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


To: JohnM who wrote (54062)10/22/2002 11:16:49 PM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
I'm increasingly convinced that this misreading is one of the critical mistakes. No one actually knows the answer to the question, how would the Palestinians react to a two state solution, until it's tried, seriously.

Well, a two-state solution was seriously offered, and Arafat treated as something the Israelis wanted so badly that they would pay any price for it.

My own guess is that the sigh of relief extending throughout much of the ME would be so large, given enough time to take hold seriously, that the one's who didn't accept it would be very, very few. Some still would not. But they would have a much more difficult time gaining support (followers and money) than before.

First, you are not allowing for the usefulness of the conflict to the various dictators of the ME. As Tom Friedman says, "50 years ago the leaders of SE Asia said to their people, support our dictatorship and we'll give you prosperity. Now they have prosperity and political conditions are easing. 50 years ago the Arab leaders said to their people, support our dictatorship and we'll give you the Arab/Israeli conflict. Now 50 years on, they're poorer than ever, but they still have the Arab/Israeli conflict."

Second, you are not allowing for ideology. Do you think the Islamists are a fringe group, that the mullahs who every week call the Jews "sons of monkeys and pigs" and call for Israel's destruction don't really mean it? Do you think Hizbullah (who now own a fiefdom in Lebanon) are going to say, just kidding, we didn't mean it about liberating Palestine in a sea of blood? And what about Hamas, PIJ, Al Aqsa?

The first group has the power and the second group has the only ideology in the Arab world that hasn't (yet) been proven a total loser. Both groups have the guns. The majority of Arabs who would just like to get on with their lives don't have power and they don't have guns and they are just keeping their heads down.



To: JohnM who wrote (54062)10/22/2002 11:46:14 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Krugman thinks we're getting back to 'Business as Usual'<G>...

Business as Usual
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Columnist
The New York Times
October 22, 2002

The mood among business lobbyists, according to a jubilant official at the Heritage Foundation, is one of "optimism, bordering on giddiness." They expect the elections on Nov. 5 to put Republicans in control of all three branches of government, and have their wish lists ready. "It's the domestic equivalent of planning for postwar Iraq," says the official.

The White House also apparently expects Christmas in November. In fact, it is so confident that it has already given business lobbyists the gift they want most: an end to all this nonsense about corporate reform. Back in July George W. Bush declared, "Corporate misdeeds will be found and will be punished," touting a new law that "authorizes new funding for investigators and technology at the Securities and Exchange Commission to uncover wrongdoing." But that was then; don't you know there's a war on?

The first big step in undermining reform came when Harvey Pitt, chairman of the S.E.C., backtracked on plans to appoint a strong and independent figure to head a new accounting oversight board.

But that was only a prelude. The S.E.C. has been underfunded for years, and most observers — including Richard Breeden, who headed the agency when Mr. Bush's father was president — thought that even the budget Mr. Bush signed back in July was seriously inadequate. But now the administration wants to cancel most of the "new funding" Mr. Bush boasted about.

Administration officials claim that the S.E.C. can still do its job with a much smaller budget. But the S.E.C. is ludicrously underfinanced: staff lawyers and accountants are paid half what they could get in the private sector, usually find themselves heavily outnumbered by the legal departments of the companies they investigate, and often must do their own typing and copying. Officials say there are investigations that they should pursue but can't for lack of resources. And the new law expands the S.E.C.'s responsibilities.

So what's going on? Here's a parallel. Since 1995 Congress has systematically forced the Internal Revenue Service to shrink its operations; the number of auditors has fallen by 28 percent. Yet it's clear that giving the I.R.S. more money would actually reduce the federal budget deficit; the agency estimates that it loses at least $30 billion a year in uncollected taxes, mainly because high-income taxpayers believe they can get away with tax evasion. So starving the I.R.S. isn't about saving money, it's about protecting affluent tax cheats.

Similarly, top officials don't really believe that the S.E.C. can do its job with less money; the whole point is to prevent the agency from doing its job.

In retrospect, it's hard to see why anyone believed that our current leadership was serious about corporate reform. To an extent unprecedented in recent history, this is a government of, by and for corporate insiders. I'm not just talking about influence, I'm talking about personal career experience. The Bush administration contains more former C.E.O.'s than any previous administration, but as James Surowiecki put it in The New Yorker, "Almost none of the C.E.O.'s on the Bush team headed competitive, entrepreneurial businesses." Instead they come out of a world of "crony capitalism, in which whom you know is more important than what you do and how you do it." Why would they turn their backs on that world?

