<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<StrategicPlanCore StartDate="2002-09-17" EndDate="" Date="2007-09-10"
><Submitter FirstName="Owen" LastName="Ambur" PhoneNumber="" EmailAddress="Owen.Ambur@verizon.net"
/><Source
>http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss.pdf</Source
><Organization
><Name
>National Security Strategy of the United States of America</Name
><Acronym
>NSS</Acronym
></Organization
><Value
><Name
/></Value
><Goal
><SequenceIndicator
>I</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>International Strategy</Name
><Description
>Political and economic freedom, peaceful relations with other&#xD;states, and respect for human dignity.</Description
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Human Dignity</Name
><Description
>Champion aspirations for human dignity</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Alliances</Name
><Description
>Strengthen alliances to defeat global&#xD;terrorism and work to prevent attacks&#xD;against us and our friends</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Regional Conflicts</Name
><Description
>Work with others to defuse regional conflicts</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Weapons of Mass Destruction</Name
><Description
>Prevent our enemies from threatening us,&#xD;our allies, and our friends, with weapons of&#xD;mass destruction</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>5</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Free Markets and Trade</Name
><Description
>Ignite a new era of global economic growth&#xD;through free markets and free trade</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>6</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Democracy and Open Societies</Name
><Description
>Expand the circle of development by&#xD;opening societies and building the&#xD;infrastructure of democracy</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>7</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Cooperative Action</Name
><Description
>Develop agendas for cooperative action with&#xD;other main centers of global power</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>8</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>National Security Transformation</Name
><Description
>Transform America’s national security&#xD;institutions to meet the challenges and&#xD;opportunities of the twenty-first century</Description
></Objective
><OtherInformation
>The United States possesses unprecedented—&#xD;and unequaled—strength and influence in the&#xD;world. Sustained by faith in the principles of&#xD;liberty, and the value of a free society, this position&#xD;comes with unparalleled responsibilities, obligations,&#xD;and opportunity. The great strength of this&#xD;nation must be used to promote a balance of&#xD;power that favors freedom.&#xD;For most of the twentieth century, the world&#xD;was divided by a great struggle over ideas: destructive&#xD;totalitarian visions versus freedom and equality.&#xD;That great struggle is over. The militant visions&#xD;of class, nation, and race which promised utopia&#xD;and delivered misery have been defeated and&#xD;discredited. America is now threatened less by&#xD;conquering states than we are by failing ones.&#xD;We are menaced less by fleets and armies than by&#xD;catastrophic technologies in the hands of the&#xD;embittered few.We must defeat these threats to&#xD;our Nation, allies, and friends.&#xD;This is also a time of opportunity for America.&#xD;We will work to translate this moment of influence&#xD;into decades of peace, prosperity, and liberty.&#xD;The U.S. national security strategy will be based&#xD;on a distinctly American internationalism that&#xD;reflects the union of our values and our national&#xD;interests. The aim of this strategy is to help make&#xD;the world not just safer but better.</OtherInformation
></Goal
><Goal
><SequenceIndicator
>II</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Human Dignity</Name
><Description
>Champion Aspirations for Human Dignity</Description
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Voice and Vote</Name
><Description
>Speak out honestly about violations of the&#xD;nonnegotiable demands of human dignity&#xD;using our voice and vote in international&#xD;institutions to advance freedom</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Foreign Aid</Name
><Description
>Use our foreign aid to promote freedom and&#xD;support those who struggle non-violently&#xD;for it, ensuring that nations moving toward&#xD;democracy are rewarded for the steps they take</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Bilateral Relations</Name
><Description
>Make freedom and the development of&#xD;democratic institutions key themes in our&#xD;bilateral relations, seeking solidarity and&#xD;cooperation from other democracies while&#xD;we press governments that deny human&#xD;rights to move toward a better future</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Freedom of Religion and Conscience</Name
><Description
>Take special efforts to promote freedom of&#xD;religion and conscience and defend it from&#xD;encroachment by repressive governments</Description
></Objective
><OtherInformation
>In pursuit of our goals, our first imperative is&#xD;to clarify what we stand for: the United States&#xD;must defend liberty and justice because these&#xD;principles are right and true for all people everywhere.&#xD;No nation owns these aspirations, and no&#xD;nation is exempt from them. Fathers and mothers&#xD;in all societies want their children to be educated&#xD;and to live free from poverty and violence. No&#xD;people on earth yearn to be oppressed, aspire to&#xD;servitude, or eagerly await the midnight knock of&#xD;the secret police.&#xD;America must stand firmly for the nonnegotiable&#xD;demands of human dignity: the rule of law;&#xD;limits on the absolute power of the state; free&#xD;speech; freedom of worship; equal justice; respect&#xD;for women; religious and ethnic tolerance; and&#xD;respect for private property.&#xD;These demands can be met in many ways.&#xD;America’s constitution has served us well.&#xD;Many other nations, with different histories and&#xD;cultures, facing different circumstances, have&#xD;successfully incorporated these core principles&#xD;into their own systems of governance. History has&#xD;not been kind to those nations which ignored or&#xD;flouted the rights and aspirations of their people.&#xD;America’s experience as a great multi-ethnic&#xD;democracy affirms our conviction that people of&#xD;many heritages and faiths can live and prosper in&#xD;peace. Our own history is a long struggle to live&#xD;up to our ideals. But even in our worst moments,&#xD;the principles enshrined in the Declaration of&#xD;Independence were there to guide us. As a result,&#xD;America is not just a stronger, but is a freer and&#xD;more just society.&#xD;Today, these ideals are a lifeline to lonely&#xD;defenders of liberty. And when openings arrive,&#xD;we can encourage change—as we did in central&#xD;and eastern Europe between 1989 and 1991,&#xD;or in Belgrade in 2000.When we see democratic&#xD;processes take hold among our friends in Taiwan&#xD;or in the Republic of Korea, and see elected&#xD;leaders replace generals in Latin America and&#xD;Africa, we see examples of how authoritarian&#xD;systems can evolve, marrying local history and&#xD;traditions with the principles we all cherish.&#xD;Embodying lessons from our past and using&#xD;the opportunity we have today, the national security&#xD;strategy of the United States must start from these&#xD;core beliefs and look outward for possibilities to&#xD;expand liberty.</OtherInformation
></Goal
><Goal
><SequenceIndicator
>III</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Alliances</Name
><Description
>Strengthen Alliances to Defeat&#xD;Global Terrorism and Work to Prevent&#xD;Attacks Against Us and Our Friends</Description
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Destroy Terrorist Organizations 1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Direct and Continuous Action</Name
><Description
>Direct and continuous action using all the&#xD;elements of national and international&#xD;power. Our immediate focus will be those&#xD;terrorist organizations of global reach and&#xD;any terrorist or state sponsor of terrorism&#xD;which attempts to gain or use weapons of&#xD;mass destruction (WMD) or their precursors.</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Destroy Terrorist Organizations 2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Identify and Destroy Threats</Name
><Description
>Defend the United States, the American&#xD;people, and our interests at home and&#xD;abroad by identifying and destroying the&#xD;threat before it reaches our borders. While&#xD;the United States will constantly strive to&#xD;enlist the support of the international&#xD;community, we will not hesitate to act alone,&#xD;if necessary, to exercise our right of self defense&#xD;by acting preemptively against such&#xD;terrorists, to prevent them from doing harm&#xD;against our people and our country.</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Destroy Terrorist Organizations 3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Deny Support</Name
><Description
>Deny further sponsorship, support,&#xD;and sanctuary to terrorists by convincing&#xD;or compelling states to accept their&#xD;sovereign responsibilities.</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>War of Ideas 1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Influence</Name
><Description
>Use the full influence of the United States,&#xD;and work closely with allies and friends,&#xD;to make clear that all acts of terrorism are&#xD;illegitimate so that terrorism will be viewed&#xD;in the same light as slavery, piracy, or&#xD;genocide: behavior that no respectable&#xD;government can condone or support and&#xD;all must oppose.</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>War of Ideas 2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Support Modern, Moderate Government</Name
><Description
>Support moderate and modern&#xD;government, especially in the Muslim&#xD;world, to ensure that the conditions and&#xD;ideologies that promote terrorism do not&#xD;find fertile ground in any nation.</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>War of Ideas 3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Diminish Causes of Terrorism</Name
><Description
>Diminish the underlying conditions&#xD;that spawn terrorism by enlisting the&#xD;international community to focus its efforts&#xD;and resources on areas most at risk.</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>War of Ideas 4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Public Diplomacy</Name
><Description
>Use effective public diplomacy to promote&#xD;the free flow of information and ideas to&#xD;kindle the hopes and aspirations of freedom&#xD;of those in societies ruled by the sponsors of&#xD;global terrorism.</Description
