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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (481255)10/25/2003 1:11:48 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
George Will
A Defense Secretary Undeterred

newsandopinion.com | He tackled a job that couldn't be done, With a smile, he went right to it.

He tackled a job that couldn't be done, And couldn't do it.

In 1969 President Nixon appointed a former congressman named Donald Rumsfeld, then a stripling of 36, to head the Office of Economic Opportunity, an agency devoted to the task of eliminating poverty in America. Rumsfeld returned home late one night to find that his wife Joyce had taped the above doggerel to the refrigerator door. If you wonder why Rumsfeld, now 71, is not discouraged by the problems of postwar Iraq, remember he headed Nixon's Cost of Living Council, an absurdity devoted to the impossible -- administering wage and price controls. Over the years he has had really difficult jobs -- jobs about which he could have, and may have, produced memos every bit as sobering as his "long, hard slog" memo about Iraq, which surfaced this week and caused much feigned excitement among the very war critics who have hitherto complained that Rumsfeld is incapable of seeing the dark side of things.

In our time, only George Shultz (the first director of the Office of Management and Budget, secretary of labor, then treasury, then state) and Pat Moynihan (assistant secretary of labor, White House domestic policy adviser, U.S. representative to the United Nations, ambassador to India, four-term senator) have had public careers with the breadth of Rumsfeld's (member of Congress, ambassador to NATO, White House chief of staff, special envoy to the Middle East, twice secretary of defense).

Like Saul Bellow's Augie March, Rumsfeld is "an American, Chicago born," and Midge Decter, in her just-published biographical essay "Rumsfeld: A Personal Portrait," correctly says he is still not a Washingtonian, but remains a "child of that prairie-driven culture of vitality." Yet no one knows more about Washington's ways. And last Saturday afternoon, in a hushed Pentagon where the escalators are turned off on weekends -- and you thought government is not frugal -- Rumsfeld, wearing a fleece vest and feeling feisty, reflected on current controversies.

He argues that although certainty is desirable when making policy, there also is one of Rumsfeld's axioms: "A narrow focus on the certain obscures the almost-certain." Critics contend, correctly, that six months of postwar access to Iraq reveal more uncertainties than anyone imagined in prewar intelligence. But in the realm of shadows and mirrors that is intelligence from secretive societies, certainty is a luxury policymakers often cannot wait for.

How much certainty is requisite as a basis for action depends in part on the consequences of being wrong. If, Rumsfeld says, the Iraqi regime had been less wicked, or if it had been in pursuit of the military equivalent of "a BB gun," the United States, even in the post-Sept. 11, 2001, environment, could have afforded to give the regime the benefit of more doubts. And it could have been more relaxed about classifying matters as "doubts."

The administration's critics would be more credible if they had a few doubts of their own concerning their own judgments, such as their reiterated insistence that only mendacity can explain the failure, so far, to find weapons of mass destruction. After all, they say, Rumsfeld, the president and Secretary of State Colin L. Powell repeatedly asserted that Iraq's weapons programs posed an "imminent" threat.

Such assertions by those three officials may have numbered zero. Rumsfeld is more bemused than angered, and certainly not shocked, that critics profess themselves shocked and angered because he, Powell and the president supposedly said, repeatedly, something that none of them actually ever said. At least, says a Rumsfeld aide, an electronic search finds not a single instance of them using the argument that Iraq posed an "imminent" WMD threat to the United States.

The president said Iraq posed a "grave and gathering danger" rather than the familiar locution "clear and present danger," because it is reckless to wait until a terrorist danger is present or imminent. In interviews and press briefings before the war, Rumsfeld, like other administration officials, was repeatedly asked to apply the word "imminent" to the Iraqi threat, and he repeatedly did not. Today, as then, he stresses the problem of knowing when a threat is imminent: When were the Sept. 11 attacks imminent? "A week before, a month before, a year before, an hour before?"

The remarkable souring of political argument in 2003 continues as some Democrats, with their calculated extravagance, insist there was "no plan" for postwar Iraq. But if that were so, how is it that we have gone, in just six months, from zero to 85,000 Iraqis participating in providing security? And what was all that work done with the World Food Program before the war?

