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Politics : THE VAST RIGHT WING CONSPIRACY -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (5507)1/20/2004 11:55:13 PM
From: calgal  Respond to of 6358
 
The real Democratic Party dud
Doug Bandow (archive)

January 19, 2004 | Print | Send

WASHINGTON - Retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark has become the great hope for establishment Democrats seeking to stop front-runner Vermont Gov. Howard Dean.

Yet Clark, who has based his campaign on his foreign policy credentials, actually has the strangest foreign policy views of anyone in the presidential race.

While Democrats were firing away at each other in the aftermath of the capture of Saddam Hussein, Clark was at the Hague seeking to hype his candidacy for president of the United States by testifying at the United Nations trial of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic. Clark, who prosecuted the 1999 war against Yugoslavia, suggested that the tribunal be considered as "one of the venues" for trying Saddam.

That's actually a foolish idea. Hussein's crimes were first and foremost against the Iraqi people. Iraqis should hold him accountable.

Moreover, however satisfying it is to see Milosevic in the dock, the idea that the United Nations has a right to create artificial ex post facto law should discomfit anyone who believes in the rule of law. Milosevic deserved to be tried, but in Yugoslavia.

The ultimate absurdity of concocting special international panels with limitless criminal authority was demonstrated when Belgium claimed global jurisdiction over all human rights abuses. Activists filed charges against political figures as varied as Fidel Castro and Ariel Sharon. Belgium finally repealed the law after critics of the Iraq war threatened to target Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

But Clark's greatest foolishness is his bizarre contention that Kosovo warranted military action while Iraq did not.

Clark is presenting himself as the anti-Bush with military experience. Alas, Clark is no Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Whatever Clark's virtues as a military leader, his experience in Kosovo did not exhibit them. In that conflict Clark led the world's most powerful military alliance against a small, impoverished country beset by a messy guerrilla war. It didn't take the least bit of talent to win.

In fact, only a genius could have found a way to lose. As Clark almost did.

First, he, like others in the Clinton administration, thought that a few bombs - indeed, the threat of a few bombs - would solve the problem. When they didn't, the alliance lacked a strategy.

Second, after the fighting had ended, he ordered British Army Lt. Gen. Sir Mike Jackson to block Russian troops from occupying the airport in Pristina, Kosovo. "I'm not going to start the third world war for you," Jackson replied.

At least most Americans would have known Clark's name had he managed to get NATO into a shooting war with Russia after the West had peacefully won the Cold War.

Even worse, however, is Clark's contention that his war was good while President George W. Bush's war was bad. I happen to think that neither was necessary, but set that aside. No serious person can claim that Yugoslavia posed a greater threat than did Iraq.

In early 1999, Yugoslavia was suffering through a nasty fight between ethnic Albanians and Serbs in Kosovo. It was a tragic conflict, but far smaller and less deadly than a score of ethnic and religious wars around the globe. Genocide it was not.

Indeed, the mass expulsion of ethnic Albanians that dominated TV screens occurred only after NATO went to war. It was a result, not cause, of the conflict. And Clark's victory has led to ethnic cleansing of Serbs, Jews, Gypsies and non-Albanian Muslims.

Milosevic was a nasty character, but Clark's claim that there was "an imminent threat" of war is just plain silly.

Milosevic's regime was bankrupt and isolated. It made no pretense of developing weapons of mass destruction. It wasn't capable of conquering its neighbors. It had no means to hurt the United States.

Nor was war a last resort after diplomacy had failed, as Clark said. The United States tried to impose its own settlement, which neither the Albanians nor the Serbs supported. Washington offered an ultimatum, not diplomacy.

Iraq was completely different. Hussein had engaged in a policy of domestic brutality on a massive scale, killing tens, and probably hundreds, of thousands of people.

He ran a police state, attacked two of his neighbors, killing hundreds of thousands more, and, it seemed, was developing weapons of mass destruction. He was capable of cooperating with terrorists, though those connections remain unproved.