></Objective
><OtherInformation
>The United States of America is fighting&#xD;a war against terrorists of global reach. The&#xD;enemy is not a single political regime or person&#xD;or religion or ideology. The enemy is terrorism—&#xD;premeditated, politically motivated violence&#xD;perpetrated against innocents.&#xD;In many regions, legitimate grievances prevent&#xD;the emergence of a lasting peace. Such grievances&#xD;deserve to be, and must be, addressed within a&#xD;political process. But no cause justifies terror. The&#xD;United States will make no concessions to terrorist&#xD;demands and strike no deals with them.We make&#xD;no distinction between terrorists and those who&#xD;knowingly harbor or provide aid to them.&#xD;The struggle against global terrorism is different&#xD;from any other war in our history. It will be fought&#xD;on many fronts against a particularly elusive&#xD;enemy over an extended period of time. Progress&#xD;will come through the persistent accumulation of&#xD;successes—some seen, some unseen.&#xD;Today our enemies have seen the results of&#xD;what civilized nations can, and will, do against&#xD;regimes that harbor, support, and use terrorism to&#xD;achieve their political goals. Afghanistan has been&#xD;liberated; coalition forces continue to hunt down&#xD;the Taliban and al-Qaida. But it is not only this&#xD;battlefield on which we will engage terrorists.&#xD;Thousands of trained terrorists remain at large&#xD;with cells in North America, South America,&#xD;Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and across Asia.&#xD;Our priority will be first to disrupt and destroy&#xD;terrorist organizations of global reach and attack&#xD;their leadership; command, control, and communications;&#xD;material support; and finances. This will&#xD;have a disabling effect upon the terrorists’ ability&#xD;to plan and operate.  &#xD;We will continue to encourage our regional&#xD;partners to take up a coordinated effort that&#xD;isolates the terrorists. Once the regional campaign&#xD;localizes the threat to a particular state, we will&#xD;help ensure the state has the military, law enforcement,&#xD;political, and financial tools necessary to&#xD;finish the task.&#xD;The United States will continue to work with&#xD;our allies to disrupt the financing of terrorism. We&#xD;will identify and block the sources of funding for&#xD;terrorism, freeze the assets of terrorists and those&#xD;who support them, deny terrorists access to the&#xD;international financial system, protect legitimate&#xD;charities from being abused by terrorists, and&#xD;prevent the movement of terrorists’ assets through&#xD;alternative financial networks.&#xD;However, this campaign need not be sequential&#xD;to be effective, the cumulative effect across all&#xD;regions will help achieve the results we seek.&#xD;While we recognize that our best defense is a&#xD;good offense, we are also strengthening America’s&#xD;homeland security to protect against and deter attack.&#xD;This Administration has proposed the largest&#xD;government reorganization since the Truman&#xD;Administration created the National Security&#xD;Council and the Department of Defense. Centered&#xD;on a new Department of Homeland Security and&#xD;including a new unified military command and a&#xD;fundamental reordering of the FBI, our comprehensive&#xD;plan to secure the homeland encompasses&#xD;every level of government and the cooperation&#xD;of the public and the private sector.&#xD;This strategy will turn adversity into&#xD;opportunity. For example, emergency management&#xD;systems will be better able to cope not just with&#xD;terrorism but with all hazards. Our medical&#xD;system will be strengthened to manage not just&#xD;bioterror, but all infectious diseases and&#xD;mass-casualty dangers. Our border controls will&#xD;not just stop terrorists, but improve the efficient&#xD;movement of legitimate traffic.&#xD;While our focus is protecting America, we&#xD;know that to defeat terrorism in today’s globalized&#xD;world we need support from our allies and&#xD;friends.Wherever possible, the United States will&#xD;rely on regional organizations and state powers to&#xD;meet their obligations to fight terrorism.Where&#xD;governments find the fight against terrorism&#xD;beyond their capacities, we will match their&#xD;willpower and their resources with whatever help&#xD;we and our allies can provide.&#xD;As we pursue the terrorists in Afghanistan,&#xD;we will continue to work with international&#xD;organizations such as the United Nations, as well&#xD;as non-governmental organizations, and other&#xD;countries to provide the humanitarian, political,&#xD;economic, and security assistance necessary to&#xD;rebuild Afghanistan so that it will never again&#xD;abuse its people, threaten its neighbors, and&#xD;provide a haven for terrorists.&#xD;In the war against global terrorism, we will&#xD;never forget that we are ultimately fighting for our&#xD;democratic values and way of life. Freedom and&#xD;fear are at war, and there will be no quick or easy&#xD;end to this conflict. In leading the campaign&#xD;against terrorism, we are forging new, productive&#xD;international relationships and redefining existing&#xD;ones in ways that meet the challenges of the&#xD;twenty-first century.&#xD;</OtherInformation
></Goal
><Goal
><SequenceIndicator
>IV</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Regional Conflicts</Name
><Description
>Work with others to&#xD;Defuse Regional Conflicts</Description
><Objective
><Description
/></Objective
><OtherInformation
>Concerned nations must remain actively&#xD;engaged in critical regional disputes to avoid&#xD;explosive escalation and minimize human&#xD;suffering. In an increasingly interconnected world,&#xD;regional crisis can strain our alliances, rekindle&#xD;rivalries among the major powers, and create&#xD;horrifying affronts to human dignity.When&#xD;violence erupts and states falter, the United States&#xD;will work with friends and partners to alleviate&#xD;suffering and restore stability.&#xD;No doctrine can anticipate every circumstance&#xD;in which U.S. action—direct or indirect—is&#xD;warranted.We have finite political, economic, and&#xD;military resources to meet our global priorities.&#xD;The United States will approach each case with&#xD;these strategic principles in mind:&#xD;• The United States should invest time and&#xD;resources into building international relationships&#xD;and institutions that can help&#xD;manage local crises when they emerge.&#xD;• The United States should be realistic about&#xD;its ability to help those who are unwilling or&#xD;unready to help themselves.Where and&#xD;when people are ready to do their part, we&#xD;will be willing to move decisively.&#xD;The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is critical&#xD;because of the toll of human suffering, because of&#xD;America’s close relationship with the state of Israel&#xD;and key Arab states, and because of that region’s&#xD;importance to other global priorities of the United&#xD;States. There can be no peace for either side&#xD;without freedom for both sides. America stands&#xD;committed to an independent and democratic&#xD;Palestine, living beside Israel in peace and security.&#xD;Like all other people, Palestinians deserve a&#xD;government that serves their interests and listens&#xD;to their voices. The United States will continue&#xD;to encourage all parties to step up to their responsibilities&#xD;as we seek a just and comprehensive&#xD;settlement to the conflict.&#xD;The United States, the international donor&#xD;community, and the World Bank stand ready to&#xD;work with a reformed Palestinian government on&#xD;economic development, increased humanitarian&#xD;assistance, and a program to establish, finance,&#xD;and monitor a truly independent judiciary. If&#xD;Palestinians embrace democracy, and the rule of&#xD;law, confront corruption, and firmly reject terror,&#xD;they can count on American support for the&#xD;creation of a Palestinian state.&#xD;Israel also has a large stake in the success of a&#xD;democratic Palestine. Permanent occupation&#xD;threatens Israel’s identity and democracy. So the&#xD;United States continues to challenge Israeli leaders&#xD;to take concrete steps to support the emergence of&#xD;a viable, credible Palestinian state. As there is&#xD;progress towards security, Israel forces need to&#xD;withdraw fully to positions they held prior to&#xD;September 28, 2000. And consistent with the&#xD;recommendations of the Mitchell Committee,&#xD;Israeli settlement activity in the occupied territories&#xD;must stop. As violence subsides, freedom of&#xD;movement should be restored, permitting innocent&#xD;Palestinians to resume work and normal life.&#xD;The United States can play a crucial role but,&#xD;ultimately, lasting peace can only come when&#xD;Israelis and Palestinians resolve the issues and end&#xD;the conflict between them.&#xD;In South Asia, the United States has also&#xD;emphasized the need for India and Pakistan to&#xD;resolve their disputes. This Administration&#xD;invested time and resources building strong&#xD;bilateral relations with India and Pakistan.&#xD;These strong relations then gave us leverage to&#xD;play a constructive role when tensions in the&#xD;region became acute.With Pakistan, our bilateral&#xD;relations have been bolstered by Pakistan’s choice&#xD;to join the war against terror and move toward&#xD;building a more open and tolerant society. The&#xD;Administration sees India’s potential to become&#xD;one of the great democratic powers of the twentyfirst&#xD;century and has worked hard to transform&#xD;our relationship accordingly. Our involvement in&#xD;this regional dispute, building on earlier investments&#xD;in bilateral relations, looks first to concrete&#xD;steps by India and Pakistan that can help defuse&#xD;military confrontation.&#xD;Indonesia took courageous steps to create a&#xD;working democracy and respect for the rule of law.&#xD;By tolerating ethnic minorities, respecting the rule&#xD;of law, and accepting open markets, Indonesia may&#xD;be able to employ the engine of opportunity that&#xD;has helped lift some of its neighbors out of poverty&#xD;and desperation. It is the initiative by Indonesia that&#xD;allows U.S. assistance to make a difference.&#xD;In the Western Hemisphere we have formed&#xD;flexible coalitions with countries that share our&#xD;priorities, particularly Mexico, Brazil, Canada,&#xD;Chile, and Colombia. Together we will promote a&#xD;truly democratic hemisphere where our integration&#xD;advances security, prosperity, opportunity,&#xD;and hope.We will work with regional institutions,&#xD;such as the Summit of the Americas process, the&#xD;Organization of American States (OAS), and the&#xD;Defense Ministerial of the Americas for the benefit&#xD;of the entire hemisphere.