Critics correctly fault the mistaken certitude of some of the administration's prewar pronouncements. But critics indicting the administration not merely for mistakes but for meretriciousness would do well to avoid that in their indictments.



To: calgal who wrote (481255)10/25/2003 1:55:13 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 769667
 
David Limbaugh




Who's being extreme?
newsandopinion.com | Tell me: Which politicians are really extreme out there? Are you more likely to find a radical in the mainstream of the Republican Party or the Democratic Party?

The elite media is fond of characterizing President Bush as "an extreme conservative" or "far right," and they couldn't be more wrong. Worse, they completely ignore the true extremism of Democratic Party leaders, presidential contenders and the many leftist constituency groups supporting them.

Consider the language of the just-passed partial-birth abortion ban. It is the delivery of a fetus "until, in the case of a headfirst presentation, the entire fetal head is outside the body of the mother, or, in the case of the breech presentation, any part of the fetal trunk past the navel is outside the body of the mother for the purpose of performing an overt act that the person knows will kill the partially delivered living fetus."

As the individual who sent me an e-mail including this definition observed, just how debased must our culture be even to be debating fine lines over this hideous, abominable procedure? You will observe that under this test the baby's life is protected based on how far it has traveled through the mother's body on the way to delivery. How can right-thinking people even consider making life determinations on this basis?

Indeed the only difference between partial-birth abortion and abortion proper is the former's visibility. If the fetus is hidden well within the womb, I suppose it's out of sight, out of mind. The inescapable conclusion is that there is no moral difference between the two "types" of abortion, which is why it troubles me that we get so worked up over the partial-birth variety and other abortions. Don't get me wrong. I'll take what I can get, and the outlawing of the partial-birth procedure is a good start, but as a society we are sadly fooling ourselves if we actually believe there is any ethical distinction between the two different types of baby extermination.



Yet even this visibly grotesque procedure is not sufficiently repugnant to some in the Democratic Party to warrant legal intervention to protect the baby's life. The convenience of the mother, the power of the women's movement, must not be violated or diminished, no matter what the cost. Please tell me who is being extreme here?

Senator Hillary Clinton, one of the most militant pro-abortion advocates, has been quite indignant about these bills to outlaw murder of the innocent. With all due respect, what type of depravity can motivate such an indefensible position? If you think my language is offensive, I'm sorry, but I wish you had one fraction of the sensitivity for the life of the unborn.

Senator Clinton, along with many of her other pro-abortionist colleagues, has always asserted that bills to outlaw partial-birth abortion were too vague and would not sufficiently protect the life of the mother. Even Justice Sandra Day O'Connor seemed to base her majority opinion declaring the Nebraska partial-birth abortion ban unconstitutional on concerns for the mother's health.

While it seems that most experts have said that health of the mother is rarely a concern in these procedures, the Senate went to painstaking lengths to craft this legislation to clarify that the procedure would not be unlawful if performed to protect the mother's health.

Yet Senator Clinton and her colleagues still vehemently opposed the bill and even called it extreme. But how extreme is a measure that 65 to 75 percent of the American public support?

Such statistics haven't moved the New York senator, et al, who insist that the bill might criminalize a "medically necessary" procedure -- even though the medically necessary hypothetical to which she refers has to do with protecting the mother's health, which is specifically covered by the bill.

Senator Clinton knows there is no "slippery slope" in this bill that would result in the criminalization of other abortions. Even its proponents concede it was tailor made to cover only the partial-birth procedure. But so extreme are Mrs. Clinton and her fellow travelers that their objections to the bill cannot be satisfied, because the sacrament of abortion is not to be abridged.

That, my folks, is extremism to an extreme degree. But if the left wants to insist on characterizing George Bush and pro-life advocates as extreme for persisting in the struggle to protect the lives of the unborn, I (and I'm sure most like-minded pro-lifers) will readily and enthusiastically plead guilty.