Of the two, Clark thinks Yugoslavia posed the greatest danger? And warranted war without international sanction?

Such passes for foreign policy analysis from a leading presidential candidate.

Winning the presidency will require that the Democratic nominee be taken seriously on foreign policy. Clark is not that candidate.

Doug Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a Townhall.com member group.

©2003 Copley News Service



To: calgal who wrote (5507)1/20/2004 11:55:27 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 6358
 
Ted Kennedy's Iraq lunacy
Rich Lowry (archive)

January 19, 2004 | Print | Send

Sen. Ted Kennedy last week launched a blistering attack on the Bush administration's Iraq policy. He charged that the Iraq War was driven by domestic political considerations, as White House operative Karl Rove and other administration officials dragged the country to war to improve the president's political standing. In this view, the war wasn't -- whatever its ultimate wisdom -- the finale of a 10-year-long battle with Saddam Hussein, supported by 70 percent of the American public and authorized by wide bipartisan majorities in Congress, but a political fraud pure and simple.

How must recent history look to Kennedy to sustain his theory? Something like this:

After the 1991 Persian Gulf War, the first President Bush leaves Saddam in power in what is widely denounced as a mistake by hawks, but is really farsighted paternal politics. Bush realizes his son will need an international punching bag midway through his first term.

In 1998, President Clinton asserts a U.S. right to unilateral military action against Iraq and argues that Saddam's continued possession of weapons of mass destruction presents a grave threat. His statements provide fodder for Bush administration hawks in 2002. Why Clinton would want to help Bush's partisan political plot in such a way will always be a mystery, although perhaps he wanted to help Bush in order to block the 2004 Democratic presidential aspirants, thus creating an opening for his wife in 2008.

In October of 1998, the Iraq Liberation Act unanimously passes the Senate, making it the official policy of the U.S. government to seek regime change in Iraq. That every Democrat in the Senate, including Kennedy, votes to advance Bush's conspiracy so early -- when Bush is still governor of Texas -- speaks well of Bush's ability to build bipartisan coalitions. Although it's impossible to know without access to congressional phone logs, Rove must have worked the phones very hard.

After the Sept. 11 attacks, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and other officials begin to push for toppling Saddam, seemingly acting on long-held convictions, but really worried that Bush's 80 percent approval ratings won't last. They are supported by a cadre of liberal hawks, such as former Clinton official Kenneth Pollack and New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, also seemingly acting on long-held convictions, but secretly working in close cooperation with Rove after reviewing focus-group data with him.

As the war talk mounts, Democrats agitate for a vote in Congress. This seems a basic call for democratic accountability, but actually represents a dastardly betrayal by Democrats of their own party.

The Iraq War resolution passes Congress easily in the fall 2002, with a majority of Senate Democrats voting "yes." Those putting their partisan interests aside to help instead the partisan interests of a conservative Republican include Sens. Hillary Clinton, Tom Daschle, Tom Harkin, Joe Biden and Chris Dodd. You know what they say about strange bedfellows.

In November of 2002, the U.N. Security Council unanimously passes Resolution 1441, giving Saddam a "final opportunity" to comply with U.N. demands. An attempt to make the United Nations seem relevant? Don't be naive. It's really part of a worldwide effort to enhance Bush's electoral fortunes. And Democrats say the administration isn't multilateral enough.

Before the war begins in April, Bush gives Saddam 48 hours to leave power, but Saddam refuses in what seems a last act of defiance, but in reality speaks to his -- well-known, among Iraq experts -- desire to help Bush by providing him a pretext to invade his country, chase him from power, kill his sons and check his head for lice. The Iraqi people feign pleasure at his capture only to provide the Bush campaign a few good visuals, useful in swing states in the upcoming presidential election.

You can quibble about details of this narrative, but there are really only two options -- you can believe all of this happened for something like these reasons, or that the Ted Kennedy view is paranoid lunacy.

Rich Lowry is editor of National Review, a Townhall.com member group, and author of Legacy: Paying the Price for the Clinton Years.

©2003 King Features Syndicate