we’ve got to be radical is to understand we cannot
continue with simply using military as a means of addressing foreign
policy issues.”
Despite once having hung a picture of legendary antiwar activist Eugene Debs
in his congressional office, Sanders is not a pacifist. He backed
NATO’s air campaign in Kosovo in 1999 and the U.S.-led invasion and
occupation of Afghanistan in 2001. Yet he opposed the Iraq War and voted against
the arming and training of Syrian rebels. So, I wonder, does he have
his own test that has to be met before the United States should use
force?
The senator makes it clear to me that,
in his view, military action should be a last resort, except in cases
of genocide. “I think there has to be a legitimate understanding that
American interests are being threatened. Obviously if someone was going
to wage war against the United States, attack the United States, there
is very good reason to respond.” He continues: “When you’re looking at
genocidal situations, where people are being slaughtered right and left …
we need international peacekeeping force to address that.”
Earlier this week, the president of the United States made what some might call a genocidal threat
at the U.N. in New York: “If [the U.S.] is forced to defend itself or
its allies, we will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea.”
I remind the senator that both Obama and Trump
came to office pledging to meet with their North Korean counterparts —
yet Obama never did while Trump is now busy mocking Kim Jong-un as “Rocket Man.” Does Sanders think a meeting between the two heads of state would be of value?
The senator says he would not object
to “face-to-face meetings done in good faith” — rather than as cynical
photo opportunities — and says that “in general, discussions and
face-to-face meetings” are worthy of support.
So, to be clear, would he support a
U.S. president sitting down with the leader of North Korea to try and
resolve the nuclear crisis? He shrugs. “Could I see that? Yeah, I could
see that, yeah.”
One foreign policy issue, however, on which Sanders has attracted criticism
from members of his own left-wing base is the Israel-Palestine
conflict. Some pro-Palestinian progressives have accused him of giving
Israel a pass. In an interview in April, for example, Sanders dismissed the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement; he also signed his name to a controversial letter attacking the U.N. for having an “anti-Israel agenda.”
Nonetheless, it is undeniable that in recent years the Vermont senator, who is Jewish and briefly lived on a kibbutz
in Israel in the 1960s, has taken a more pro-Palestinian position on
the conflict and, specifically, against the right-wing government of
Benjamin Netanyahu. “There comes a time when … we are going to have to
say that Netanyahu is not right all of the time,” he told Clinton during a Democratic primary debate in April 2016.
These days, unlike other members of Congress, Sanders has no qualms about identifying, and decrying,
the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. But does he accept
that the United States is complicit in Israel’s occupation, through its
military aid and arms sales? And does he also accept, therefore, that
the occupation of the Palestinian territories will never end until the
U.S. stops arming and funding the Jewish state?
“Certainly the United States is
complicit, but it’s not to say … that Israel is the only party at
fault,” he tells me. However, he adds, “in terms of Israeli-Palestinian
relations the United States has got to play a much more even-handed
role. Clearly that is not the case right now.”
Would he, therefore, ever consider voting to reduce U.S. aid to Israel — worth at least $3bn per annum — or U.S. arms sales to the Israeli military?
“The U.S. funding plays a very
important role, and I would love to see people in the Middle East sit
down with the United States government and figure out how U.S. aid can
bring people together, not just result in an arms war in that area. So I
think there is extraordinary potential for the United States to help
the Palestinian people rebuild Gaza and other areas. At the same time,
demand that Israel, in their own interests in a way, work with other
countries on environmental issues.” He then, finally, answers my
question: “So the answer is yes.”
It is — by the depressingly low
standard of modern U.S. politics — a remarkable and, dare I say it,
radical response from Sanders. “Aid to Israel in Congress and the
pro-Israel community has been sacrosanct,” the Jewish Telegraphic Agency noted earlier this year, “and no president has seriously proposed cutting it since Gerald Ford in the mid-1970s.”
Jeremy Corbyn, the left-wing Labour Party leader in the United Kingdom, who is constantly compared to Sanders, grabbed headlines in May after urging Britons in a speech,
to “be brave enough to admit the war on terror is simply not working”
and to draw “connections between wars our government has supported or
fought in other countries and terrorism here at home.” In the past, the
Labour leader has labelled NATO a “danger to world peace” and called for engagement with groups, such as the Irish Republican Army, Hezbollah, and Hamas.
You might say Corbyn is a genuine
radical on foreign policy. Is the more cautious Sanders willing to match
the Labour leader’s rhetoric on terrorism and the West’s response to
terrorism? Does he, for example, think the United States has lost the
so-called war on terror?
“Well, no, that’s too general of a
question,” he replies dismissively. “I think you best deal with
terrorism by trying to understand the root causes of those problems: the
massive poverty that exists, the lack of education that exists, that
when you drop a drone, for example, that kills innocent men, women, and
child, that it only forms more antagonism toward the United States.”
I ask about the role of Saudi Arabia
in allegedly supporting and funding terrorism. Fifteen of the 19
hijackers, lest we forget, were Saudi citizens. So is it an ally or
enemy of the United States?
“It is not just that many of the 9/11
bombers came from Saudi Arabia,” he says, “what I think is more
significant is their … continuing to fund madrasas and to spread an
extremely radical Wahhabi doctrine in many countries around the world.
And they are funding these mosques, they’re funding the madrasas, and
they are fomenting a lot of hatred.”
Sanders wants the United States to
pivot away from blind, uncritical support for the Gulf kingdom. He even
seems to suggest that the United States should embrace the Saudis’
mortal enemy: the Iranians.
