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


To: Mike M who wrote (75059)2/18/2003 12:13:43 AM
From: Rollcast...  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Well said.

Though I'm sure it wasn't "nuanced" enough for some here.



To: Mike M who wrote (75059)2/18/2003 3:53:22 AM
From: KLP  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
And more Jimmy Carter....EX-PRESIDENT JIMMY CARTER BACKS OUR FIGHT (The Not in My Name folks)

KLP Note: For the folks in Europe who read the Tabloids...With Jimmy Carter around, it's no wonder folks misunderstand .....

mirror.co.uk

From Alexandra Williams In Plains, Georgia


FORMER US President Jimmy Carter is backing the Daily Mirror's Not in My Name campaign.

The Nobel Peace Prize winner, and the only US president since 1945 never to order American soldiers into war, endorsed our stance on war with Iraq, saying: "You're doing a good job. I am glad about that. War is evil."

Carter, who will be 79 this year, is a pariah among hawkish Republicans and a hero for doveish Democrats, frequently denouncing wars and conflict whenever they flare. He said: "There has been a virtual declaration of war but a case for pre-emptive action against Iraq has not been made. We want Saddam Hussein to disarm but we want to achieve this through peaceful means.

"He obviously has the capability and desire to build prohibited weapons and probably has some hidden in his country.

"A sustained and enlarged UN inspection team is required."

Carter said an opinion poll which rated the US as the country posing greatest danger to world peace was a "very embarrassing thing".

It was "sobering" to realise the degree of doubt that has been raised about his country's motives for war in the absence of convincing proof of a genuine Iraqi threat.

Looking at a copy of the Mirror he said: "I know the Daily Mirror, of course. I know it well. It's getting the message across."

We met at his home in Plains, the heart of rural Georgia, 130 miles south of Atlanta.

The former peanut farmer's house, where he lives with his wife Rosalynn, is surrounded by pungent red peanut fields and cotton farms.

It is set well back from the road behind a high iron fence. Secret Service patrol the area 24 hours a day.

Four Secret Service agents dressed in blue blazers and with curly wires coming from their right ears signalled his arrival.

He said: "The issue that concerns everybody is Iraq.

"The news this morning is that all over the world, including this country and Britain, there are massive demonstrations against the starting of a pre-emptive war.

"Obviously Saddam Hussein will have to comply with the revelation and destruction of all weapons of mass destruction.

"But there is a growing consensus, among other countries at least, that we should let the UN inspectors do their thing first before we start a pre-emptive war against Iraq."

Forever the diplomat, Carter was careful not to directly criticise President George Bush by name.

He said: "Some very embarrassing things have happened in this country.

"Time magazine in Europe did a public opinion poll on its website and over 350,000 people responded to the question, 'Which country poses the greatest threat to world peace?'

"North Korea received seven per cent of the votes, Iraq received eight per cent and the United States received 84 per cent.

"We have lost the ability apparently in our country to convince other nations to stand side by side with us."

He added: "I think most people, if they were asked, 'Would you prefer the Iraqi question was resolved peacefully?' would say yes.

"If you asked the same people, 'Do you think Iraq must comply with the UN requirement to eliminate weapons of mass destruction?' they would say yes.

"So the question is, how do we correlate these two yes answers in a positive and effective fashion?"

Carter has argued that any "belligerent move by Saddam would be suicidal" in the current climate of intense monitoring and therefore "inconceivable".

And he has described the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as the "festering cancer and root cause of much anti-American sentiment".

In private Carter makes his views about the government known, as a friend of his revealed.

The friend said: "The former President is far too discreet to go mouthing off.

"But people round here do remember him saying, 'Our State Department never gets upset about anything unless white skin or oil is involved'. His words have rung true again."

Carter's single term presidency from 1977 to 1981 was often dismissed as ineffective, despite his greatest success - the Camp David agreement of 1978 which led to the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt.

This was quickly eclipsed by the energy crisis and the taking of US hostages in Iran.

However his activities since he lost office have been held up as a model for a post-presidential career. He has "waged peace", as he calls it.

A commentator once quipped: "Carter used the presidency as a stepping stone to what he really wanted to do in life."

Unlike most of his successors, Carter - an ex-President at only 56 - did not take up golf or take to the lucrative lecture circuit.

He returned to Plains and a year later set up the Carter Center in Atlanta, through which he has negotiated with some of the world's most controversial figures.

He has circled the globe as a freelance mediator in international conflicts. He has defended democracy by monitoring elections and pioneering medical programmes in the Third World. And he has built housing for Atlanta's poor.

It remains to be seen just how effective his influence can be on the warmongers. But if his CV is anything to go by he could hold the key to the crisis.



To: Mike M who wrote (75059)2/18/2003 4:07:47 AM
From: FaultLine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Mike M;

What you want is our President to fall on his face. Perhaps it is because no war is moral to you John. No war is worth fighting. Perhaps its just simply wanting the Republicans to flame out.

