SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gao seng who wrote (209909)12/13/2001 11:02:42 PM
From: gao seng  Respond to of 769670
 
While Caracas Burns

Sen. Dodd's petulance threatens national security.

Thursday, December 13, 2001 12:01 a.m. EST

Argentina has a debt crisis, guerrilla movements are growing in
Colombia and Peru, and on Monday Venezuela was all but shut
down because of a nationwide protest against the creeping
dictatorship of President Hugo Chavez. The success story that
was once Latin America is unraveling by the day, thanks in part
to a lack of U.S. leadership.

Yet while Caracas burns, the top U.S. policy maker for the
region can't assume his post for reasons of petty ideological
revenge. Otto Reich--President Bush's nominee to be Assistant
Secretary of State for the Western Hemisphere--still can't get
a hearing in Connecticut Senator Chris Dodd's subcommittee. Mr.
Dodd's petulance has gone beyond the usual Beltway payback and
is now creating a leadership vacuum damaging to U.S. national
security.

It's hard to recall reading today's headlines, but 10 years ago
Latin America's future looked bright. Democracy was on the
rise, economies were growing and the era of military coups
seemed to be over. The countries did this mostly on their own,
but U.S. leadership was crucial. The U.S. nurtured free-market
economic ideas and helped against Marxist rebels. That trend
stopped during the 1990s, as the Clinton Administration mostly
ignored the region for more glamorous priorities. The result
today is a region threatened by repression, violence and
economic decline.

In Colombia, Marxist guerrillas now control, and claim to own,
a portion of the country as large as Switzerland. Any
negotiations with the government, they maintain, are about who
controls the rest of Colombia, and to prove it they launch
terrorist strikes, kidnap or kill innocents and sabotage
electricity and oil pipelines. The narcotics trade and
guerrillas are both now spilling out of Colombia into Ecuador.

Shining Path terrorism is returning to the countryside in Peru,
where the State Department has issued a travel warning to
Americans. The triple border area of Paraguay, Brazil and
Argentina is home to a number of Islamic fundamentalist
terrorist cells. In Argentina, the government is bankrupt,
tariff barriers on consumer goods have been hiked to 35% and a
bank run has triggered capital controls.

But nowhere have conditions deteriorated faster than in
Venezuela under President Chavez, whose role model is Fidel
Castro. Responding to Monday's nationwide strike, Mr. Chavez
donned military fatigues as fighter planes roared overhead.
"Now we will begin tightening the screws," he said. "Nothing
stops this revolution." He has already passed laws that will
allow him to confiscate private farmland, and on Tuesday Fidel
himself paid a visit and praised his handiwork.

As for Central America, crime and kidnapping rings are chasing
out foreign investment, the great hope of so many jobless poor.
Haitian President Jean Bertrand Aristide--restored to power by
Bill Clinton--behaves like a mafia don in his destitute nation,
where critics of the government are murdered with impunity. The
refugee exodus has resumed, with the U.S. Coast Guard
reportedly intercepting more than 300 this month.

Despite anti-Yankee rhetoric for local consumption, Latin
America has long relied on the U.S. for leadership. The region
is in enough trouble now that if Secretary of State Colin
Powell didn't have a war to worry about, he would have no
choice but to make Latin America a priority. And the crisis
explains why Messrs. Bush and Powell are both adamant in
supporting Mr. Reich, a Cuban immigrant and former ambassador
to Venezuela with a lifetime of experience and contacts in the
region.

Mr. Dodd knows that Mr. Reich would be confirmed if he got to
the Senate floor, which is why he wants to block even a
hearing. He and Latin America aide Janice O'Connell bear a
grudge against the Cuban-American going back to their days on
opposite sides of the battle over Central America. But rather
than face that difference squarely, Mr. Dodd's strategy has
been to smear Mr. Reich's reputation, accusing him in a letter
to this paper of, among other things, being soft on terrorism.
U.S. officials say the public record refutes those charges,
which may be why Mr. Dodd doesn't want Mr. Reich to get his
chance to make his case in the Senate.

We keep wondering when Mr. Dodd's Democratic betters are going
to call him to account for such behavior. It'd be nice to know,
for example, how Florida Democrats Bob Graham and Bill Nelson
feel about this treatment of a Cuban American. Tom Daschle
recently met with Mr. Reich, but the majority leader has been
reluctant to overrule his party's junior barons when they get
the bit in their mouths.

Mr. Bush has the recourse of a recess appointment for Mr. Reich
once the Senate leaves town. Given the worsening state of Latin
America, and Mr. Dodd's irresponsibility, the President can
justify such a move in the urgent national interest.

opinionjournal.com



To: gao seng who wrote (209909)12/13/2001 11:03:40 PM
From: greenspirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
gao, after reading the news of the web tonight. It looks like we're down to the last 12 hours before Ben Laden is killed or captured.

Let's hope we wake up to some good news tomorrow!