&#xD;Parts of Latin America confront regional&#xD;conflict, especially arising from the violence of&#xD;drug cartels and their accomplices. This conflict&#xD;and unrestrained narcotics trafficking could&#xD;imperil the health and security of the United&#xD;States. Therefore we have developed an active&#xD;strategy to help the Andean nations adjust their&#xD;economies, enforce their laws, defeat terrorist&#xD;organizations, and cut off the supply of drugs,&#xD;while—as important—we work to reduce the&#xD;demand for drugs in our own country.&#xD;In Colombia, we recognize the link between&#xD;terrorist and extremist groups that challenge the&#xD;security of the state and drug trafficking activities&#xD;that help finance the operations of such groups.&#xD;We are working to help Colombia defend its&#xD;democratic institutions and defeat illegal armed&#xD;groups of both the left and right by extending&#xD;effective sovereignty over the entire national&#xD;territory and provide basic security to the&#xD;Colombian people.&#xD;In Africa, promise and opportunity sit side by&#xD;side with disease, war, and desperate poverty. This&#xD;threatens both a core value of the United States—&#xD;preserving human dignity—and our strategic&#xD;priority—combating global terror. American&#xD;interests and American principles, therefore, lead&#xD;in the same direction: we will work with others for&#xD;an African continent that lives in liberty, peace,&#xD;and growing prosperity. Together with our&#xD;European allies, we must help strengthen Africa’s&#xD;fragile states, help build indigenous capability to&#xD;secure porous borders, and help build up the law&#xD;enforcement and intelligence infrastructure to&#xD;deny havens for terrorists.&#xD;An ever more lethal environment exists in&#xD;Africa as local civil wars spread beyond borders to&#xD;create regional war zones. Forming coalitions of&#xD;the willing and cooperative security arrangements&#xD;are key to confronting these emerging transnational&#xD;threats.&#xD;Africa’s great size and diversity requires a&#xD;security strategy that focuses on bilateral engagement&#xD;and builds coalitions of the willing. This&#xD;Administration will focus on three interlocking&#xD;strategies for the region:&#xD;• countries with major impact on their&#xD;neighborhood such as South Africa, Nigeria,&#xD;Kenya, and Ethiopia are anchors for regional&#xD;engagement and require focused attention;&#xD;• coordination with European allies and&#xD;international institutions is essential for&#xD;constructive conflict mediation and&#xD;successful peace operations; and&#xD;• Africa’s capable reforming states and&#xD;sub-regional organizations must be strengthened&#xD;as the primary means to address&#xD;transnational threats on a sustained basis.&#xD;Ultimately the path of political and economic&#xD;freedom presents the surest route to progress in&#xD;sub-Saharan Africa, where most wars are conflicts&#xD;over material resources and political access often&#xD;tragically waged on the basis of ethnic and&#xD;religious difference. The transition to the African&#xD;Union with its stated commitment to good&#xD;governance and a common responsibility for&#xD;democratic political systems offers opportunities&#xD;to strengthen democracy on the continent.&#xD;</OtherInformation
></Goal
><Goal
><SequenceIndicator
>V</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Weapons of Mass Destruction</Name
><Description
>Prevent Our Enemies from Threatening Us,&#xD;Our Allies, and Our Friends&#xD;with Weapons of Mass Destruction</Description
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>WMD 1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Counterproliferation</Name
><Description
>Proactive counterproliferation efforts.</Description
><OtherInformation
>We&#xD;must deter and defend against the threat&#xD;before it is unleashed. We must ensure that&#xD;key capabilities—detection, active and&#xD;passive defenses, and counterforce&#xD;capabilities—are integrated into our defense&#xD;transformation and our homeland security&#xD;systems. Counterproliferation must also be&#xD;integrated into the doctrine, training, and&#xD;equipping of our forces and those of our&#xD;allies to ensure that we can prevail in any&#xD;conflict with WMD-armed adversaries.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>WMD 2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Nonproliferation</Name
><Description
>Strengthened nonproliferation efforts to&#xD;prevent rogue states and terrorists from&#xD;acquiring the materials, technologies, and&#xD;expertise necessary for weapons of mass&#xD;destruction. </Description
><OtherInformation
>We will enhance diplomacy,&#xD;arms control, multilateral export controls,&#xD;and threat reduction assistance that impede&#xD;states and terrorists seeking WMD, and&#xD;when necessary, interdict enabling technologies&#xD;and materials. We will continue to build&#xD;coalitions to support these efforts, encouraging&#xD;their increased political and financial&#xD;support for nonproliferation and threat&#xD;reduction programs. The recent G-8&#xD;agreement to commit up to $20 billion to a&#xD;global partnership against proliferation&#xD;marks a major step forward.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>WMD 3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Consequence Management</Name
><Description
>Effective consequence management to respond&#xD;to the effects of WMD use, whether by terrorists&#xD;or hostile states. </Description
><OtherInformation
>Minimizing the effects of&#xD;WMD use against our people will help deter&#xD;those who possess such weapons and&#xD;dissuade those who seek to acquire them by&#xD;persuading enemies that they cannot attain&#xD;their desired ends. The United States must&#xD;also be prepared to respond to the effects of&#xD;WMD use against our forces abroad, and to&#xD;help friends and allies if they are attacked.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Preemptive Options 1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Intelligence Capabilities</Name
><Description
>Build better, more integrated intelligence&#xD;capabilities to provide timely, accurate information&#xD;on threats, wherever they may emerge.</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Preemptive Options 2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Coordination with Allies</Name
><Description
>Coordinate closely with allies to form a&#xD;common assessment of the most dangerous&#xD;threats.</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Preemptive Options 3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Military Transformation</Name
><Description
>Continue to transform our military forces to&#xD;ensure our ability to conduct rapid and&#xD;precise operations to achieve decisive results.</Description
></Objective
><OtherInformation
>The nature of the Cold War threat required the&#xD;United States—with our allies and friends—to&#xD;emphasize deterrence of the enemy’s use of force,&#xD;producing a grim strategy of mutual assured&#xD;destruction.With the collapse of the Soviet Union&#xD;and the end of the Cold War, our security environment&#xD;has undergone profound transformation.&#xD;Having moved from confrontation to cooperation&#xD;as the hallmark of our relationship with Russia,&#xD;the dividends are evident: an end to the balance of&#xD;terror that divided us; an historic reduction in the&#xD;nuclear arsenals on both sides; and cooperation in&#xD;areas such as counterterrorism and missile defense&#xD;that until recently were inconceivable.&#xD;But new deadly challenges have emerged from&#xD;rogue states and terrorists. None of these contemporary&#xD;threats rival the sheer destructive power&#xD;that was arrayed against us by the Soviet Union.&#xD;However, the nature and motivations of these new&#xD;adversaries, their determination to obtain destructive&#xD;powers hitherto available only to the world’s&#xD;strongest states, and the greater likelihood that&#xD;they will use weapons of mass destruction against&#xD;us, make today’s security environment more&#xD;complex and dangerous.&#xD;In the 1990s we witnessed the emergence of a&#xD;small number of rogue states that, while different&#xD;in important ways, share a number of attributes.&#xD;These states:&#xD;• brutalize their own people and squander&#xD;their national resources for the personal gain&#xD;of the rulers;&#xD;• display no regard for international law,&#xD;threaten their neighbors, and callously&#xD;violate international treaties to which they&#xD;are party;&#xD;• are determined to acquire weapons of mass&#xD;destruction, along with other advanced&#xD;military technology, to be used as threats or&#xD;offensively to achieve the aggressive designs&#xD;of these regimes;&#xD;• sponsor terrorism around the globe; and&#xD;• reject basic human values and hate the United&#xD;States and everything for which it stands.&#xD;At the time of the Gulf War, we acquired&#xD;irrefutable proof that Iraq’s designs were not&#xD;limited to the chemical weapons it had used&#xD;against Iran and its own people, but also extended&#xD;to the acquisition of nuclear weapons and biological&#xD;agents. In the past decade North Korea has&#xD;become the world’s principal purveyor of ballistic&#xD;missiles, and has tested increasingly capable&#xD;missiles while developing its own WMD arsenal.&#xD;Other rogue regimes seek nuclear, biological, and&#xD;chemical weapons as well. These states’ pursuit of,&#xD;and global trade in, such weapons has become a&#xD;looming threat to all nations.&#xD;We must be prepared to stop rogue states and&#xD;their terrorist clients before they are able to&#xD;threaten or use weapons of mass destruction&#xD;against the United States and our allies and&#xD;friends. Our response must take full advantage of&#xD;strengthened alliances, the establishment of new&#xD;partnerships with former adversaries, innovation&#xD;in the use of military forces, modern technologies,&#xD;including the development of an effective missile&#xD;defense system, and increased emphasis on&#xD;intelligence collection and analysis.&#xD;It has taken almost a decade for us to&#xD;comprehend the true nature of this new threat.&#xD;Given the goals of rogue states and terrorists, the&#xD;United States can no longer solely rely on a reactive&#xD;posture as we have in the past. The inability&#xD;to deter a potential attacker, the immediacy of&#xD;today’s threats, and the magnitude of potential&#xD;harm that could be caused by our adversaries’&#xD;choice of weapons, do not permit that option.We&#xD;cannot let our enemies strike first.&#xD;• In the Cold War, especially following the&#xD;Cuban missile crisis, we faced a generally&#xD;status quo, risk-averse adversary. Deterrence&#xD;was an effective defense. But deterrence&#xD;based only upon the threat of retaliation is&#xD;less likely to work against leaders of rogue&#xD;states more willing to take risks, gambling&#xD;with the lives of their people, and the wealth&#xD;of their nations.