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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnM who wrote (42981)9/9/2002 11:27:29 PM
From: Eashoa' M'sheekha  Respond to of 281500
 
Thanks For The Articles John And Scott.

Just browsed quickly so far and they look to be a very informative read.

PS: Have a great trip John!

Looks Like " The Rain In Main Will Be Mostly On The Wane "

for you.<GG>

weather.com

KC



To: JohnM who wrote (42981)9/11/2002 10:06:12 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 281500
 
Let's dedicate 9/11 to making the world more equal, humane

By Bill Clapp
Guest columnist
The Seattle Times
Wednesday, September 11, 2002 - 12:00 a.m. Pacific

All the anger, anxiety, sadness and bewilderment over what happened to us one year ago are welling up again today, as they likely will every Sept. 11 for the rest of our lives.

After the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, we realized that despite our strength as a nation, we are still not secure. Our policies have not led to global stability. We feel misunderstood and betrayed by others in the world.

But we also realize others feel the same about us. However generously we have given our money, protection and products, not all have benefited equally. In fact the gap between the world's rich and poor continues to grow at appalling rates.

The lesson we should draw from the events of the past year is that it is not enough to be the world's protector.

As the most prosperous nation in history, we should use our leadership to spread the core values of equality, freedom and individual opportunity to all people. Not an equality where one American life equals one hundred Asian lives, but where we honor the value and potential of every person on Earth.

A more equal world will be a more stable world. And we intuitively know that when people have a stake in the future and a real opportunity to improve their own well-being and that of their children, they will work for stability and value peace, as we do.

In March, President Bush declared at the International Conference on Financing for Development in Monterrey, Mexico:

"Poverty doesn't cause terrorism. Being poor doesn't make you a murderer. Yet persistent poverty and oppression can lead to hopelessness and despair. And when governments fail to meet the most basic needs of their people, these failed states can become havens for terror ... The needs of the developing world demand a new approach."

The president's commitment of an additional $5 billion a year in foreign assistance, starting in 2006, marks the largest increase in foreign aid since 1979.

At first blush this seems like a generous promise, but when you consider that we, the global economic powerhouse, actually give less than one-tenth of 1 percent of our gross national product (GNP) in foreign assistance, even the president's recent commitment appears anemic.

It grows even paler when compared to the rest of the world's most developed countries, who contribute an average four-tenths of a percent of their GNP.

The world's leaders (except Bush) met recently in Johannesburg, South Africa, for the World Summit on Sustainable Development. They worked on agreements to narrow the gap between rich and poor, and preserve the Earth's resources for generations to come. Not an easy trick.

In his opening remarks, President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa said, "A global human society based on poverty for many and prosperity for a few, characterized by islands of wealth, surrounded by a sea of poverty, is unsustainable."

Unsustainable is an understatement. I would add unacceptable, explosive, highly dangerous from a national security perspective, extremely risky from an economic standpoint, and simply inhumane.

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has proposed renaming foreign aid "national security support."

Thus, we should cease thinking about international development assistance as charity or aid, and start thinking of it as an inherent part of our strategy for national security and economic development. It should be a cornerstone of our foreign and defense policies. This shift may help us identify the resources necessary to seriously impact poverty.

Let's do the math. The United States' estimated military spending for 2002 is $366 billion. Global military spending in 2000 was $785 billion. The United Nations Development Program estimates the annual cost to bring education, health care, basic nutrition and sanitation to the undeveloped world is $40 billion.

Imagine the difference the U.S. alone would make if we reprioritized our spending choices and committed a mere 10 percent of our military budget to meaningful, directed development assistance, or "national security support." Imagine a world where someday we spend more on building the world than defending it.

Let's declare a prolonged, committed assault on global poverty, just as we did for the Cold War.

