Everything about Reagan Doctrine totally explained
The
Reagan Doctrine was a strategy orchestrated and implemented by the
United States to oppose the global influence of the
Soviet Union during the final years of the
Cold War. While the doctrine lasted less than a decade, it was a centerpiece of American foreign policy from the mid-1980s until the end of the Cold War in 1991.
Under the Reagan Doctrine, the U.S.
provided overt and covert aid to
anti-communist resistance movements in an effort to "
rollback" Soviet-backed
communist governments in
Africa,
Asia and
Latin America. The doctrine was designed to serve the dual purposes of diminishing Soviet influence in these regions of the world, while also potentially opening the door for
capitalism in nations that were largely being governed by Soviet-supported Marxist governments.
History of U.S. Presidential "doctrines"
The Reagan Doctrine followed in the post-
World War II tradition of
U.S. Presidents developing foreign policy "doctrines," which were designed to reflect these Presidents' global challenges and proposed foreign policy solutions to them.
The tradition started with the 1947
Truman Doctrine, under which the U.S. provided support to
Greece and
Turkey as part of a Cold War strategy to keep these two European nations out of the Soviet sphere of influence. The Truman Doctrine was followed by the
Eisenhower Doctrine, the
Kennedy Doctrine, the
Johnson Doctrine and the
Nixon Doctrine, all of which defined the foreign policy approaches of these respective U.S. Presidents on some of the largest global challenges of their administrations.
Origins of the Reagan Doctrine
Carter administration and Afghanistan
At least one component of the Reagan Doctrine technically pre-dated the
Reagan Presidency. In the final year of the
Carter administration, following the
December 24,
1979 Soviet invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, the U.S., along with
China,
Pakistan,
Saudi Arabia and the
United Kingdom, began providing covert military assistance to Afghanistan's
mujahideen, in an effort to drive the Soviets out of the nation, or at least raise the military and political cost of the
Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. The policy of aiding the mujahideen in their war against the Soviet occupation was originally proposed by Carter's national security adviser
Zbigniew Brzezinski, implemented by U.S. intelligence services, and enjoyed broad bipartisan political support.
Heritage Foundation initiatives
With the arrival of the
Reagan administration, the
Heritage Foundation and other conservative foreign policy experts saw a political opportunity to significantly expand Carter's Afghanistan policy into a more global "doctrine," including U.S. support to anti-communist resistance movements in Soviet-allied nations in Africa, Asia and Latin America. According to the book
Rollback, "it was the Heritage Foundation that translated theory into concrete policy. Heritage targeted nine nations for rollback:
Afghanistan,
Angola,
Cambodia,
Ethiopia,
Iran,
Laos,
Libya,
Nicaragua and
Vietnam."
Throughout the 1980s, the Heritage Foundation's foreign policy expert on the Third World,
Michael Johns, the foundation's principal Reagan Doctrine advocate, visited with resistance movements in Angola, Cambodia, Nicaragua, and other Soviet-supported nations and urged the Reagan administration to initiate or expand military and political support to them. Heritage Foundation foreign policy experts also endorsed the Reagan Doctrine in two of their
Mandate for Leadership books, which provided comprehensive policy advice to Reagan administration officials.
The result was that, in addition to Afghanistan, the Reagan Doctrine was rather quickly applied in Angola and Nicaragua, with the U.S. providing military support to the
UNITA movement in Angola and the "
contras" in Nicaragua. Speaking to the Heritage Foundation in October 1989, UNITA leader
Jonas Savimbi called the Heritage Foundation's efforts "a source of great support. No Angolan will forget your efforts. You have come to
Jamba, and you've taken our message to Congress and the Administration." U.S. aid to UNITA began to flow overtly after Congress repealed the
Clark Amendment, a long-standing legislative prohibition on military aid to UNITA. Savimbi told the Heritage Foundation in 1989 that the amendment's repeal was "very much associated with your efforts. This foundation has been a source of great support."
Following these victories, Johns and the Heritage Foundation urged further expanding the Reagan Doctrine to Ethiopia, where they argued that the
Ethiopian famine was a product of the military and
agricultural policies of Ethiopia's Soviet-supported
Mengistu Haile Mariam government. Johns and Heritage also argued that Mengistu's decision to permit a Soviet naval and air presence on the
Red Sea ports of
Eritrea represented a strategic challenge to U.S. security interests in the
Middle East and
North Africa.