&#xD;• In the Cold War, weapons of mass destruction&#xD;were considered weapons of last resort&#xD;whose use risked the destruction of those&#xD;who used them. Today, our enemies see&#xD;weapons of mass destruction as weapons of&#xD;choice. For rogue states these weapons are&#xD;tools of intimidation and military aggression&#xD;against their neighbors. These weapons may&#xD;also allow these states to attempt to blackmail&#xD;the United States and our allies to&#xD;prevent us from deterring or repelling the&#xD;aggressive behavior of rogue states. Such&#xD;states also see these weapons as their best&#xD;means of overcoming the conventional&#xD;superiority of the United States.&#xD;• Traditional concepts of deterrence will not&#xD;work against a terrorist enemy whose&#xD;avowed tactics are wanton destruction and&#xD;the targeting of innocents; whose so-called&#xD;soldiers seek martyrdom in death and whose&#xD;most potent protection is statelessness. The&#xD;overlap between states that sponsor terror and&#xD;those that pursue WMD compels us to action.&#xD;For centuries, international law recognized that&#xD;nations need not suffer an attack before they can&#xD;lawfully take action to defend themselves against&#xD;forces that present an imminent danger of attack.&#xD;Legal scholars and international jurists often&#xD;conditioned the legitimacy of preemption on the&#xD;existence of an imminent threat—most often a&#xD;visible mobilization of armies, navies, and air&#xD;forces preparing to attack.&#xD;We must adapt the concept of imminent&#xD;threat to the capabilities and objectives of today’s&#xD;adversaries. Rogue states and terrorists do not&#xD;seek to attack us using conventional means.&#xD;They know such attacks would fail. Instead, they&#xD;rely on acts of terror and, potentially, the use of&#xD;weapons of mass destruction—weapons that can&#xD;be easily concealed, delivered covertly, and used&#xD;without warning.&#xD;The targets of these attacks are our military&#xD;forces and our civilian population, in direct violation&#xD;of one of the principal norms of the law of&#xD;warfare. As was demonstrated by the losses on&#xD;September 11, 2001, mass civilian casualties is the&#xD;specific objective of terrorists and these losses&#xD;would be exponentially more severe if terrorists&#xD;acquired and used weapons of mass destruction.&#xD;The United States has long maintained the&#xD;option of preemptive actions to counter a sufficient&#xD;threat to our national security. The greater&#xD;the threat, the greater is the risk of inaction—&#xD;and the more compelling the case for taking&#xD;anticipatory action to defend ourselves, even if&#xD;uncertainty remains as to the time and place of&#xD;the enemy’s attack. To forestall or prevent such&#xD;hostile acts by our adversaries, the United States&#xD;will, if necessary, act preemptively.&#xD;The United States will not use force in all cases&#xD;to preempt emerging threats, nor should nations&#xD;use preemption as a pretext for aggression. Yet in&#xD;an age where the enemies of civilization openly&#xD;and actively seek the world’s most destructive&#xD;technologies, the United States cannot remain idle&#xD;while dangers gather.&#xD;We will always proceed deliberately, weighing&#xD;the consequences of our actions.&#xD;The purpose of our actions will always be to&#xD;eliminate a specific threat to the United States or&#xD;our allies and friends. The reasons for our actions&#xD;will be clear, the force measured, and the cause just.&#xD;</OtherInformation
></Goal
><Goal
><SequenceIndicator
>VI</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Free Markets and Trade</Name
><Description
>Ignite a New Era of Global Economic&#xD;Growth through Free Markets and Free Trade</Description
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Economic Growth 1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Legal and Regulatory Policies</Name
><Description
>Pro-growth legal and regulatory policies to&#xD;encourage business investment, innovation,&#xD;and entrepreneurial activity</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Economic Growth 2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Tax Policies</Name
><Description
>Tax policies—particularly lower marginal tax&#xD;rates—that improve incentives for work and&#xD;investment</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Economic Growth 3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Rule of Law</Name
><Description
> Rule of law and intolerance of corruption so&#xD;that people are confident that they will be&#xD;able to enjoy the fruits of their economic&#xD;endeavors</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Economic Growth 4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Financial Systems</Name
><Description
>Strong financial systems that allow capital to&#xD;be put to its most efficient use</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Economic Growth 5</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Fiscal Policies</Name
><Description
>Sound fiscal policies to support business&#xD;activity</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Economic Growth 6</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Health and Education</Name
><Description
>Investments in health and education that&#xD;improve the well-being and skills of the&#xD;labor force and population as a whole</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Economic Growth 7</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Free Trade</Name
><Description
>Free trade that provides new avenues for&#xD;growth and fosters the diffusion of technologies&#xD;and ideas that increase productivity&#xD;and opportunity</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Free Trade 1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Global Initiative</Name
><Description
>Seize the global initiative</Description
><OtherInformation
>The new global&#xD;trade negotiations we helped launch at Doha&#xD;in November 2001 will have an ambitious&#xD;agenda, especially in agriculture, manufacturing,&#xD;and services, targeted for completion&#xD;in 2005. The United States has led the way in&#xD;completing the accession of China and a&#xD;democratic Taiwan to the World Trade&#xD;Organization.We will assist Russia’s&#xD;preparations to join the WTO.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Free Trade 2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Regional Initiatives</Name
><Description
>Press regional initiatives</Description
><OtherInformation
>The United States&#xD;and other democracies in the Western&#xD;Hemisphere have agreed to create the Free&#xD;Trade Area of the Americas, targeted for&#xD;completion in 2005. This year the United&#xD;States will advocate market-access negotiations&#xD;with its partners, targeted on&#xD;agriculture, industrial goods, services, investment,&#xD;and government procurement.We will&#xD;also offer more opportunity to the poorest&#xD;continent, Africa, starting with full use of&#xD;the preferences allowed in the African&#xD;Growth and Opportunity Act, and leading&#xD;to free trade.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Free Trade 3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Bilateral Agreements</Name
><Description
>Move ahead with bilateral free trade&#xD;agreements</Description
><OtherInformation
>Building on the free trade&#xD;agreement with Jordan enacted in 2001,&#xD;the Administration will work this year to&#xD;complete free trade agreements with Chile&#xD;and Singapore. Our aim is to achieve free&#xD;trade agreements with a mix of developed&#xD;and developing countries in all regions of&#xD;the world. Initially, Central America,&#xD;Southern Africa,Morocco, and Australia will&#xD;be our principal focal points.&#xD;</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Free Trade 4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Executive-Congressional Partnership</Name
><Description
>Renew the executive-congressional partnership</Description
><OtherInformation
>Every administration’s trade strategy&#xD;depends on a productive partnership with&#xD;Congress. After a gap of 8 years, the&#xD;Administration reestablished majority&#xD;support in the Congress for trade liberalization&#xD;by passing Trade Promotion Authority&#xD;and the other market opening measures for&#xD;developing countries in the Trade Act of&#xD;2002. This Administration will work with&#xD;Congress to enact new bilateral, regional,&#xD;and global trade agreements that will be&#xD;concluded under the recently passed Trade&#xD;Promotion Authority.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Free Trade 5</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Trade and Development</Name
><Description
>Promote the connection between trade and&#xD;development</Description
><OtherInformation
>Trade policies can help developing&#xD;countries strengthen property rights,&#xD;competition, the rule of law, investment, the&#xD;spread of knowledge, open societies, the efficient&#xD;allocation of resources, and regional&#xD;integration—all leading to growth, opportunity,&#xD;and confidence in developing countries.&#xD;The United States is implementing The&#xD;Africa Growth and Opportunity Act to&#xD;provide market-access for nearly all goods&#xD;produced in the 35 countries of sub-&#xD;Saharan Africa.We will make more use of&#xD;this act and its equivalent for the Caribbean&#xD;Basin and continue to work with multilateral&#xD;and regional institutions to help poorer&#xD;countries take advantage of these opportunities.&#xD;Beyond market access, the most&#xD;important area where trade intersects with&#xD;poverty is in public health.We will ensure&#xD;that the WTO intellectual property rules are&#xD;flexible enough to allow developing nations&#xD;to gain access to critical medicines for&#xD;extraordinary dangers like HIV/AIDS,&#xD;tuberculosis, and malaria.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Free Trade 6</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Enforcement</Name
><Description
>Enforce trade agreements and laws against&#xD;unfair practices</Description
><OtherInformation
>Commerce depends on the&#xD;rule of law; international trade depends on&#xD;enforceable agreements. Our top priorities&#xD;are to resolve ongoing disputes with the&#xD;European Union, Canada, and Mexico and&#xD;to make a global effort to address new technology,&#xD;science, and health regulations that&#xD;needlessly impede farm exports and&#xD;improved agriculture. Laws against unfair&#xD;trade practices are often abused, but the&#xD;international community must be able to&#xD;address genuine concerns about government&#xD;subsidies and dumping. International&#xD;industrial espionage which undermines fair&#xD;competition must be detected and deterred.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Free Trade 7</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Industry and Worker Adjustment</Name
><Description
>Help domestic industries and workers adjust</Description
><OtherInformation