And don't forget the personal incentives. Almost all of those ex-C.E.O.'s in the administration became wealthy thanks to the connections they had acquired in Washington; the exception is Mr. Bush himself, who became wealthy thanks to the connections his father had acquired in Washington. This process continues. Senator Phil Gramm, who pushed through legislation that exempted Enron's trading practices from regulation while his wife sat on the company's board, is retiring and taking a new job: he's going to UBS Warburg, the company that bought Enron's trading operation. Somehow, crusaders against business abuse don't get similar offers.

The bottom line is that you shouldn't worry about those TV images of men in suits doing the perp walk. That was for public consumption; now that the public is focused on other things, it's back to business — insider business — as usual.

________________________________________

Paul Krugman joined The New York Times in 1999 as a columnist on the Op-Ed Page and continues as Professor of Economics and International Affairs at Princeton University.

Krugman received his B.A. from Yale University in 1974 and his Ph.D. from MIT in 1977. He has taught at Yale, MIT and Stanford. At MIT he became the Ford International Professor of Economics.

nytimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (54062)10/23/2002 2:28:53 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
"Meanwhile, back in Rio." A Boston University Prof (Harvard University, Ph.D. Political Science, 1991) examines the Brazil problem. And gives due respect to the people Clinton called, "Those Damned Bond Traders!"

October 23, 2002
Brazil's Democracy Takes a Chance
By JEFFREY W. RUBIN

BOSTON, The potential contradiction between democracy and markets is nowhere more apparent than in Brazil this month. A leftist candidate, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, known as Lula, won 46 percent of the vote in the first round of Brazil's presidential elections on Oct. 6, twice the share of the next contender, centrist José Serra. Current polls show Mr. da Silva poised to win the runoff elections on Oct. 27.

This would change the political map of Latin America, where no leftist party with both high ambitions and democratic credentials has had a chance at national power in more than a decade.

If Brazilians choose Mr. da Silva, they may find some innovative ways to escape the inequality and poverty that have characterized Latin America in the 20th century ? that is, if global markets do not so prejudge Mr. da Silva as to void Brazilians' democratic choice. The disruptive potential of markets has been apparent throughout the presidential campaign. As soon as Mr. da Silva surged in the polls last spring and foreign observers realized that his Workers' Party might govern Brazil, international banks warned investors to beware. Immediately, Brazil's currency ? the real ? began a precipitous decline. Central bank efforts to bolster the real by increasing bank reserve requirements and raising already high interest rates do not appear to be helping. The reason for the decline in the real has been clear all along: uncertainty about Brazil's political and economic future.

This uncertainty is quite rational. While Mr. da Silva has toned down his past radicalism and promised to abide by Brazil's financial commitments, he has also continued to advocate relieving the poverty and misery suffered by more than half of Brazil's 170 million people. This requires innovative policy regarding wages, profit rates, land distribution, education, social welfare policies and taxation.

Twenty years ago, Latin American military dictatorships gave way to democracies, accompanied by vigorous social movements and great hope for electoral competition and the rule of law. At the same time, neoliberal economic reforms ? encouraged by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund and supported by the new generation of Latin American leaders ? did away with subsidies, social welfare policies and state-owned enterprises, freeing market forces domestically and encouraging foreign investment.

The assumption was that democracy and markets would lead to prosperity in some sort of automatic, if gradual, way. What resulted was big increases in productivity and efficiency and credible processes of administrative decentralization, especially in emerging markets like Brazil and Mexico. However, little changed in the distribution of wealth or the persistence of poverty. Great prosperity and the benefits of modernity and globalization continued to coexist with misery and exclusion. Now even the gains are being rolled back.

At the same time, Latin American democracies have functioned with impressive continuity despite the challenges of guerrilla movements, economic crises and coup attempts. Democratic institutions have taken root in Latin America, in both political practice and popular imagination. But if democracy is to persist, one question must be answered: Will democracy better people's lives?

Supporters of unrestricted free trade believe that democratic citizens must endure dire poverty and wait for market-generated wealth to improve income levels. In contrast, Brazilians are deciding, democratically, in the course of a long and much debated political campaign, that they would like to modify some basic arrangements.

This means asking tough questions. Should land be more equally distributed, in order to strengthen competition and nourish rural communities? Should urban tax rates be high enough to provide sewer systems in all neighborhoods? Would policies that strengthen small farmers rather than agribusiness be able to produce abundant, healthy crops and keep rural people employed? How would education and small business employment be affected if public universities sent faculty out to urban neighborhoods and rural towns to teach courses that respond to local needs? What are the links between basic health-care services for women, gender equality and a more creative civil society?