Heritage and the Reagan administration also sought to apply the Reagan Doctrine in Cambodia, but faced the dilemma that the largest resistance movement fighting Cambodia's communist government was comprised largely of members of the former
Khmer Rouge regime, whose human rights record was among the worst of the 20th century. Johns, however, returned from a visit inside Cambodia, urging the Reagan administration to support a smaller Cambodian resistance movement, a coalition of the
Khmer People's National Liberation Front, known as the KPNLF and then run by
Son Sann, and the
Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea, known as the CGDK and run by
Norodom Sihanouk. One of the few Americans permitted access to the CGDK/KPNLF forces inside Cambodia, Johns argued that U.S. aid to the CGDK/KPNLF would strengthen the coalition as a non-communist, democratic political alternative in the country.
Reagan administration advocates
Within the Reagan administration, the doctrine was quickly embraced by nearly all of Reagan's top national security and foreign policy officials, including
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger,
U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, and a series of Reagan National Security advisers including
John Poindexter,
Frank Carlucci and
Colin Powell.
Reagan himself was a vocal proponent of the policy. Seeking to expand Congressional support for the doctrine in his February 1985
State of the Union Address, Reagan said: "We must not break faith with those who are risking their lives...on every continent, from Afghanistan to Nicaragua ... to defy Soviet aggression and secure rights which have been ours from birth. Support for freedom fighters is self-defense."
As part of his effort to gain Congressional support for the Nicaraguan
contras, Reagan labeled the contras "the moral equivalent of our founding fathers," which was controversial because the contras, while fighting a communist dictatorship, had sometimes shown a disregard for
human rights. There also were allegations that some members of the contra leadership were involved in
cocaine trafficking.
However, relative to the large scale atrocities allegedly committed by communist regimes that the Reagan administration was endeavoring to remove, these losses were infinitesimally small.. Reagan and other conservative advocates of the Reagan Doctrine advocates also argued that the doctrine served U.S. foreign policy and strategic objectives and was a moral imperative against the former
Soviet Union, which Reagan, his advisers and supporters labeled an "
evil empire."
Other advocates
Other early conservative advocates for the Reagan Doctrine included influential conservative activist
Grover Norquist, who ultimately became a registered UNITA lobbyist and an economic adviser to Savimbi's UNITA movement in Angola, and former Reagan speechwriter and current
U.S. Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, who made several secret visits with the mujahideen in Afghanistan and returned with glowing reports of their bravery against the Soviet occupation. Rohrabacher was led to Afghanistan by his contact with the mujahideen, Jack Wheeler.
Phrase's origin
In 1985, as U.S. support was flowing to the mujahideen, Savimbi's UNITA, and the Nicaraguan contras, columnist
Charles Krauthammer, in an essay for
Time magazine, labeled the policy the "Reagan Doctrine," and the name stuck.
"Rollback" replaces "containment"
The Reagan Doctrine was especially significant because it represented a substantial shift in the post-World War II foreign policy of the U.S. Prior to the Reagan Doctrine, U.S. foreign policy in the Cold War was rooted in "
containment," as originally defined by
George F. Kennan,
John Foster Dulles and other post-World War II U.S. foreign policy experts.
Although a similar policy of "rollback" had been considered on a few occasions during the Cold War, the U.S. government, fearing an escalation of the Cold War and possible
nuclear conflict, chose not to confront the Soviet Union directly. With the Reagan Doctrine, those fears were set aside and the U.S. began to openly confront Soviet-supported governments through support of rebel movements in the doctrine's targeted countries.
One perceived benefit of the Reagan Doctrine was the relatively low cost of supporting guerilla forces compared to the Soviet Union's expenses in propping up client states. Another benefit was the lack of direct involvement of American troops, which allowed the U.S. to confront Soviet client states without sustaining casualties.
Covert implementation
As the Reagan administration set about implementing the Heritage Foundation plan in Afghanistan, Angola, and Nicaragua, it first attempted to do so covertly, not as part of official policy. "The Reagan government's initial implementation of the Heritage plan was done covertly," according to the book
Rollback, "following the longstanding custom that containment can be overt but rollback should be covert." Ultimately, however, the administration supported the policy more openly.
Congressional votes
While the doctrine benefited from strong support from the Reagan administration, the Heritage Foundation and several influential Members of Congress, many votes on critical funding for resistance movements, especially the Nicaraguan contras, were extremely close, making the Reagan Doctrine one of the more contentious American political issues of the late 1980s.