Your remarks are completely inappropriate for this thread.

Please keep your personal judgements of our fellow contributors to yourself.

Read the thread header again, and take it to heart, before you post again.

--fl



To: Mike M who wrote (75059)2/18/2003 2:21:57 PM
From: JohnM  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 281500
 
MikeM,

First, I count that as a hostile post not one which asks for a conversation. I'm going to reply to you and invite you to reply to me. But if the hostile tone continues, I will not make any future replies. I consider such hostility inappropriate for this thread.

Whose point John? Why should "global perceptions" even enter into the equation when the self interest is clearly linked with survivability?

I don't consider the present Iraq situation as one about "survivability" at all. I do consider Saddam dangerous, a tyrant, you name it, but the Bush folk have not convinced me nor a great many other citizens of the globe that he constitutes an imminent threat. Read the Mearsheimer and Walt piece that has been posted to this thread frequently to see some quite serious arguments about containment. Moreover, the Bush arguments about ties to Al Q have not been convincing. We've argued that extensively here on the thread so I'm not willing to do so again. If you are seriously interested, you can find the most recent versions of them just after the first post of the most recent Goldberg piece in The New Yorker or right after Powell's UNSC speech. So, bottom line, I'm of a view that containment works and no serious ties to Al Q have been demonstrated. Obviously, not your view but one that reasonable folk can argue about. So, let's do so, reasonably.

John, we all choose to believe what we do. What bothers me is how very weak the left's moral imperative has become.

Whoops, you are skipping some gears here. I'll be happy to argue my views with you but I don't consider they represent the "left" nor that the "left" is represented by any one set of views. Like the right, it's all over the lot. So, whose moral imperatives that are weak do you have in mind? Some actual names would help the conversation. Some of them I might agree with; some I might not. Some, even if I disagree, I might be able to defend; some not.

Do you really want UN permission to force Iraq to do what is in our interest? Baloney! At least be honest with yourself if you cannot do so with me. What you want is our President to fall on his face. Perhaps it is because no war is moral to you John. No war is worth fighting. Perhaps its just simply wanting the Republicans to flame out.

Ah, do I wish the Republicans would lose the next presidential election. You better bet, I do. And the last six or seven months have increased that desire. Can you reduce my misgivings about the present Bush foreign policy to that desire? Well, I gather you will do what you will do. But I consider that a way to stop listening to other points of view. Just blame them. They won't go away. But you won't have to think about them.

Do I want UN approval for the US to do what is in our interest? That's a bit more complicated, Mike. I don't consider, as you can see above, an invasion of Iraq as being in our interest. I think it's counter to our interest. Because, as I typed above, there is no imminent threat and because such an invasion will create havoc rather than stability in the ME. It could well lead to Islamist governments in several countries; it will, undoubtedly, lead to a wave of recruits for Al Q; and it will, undoubtedly, lead to much more cooperation between Al Q and governments we don't favor.

As for whether any war is moral for me or not, how could you possibly come to that conclusion from my recent posts opposing this invasion of Iraq; or from the many posts I've made to this thread. Read, read, read, study, study, study; then come and ask. I've made enough posts on these issues for you to do your homework. But perhaps that's not what gets you going. Just want to play the "I'm more moral than you" card.

You know John, I don't frankly care whether the French, the Chinese or the Russians can agree on anything much less whether we should forcibly remove Saddam's WMDs. But I'm bothered that people who ought to know better hide behind such a thin veneer. Sure you are afraid of the ramifications of this struggle. We all are. I may have a son in this struggle in a few years. But the real issue isn't whether there should be a struggle. That has already been decided for us. The real issue is where this struggle will be fought. Hide your head in the sand if you will but it's coming to our borders...to your town and the only thing left is to determine how far along we will allow our enemies to develop their arsenal.

Much hostile talk here, MikeM, but there is a kernel of a problem. And that is the Bush folk have placed themselves so far out on the proverbial limb that folk like Zakaria have begun to argue an invasion is necessary, not because of things in Iraq, but in order to preserve US credibility. For me, that's an indication of just how badly the Bush folk have played the diplomacy angles of this. As for whether, I would join Zakaria, I'm not of a mind to do so. The Bush folk didn't ask for my approval, in any sense of the word, when they stepped out on the limb; so it hardly behooves me to grant it now. At any rate, they clearly could care less about that approval.

The big issue, MikeM, is the level of popular support in the US and globablly for this invasion. If the global stuff stays at present levels, watch out because we know Bush and his folk are going to attack. But the backside will be genuinely tough. And, if the US levels don't give Bush more support than he is getting now, and deeper support, some genuine hesitancy will develop among military leaders.

But, as LBill continually says and I agree, TWT.

Had Hitler tarried in his assault on Poland, most likely he would have been first to develop the atomic bomb.

That has nothing to with anything.