Let's employ our best minds, latest research and technologies, and most innovative approaches to address the most critical needs facing the globe's population. Let's get our talented business sector actively involved in problem solving. Let's also enlist the support of our allies in this effort. Let's call it — Operation Enduring Freedom and Opportunity, for all.

And finally, let's make Sept. 11 the launch date to replace the poverty and despair faced by billions of people around the world, with hope and action in the very best American tradition.
______________________________________________________

Bill Clapp is chairman and CEO of Global Partnerships, a Seattle-based nonprofit agency that is working to eliminate world poverty.

Copyright © 2002 The Seattle Times Company

seattletimes.nwsource.com



To: JohnM who wrote (42981)9/14/2002 4:36:11 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Never Forget What?

By FRANK RICH
Columnist
The New York Times
September 14, 2002

Candor is so little prized in Washington that you want to shake the hand of anyone who dares commit it. So cheers to Andrew Card, the president's chief of staff, for telling The Times's Elisabeth Bumiller the real reason that his boss withheld his full-frontal move on Saddam Hussein until September: "From a marketing point of view, you don't introduce new products in August." Mr. Card has taken some heat for talking about a war in which many may die as if it were the rollout of a new S.U.V. But he wasn't lying, and history has already proved him right. This campaign has been so well timed and executed that the new product already owns the market. The unofficial motto of the 9/11 anniversary may have been "Never forget," but by 9/12, if not before, the war on Al Qaeda was already fading from memory as the world was invited to test-drive the war on Iraq.

Al Qaeda may be forgotten, but it's not gone — apparently even from the suburbs of Buffalo, as CBS News first reported last night. At least two-thirds of its top leadership remains at large. A draft version of a U.N. report on our failure to shut down its cash flow says that "Al Qaeda is by all accounts `fit and well' and poised to strike again at its leisure." (It has already struck at least a half-dozen times since January.) Regime change, anyone? Al Qaeda almost brought one about in Afghanistan, assuming its likely role in the assassination attempt on Hamid Karzai. As Harry Shearer said in his satirical radio program, "Le Show," 9/11 is "the event that changed everything except terrorism."

But on to Iraq. Saddam might "be able to build a nuclear weapon within a year," said George W. Bush to the U.N. on Thursday. Yes, but Pakistan, where The Washington Post recently found two top Qaeda operatives planning new missions with impunity, already has nuclear weapons within terrorists' reach. "Al Qaeda terrorists escaped from Afghanistan and are known to be in Iraq," said Mr. Bush on Thursday. Yes, but there are Qaeda operatives in at least 65 countries, and The Times reported this week that the largest number of them are in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Iran (identified by Mr. Bush's own State Department in May as "the most active state sponsor of terrorism"), Syria and Yemen are not far behind. And then there's our ally, Saudi Arabia: according to USA Today, nearly 80 percent of the hits on a secretive Qaeda Web site since June have come from addresses in the country that also spawned nearly 80 percent of the 9/11 hijackers.

That Iraq is "a grave and gathering danger," as the president also said, is not in doubt. But is it as grave a danger as the enemy that attacked America on 9/11 and those states that are its most integral collaborators? The campaign against Iraq, wrote Brent Scowcroft in the op-ed that launched a thousand others, "is certain to divert us for some indefinite period from our war on terrorism." Since major Qaeda attacks are planned well in advance and have historically been separated by intervals of 12 to 24 months, we will find out how much we've been distracted soon enough.

There is now a "debate" about the new war, but so far it has been largely a parochial Washington affair, largely about process, and soon to be academic. Will President Bush ask Congress for authorization to go after Saddam? Will he consult the Security Council? We now know the answers are yes and yes, and that Congress will not stand in his way. (If the Democrats can't challenge the president about taxes, they certainly won't about war.) The Security Council may now sign on too, to Mr. Bush's rightful demand that the U.N. enforce its own resolutions against Iraq.