In other words, how can the gains of economic liberalization be combined with innovative policies that preserve many market incentives but bring about fairer results?

In addressing this question, the private sector may have to rethink some of its assumptions, just as the left has modified its past stances. For example, Brazilian businessmen may come to believe, as their counterparts in much of Europe did over the past 50 years, that it is in their personal interest to live in a society without extreme misery and violence, and in their corporate interest to have a healthy and well-educated work force. In this light, high profits might rationally be traded for wage increases or after-school computer training programs in shantytowns. Indeed, groups of prominent Brazilian businessmen are already making such proposals in Brazil's major cities.

Mr. da Silva's Workers' Party has a 20-year record of putting new ideas into practice. For example, cities and states governed by the party have instituted participatory budgeting programs in which people in neighborhoods decide how parts of municipal budgets should be spent. Local governments run by the Workers' Party have assembled reformist, multiparty coalitions that have improved schools and health care ? in small towns and big cities alike ? while promoting private sector growth.

If domestic and international investors run from Brazil in the face of a victory by Mr. da Silva, it will be impossible to expand these innovative policies or implement new ones. And if the very existence of debate about a society's economic bargains leads investors to strangle the economy, then change will be impossible, and democracy will have been defeated.

In that case, we would have to revise commonly held views about international support for democracy and recognize a different truth: the international community supports democracy in developing countries so long as it doesn't do much more than efficiently administer the status quo.

Individuals, businesses and foreign governments need to invest in Brazil precisely because its people are willing to take some risks. By shaking things up, Brazilians might find ways to alleviate some of the worst problems of contemporary societies. This is supposed to be one of the attractions of democracy, after all: its creativity.

Jeffrey W. Rubin is professor of history at Boston University and and research associate at the Institute for the Study of Economic Culture. He recently completed a year of research in Brazil on democracy and innovation.
nytimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (54062)10/23/2002 4:38:07 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Good article from TNR by a guy on your side, John.

WHY LIBERALS SHOULD SUPPORT THE WAR.
False Alarm
by Jonathan Chait

Post date: 10.10.02
Issue date: 10.21.02
It is perhaps telling that the case for war with Iraq was most clearly made not by Republican President George W. Bush but by Democratic President Bill Clinton. "Predators of the twenty-first century," Clinton warned, speaking four and a half years ago, "will be all the more lethal if we allow them to build arsenals of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons and the missiles to deliver them. ... There is no more clear example of this threat than Saddam Hussein's Iraq." And if the world were to allow Saddam to continue to construct his terrible weapons? "Well, he will conclude that the international community has lost its will," Clinton declared. "He will then conclude that he can go right on and do more to rebuild an arsenal of devastating destruction. And some day, some way, I guarantee you, he'll use the arsenal."

As American liberals contemplate the current president's proposed war with Iraq, it's worth pondering his predecessor's logic. For if you accept Clinton's reasoning--and few liberals objected at the time--you can hardly help but resolve that we must eliminate Iraq's nonconventional arsenal by any means at our disposal, including, if all else fails, war. Two things have changed since Clinton's comments: First, in late 1998 Saddam effectively shut down U.N. weapons inspectors in Iraq, breaking the back of the already ailing inspections regime and granting himself four largely unfettered years in which to continue developing weapons of mass destruction; and second, in early 2001 Clinton was replaced in office by a Republican. The first of these points unquestionably strengthens the case for war: Saddam has provided strong evidence that he will not allow anything to deter him from pursuing weapons of mass destruction.

But many of my fellow liberals appear driven more by the second point. When asked about war, they typically offer the following propositions: President Bush has cynically timed the debate to bolster Republican chances in the November elections, he has pursued his Iraq policy with an arrogant disregard for the views of Congress and the public, and his rationales for military action have been contradictory and in some cases false. I happen to believe all these criticisms are true (although the first is hard to prove) and that they add more evidence to what is already a damning indictment of the Bush presidency. But these are objections to the way Bush has carried out his Iraq policy rather than to the policy itself. (If Bush were to employ such dishonest tactics on behalf of, say, universal health care, that wouldn't make the policy a bad idea.) Ultimately the central question is: Does war with Iraq promote liberal foreign policy principles? The answer is yes, it does.

