Richard Fontaine
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applying to a withdrawal from Afghanistan. Biden has said that he
would bring U.S. combat troops home during his rst term but that
he remains open to a “residual presence” to conduct counterterrorism
operations—roughly the same approach as Trump’s. Senator Cory
Booker o
New Jersey has promised that as president he would imme-
diately begin a “process” to withdraw troops from Afghanistan, while
somehow ensuring that the country does not again become a safe
haven for terrorists. Pete Buttigieg, the mayor o South Bend, Indi-
ana, who served as a naval ocer in Afghanistan, has agreed that “it’s
time to end this endless war,” and yet he envisions a peace agreement
that keeps U.S. special operations forces and intelligence operatives
there. Such concessions, responsible policy though they are, stop well
short o terminating the United States’ longest war.
Even the most committed anti-interventionists continue to come up
with exceptions. The foreign policy manifesto o Senator Bernie Sanders
o Vermont, published in Foreign Aairs in June, is titled “Ending
America’s Endless War,” and yet he has acknowledged that “military
force is sometimes necessary, but always—always—as the last resort.”
His foreign policy adviser has emphasized Sanders’ commitment to
collective defense among allies and has said that genocide and mass
atrocities would “weigh heavily” on Sanders when contemplating mili-
tary action. Advocates o oshore balancing, such as the scholar John
Mearsheimer, favor using force i a regional balance o power is breaking
down, and Mearsheimer has written that his approach would not preclude
operations to halt genocides like the one that befell Rwanda in 1994.
Even at a rhetorical and intellectual level, then, the end o interven-
tion is not nearly as clear-cut as today’s politicians suggest. The reality
o being commander in chie complicates things further: on the cam-
paign trail, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and Trump
each pledged to engage in fewer foreign military adventures and redi-
rect resources toward needs at home. In oce, each reluctantly pro-
ceeded to not only continue existing wars but also launch new oensives.
The result is that, according to a Congressional Research Service
estimate, the United States has employed military force over 200
times since the end o the Cold War. Many o these operations have
taken place in or around the Middle East, including in Afghanistan,
Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Syria, and Yemen. But other, less frequently
recalled interventions have occurred elsewhere, as in Bosnia, Colom-
bia, Haiti, Kosovo, Liberia, and the Philippines. What’s more, the
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