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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (2690)2/7/2002 2:47:35 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15516
 
Bush lays groundwork for striking first at nations with weapons of mass destruction.

"And the UN charter allows for self-defense in case of an armed attack,
legal experts doubt it wouldsanction a US
preemptive move to overthrow Iraq - short of a specific
threat by Baghdad. "The rest of the world
would by and largeconsider it illegal,
and American lawyers would have a hard time
putting together ... a proposition it was right,"

says Detlev Vagts, a professor of international
law at Harvard Law School in Cambridge.."

February 7, 2001
By Ann Scott Tyson | Special correspondent of
The Christian Science Monitor

WASHINGTON - One bright afternoon in June 1981, Israeli F-16 jets
streaked low across the Iraqi desert. Spotting the gleaming domes of
the unfinished Osiraq nuclear reactor, the pilots decimated it with
bombs - a bold preemptive strike in the name of self-preservation.

The world reaction to the strike was swift and critical, with the United
States and the rest of the UN Security Council unanimously
condemning it.

But now, two decades later, the Bush
administration - warning of time-bomb
terrorists and the spread of deadly mass
weapons - proposes a far more open-ended,
sweeping use of preemptive force than
Israel's.

In a controversial expansion of the Bush
doctrine - the unilateralist "with us or with
the terrorists" foreign policy that followed
Sept. 11 - the administration is making a
stark argument for striking first.


"Defending against terrorism and other
emerging 21st century threats may well
require that we take the war to the enemy,"
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said
last week in a speech at the National
Defense University.

In one extreme scenario - one nevertheless
under consideration by US officials - the Bush administration could
claim the right to overthrow the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein
preemptively. The goal: to prevent Hussein - alone or through
terrorists - from threatening the United States or its allies with
weapons of mass destruction (WMD).

"This is absolutely a new wrinkle," says Kurt Campbell, of the
International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies. "There has been no presidential doctrine on
terrorism before now."

In contrast, over the past 20 years, American military strikes against
terrorist targets have been limited and for the most part retaliatory:


• In April 1986, the US struck military sites in Libya in response to
the bombing 10 days earlier of a Berlin discotheque frequented by US
troops.

• In June 1993, in retaliation for Iraq's alleged plot to assassinate
former President George Bush in April, US forces fired Tomahawk
cruise missiles at the Iraqi intelligence service headquarters in
Baghdad.

• In August 1998, 13 days after the bombings of the US embassies in
Kenya and Tanzania, the US fired cruise missiles at training camps
in Afghanistan and a pharmaceutical plant in Sudan suspected of
making chemical weapons.

Yet today, many terrorism experts view such "action-reaction" strikes
as ineffective.


"We learned by experience that bombing installations and institutions
does not work in terms of pressing the regime to do something,"
says Matthew Levitt, a former FBI counterterrorism expert at the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy here.

Two central factors drive the shift toward a preemptive policy against
the threat of terrorism and WMD. The first is the realization since
Sept. 11 of US vulnerability to thousands of terrorists trained and
willing to carry out attacks against Americans.

The other is the recognition that time is evaporating for Washington
to act against another, old, long-anticipated threat - chemical,
biological, and, most critically, nuclear weapons programs carried out
by "rogue" states such as Iraq, Iran, and North Korea.

"Time is not in our favor," the Pentagon official says. "There is a
sense of urgency because of the Iraqi program, among others. The
Iranian program is moving along in dangerous ways, and this
administration has always been nervous about North Korea and
whether its nuclear weapons program is completely constrained by
the 1994 agreement."

In 1998, a report to Congress by a bipartisan commission led by Mr.
Rumsfeld warned that rogue states were seeking to acquire ballistic
missiles with nuclear payloads, and the US could face a ballistic
missile strike within five years.

Meanwhile, officials say, known links between terrorist groups
actively pursuing WMD and states developing them led President
Bush to decide that preemptive action is warranted - and indeed, as
he said in his State of the Union address last week, the risk of
waiting to act "would be catastrophic."

Yet in what appeared to be a broadening of the war beyond terror,
President Bush indicated that threat of WMD alone would justify
preventative US action. "The United States of America will not permit
the world's most dangerous regimes to threaten us with the world's
most destructive weapons," he said.

"I think nuclear weapons is what this is all about," says Tom Nichols,
a professor at the US Naval War College in Newport, R.I. "This is a
fundamentally new problem, because nuclear weapons allow a weak
state to inflict a huge amount of damage overnight."

Still, the Bush administration faces an uphill battle in convincing
skeptical European and other allies. And the UN charter allows for
self-defense in case of an armed attack, legal experts doubt it would
sanction a US preemptive move to overthrow Iraq - short of a specific
threat by Baghdad. "The rest of the world would by and large
consider it illegal, and American lawyers would have a hard time
putting together ... a proposition it was right," says Detlev Vagts, a
professor of international law at Harvard Law School in Cambridge,
Mass.

csmonitor.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (2690)2/7/2002 7:41:45 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Beware unilateral war without end

Tuesday, February 5, 2002

By HELEN THOMAS
HEARST NEWSPAPERS

WASHINGTON -- President Bush used his State of the
Union address and some other recent speeches to flex the
nation's military muscle and threaten several nations,
designated as the "axis of evil."

Rarely has the world heard a more belligerent American
president. His tone and substance have dismayed our allies
as much as the targets he cites -- Iraq, Iran and North
Korea.

No U.S. military attacks are imminent, his spokesman
reassures. And no, there's no new intelligence that makes
these three nations any different now than they were last
week.