Liberals and conservatives share many foreign policy values in common: encouraging democracy and capitalism, responding to direct aggression, and so on. That is why, for instance, both overwhelmingly supported overthrowing the Taliban and hunting down Al Qaeda in Afghanistan. In the post-cold-war era, though, liberals have centered their thinking around certain ideals with which conservatives do not agree. Writing in these pages in 1999, conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer identified three distinctly liberal principles: advancing humanitarian (rather than merely national) interests; observing international law; and acting in concert with international institutions, such as the United Nations. Krauthammer cited these three principles in order to dismiss them. I disagree. Underlying all three is an understanding that American global dominance cannot last unless it is accepted by the rest of the world, and that cannot happen unless it operates on behalf of the broader good and on the basis of principles more elevated than "might makes right."

Do these three liberal precepts militate against war with Iraq? Certainly the liberal concern for humanitarianism should not stand in the way. We are contemplating, after all, the overthrow of one of the most internally violent and repressive regimes on Earth (see "Slave State," by Robert D. Kaplan, page 10). Indeed, from a purely humanitarian perspective, the case for this war is stronger than for the Gulf war--in which we restored a dissolute, authoritarian monarchy in Kuwait and left Saddam's tyrannical regime in place. No matter how badly we might bungle a post-Saddam rebuilding of Iraq--and Bush's record in Afghanistan, alas, suggests little reason for optimism--it is difficult to imagine that deposing Saddam will not greatly improve the living conditions and human rights of the Iraqi people.

It's true that absent an internal coup, toppling the Iraqi government would lead to the loss of life among innocent Iraqis. But the fact that a military action causes casualties does not mean it cannot be justified in liberal eyes: Witness liberal support for U.S. action in Afghanistan, Kosovo, and Somalia. Moreover, post-Gulf war advancements in precision bombing have made the American military better at minimizing civilian casualties. And there is abundant evidence that a large portion of the Iraqi populace is willing to endure physical danger in order to oust Saddam: All of the major Iraqi exile groups--even those that oppose the current sanctions regime--support a war to overthrow Saddam. Iraqi Kurds and Shias rose up against Saddam when he looked weak in 1991, and thousands gave their lives in the effort. Humanitarianism may not be a sufficient rationale for war in and of itself--liberals don't want to go around overthrowing every government that mistreats its citizens. But it certainly isn't a compelling reason not to go to war.



more serious sticking point would seem to be international law. War with Iraq worries liberals in part because it seems to come right out of the blue. The Bush administration has inadvertently stoked this fear by blundering the argument. First, it has framed war with Iraq as a continuing response to the September 11 attacks. But there's not yet convincing evidence that Iraq lent meaningful support to Al Qaeda, and the lessons of last year's attack would suggest action against terrorist groups and the states that most aggressively support them (e.g., Iran and Syria), not Iraq. Barbra Streisand's contention in a memo to the Democratic leadership that "Sadam [sic] Hussein did not bomb the World Trade Center," is--however facile--true.

Second, the Bush administration has justified war with Iraq as the first exercise of its new doctrine of "preemption," whereby the United States, in defiance of international law, can attack rival states that pose a non-imminent threat. Liberals, normally, find such a prospect alarming. "International law seems to count for nothing in this administration's view of the world," the editors of The American Prospect wrote in a joint antiwar editorial. "Not only does preemption violate the U.N. charter and set a dangerous precedent for other countries, it also risks triggering wars we might otherwise avoid." By framing war with Iraq as the model for a new foreign policy doctrine under which we can attack anybody we deem a threat, without any regard for the opinion of the world or even our allies, Bush has made it anathema to liberals.

But opposing the administration's expansive new preemption doctrine does not require one to oppose its intended war with Iraq. Here, again, the administration has bungled the argument. The more persuasive justification for war is that Iraq has violated a series of U.N. resolutions requiring its disarmament and compliance with weapons inspections. Yes, lots of countries violate U.N. resolutions. What makes Iraq's violation a casus belli is that it agreed to disarm as a condition of ending the Gulf war. War with Iraq does not require trashing international law. Just the opposite: Sustaining international law is central to its very rationale.

Indeed, if you want to get technical, the Gulf war never really ended. Hostilities came to a halt April 9, 1991, when Iraq agreed to U.N. cease-fire resolution 687, which required Iraq to "unconditionally accept the destruction, removal or rendering harmless" of its weapons of mass destruction and missiles with a range of 150 kilometers or more. But Iraq refused to cooperate with the U.N.'s efforts to locate and destroy these weapons. Time and again, Iraq demanded concessions from the inspectors--requiring advance notice, barring them based on nationality, and exempting "presidential sites," which included areas as large as Washington, D.C. Its allies on the Security Council continuously supported Iraq's cause, which merely emboldened Saddam to demand more concessions, until at last he dispensed with even the pretense of cooperating with UNSCOM. In a pathetic display of appeasement the United Nations created a new inspections regime to be staffed by more compliant inspectors, operating under absurdly restrictive conditions, but Saddam refused to cooperate with even that.

