In a sharp and welcome rebuke to President Donald Trump’s approach to foreign policy, a Senate committee voted last week in favor of more diplomacy.
Support was unanimous.
The Senate Appropriations Committee approved $51.2 billion for the State Department, the
US Agency for International Development and other overseas
assistance — more than a third
greater than the $37.6 billion the administration had requested.
Not only was its proposal disturbingly incomplete, but it shortchanged humanitarian aid, economic development, multilateral organizations and cultural exchanges. It would have undercut US leadership and left Americans more vulnerable to threats such as climate change, transnational crime and the spread of infectious diseases.
In recent months, the drawbacks of this so-called “hard power budget†have become even more glaringly apparent.
From North Korea and Afghanistan to Venezuela and Central America, the administration has been forced to recognize that US military might is necessary but not sufficient.
To maintain alliances, contain complex threats, win hearts and minds, and keep small problems from becoming big ones, soft power — as well as seasoned diplomats to wield it — is essential.
The appropriations committee’s bill attempts to fill some of those gaps. It fights threats like drug trafficking and illegal migration by restoring funding to strengthen law enforcement and governance in Central America and Colombia. It helps create new markets by supporting economic development overseas. It bolsters global stability by boosting spending to address famines, epidemics and disease. Even with the bill’s failure to restore US funding for the Green Climate Fund, its $10 million
increase over Trump’s budget still represents money well spent.
Less welcome are the committee’s well-intentioned efforts to hamstring any restructuring of the State Department with amendments to micromanage bureaus and staffing levels.
Congress has the power to do this, but it is a blunt instrument that can reduce flexibility, sap resources and disrupt policymaking. Congress itself has hailed previous efforts to prune the department’s bloated roster of mandated “special envoys†— an effort Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has pledged to step up.
The convoluted US budget process may not reach a conclusion until December, in the form of an omnibus spending bill that lands on Trump’s desk. But the Senate committee’s bipartisan vote, coming after a similar one in the House, is a timely affirmation of US leadership that should
concentrate minds both in the White House and at the State
Department.
—Bloomberg