Reagan Doctrine and the Cold War's end
As arms flowed to the contras, Savimbi's UNITA and the mujahideen, the Reagan Doctrine's advocates argued that the doctrine was yielding constructive results for U.S. interests and global democracy.
In Nicaragua, pressure from the Contras swayed the majority of Nicaraguan voters against the
Sandinistas in the 1990 election. In Afghanistan, the mujahideen bled the Soviet Union's military, fostered discontent among the families of Soviet soldiers sent to fight the long-running war, and stirred up nationalist feeling in the
Islamic-populated
Republics of the Soviet Union. In Angola, Savimbi's resistance ultimately led to a decision by the Soviet Union and
Cuba to bring their troops and military advisors home from Angola as part of a negotiated settlement.
All of these developments were Reagan Doctrine victories, the doctrine's advocates argue, laying the ground for the ultimate collapse of the Soviet Union.
Thatcher's view
Among others,
Margaret Thatcher, former
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, has credited the Reagan Doctrine with aiding the end of the Cold War. In December 1997, Thatcher said that the Reagan Doctrine "proclaimed that the truce with communism was over. The West would henceforth regard no area of the world as destined to forego its liberty simply because the Soviets claimed it to be within their sphere of influence. We would fight a battle of ideas against communism, and we'd give material support to those who fought to recover their nations from tyranny."
Death of Savimbi and Contra leader
While resistance movement leaders in Afghanistan, Angola, and Nicaragua were strengthened considerably by U.S. military support, their role as leaders of these anti-communist movements also made them understandable enemies of the Soviet Union and the Soviet-allied governments they were fighting. The result was that these resistance movement leaders faced repeated assassination attempts, and were prime military targets in the wars in their respective countries.
In February 1991, following a ceasefire and while negotiations were taking place for possible elections in Nicaragua between the
Sandinista government and the contras, the contras' top military commander,
Enrique Bermúdez, was shot and killed by an assassin in
Managua. Bermudez' murder briefly ended the Nicaraguan ceasefire, as contra fighters resumed fighting.
In February 2002, UNITA's Jonas Savimbi was killed by Angolan military forces in an ambush in eastern Angola. Savimbi was succeeded by a series of UNITA leaders, but the movement was so closely associated with Savimbi that it never recovered the political and military clout it held at the height of its influence in the late 1980s.
End of Reagan Doctrine
The Reagan Doctrine, while closely associated with the foreign policy of
Ronald Reagan and his administration, continued into the administration of Reagan's successor,
George H. W. Bush, who assumed the U.S. Presidency in January 1989. But Bush's Presidency featured the final year of the Cold War and the
Gulf War, and the Reagan Doctrine soon faded from U.S. policy as the Cold War began to end.
In Nicaragua, the
Contra War ended after the Sandinista government, facing military and political pressure, agreed to free and fair elections, in which the contras' political wing participated, in 1990. In Angola, an agreement in 1989 met Savimbi's demand for the removal of Soviet, Cuban and other military troops and advisers from Angola. Also in 1989, in Afghanistan, Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev labeled the war against the U.S.-supported mujahideen a "bleeding wound" and ended the Soviet occupation of the country.
Criticism
Overextending U.S. foreign policy
Also, while the Reagan Doctrine enjoyed strong support from conservative think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation and the
American Enterprise Institute, the libertarian-oriented
Cato Institute opposed the Reagan Doctrine, arguing in 1986 that "most Third World struggles take place in arenas and involve issues far removed from legitimate American security needs. U.S. involvement in such conflicts expands the republic's already overextended commitments without achieving any significant prospective gains. Instead of draining Soviet military and financial resources, we end up dissipating our own."
Even Cato, however, conceded that the Reagan Doctrine had "fired the enthusiasm of the conservative movement in the United States as no foreign policy issue has done in decades." While opposing the Reagan Doctrine as an official governmental policy, Cato instead urged Congress to remove the legal barriers prohibiting private organizations and citizens from supporting these resistance movements.
Drug allegations
Finally, there was criticism by Reagan Doctrine opponents that, because some of the resistance movements supported by the Reagan Doctrine were allegedly involved in drug trafficking and human rights abuses, that they didn't hold the moral or ethical values that warranted U.S. support. The
Progressive Review and other contra opponents alleged, for instance, that the Nicaraguan contra leadership was involved in the trafficking of cocaine.
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