But when Saddam in all likelihood balks, we'll go to war, no matter how few our allies. If you think back to that ancient past of summer 2001, you'll recognize the game plan from the White House's several weeks of deliberation over stem-cell research. "He's listening to all sides of the debate," Ari Fleischer said then, even though it was evident from the get-go that Mr. Bush would do pretty much what he always intended after a few weeks of ostentatious "listening."

To question the president on Iraq is an invitation to have one's patriotism besmirched. The invective aimed at those with the toughest questions, almost all of them pillars of the Republican or military establishments, has been borderline ugly, complete with the requisite allusions to Neville Chamberlain. But it's hard to find any doubter of the war who wants to appease Saddam or denies that he is an evil player. The question many critics are asking is why he has jumped to the head of the most-wanted list when the war on Al Qaeda remains unfinished and our resources are finite. Even those who can stomach pre-emptive war as a new doctrine wonder if we have our pre-emptive priorities straight.

Peggy Noonan, as faithful a George W. Bush partisan as there is, sharpened the question most pointedly on The Wall Street Journal editorial page on Wednesday, when she implored the president to give us facts instead of sermons in making his case. " `Saddam is evil' is not enough," she wrote. "A number of people are evil, and some are even our friends. `Saddam has weapons of mass destruction' is not enough. A number of countries do. What the people need now is hard data that demonstrate conclusively that Saddam has weapons of mass destruction which he is readying to use on the people of the U.S. or the people of the West." (And maybe even the non-West.)

What we have been getting instead is the one thing worse than no data — false data. For months, administration officials have been trying to implicate Iraq in 9/11 with the story of an alleged April 2001 meeting in Prague between Mohamed Atta and a Saddam spy. But the C.I.A. can find no evidence of this, and the 21-page fact sheet the U.S. released with the president's speech mentions no Saddam-9/11 link at all. As for nuclear arms, last weekend in his appearance with Tony Blair the president referred to a 1998 International Atomic Energy Agency report that said Iraq was "six months away" from developing a nuclear weapon, adding "I don't know what more evidence we need." Plenty more, as it happens, because an agency spokesman says no such report exists. This is why those who most want to believe Mr. Bush, from a conservative G.O.P. Senate leader like Don Nickles to our allies, keep saying (in Mr. Nickles's words), "You're not giving us enough."

It's this high-handedness that echoes the run-up to Vietnam. The analogy can be overdone, certainly, since today's armed forces are highly unlikely to find Iraq a military quagmire and no one can even try to make a case for the legitimacy of Saddam's regime. But there is a widening credibility gap between the White House's marketing of the war and the known facts. The arrogance of this C.E.O. administration, which gives citizens no better information than companies like Halliburton gave to its stockholders, recalls the hubris of those Ivy League and corporate "whiz kids" on Robert McNamara's Pentagon team who saw themselves as better and brighter than the rest of us.

But on to Iraq. Anyone who believes that Mr. Bush might turn back now has not been following the path of a president who, by his own account, never second-guesses a decision; indeed, we're already ratcheting up our longstanding military engagement with Saddam. As we move from containment to attack mode, though, it might be best to focus less on procedural debates, such as the timing and wording of whatever rubber-stamp approval Congress will deliver, and more on the tougher questions the administration would prefer to ignore.

What happens if Al Qaeda attacks the U.S., or if Afghanistan or Pakistan falls while we're at war in Iraq? Can we continue to meet all our commitments with an all-volunteer army? As budget deficits spiral into the foreseeable future, where will we get the tens of billions of dollars we need to support the post-Saddam Iraq that we will surely inherit? Is Saddam our new focus because he's the most catastrophic threat or is there another agenda that should be spelled out, whether it involves oil or unfinished Bush family business?

