Bush's Security Strategy 
  September 27, 2002
  nytimes.com
 
  To the Editor: 
  The Bush administration's new national security strategy (front page, Sept. 20),  despite its rejection of international cooperation, is the very opposite of isolationism.  It is a declaration of intent for global domination. 
  It  abandons longstanding treaties and agreements  on nonproliferation, antiballistic missile defense, comprehensive nuclear test bans and no-first-strike understandings. It announces that we will strike pre-emptively and unilaterally against any nation that we define as a threat. 
  It declares that no other nation may attempt to equal our  military strength: we will "dissuade"  it.  It proposes a  global economic policy  to be administered  by instruments we control, the International Monetary Fund  and the World Bank .
  In sum, it asserts that American sovereignty trumps all other national sovereignties - America über alles.     H. JACK GEIGER, M.D. Brooklyn, Sept. 20, 2002 The writer is a founding member and former president, Physicians for Social Responsibility .
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