>There is a sound statutory framework for&#xD;these transitional safeguards which we have&#xD;used in the agricultural sector and which we&#xD;are using this year to help the American steel&#xD;industry. The benefits of free trade depend&#xD;upon the enforcement of fair trading practices.&#xD;These safeguards help ensure that the&#xD;benefits of free trade do not come at the&#xD;expense of American workers. Trade adjustment&#xD;assistance will help workers adapt to&#xD;the change and dynamism of open markets.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Free Trade 8</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Environmental and Worker Protection</Name
><Description
>Protect the environment and workers</Description
><OtherInformation
>The&#xD;United States must foster economic growth&#xD;in ways that will provide a better life along&#xD;with widening prosperity.We will incorporate&#xD;labor and environmental concerns into&#xD;U.S. trade negotiations, creating a healthy&#xD;“network” between multilateral environmental&#xD;agreements with the WTO, and use&#xD;the International Labor Organization, trade&#xD;preference programs, and trade talks to&#xD;improve working conditions in conjunction&#xD;with freer trade.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Free Trade 9</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Energy Security</Name
><Description
>Enhance energy security</Description
><OtherInformation
>We will strengthen&#xD;our own energy security and the shared&#xD;prosperity of the global economy by&#xD;working with our allies, trading partners,&#xD;and energy producers to expand the sources&#xD;and types of global energy supplied, especially&#xD;in the Western Hemisphere, Africa,&#xD;Central Asia, and the Caspian region.  We&#xD;will also continue to work with our partners&#xD;to develop cleaner and more energy efficient&#xD;technologies.&#xD;</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Global Climate 1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>U.N. Framework Convention</Name
><Description
>Remain committed to the basic U.N.&#xD;Framework Convention for international&#xD;cooperation</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Global Climate 2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Industry Agreements</Name
><Description
>Obtain agreements with key industries to cut&#xD;emissions of some of the most potent&#xD;greenhouse gases and give transferable&#xD;credits to companies that can show real cuts</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Global Climate 3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Standards</Name
><Description
>Develop improved standards for measuring&#xD;and registering emission reductions</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Global Climate 4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Renewable and Nuclear Energy, Coal, and Fuel Economy</Name
><Description
>promote renewable energy production and&#xD;clean coal technology, as well as nuclear&#xD;power—which produces no greenhouse gas&#xD;emissions, while also improving fuel&#xD;economy for U.S. cars and trucks</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Global Climate 5</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Research and Technology Spending</Name
><Description
>Increase spending on research and new&#xD;conservation technologies, to a total of&#xD;$4.5 billion—the largest sum being spent on&#xD;climate change by any country in the world&#xD;and a $700 million increase over last year’s&#xD;budget</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Global Climate 6</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Assistance to Developing Countries</Name
><Description
>Assist developing countries, especially the&#xD;major greenhouse gas emitters such as China&#xD;and India, so that they will have the tools&#xD;and resources to join this effort and be able&#xD;to grow along a cleaner and better path</Description
></Objective
><OtherInformation
>A strong world economy enhances our national&#xD;security by advancing prosperity and freedom in&#xD;the rest of the world. Economic growth supported&#xD;by free trade and free markets creates new jobs&#xD;and higher incomes. It allows people to lift their&#xD;lives out of poverty, spurs economic and legal&#xD;reform, and the fight against corruption, and it&#xD;reinforces the habits of liberty.&#xD;We will promote economic growth and&#xD;economic freedom beyond America’s shores. All&#xD;governments are responsible for creating their&#xD;own economic policies and responding to their&#xD;own economic challenges. We will use our&#xD;economic engagement with other countries to&#xD;underscore the benefits of policies that generate&#xD;higher productivity and sustained economic&#xD;growth.&#xD;The lessons of history are clear: market&#xD;economies, not command-and-control economies&#xD;with the heavy hand of government, are the best&#xD;way to promote prosperity and reduce poverty.&#xD;Policies that further strengthen market incentives&#xD;and market institutions are relevant for all&#xD;economies—industrialized countries, emerging&#xD;markets, and the developing world.&#xD;A return to strong economic growth in Europe&#xD;and Japan is vital to U.S. national security interests.&#xD;We want our allies to have strong economies&#xD;for their own sake, for the sake of the global&#xD;economy, and for the sake of global security.&#xD;European efforts to remove structural barriers in&#xD;their economies are particularly important in this&#xD;regard, as are Japan’s efforts to end deflation and&#xD;address the problems of non-performing loans in&#xD;the Japanese banking system.We will continue to&#xD;use our regular consultations with Japan and our&#xD;European partners—including through the Group&#xD;of Seven (G-7)—to discuss policies they are&#xD;adopting to promote growth in their economies&#xD;and support higher global economic growth.&#xD;Improving stability in emerging markets is also&#xD;key to global economic growth. International&#xD;flows of investment capital are needed to expand&#xD;the productive potential of these economies. These&#xD;flows allow emerging markets and developing&#xD;countries to make the investments that raise living&#xD;standards and reduce poverty. Our long-term&#xD;objective should be a world in which all countries&#xD;have investment-grade credit ratings that allow&#xD;them access to international capital markets and&#xD;to invest in their future.&#xD;We are committed to policies that will help&#xD;emerging markets achieve access to larger capital&#xD;flows at lower cost. To this end, we will continue&#xD;to pursue reforms aimed at reducing uncertainty&#xD;in financial markets.We will work actively with&#xD;other countries, the International Monetary Fund&#xD;(IMF), and the private sector to implement the&#xD;G-7 Action Plan negotiated earlier this year for&#xD;preventing financial crises and more effectively&#xD;resolving them when they occur.&#xD;The best way to deal with financial crises is to&#xD;prevent them from occurring, and we have&#xD;encouraged the IMF to improve its efforts doing&#xD;so.We will continue to work with the IMF to&#xD;streamline the policy conditions for its lending&#xD;and to focus its lending strategy on achieving&#xD;economic growth through sound fiscal and&#xD;monetary policy, exchange rate policy, and&#xD;financial sector policy.&#xD;The concept of “free trade” arose as a moral&#xD;principle even before it became a pillar of&#xD;economics. If you can make something that others&#xD;value, you should be able to sell it to them. If&#xD;others make something that you value, you should&#xD;be able to buy it. This is real freedom, the freedom&#xD;for a person—or a nation—to make a living. To&#xD;promote free trade, the Unites States has developed&#xD;a comprehensive strategy.&#xD;Economic growth should be accompanied by&#xD;global efforts to stabilize greenhouse gas concentrations&#xD;associated with this growth, containing&#xD;them at a level that prevents dangerous human&#xD;interference with the global climate. Our overall&#xD;objective is to reduce America’s greenhouse gas&#xD;emissions relative to the size of our economy,&#xD;cutting such emissions per unit of economic&#xD;activity by 18 percent over the next 10 years, by&#xD;the year 2012.&#xD;</OtherInformation
></Goal
><Goal
><SequenceIndicator
>VII</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Democracy, Openness, and Development</Name
><Description
>Expand the Circle of Development by&#xD;Opening Societies and Building&#xD;the Infrastructure of Democracy</Description
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Reform and Aid</Name
><Description
>Provide resources to aid countries that have&#xD;met the challenge of national reform</Description
><OtherInformation
>We&#xD;propose a 50 percent increase in the core&#xD;development assistance given by the United&#xD;States. While continuing our present&#xD;programs, including humanitarian assistance&#xD;based on need alone, these billions of new&#xD;dollars will form a new Millennium&#xD;Challenge Account for projects in countries&#xD;whose governments rule justly, invest in&#xD;their people, and encourage economic&#xD;freedom. Governments must fight corruption,&#xD;respect basic human rights, embrace&#xD;the rule of law, invest in health care and&#xD;education, follow responsible economic&#xD;policies, and enable entrepreneurship. The&#xD;Millennium Challenge Account will reward&#xD;countries that have demonstrated real policy&#xD;change and challenge those that have not to&#xD;implement reforms.&#xD;</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>World and Other Development Banks</Name
><Description
>Improve the effectiveness of the World Bank&#xD;and other development banks in raising living&#xD;standards</Description
><OtherInformation
>The United States is committed to&#xD;a comprehensive reform agenda for making&#xD;the World Bank and the other multilateral&#xD;development banks more effective in&#xD;improving the lives of the world’s poor.We&#xD;have reversed the downward trend in U.S.&#xD;contributions and proposed an 18 percent&#xD;increase in the U.S. contributions to the&#xD;International Development Association&#xD;(IDA)—the World Bank’s fund for the&#xD;poorest countries—and the African&#xD;Development Fund. The key to raising living&#xD;standards and reducing poverty around the&#xD;world is increasing productivity growth,&#xD;especially in the poorest countries.We will&#xD;continue to press the multilateral development&#xD;banks to focus on activities that&#xD;increase economic productivity, such as&#xD;improvements in education, health, rule of&#xD;law, and private sector development. Every&#xD;project, every loan, every grant must be&#xD;judged by how much it will increase&#xD;productivity growth in developing countries.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Measurable Results</Name
><Description
>Insist upon measurable results to ensure that&#xD;development assistance is actually making a&#xD;difference in the lives of the world’s poor</Description