Such strident statements from the commander in chief
make you wonder. He's riding high in public opinion polls
and is daring the world: "I can lick anyone on the block."

It seems to me that Bush has brushed off the man who
knows more about war than anyone in his administration --
Secretary of State Colin Powell, the former chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Powell looked forlorn as he stood with other Cabinet
officers when they rushed to congratulate Bush on his
bellicose speech.

Bush, closer to the hawks in his administration, has not
been happy with the retired general for urging him to
announce that the United States would treat the detainees
at the Guantanamo Bay Navy Base in Cuba in accordance
with the 1949 Geneva Convention on treatment of
prisoners. Bush hasn't decided yet whether he wants to go
that route.

American officials insist the prisoners taken in Afghanistan
are being treated humanely but will not be designated as
prisoners of war and thus automatically protected by the
Geneva Convention.

Powell apparently is too dovish for Bush, who was recently
dubbed a "freshly anointed American Caesar" by a German
newspaper.

Considering the national gung-ho mood, I have no doubt
that if Bush were to widen the war beyond Afghanistan
tomorrow, he would have the strong backing of the
American people, with few questions asked.

The Gallup poll shortly after Bush's speech Tuesday night
gave him an 83 percent approval rating; 91 percent said his
policies are taking the nation in the right direction and 64
percent thought his proposals on dealing with terrorism
were "very effective."

Senior political adviser Karl Rove had already signaled that
Bush would play the war card with the mid-term elections
coming up in November. Rove told the Republican National
Committee: We can go to the country on this issue because
the American people "trust the Republican party to do a
better job of protecting and strengthening America's
military might and thereby protecting America."

His remarks infuriated Democrats who have gone all out to
support the administration's conduct of the war. They are
now in a political straitjacket. Rove has made the war a
partisan issue and any criticism from the Democrats would
be considered unpatriotic.

Bush also put terrorists of the world put on notice if they
pursue their goals or seek to develop weapons of mass
destruction, he would not hesitate to take preemptive
action.

Do we really have the right to attack a country without
provocation? To strike first is not our tradition. When he
says, "Let's roll," does that mean he believes he can
undertake armed intervention anywhere in the world
without any congressional or international go-ahead?

In his threatening remarks he did not bother to mention
U.S. allies or Congress.

This unilateralism is Bush's foreign policy in a nutshell.
Bush is saying we will go it alone. We don't need the rest of
the world to take up arms against any country suspected of
sponsoring or harboring terrorists.

After the Sept. 11 horror, Bush mustered the sympathy of
foreign leaders with a marathon of friendly, soothing
personal telephone calls. But many now are appalled at the
new, pugnacious Bush. The New York Times said Britain
was the only nation that came out stalwartly behind the
aggressive speech.

Dimitri Rogozin, chairman of Russia's parliamentary
international committee, said the speech seemed to
indicate that the ultraconservatives in the administration
had the upper hand.

Does the president really feel the United States is powerful
enough to extend its military operations to so many places?
Where is his diplomatic outreach? What makes him think
that the world would be with him when he widens the war?
Will the bombs be so smart they would only hit al-Qaida
members and no innocent civilians?

Why hasn't the president put the case of global terrorism
before the United Nations and tried to bring everyone into
the act?

I remember Vietnam. Lyndon B. Johnson had most of the
nation and the media with him in the beginning. But the
futility of that war eventually turned the country against
the war and the president. Retaliation was the right
response in Afghanistan.

But looking to the future, the American people should be
careful about embarking on a war without end.

Helen Thomas is a columnist for Hearst Newspapers. Copyright
2002 Hearst Newspapers. E-mail: helent@hearstdc.com

seattlepi.nwsource.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (2690)2/7/2002 8:17:19 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Lessons for Nation-Builders
February 7, 2002
The New York Times

Nation-building aided by
outsiders is a project many
believe is doomed to fail. Yet
international attempts to create a
society from the ground up have sometimes succeeded. A
recent example is East Timor, which offers a few lessons
for future efforts in places like Afghanistan.

In 1975 East Timor was forcibly annexed by Indonesia in a
brutal invasion. Over the next two decades, a fifth of the
population was killed. In 1999, Indonesian troops and
their allied local militias went on a spree of destruction,
burning much of the area's infrastructure to the ground
and holding a civilian U.N. mission hostage. The carnage
was stopped only by a coalition of United Nations troops
led by Australia.

Remarkably, East Timor today is secure and peaceful, with
much rebuilt infrastructure. It has the institutions of
democracy and will hold presidential elections before it
becomes an independent nation on May 20. The U.N. has
been training Timorese to take over administrative posts.

One important lesson to be drawn from East Timor is the
need for a strong peacekeeping force with robust rules of
engagement. The U.N. forces were able to stop militia
raids into East Timor from West Timor, which is part of
Indonesia, by getting permission for their peacekeepers
and police to aggressively protect themselves and the
Timorese people. They can shoot first if threatened. After
independence, 5,000 peacekeepers will stay.

Problems faced by the U.N. in East Timor are also worth
noting. The process would have benefited from less rivalry
between departments. All hiring was done from New York,
much of it based on little information. The mission was
slow to put local people in positions of authority, hiring
them only as drivers, guards or interpreters. After much
criticism and World Bank help, the U.N. began to hire and
train more local people.

Whoever takes on the enormous task of nation-building in
Afghanistan and elsewhere needs to learn from these
lessons. The most important job is not to run the country,
but to enable its citizens to do the job themselves.

nytimes.com