The dangerous legacy of this episode is obvious. When a belligerent dictator sees that he can flout the dictates of international law without resistance, he and other dictators will grow emboldened to pursue future aggression. And, of course, the underlying substance of Saddam's conflict with international law--his ongoing efforts to build long-range missiles and nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons--has only grown more crucial since his 1998 expulsion of the weapons inspectors. Nonetheless, this latter point has come into dispute of late, with many liberals arguing that the threat of annihilation would deter Iraq from using, or even threatening to use, nuclear weapons. "I think Saddam knows that if they ever used a weapon of mass destruction, that they'd be destroyed in turn," argued Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin. "They are interested in power." It naturally follows from this argument that Iraqi nuclear weapons would pose no significant danger to the world. If that's the case, though, not only should we not threaten war to stop the Iraqi weapons buildup, we should lift all sanctions designed to halt it. (After all, sanctions undoubtedly harm the Iraqi people.) The very fact that liberals vehemently insist upon the necessity of an inspections regime at the same time they claim deterrence will protect us suggests that they do not truly believe the latter argument.

And why should they? The claim that Saddam can be deterred from using weapons of mass destruction rests on the assumption that he is a rational actor. But Saddam's history, as former CIA Iraq analyst Kenneth Pollack argued in The New York Times last month, is replete with irrational behavior. In the 1970s he attacked Iranian-armed Kurds, resulting in a humiliating accord in which he ceded territory to Iran. He has launched two costly, ill-fated wars and ordered an assassination of President George H.W. Bush--an adventure that, had it succeeded, may well have led to an American invasion and the end of his regime. These are not the actions of a man concerned only with survival and power.

Perhaps the strongest evidence of Saddam's irrationality, however, is his very obsession with obtaining weapons of mass destruction. Had Saddam acceded to U.N. demands at the close of the Gulf war, international sanctions against Iraq would likely have been lifted years ago. In the absence of sanctions, Iraq could have pumped as many as six million barrels of crude oil per day; with the tens of billions of dollars that came from this, Saddam could have pursued his passion for palace-building to an unprecedented degree, built a conventional military more than strong enough to deter aggression by his neighbors, and perhaps even made his country a better place. Instead, under the sanctions regime, he has been allowed to pump just 1.4 million barrels of oil per day and has been prohibited from purchasing steel, computers, and other goods he surely covets. As a result his army is dilapidated and his populace poor and restive. Moreover, his intransigence has earned him repeated attacks from American planes and missiles, and large chunks of his country are, for all practical purposes, independent of his rule. If American deterrence renders Saddam's weapons of mass destruction useless, then why does he endure such sacrifices to acquire them? Perhaps his mania for building them is irrational--but, then, it's hard to see why he would be irrational in the acquisition of these weapons but rational in their use.



erhaps because they don't fully trust deterrence to protect the world from Saddam, liberals have fallen back on another argument: OK, we can go to war with Saddam, but only if we garner the support of our allies and the United Nations. This line of reasoning, relying on the third liberal principle, multilateralism, has become the most prominent objection of war critics. A full-page advertisement in The New York Times last week, paid for by Common Cause and signed by the likes of Derek Bok, Mario Cuomo, and Arthur Schlesinger Jr., sums up this thinking: "It would be unacceptable for the United States (except if it had to repel sudden attacks) to enforce the authority of the United Nations by actions that dispense with U.N. approval." The suggestion here is that U.N. approval amounts to a sine qua non of American military action. But liberals have not elevated it to this level before. Many opposed the Gulf war at the time, even though we led a broad international coalition and enjoyed U.N. backing. And many supported U.S. intervention in Kosovo, a campaign that lacked U.N. authority and was condemned by Secretary-General Kofi Annan as a result. International support, then, is neither a sufficient nor a necessary condition for liberals to support a war.