><OtherInformation
>When it comes to economic development,&#xD;what really matters is that more children are&#xD;getting a better education, more people have&#xD;access to health care and clean water, or&#xD;more workers can find jobs to make a better&#xD;future for their families. We have a moral&#xD;obligation to measure the success of our&#xD;development assistance by whether it is&#xD;delivering results. For this reason, we will&#xD;continue to demand that our own development&#xD;assistance as well as assistance from the&#xD;multilateral development banks has measurable&#xD;goals and concrete benchmarks for&#xD;achieving those goals. Thanks to U.S.&#xD;leadership, the recent IDA replenishment&#xD;agreement will establish a monitoring and&#xD;evaluation system that measures recipient&#xD;countries’ progress. For the first time,&#xD;donors can link a portion of their contributions&#xD;to IDA to the achievement of actual&#xD;development results, and part of the U.S.&#xD;contribution is linked in this way.We will&#xD;strive to make sure that the World Bank and&#xD;other multilateral development banks build&#xD;on this progress so that a focus on results is&#xD;an integral part of everything that these&#xD;institutions do.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Development Grants</Name
><Description
>Increase the amount of development assistance&#xD;that is provided in the form of grants instead&#xD;of loans</Description
><OtherInformation
>Greater use of results-based grants&#xD;is the best way to help poor countries make&#xD;productive investments, particularly in the&#xD;social sectors, without saddling them with&#xD;ever-larger debt burdens. As a result of&#xD;U.S. leadership, the recent IDA agreement&#xD;provided for significant increases in grant&#xD;funding for the poorest countries for education,&#xD;HIV/AIDS, health, nutrition, water,&#xD;sanitation, and other human needs. Our goal&#xD;is to build on that progress by increasing the&#xD;use of grants at the other multilateral&#xD;development banks.We will also challenge&#xD;universities, nonprofits, and the private&#xD;sector to match government efforts by using&#xD;grants to support development projects that&#xD;show results.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>5</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Open Commerce and Investment</Name
><Description
>Open societies to commerce and investment</Description
><OtherInformation
>Trade and investment are the real engines of&#xD;economic growth. Even if government aid&#xD;increases, most money for development&#xD;must come from trade, domestic capital, and&#xD;foreign investment. An effective strategy&#xD;must try to expand these flows as well. Free&#xD;markets and free trade are key priorities of&#xD;our national security strategy.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>6</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Public Health</Name
><Description
>Secure public health</Description
><OtherInformation
>The scale of the public&#xD;health crisis in poor countries is enormous.&#xD;In countries afflicted by epidemics and&#xD;pandemics like HIV/AIDS, malaria, and&#xD;tuberculosis, growth and development will&#xD;be threatened until these scourges can be&#xD;contained. Resources from the developed&#xD;world are necessary but will be effective only&#xD;with honest governance, which supports&#xD;prevention programs and provides effective&#xD;local infrastructure. The United States has&#xD;strongly backed the new global fund for&#xD;HIV/AIDS organized by U.N. Secretary&#xD;General Kofi Annan and its focus on&#xD;combining prevention with a broad strategy&#xD;for treatment and care. The United States&#xD;already contributes more than twice as much&#xD;money to such efforts as the next largest&#xD;donor. If the global fund demonstrates its&#xD;promise, we will be ready to give even more.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>7</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Education</Name
><Description
>Emphasize education</Description
><OtherInformation
>Literacy and learning&#xD;are the foundation of democracy and development.&#xD;Only about 7 percent of World&#xD;Bank resources are devoted to education.&#xD;This proportion should grow. The United&#xD;States will increase its own funding for&#xD;education assistance by at least 20 percent&#xD;with an emphasis on improving basic education&#xD;and teacher training in Africa. The&#xD;United States can also bring information&#xD;technology to these societies, many of whose&#xD;education systems have been devastated by&#xD;HIV/AIDS.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>8</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Agricultural Development</Name
><Description
>Continue to aid agricultural development</Description
><OtherInformation
>New technologies, including biotechnology,&#xD;have enormous potential to improve crop&#xD;yields in developing countries while using&#xD;fewer pesticides and less water. Using sound&#xD;science, the United States should help bring&#xD;these benefits to the 800 million people,&#xD;including 300 million children, who still&#xD;suffer from hunger and malnutrition.</OtherInformation
></Objective
><OtherInformation
>A world where some live in comfort and&#xD;plenty, while half of the human race lives on less&#xD;than $2 a day, is neither just nor stable. Including&#xD;all of the world’s poor in an expanding circle of&#xD;development—and opportunity—is a moral&#xD;imperative and one of the top priorities of U.S.&#xD;international policy.&#xD;Decades of massive development assistance&#xD;have failed to spur economic growth in the&#xD;poorest countries.Worse, development aid has&#xD;often served to prop up failed policies, relieving&#xD;the pressure for reform and perpetuating misery.&#xD;Results of aid are typically measured in dollars&#xD;spent by donors, not in the rates of growth and&#xD;poverty reduction achieved by recipients. These&#xD;are the indicators of a failed strategy.&#xD;Working with other nations, the United States&#xD;is confronting this failure.We forged a new&#xD;consensus at the U.N. Conference on Financing&#xD;for Development in Monterrey that the objectives&#xD;of assistance—and the strategies to achieve those&#xD;objectives—must change.&#xD;This Administration’s goal is to help unleash&#xD;the productive potential of individuals in all&#xD;nations. Sustained growth and poverty reduction&#xD;is impossible without the right national policies.&#xD;Where governments have implemented real policy&#xD;changes, we will provide significant new levels of&#xD;assistance. The United States and other developed&#xD;countries should set an ambitious and specific&#xD;target: to double the size of the world’s poorest&#xD;economies within a decade.</OtherInformation
></Goal
><Goal
><SequenceIndicator
>VIII</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Cooperative Action</Name
><Description
>Develop Agendas for Cooperative Action&#xD;with the Other Main Centers of Global Power</Description
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>NATO 1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Expand Membership</Name
><Description
>Expand NATO’s membership to those&#xD;democratic nations willing and able to share&#xD;the burden of defending and advancing our&#xD;common interests</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>NATO 2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Combat Contributions</Name
><Description
>Ensure that the military forces of NATO&#xD;nations have appropriate combat&#xD;contributions to make in coalition warfare</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>NATO 3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Planning Processes</Name
><Description
>Develop planning processes to enable&#xD;those contributions to become effective&#xD;multinational fighting forces</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>NATO 4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Technology and Economies of Scale</Name
><Description
>Take advantage of the technological opportunities&#xD;and economies of scale in our defense&#xD;spending to transform NATO military forces&#xD;so that they dominate potential aggressors&#xD;and diminish our vulnerabilities</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>NATO 5</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Command Structures</Name
><Description
>Streamline and increase the flexibility&#xD;of command structures to meet new&#xD;operational demands and the associated&#xD;requirements of training, integrating,&#xD;and experimenting with new force&#xD;configurations</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>NATO 6</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Capability Maintenance</Name
><Description
>Maintain the ability to work and fight&#xD;together as allies even as we take the&#xD;necessary steps to transform and modernize&#xD;our forces</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Asia 1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Japan</Name
><Description
>Look to Japan to continue forging a leading&#xD;role in regional and global affairs based on&#xD;our common interests, our common values,&#xD;and our close defense and diplomatic&#xD;cooperation</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Asia 2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>South Korea</Name
><Description
>Work with South Korea to maintain vigilance&#xD;towards the North while preparing our&#xD;alliance to make contributions to the&#xD;broader stability of the region over the&#xD;longer term</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Asia 3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Australia</Name
><Description
>Build on 50 years of U.S.-Australian alliance&#xD;cooperation as we continue working&#xD;together to resolve regional and global&#xD;problems—as we have so many times from&#xD;the Battle of the Coral Sea to Tora Bora</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Asia 4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Regional Forces</Name
><Description
>Maintain forces in the region that reflect&#xD;our commitments to our allies, our requirements,&#xD;our technological advances, and the&#xD;strategic environment</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>Asia 5</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Regional Alliances</Name
><Description
>Build on stability provided by these alliances,&#xD;as well as with institutions such as ASEAN&#xD;and the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation&#xD;forum, to develop a mix of regional and&#xD;bilateral strategies to manage change in this&#xD;dynamic region</Description
></Objective
><OtherInformation
