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


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (491244)11/12/2003 1:25:38 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 769670
 
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At one level, this pattern of cuts is standard operating procedure. Just about every apparent
promise of financial generosity this administration has made (other than those involving tax cuts for top
brackets and corporate contracts) has turned out to be nonoperational. No Child Left Behind got left
behind — or at least left without funds. AmeriCorps got praised in the State of the Union address, then
left high and dry in the budget that followed. New York's firefighters and policemen got a photo-op with
the president, but very little money. For that matter, it's clear that New York will never see the full $20
billion it was promised for rebuilding. Why shouldn't soldiers find themselves subject to the same kind
of bait and switch?

Yet one might have expected the administration to treat the military differently, if only as a matter
of sheer political calculation. After all, the military needs some mollifying: the Iraq war has turned
increasingly nightmarish, and deference toward the administration is visibly eroding. Even Pfc. Jessica
Lynch has, to her credit, balked at playing her scripted role.

So what's going on? One answer is that once you've instilled a Scrooge mentality throughout the
government, it's hard to be selective. But I also suspect that a government of, by and for the economic
elite is having trouble overcoming its basic lack of empathy with the working-class men and women
who make up our armed forces.

Some say that Representative George Nethercutt's remark that progress in Iraq is a more
important story than deaths of American soldiers was redeemed by his postscript, "which, heaven
forbid, is awful." Your call. But it's hard to deny the stunning insensitivity of President Bush's remarks
back on July 2: "There are some who feel like that, you know, the conditions are such that they can
attack us there. My answer is bring 'em on. We got the force necessary to deal with the security
situation." Those are the words of a man who can't imagine himself or anyone close to him actually
being in the line of fire.

The question is whether the military will start to feel taken for granted. Publications like Army
Times are obviously going off the reservation. Retired military officers, like Gen. Anthony Zinni —
formerly President Bush's envoy to the Middle East — have started to offer harsh, indeed unprintable,
assessments of administration policies. If this disillusionment spreads to the rank and file, the politics
of 2004 may be very different from what anyone expects.