Nor should it be. While some war critics speak of the U.N.'s judgment as if it came from Mount Olympus, in practical fact it is influenced by all sorts of considerations that liberals ought to abhor. When critics invoke U.N. backing, they mean not the General Assembly, which represents all nations, but the Security Council or generally just the four other permanent members thereof. And almost nowhere are the principles of power politics more evident in international affairs than among the permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, who owe their position to the fact that they are (or, in the case of France and Britain, were) the world's preeminent military powers. Indeed, one (China) is a dictatorship, and another (Russia) is a quasi-dictatorship. Not only have Security Council members undermined inspections and appeased Saddam, they have done so less because of any moral scruples than because they want to safeguard their corporations' profits. Liberals don't want to see U.S. foreign policy dictated by the interests of American oil companies. Why is it better if it is dictated by the interests of French and Russian oil companies?

But while international support cannot be an absolute moral prerequisite, then neither should its pragmatic advantages be discounted. For example, we certainly should not squander international goodwill on trivial things like buying off domestic pressure groups. If Bush truly put national security ahead of political concerns, for example, he wouldn't have infuriated American allies by pushing lavish farm subsidies and steel and textile tariffs or by ostentatiously opposing the Kyoto Protocol. But on critical issues--such as the potential threat posed by a nuclear Iraq--our national interests may supersede the advantages of international consensus. If given the choice of maintaining good relations with the rest of the world or disarming Saddam, I would pick the latter.



till, the best-case scenario would be an aggressive effort to disarm Saddam that enjoyed substantial international support--and many liberals believe this is an attainable goal. "I could support an Iraq war with a genuine purpose of getting at its weapons of mass destruction, whether by force or (ideally) by forcing it to accept weapons inspections," submitted TNR contributing editor Robert Wright, arguing against war in Slate.com last week. Paul Starr, writing an antiwar column in The American Prospect, maintains, "If the Bush administration had proceeded differently--if it had established a legal basis for military action, perhaps by working through the United Nations; if it had built allied support; if it had genuinely pursued alternatives to forcible `regime change'--war might have emerged, by general agreement here and abroad, as a necessary final resort."

What makes such liberal criticisms so strange is that they hinge upon the assumption that Bush's unilateralism is the main obstacle to a tough, U.N.-backed inspections regime. This reading gets cause and effect backward: The only reason the Security Council is even considering a tough Iraq resolution is Bush's talk of regime change. After all, the United States spent nearly a decade trying exactly what liberals now implore Bush to do--working collaboratively with other members of the Security Council to come up with an Iraq policy that splits the difference between America's (overwhelmingly security-related) interests and Russia's and France's (overwhelmingly economic) interests. The result was a clear failure. France and Russia allowed Iraq to reduce the inspections regime to near-meaninglessness and then, when Iraq would not abide even by that, refused to endorse any consequences whatsoever. If our allies were too solicitous of Iraq to support loophole-ridden inspections backed by the threat of pinprick bombing, why would they support tough inspections backed by the threat of full-scale invasion now?

The only thing that might change their minds is the threat that Bush would attack Iraq without them. Such a prospect would weaken the relevance of their Security Council seats and endanger their economic standing in a post-Saddam Iraq. If forced to choose between tough inspections and nothing, the allies have shown they prefer nothing. If forced to choose between tough inspections and unilateral war, it now looks as though they will choose inspections. Had Bush foresworn unilateral action, as liberals have implored, the prospects for the tough U.N. inspections they now urge would be nonexistent.

So, if Bush is heading in the direction liberals want to go, why do they regard his policy with such hostility? The answer seems to be that they regard their policy as one that will render war a remote, mainly theoretical, possibility. The Common Cause ad pleads that war be only "a last resort" and maintains that Saddam "can be made to respond to diplomatic pressures if these are backed by a credible and sustained military threat." But of course a threat is only credible if you're prepared to follow through on it. And at the moment it would seem to be impossible to design a military threat credible enough to alarm Saddam but not so credible that it alarms Derek Bok.

Deluded by the hope that they can have multilateralism and disarmament without the risk of war, liberals have concentrated their intellectual energies on the slim possibility that the United Nations will approve an airtight inspections system and that Saddam will submit to it. If that happens, they would not support a unilateral Bush war. And for that matter, neither would I. But the chance of that happening is small. We have eleven years of accumulated evidence suggesting that the United Nations will not approve loophole-free inspections and that even if it does, Saddam will defy it once more. Which is why it's strange to find so many liberals who consider themselves antiwar conceding that, if all else fails, they would support military action against Iraq. "All else" has failed for more than a decade. And barring a profound character reversal by Saddam, "all else" will likely fail again in the coming months. Just how many times are we supposed to go down this road before we realize our last resort may be our only option?



Jonathan Chait is a senior editor at TNR.