>America will implement its strategies by&#xD;organizing coalitions—as broad as practicable—&#xD;of states able and willing to promote a balance of&#xD;power that favors freedom. Effective coalition&#xD;leadership requires clear priorities, an appreciation&#xD;of others’ interests, and consistent consultations&#xD;among partners with a spirit of humility.&#xD;There is little of lasting consequence that the&#xD;United States can accomplish in the world without&#xD;the sustained cooperation of its allies and friends&#xD;in Canada and Europe. Europe is also the seat of&#xD;two of the strongest and most able international&#xD;institutions in the world: the North Atlantic Treaty&#xD;Organization (NATO), which has, since its inception,&#xD;been the fulcrum of transatlantic and&#xD;inter-European security, and the European Union&#xD;(EU), our partner in opening world trade.&#xD;The attacks of September 11 were also an&#xD;attack on NATO, as NATO itself recognized when&#xD;it invoked its Article V self-defense clause for the&#xD;first time. NATO’s core mission—collective&#xD;defense of the transatlantic alliance of democracies—&#xD;remains, but NATO must develop new&#xD;structures and capabilities to carry out that&#xD;mission under new circumstances. NATO must&#xD;build a capability to field, at short notice, highly&#xD;mobile, specially trained forces whenever they are&#xD;needed to respond to a threat against any member&#xD;of the alliance.&#xD;The alliance must be able to act wherever our&#xD;interests are threatened, creating coalitions under&#xD;NATO’s own mandate, as well as contributing to&#xD;mission-based coalitions.&#xD;If NATO succeeds in enacting [the necessary] changes,&#xD;the rewards will be a partnership as central to the&#xD;security and interests of its member states as was&#xD;the case during the Cold War. We will sustain a&#xD;common perspective on the threats to our societies&#xD;and improve our ability to take common&#xD;action in defense of our nations and their interests.&#xD;At the same time, we welcome our European&#xD;allies’ efforts to forge a greater foreign policy and&#xD;defense identity with the EU, and commit&#xD;ourselves to close consultations to ensure that&#xD;these developments work with NATO. We cannot&#xD;afford to lose this opportunity to better prepare&#xD;the family of transatlantic democracies for the&#xD;challenges to come.&#xD;The attacks of September 11 energized&#xD;America’s Asian alliances. Australia invoked the&#xD;ANZUS Treaty to declare the September 11 was an&#xD;attack on Australia itself, following that historic&#xD;decision with the dispatch of some of the world’s&#xD;finest combat forces for Operation Enduring&#xD;Freedom. Japan and the Republic of Korea&#xD;provided unprecedented levels of military&#xD;logistical support within weeks of the terrorist&#xD;attack. We have deepened cooperation on counterterrorism&#xD;with our alliance partners in Thailand&#xD;and the Philippines and received invaluable&#xD;assistance from close friends like Singapore and&#xD;New Zealand.&#xD;The war against terrorism has proven that&#xD;America’s alliances in Asia not only underpin&#xD;regional peace and stability, but are flexible and&#xD;ready to deal with new challenges.&#xD;We are attentive to the possible renewal of old&#xD;patterns of great power competition. Several&#xD;potential great powers are now in the midst of&#xD;internal transition—most importantly Russia,&#xD;India, and China. In all three cases, recent developments&#xD;have encouraged our hope that a truly&#xD;global consensus about basic principles is slowly&#xD;taking shape.&#xD;With Russia, we are already building a new&#xD;strategic relationship based on a central reality of&#xD;the twenty-first century: the United States and&#xD;Russia are no longer strategic adversaries. The&#xD;Moscow Treaty on Strategic Reductions is&#xD;emblematic of this new reality and reflects a critical&#xD;change in Russian thinking that promises to&#xD;lead to productive, long-term relations with the&#xD;Euro-Atlantic community and the United States.&#xD;Russia’s top leaders have a realistic assessment of&#xD;their country’s current weakness and the&#xD;policies—internal and external—needed to reverse&#xD;those weaknesses. They understand, increasingly,&#xD;that Cold War approaches do not serve their&#xD;national interests and that Russian and American&#xD;strategic interests overlap in many areas.&#xD;United States policy seeks to use this turn in&#xD;Russian thinking to refocus our relationship on&#xD;emerging and potential common interests and&#xD;challenges.We are broadening our already extensive&#xD;cooperation in the global war on terrorism.&#xD;We are facilitating Russia’s entry into the World&#xD;Trade Organization, without lowering standards&#xD;for accession, to promote beneficial bilateral trade&#xD;and investment relations.We have created the&#xD;NATO-Russia Council with the goal of deepening&#xD;security cooperation among Russia, our European&#xD;allies, and ourselves.We will continue to bolster&#xD;the independence and stability of the states of the&#xD;former Soviet Union in the belief that a prosperous&#xD;and stable neighborhood will reinforce&#xD;Russia’s growing commitment to integration into&#xD;the Euro-Atlantic community.&#xD;At the same time, we are realistic about the&#xD;differences that still divide us from Russia and&#xD;about the time and effort it will take to build an&#xD;enduring strategic partnership. Lingering distrust&#xD;of our motives and policies by key Russian elites&#xD;slows improvement in our relations. Russia’s&#xD;uneven commitment to the basic values of&#xD;free-market democracy and dubious record in&#xD;combating the proliferation of weapons of mass&#xD;destruction remain matters of great concern.&#xD;Russia’s very weakness limits the opportunities&#xD;for cooperation. Nevertheless, those opportunities&#xD;are vastly greater now than in recent years—or&#xD;even decades.&#xD;The United States has undertaken a transformation&#xD;in its bilateral relationship with India&#xD;based on a conviction that U.S. interests require a&#xD;strong relationship with India.We are the two&#xD;largest democracies, committed to political&#xD;freedom protected by representative government.&#xD;India is moving toward greater economic freedom&#xD;as well.We have a common interest in the free&#xD;flow of commerce, including through the vital sea&#xD;lanes of the Indian Ocean. Finally, we share an&#xD;interest in fighting terrorism and in creating a&#xD;strategically stable Asia.&#xD;Differences remain, including over the development&#xD;of India’s nuclear and missile programs, and&#xD;the pace of India’s economic reforms. But while in&#xD;the past these concerns may have dominated our&#xD;thinking about India, today we start with a view&#xD;of India as a growing world power with which we&#xD;have common strategic interests. Through a&#xD;strong partnership with India, we can best address&#xD;any differences and shape a dynamic future.&#xD;The United States relationship with China is&#xD;an important part of our strategy to promote a&#xD;stable, peaceful, and prosperous Asia-Pacific&#xD;region.We welcome the emergence of a strong,&#xD;peaceful, and prosperous China. The democratic&#xD;development of China is crucial to that future. Yet,&#xD;a quarter century after beginning the process of&#xD;shedding the worst features of the Communist&#xD;legacy, China’s leaders have not yet made the next&#xD;series of fundamental choices about the character&#xD;of their state. In pursuing advanced military&#xD;capabilities that can threaten its neighbors in the&#xD;Asia-Pacific region, China is following an outdated&#xD;path that, in the end, will hamper its own pursuit&#xD;of national greatness. In time, China will find that&#xD;social and political freedom is the only source of&#xD;that greatness.&#xD;The United States seeks a constructive relationship&#xD;with a changing China.We already cooperate&#xD;well where our interests overlap, including the&#xD;current war on terrorism and in promoting&#xD;stability on the Korean peninsula. Likewise, we&#xD;have coordinated on the future of Afghanistan&#xD;and have initiated a comprehensive dialogue on&#xD;counterterrorism and similar transitional&#xD;concerns. Shared health and environmental&#xD;threats, such as the spread of HIV/AIDS, challenge&#xD;us to promote jointly the welfare of our citizens.&#xD;Addressing these transnational threats will&#xD;challenge China to become more open with&#xD;information, promote the development of civil&#xD;society, and enhance individual human rights.&#xD;China has begun to take the road to political&#xD;openness, permitting many personal freedoms and&#xD;conducting village-level elections, yet remains&#xD;strongly committed to national one-party rule by&#xD;the Communist Party. To make that nation truly&#xD;accountable to its citizen’s needs and aspirations,&#xD;however, much work remains to be done. Only by&#xD;allowing the Chinese people to think, assemble,&#xD;and worship freely can China reach its full potential.&#xD;Our important trade relationship will benefit&#xD;from China’s entry into the World Trade&#xD;Organization, which will create more export&#xD;opportunities and ultimately more jobs for&#xD;American farmers, workers, and companies. China&#xD;is our fourth largest trading partner, with over&#xD;$100 billion in annual two-way trade. The power&#xD;of market principles and the WTO’s requirements&#xD;for transparency and accountability will advance&#xD;openness and the rule of law in China to help&#xD;establish basic protections for commerce and for&#xD;citizens. There are, however, other areas in which&#xD;we have profound disagreements. Our commitment&#xD;to the self-defense of Taiwan under the Taiwan&#xD;Relations Act is one. Human rights is another.We&#xD;expect China to adhere to its nonproliferation&#xD;commitments.We will work to narrow differences&#xD;where they exist, but not allow them to preclude&#xD;cooperation where we agree.&#xD;The events of September 11, 2001, fundamentally&#xD;changed the context for relations between the&#xD;United States and other main centers of global&#xD;power, and opened vast, new opportunities.With&#xD;our long-standing allies in Europe and Asia, and&#xD;with leaders in Russia, India, and China, we must&#xD;develop active agendas of cooperation lest these&#xD;relationships become routine and unproductive.&#xD;Every agency of the United States Government&#xD;shares the challenge.We can build fruitful habits&#xD;of consultation, quiet argument, sober analysis,&#xD;and common action. In the long-term, these are&#xD;the practices that will sustain the supremacy of&#xD;our common principles and keep open the path&#xD;of progress.</OtherInformation
></Goal
><Goal
><SequenceIndicator
>IX</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>National Security Transformation</Name
><Description
>Transform America’s National Security&#xD;Institutions to Meet the Challenges and&#xD;Opportunities of the Twenty-First Century</Description
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>1</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Central Intelligence Authority</Name
><Description