To: calgal who wrote (481255)10/25/2003 1:59:24 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
MUGGER




Kucinich's Third-Party Bid? He's green enough, that's for sure

newsandopinion.com | There's currently a poll on the Weekly Standard's website asking, "Who will be the next Democrat to drop out of the 2004 race?" I clicked for the increasingly desperate Sen. John Edwards and then read the results (as of Monday morning): Carol Moseley Braun was first with 44 percent, followed by Rep. Dennis Kucinich at 19 percent and Edwards just a point behind.

I doubt if Braun or Kucinich will pack up before better-financed candidates like Edwards or Sen. Joe Lieberman, who are running traditional campaigns, relying on fundraising, an infrastructure of well-paid jackals (consultants) and vacuous television advertisements. Braun is probably the most brain-impaired contender, but she's hoodwinked groups of women like NOW to endorse her candidacy and will trudge on. Kucinich, on the other hand, is smart, passionate and driven and doesn't need a ton of money to stay on past the first round of primaries.

Like Jerry Brown in '92, Kucinich will sleep on floors, doesn't need to hire pollsters and will pester the likes of Howard Dean and Dick Gephardt for many months to come. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised to see Kucinich wind up as the Green Party candidate next fall, which would be dandy by me, taking away votes from whatever stiff the Democrats eventually nominate. I don't agree with virtually any of Kucinich's views (extreme protectionism, immediate pullout from Iraq, single-payer healthcare, etc.) but I'd love to see him debate President Bush and the Democratic nominee in the general election. (It was absurd that Ralph Nader was excluded in 2000; he'd have made mincemeat of both Bush and Al Gore.)

Matt Taibbi wrote an excellent article about Kucinich's quixotic campaign in the Oct. 27 Nation, probably the first I've read that really explains why the onetime mayor of Cleveland is running for president, and the mainstream media's prejudice against a troublemaker like him. Taibbi tees off on Edwards to open his piece, "Who's Afraid of Dennis Kucinich?" and it's an artful beginning.



He writes: "The parallel movements of the Southern Senator are a powerful leitmotif in the Kucinich campaign. In the epic novel of this election, whose tragic theme is the unavoidable humiliation of the sane in a kingdom of idiots, Edwards appears as Kucinich's foil, his Dostoyevskian opposite. For every step Kucinich takes, Edwards is seemingly there to remind him that a man cannot succeed in a world designed for children. The Southern Senator is a kind of anti-Kucinich: tall, handsome, bubbly, seemingly not sure why he is running for President. The ideas that drive his candidacy seem like items from a sales-drive PowerPoint presentation, or frat dares."

I think Taibbi's wrong on why Beltway pundits dismiss Kucinich, claiming that it's because he's short and not particularly attractive (like most Americans), when it's probably the congressman's refusal to schmooze with reporters, practice soundbites and lay out a decent buffet at campaign events that turns them off. And even the reporters covering the various campaigns and debates, most of whom will vote for the Democratic nominee, aren't ready for Kucinich's barely disguised call for at least a moderate policy of socialism. Not when these Beltway creatures are affluent, have kids in private school and already receive excellent health benefits from their employers.

Taibbi describes a rapturous reception Kucinich received at the University of New Hampshire last month, at which numerous students signed up for the campaign. Admittedly, the author is smitten, but what other writer has come with a description of Kucinich like this: "He outlines a revolutionary plan, centered in his creation of a Department of Peace, that would 'make nonviolence an organizing principle of society.' He quotes from Jung, Barbara Marx Hubbard, Thomas Berry, Morris Berman. Dennis Kucinich is the only presidential candidate whose speeches need to be annotated."

That's a stretch, but Taibbi's made his point rather eloquently. It'd be productive to have a bona-fide left-wing candidate running for president to present a clear alternative to Bush. As I've written in the past, the ideal Democrat, one the media might take more seriously than Kucinich, is Russell Feingold, but the principled senator from Wisconsin just didn't have the stomach to be on the same stage, week after week, with the likes of John Kerry, Al Sharpton, Edwards and Wesley Clark.