This is the candid talk we need to have. Maybe the administration can make the case that we can simultaneously whip Al Qaeda and Saddam, secure Afghanistan for keeps, tame the rest of the "axis of evil," guzzle gas in perpetuity and keep cutting taxes (for some of us). If that's so, and someone else's children will be marching on Baghdad, what patriot would not stand up and say "Let's roll"?

nytimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (42981)9/14/2002 6:11:19 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Drumbeat of war drowns out concerns of average Americans

BY MARIE COCCO
Syndicated Columnist
Posted on Fri, Sep. 13, 2002

The public prayers are finished, the saturation coverage wrung out, the documentaries shelved in history's library awaiting time's critique.

America wakes today to the usual clatter, the humdrum of workday worries punctuated by the presidential beating of war drums.

It is hard to remember when some other rhythm was heard. War is replacing remembrance, even as the nation seems dazed and divided by the speed with which an old enemy, Iraq, has re-emerged.

We are told we must engage in a permanent, global war. Yet most of us are asked to pay no price, bear no burden. The home front remains a disengaged place. And in this place, the sense of national purpose that sprung from the events of Sept. 11, 2001, finds its opposite in national neglect of everything else.

This is nothing like World War II, when women worked the factories. When men who remained behind were willing conscripts for civil defense. When sacrifice was asked, and made.

In this year since the terrorists struck, the everyday concerns of average Americans have been pushed aside. Not because of a deliberate plan to dedicate ourselves to some larger purpose. But because of the deliberate scheme of public officials to avoid responsibility.

The federal government's ledgers have gone from black to alarming red. Surpluses that were once supposed to finance the onrushing retirement of the baby boom generation have disappeared, replaced by recurring deficits projected to total $229 billion over the next four years.

The price of war? Not really. Spending related to the attacks of Sept. 11 accounts for about 10 percent of the loss of previously anticipated surpluses, according to Congressional Budget Office figures.

The cries of workers whose retirement savings were looted by corporate crooks or decimated by stock market losses were heard, briefly, above the din of war talk. Yet Congress is now busy diluting even the pallid pension-protection measures that lawmakers introduced in the spring. Even Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's effort to limit — but not ban — a corporation's ability to use company stock for its 401(k) matching contributions has been blunted. Thanks, lobbyists.

Meanwhile, the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, the federal agency that insures the old defined-benefit pensions that are meant to give workers a guaranteed, steady income in retirement, reports a record jump in the number of private pension plans that are underfunded. That is, they do not currently have assets sufficient to pay promised benefits. In 2000, 87 plans reported they were underfunded. In 2001, that tripled to 261. Stock market losses and low interest on investments are the chief culprits.

And what of today's retirees?

They are struck, again, by the blow of HMOs pulling out of Medicare. Or they are stuck paying higher charges to those HMOs that remain. Next year an estimated 200,000 elderly people will lose HMO coverage, bringing to 2.4 million the number dropped since 1998. The managed-care industry was promoted as the answer to Medicare's every problem. The answer has proved wrong. No one comes forward with another.

Even the stooped grandmothers, with their tales of splitting pills in two so as to afford their prescriptions, have gotten the official brushoff. Prescription drug coverage for Medicare beneficiaries is another priority pushed down the list.

By year's end, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities estimates that about 2.2 million Americans who were thrown out of jobs by the terrorist attack or by the economic doldrums that preceded and now follow it are expected to run out of unemployment benefits before finding work. During the recession of the early 1990s, Congress moved four times to make sure benefits kept flowing to laid-off workers. So far in this downturn it has acted only once, and only grudgingly.

Perhaps we are at a juncture of history where there can be one, and only one, priority — national security. But no one has explained this to us, or asked for perseverance on all others.

No one has come right out and said forget about your standard of living, your retirement hopes, your ability even to pay for drugs you need to stay alive. When this week's tears finally dry, it is time to look clearly at this failure, and demand an explanation — or action.

------------------------------------------------------------
Cocco (e-mail: is cocco@newsday.com) is a columnist for Newsday, 235 Pinelawn Rd., Melville, NY 11747. Distributed by the Washington Post Writers Group.

twincities.com