So could this
be his foreign policy equivalent of Medicare for All? Trying to end
almost four decades of hostility and mistrust between the United States
of America and the Islamic Republic of Iran? Without firing a shot? It
would be a dramatic and historic shift in approach. During the
presidential primaries, Sanders was attacked for suggesting that the U.S. should “move as aggressively as we can to normalize relations with Iran.”
Yet, almost two years later, he isn’t
afraid to make the case again. “I think that one of the areas that we
have got to rethink, in terms of American foreign policy, is our
position vis-a-vis Iran and Saudi Arabia,” he tells me, leaning forward
in his chair. “For whatever reason — and I think we know some of the
reasons having to do with a three-letter word called oil — the United
States has kind of looked aside at the fact that Saudi Arabia is an
incredibly anti-democratic country and has played a very bad role
internationally, but we have sided with them time and time and time
again, and yet Iran, which just held elections, Iran whose young people
really want to reach out to the West, we are … continuing to put them
down.”
While Sanders has “legitimate concerns
… about Iran’s foreign policy” he wants a more “even-handed” approach
from the United States to the “Iran and Saudi conflict.”
So I try to pin him down on the nature
of the U.S.-Saudi relationship and ask again: Does he or does he not
consider Saudi Arabia to be ally of the United States in the so-called
war on terror?
He pauses. “Do I consider them an
ally? I consider them to be an undemocratic country that has supported
terrorism around the world, it has funded terrorism, so I can’t … No,
they are not an ally of the United States.”
Wait, maybe this
is the foreign policy Medicare For All — downgrading diplomatic ties
with one of the world’s worst regimes. Distancing Washington from
Riyadh. But could Sanders really pull it off? Help persuade his fellow
senators, on both sides of the aisle to depart from the decades-long
bipartisan consensus on Saudi Arabia as a key U.S. ally? In June, the
senator joined four Republicans and 42 Democrats to try and block a $510
million sale of precision-guided munitions to Saudi Arabia. They were
defeated — but by only six votes.
Greeted by a cheering crowd of students Thursday and awarded an
honorary degree by the college in advance of his speech, a stern Sanders
denounced the
global war on terror as “a disaster for the American people” because it
“responds to terrorists by giving them exactly what they want.”
He also offered a rousing defense of Obama’s key foreign affairs
legacy: the Iran nuclear deal. “We must protect this deal,” Sanders told
his audience, citing the nuclear agreement as an example of “real
leadership” on the part of the United States.
Over the course of an hour on Thursday, the independent senator
offered an unashamedly progressive, diplomacy-oriented, non-militarized
vision of U.S. foreign policy in the 21st century: “The goal is not for
the United States to dominate the world. … Our goal should be global
engagement based on partnership, rather than dominance.
At a time when the U.S. president is beating the drums of war, threatening to “totally destroy” North Korea and tear up
the Iran nuclear deal, it is both refreshing and admirable to hear a
leading U.S. politician speak in this direct way. Sanders tells me that
he wants a “serious discussion about foreign policy” — which,
shamefully, is something his Democratic colleagues in the Senate have
yet to agree to. For example, he points to a vote in the Senate
on Monday, which authorized a whopping $80 billion annual increase in
Pentagon spending. “Is that really a wise investment?” he asks.
“I dare say,” he adds acidly, “that
most of the people who voted for this huge increase in military spending
really would not be able to tell you exactly why it is needed.”
Only four Senate Democrats joined Sanders to vote against the bill. Why does he think the rest of them voted for it?
“You’ll have to ask them,” is the curt rejoinder.
Some of his critics on the left, however, don’t think Sanders goes far enough. Writing in July, Jacobin’s Branko Marcetic
castigated Sanders over his “relative silence on Obama’s foreign
policy” and his “fairly conventional foreign policy thinking throughout
his Washington career.” Such critics tend to want to see a
full-throated, Noam Chomsky-style denunciation of U.S. imperialism from
Sanders — and they want to see it yesterday.
Interestingly, in 1985, Sanders invited Chomsky to speak in Burlington City Hall, introducing
him to the crowd as “a very vocal and important voice in the wilderness
of intellectual life in America” and saying he was “delighted to
welcome a person who I think we’re all very proud of.” In 2016, when I interviewed
Chomsky for my Al Jazeera English show, UpFront, the veteran
philosopher and foreign policy critic heaped praise on Sanders as a
“decent, honest” politician with “the best policies.”
I ask Sanders if, three decades later,
he still agrees with Chomsky’s blistering critique of U.S. foreign
policy across the board, including his provocative description of the
United States as a “rogue state.”
Sanders cuts me off before I can
finish my question. “OK, I get it. Noam Chomsky has played an
extraordinarily important role. I am a United States senator. We live in
different worlds.” He quickly — and conveniently — changes the subject.
“Bottom line is I think we need to rethink foreign policy … and that
means dealing with issues like income and wealth inequality, which is
not only an American issue, it is a horrific global issue.”
Sanders is
now in his element and on a roll. “We have six of the wealthiest people
who have more wealth than the bottom half of the world’s population. We
need to deal with the issue of climate change, because if we don’t get
our act together internationally on that, we may not have much of a
planet left for our children and our grandchildren.”
Let’s be clear: On foreign policy,
Sanders does not go as far in a left-wing direction as his old friend
Noam Chomsky or even his U.K. counterpart Jeremy Corbyn. But his renewed
interest in foreign policy and his willingness to break with the
established consensus could be among his most radical acts yet.
“Where we’ve got to be radical,” Sanders tells me, “is to understand
that we cannot continue with simply using military as a means of
addressing foreign policy issues. Where we have got to be radical and
forceful, in an unprecedented way, is to force debate and discussion on
the causes of international conflict – and certainly, we have not been
doing that, and we need more American leadership to do that.”
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