>Strengthen the authority of the Director&#xD;of Central Intelligence to lead the development&#xD;and actions of the Nation’s foreign&#xD;intelligence capabilities</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>2</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Integrated Warnings</Name
><Description
>Establish a new framework for intelligence&#xD;warning that provides seamless and&#xD;integrated warning across the spectrum of&#xD;threats facing the nation and our allies</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>3</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>New Methods</Name
><Description
>Continue to develop new methods of&#xD;collecting information to sustain our&#xD;intelligence advantage</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>4</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Future Capabilities</Name
><Description
>Investing in future capabilities while working&#xD;to protect them through a more vigorous&#xD;effort to prevent the compromise of intelligence&#xD;capabilities</Description
></Objective
><Objective
><SequenceIndicator
>5</SequenceIndicator
><Name
>Intelligence Collection &amp; Analysis</Name
><Description
>collecting intelligence against the terrorist&#xD;danger across the government with allsource&#xD;analysis</Description
></Objective
><OtherInformation
>The major institutions of American national&#xD;security were designed in a different era to meet&#xD;different requirements. All of them must be&#xD;transformed.&#xD;It is time to reaffirm the essential role of&#xD;American military strength.We must build and&#xD;maintain our defenses beyond challenge. Our&#xD;military’s highest priority is to defend the United&#xD;States.&#xD;To do so effectively, our military must:&#xD;• assure our allies and friends;&#xD;• dissuade future military competition;&#xD;• deter threats against U.S. interests, allies, and&#xD;friends; and&#xD;• decisively defeat any adversary if deterrence&#xD;fails.&#xD;The unparalleled strength of the United States&#xD;armed forces, and their forward presence, have&#xD;maintained the peace in some of the world’s most&#xD;strategically vital regions. However, the threats and&#xD;enemies we must confront have changed, and so&#xD;must our forces. A military structured to deter&#xD;massive Cold War-era armies must be transformed&#xD;to focus more on how an adversary might fight&#xD;rather than where and when a war might occur.&#xD;We will channel our energies to overcome a host&#xD;of operational challenges.&#xD;The presence of American forces overseas is&#xD;one of the most profound symbols of the U.S.&#xD;commitments to allies and friends. Through our&#xD;willingness to use force in our own defense and in&#xD;defense of others, the United States demonstrates&#xD;its resolve to maintain a balance of power that&#xD;favors freedom. To contend with uncertainty and&#xD;to meet the many security challenges we face, the&#xD;United States will require bases and stations&#xD;within and beyond Western Europe and Northeast&#xD;Asia, as well as temporary access arrangements for&#xD;the long-distance deployment of U.S. forces.&#xD;Before the war in Afghanistan, that area was&#xD;low on the list of major planning contingencies.&#xD;Yet, in a very short time, we had to operate across&#xD;the length and breadth of that remote nation,&#xD;using every branch of the armed forces.We must&#xD;prepare for more such deployments by developing&#xD;assets such as advanced remote sensing,&#xD;long-range precision strike capabilities, and&#xD;transformed maneuver and expeditionary forces.&#xD;This broad portfolio of military capabilities must&#xD;also include the ability to defend the homeland,&#xD;conduct information operations, ensure U.S.&#xD;access to distant theaters, and protect critical&#xD;U.S. infrastructure and assets in outer space.&#xD;Innovation within the armed forces will rest on&#xD;experimentation with new approaches to warfare,&#xD;strengthening joint operations, exploiting U.S.&#xD;intelligence advantages, and taking full advantage&#xD;of science and technology.We must also transform&#xD;the way the Department of Defense is run,&#xD;especially in financial management and recruitment&#xD;and retention. Finally, while maintaining&#xD;near-term readiness and the ability to fight the&#xD;war on terrorism, the goal must be to provide the&#xD;President with a wider range of military options&#xD;to discourage aggression or any form of coercion&#xD;against the United States, our allies, and our friends.&#xD;We know from history that deterrence can fail;&#xD;and we know from experience that some enemies&#xD;cannot be deterred. The United States must and&#xD;will maintain the capability to defeat any attempt&#xD;by an enemy—whether a state or non-state&#xD;actor—to impose its will on the United States, our&#xD;allies, or our friends.We will maintain the forces&#xD;sufficient to support our obligations, and to&#xD;defend freedom. Our forces will be strong enough&#xD;to dissuade potential adversaries from pursuing a&#xD;military build-up in hopes of surpassing, or&#xD;equaling, the power of the United States.&#xD;Intelligence—and how we use it—is our first&#xD;line of defense against terrorists and the threat&#xD;posed by hostile states. Designed around the&#xD;priority of gathering enormous information about&#xD;a massive, fixed object—the Soviet bloc—the&#xD;intelligence community is coping with the&#xD;challenge of following a far more complex and&#xD;elusive set of targets.&#xD;We must transform our intelligence capabilities&#xD;and build new ones to keep pace with the nature&#xD;of these threats. Intelligence must be appropriately&#xD;integrated with our defense and law enforcement&#xD;systems and coordinated with our allies and&#xD;friends.We need to protect the capabilities we&#xD;have so that we do not arm our enemies with the&#xD;knowledge of how best to surprise us. Those who&#xD;would harm us also seek the benefit of surprise to&#xD;limit our prevention and response options and to&#xD;maximize injury.&#xD;We must strengthen intelligence warning and&#xD;analysis to provide integrated threat assessments&#xD;for national and homeland security. Since the&#xD;threats inspired by foreign governments and&#xD;groups may be conducted inside the United States,&#xD;we must also ensure the proper fusion of information&#xD;between intelligence and law enforcement.&#xD;As the United States Government relies on the&#xD;armed forces to defend America’s interests, it must&#xD;rely on diplomacy to interact with other nations.&#xD;We will ensure that the Department of State&#xD;receives funding sufficient to ensure the success of&#xD;American diplomacy. The State Department takes&#xD;the lead in managing our bilateral relationships&#xD;with other governments. And in this new era, its&#xD;people and institutions must be able to interact&#xD;equally adroitly with non-governmental organizations&#xD;and international institutions. Officials&#xD;trained mainly in international politics must&#xD;also extend their reach to understand complex&#xD;issues of domestic governance around the&#xD;world, including public health, education, law&#xD;enforcement, the judiciary, and public diplomacy.&#xD;Our diplomats serve at the front line of&#xD;complex negotiations, civil wars, and other&#xD;humanitarian catastrophes. As humanitarian&#xD;relief requirements are better understood, we&#xD;must also be able to help build police forces,&#xD;court systems, and legal codes, local and provincial&#xD;government institutions, and electoral&#xD;systems. Effective international cooperation is&#xD;needed to accomplish these goals, backed by&#xD;American readiness to play our part.&#xD;Just as our diplomatic institutions must adapt&#xD;so that we can reach out to others, we also need a&#xD;different and more comprehensive approach to&#xD;public information efforts that can help people&#xD;around the world learn about and understand&#xD;America. The war on terrorism is not a clash of&#xD;civilizations. It does, however, reveal the clash&#xD;inside a civilization, a battle for the future of the&#xD;Muslim world. This is a struggle of ideas and this&#xD;is an area where America must excel.&#xD;We will take the actions necessary to ensure&#xD;that our efforts to meet our global security&#xD;commitments and protect Americans are not&#xD;impaired by the potential for investigations,&#xD;inquiry, or prosecution by the International&#xD;Criminal Court (ICC), whose jurisdiction does&#xD;not extend to Americans and which we do not&#xD;accept.We will work together with other nations&#xD;to avoid complications in our military operations&#xD;and cooperation, through such mechanisms as&#xD;multilateral and bilateral agreements that will&#xD;protect U.S. nationals from the ICC.We will&#xD;implement fully the American Servicemembers&#xD;Protection Act, whose provisions are intended to&#xD;ensure and enhance the protection of U.S.&#xD;personnel and officials.&#xD;We will make hard choices in the coming year&#xD;and beyond to ensure the right level and allocation&#xD;of government spending on national security.&#xD;The United States Government must strengthen&#xD;its defenses to win this war. At home, our most&#xD;important priority is to protect the homeland for&#xD;the American people.&#xD;Today, the distinction between domestic and&#xD;foreign affairs is diminishing. In a globalized&#xD;world, events beyond America’s borders have a&#xD;greater impact inside them. Our society must be&#xD;open to people, ideas, and goods from across the&#xD;globe. The characteristics we most cherish—our&#xD;freedom, our cities, our systems of movement, and&#xD;modern life—are vulnerable to terrorism. This&#xD;vulnerability will persist long after we bring to&#xD;justice those responsible for the September 11&#xD;attacks. As time passes, individuals may gain&#xD;access to means of destruction that until now&#xD;could be wielded only by armies, fleets, and&#xD;squadrons. This is a new condition of life.We&#xD;will adjust to it and thrive—in spite of it.&#xD;In exercising our leadership, we will respect the&#xD;values, judgment, and interests of our friends and&#xD;partners. Still, we will be prepared to act apart&#xD;when our interests and unique responsibilities&#xD;require.When we disagree on particulars, we will&#xD;explain forthrightly the grounds for our concerns&#xD;and strive to forge viable alternatives.We will not&#xD;allow such disagreements to obscure our determination&#xD;to secure together, with our allies and&#xD;our friends, our shared fundamental interests&#xD;and values.&#xD;Ultimately, the foundation of American&#xD;strength is at home. It is in the skills of our&#xD;people, the dynamism of our economy, and the&#xD;resilience of our institutions. A diverse, modern&#xD;society has inherent, ambitious, entrepreneurial&#xD;energy. Our strength comes from what we do&#xD;with that energy. That is where our national&#xD;security begins.&#xD;</OtherInformation
></Goal
></StrategicPlanCore
>
