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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: lurqer who wrote (38976)3/6/2004 11:53:33 PM
From: lurqer  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
Think I'm with Belefonte, but that's

JMO

Belafonte vs. Powell Revisited

By Colbert I. King
Saturday, March 6, 2004; Page A19

The Trotter Group, an organization of black columnists, recently received a note from a former journalist who said he was wondering whether the events of the past six months may have caused any one of the "shocked" journalists of last year to rethink their commentaries concerning Harry Belafonte's critical remarks about Colin Powell. He asked: "Shouldn't there be an accounting somewhere given the revelation of so much new information?"

It was a fair question. I was one of those who weighed in on Belafonte's criticism of the secretary of state, coming down firmly on Powell's side ["Powell's Mastery," op-ed, Feb. 8, 2003]. I owe an accounting.

For those who may have missed it, five months earlier, in October, during an appearance on a radio talk show in California, Belafonte was critical of Powell's role in the Bush administration, likening the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to a house slave who lives to do his master's bidding.

"Colin Powell," Belafonte said, "is permitted to come into the house of the master as long as he would serve the master, according to the master's dictates. And when Colin Powell dares to suggest something other than what the master wants to hear, he will be turned back out to pasture."

I used the occasion of Powell's Feb. 5, 2003, presentation on Iraq to a packed U.N. Security Council chamber to respond. Powell, I thought, had delivered a devastating indictment of the Iraqi regime. The secretary had sold me on the idea that Saddam Hussein was a lying despot who had, in violation of U.N. resolutions, continued to harbor, manufacture and hide weapons of mass destruction. In light of Powell's claims about Hussein's weapons stockpile, I agreed Iraq should be disarmed.

Now, 13 months later, all the evidence assembled thus far has failed to back up Powell's assertions. No weapons stocks or active production lines have been found. Those who said at the time that Powell's evidence was inconclusive, that waging war in Iraq would take attention away from the war on terrorism, and that the presence of U.N. weapons inspectors would prevent Hussein from going forward with his illegal weapons program had, it now seems, the better arguments.

But in February 2003 I believed Colin Powell because it was inconceivable to me that one of the country's most respected public officials, a former top military leader tempered by the Vietnam experience and sensitive to the importance of maintaining public credibility, would go before a world body and present a case that could later get blown out of the water. No way, I thought.

I was wrong.

But was Harry Belafonte right about Powell? In a word, no.

Belafonte's harsh criticism of the Bush administration's foreign and domestic policies was and is certainly fair enough. And his opposition to Bush's treatment of the international community in the run-up to the Iraq war was warranted. But Belafonte was wrong to suggest that because he disagrees with Powell on Iraq or with George W. Bush on a host of other issues, that Powell is somehow a white man's tool. It was Belafonte's use of slurs and his demeaning personal characterization of Powell that struck me as uncalled for and out of bounds.

I have no reason to think that Powell deliberately lied at the United Nations or that he distorted and exaggerated the intelligence on which his testimony was based. But was I wrong to have deferred to the secretary of state because he happened to be Colin Powell? Should I have been more skeptical, less accepting and more willing to listen to Powell's critics? To each question, the answer is yes.

The only justification for going to war, in my view, was the belief that Saddam Hussein had chemical and biological weapons and that he was going to use them against this country and our allies. Any other administration casus belli paled in significance. It's sickening to realize that so many lives have been lost and so many billions have been spent on the basis of evidence that turns out to have been so questionable. Yes, it's time for an accounting.

That said, it doesn't follow that Powell deserves branding as an Uncle Tom or traitor to his race because of what he did or failed to do on Iraq, either within the high councils of the administration or at the United Nations. There is no "black" and "white" way of looking at Iraq. And if white people can disagree on the best way to handle Iraq -- and they do -- why can't black people as well, without public officials such as Powell and national security adviser Condoleezza Rice having their racial cards pulled?

Yes, I think administration officials are in over their heads in a country and culture they didn't take the time to get to know or understand, and it's clear that Bush and his advisers are making it up as they go along. Pride and politics stand in the way of their admitting their mistakes, while the nation pays in blood and treasure. That's reason enough to vigorously oppose the direction of the administration's foreign policy. And the rape of Haitian democracy makes a mockery of the Bush administration's professed love of freedom from tyranny. There is a need for an accounting on Haiti, too.

But does that mean the administration's foreign policy officials who are African American and who don't see things my way on Iraq or Haiti are house slaves and thus open to offensive questioning of their blackness? That's where we part company.

I felt that way about Belafonte's characterization of Powell one year and five months ago. I feel the same way now.

washingtonpost.com

lurqer



To: lurqer who wrote (38976)3/7/2004 10:15:33 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Kerry Dots Deliberation With Decision

story.news.yahoo.com

<<...Now that Kerry has effectively won the Democratic presidential nomination, strategists say, his executive skills will come under scrutiny in a campaign against an opponent whose seemingly snap decision-making has been noted.

Kerry's supporters say his approach is nuanced and thorough, better for tackling complicated issues such as the economy and the war on terrorism. Far from paralyzing, they say, it is what makes his argument compelling.

"George Bush is, 'I know what's right, and I know what's wrong,' regardless of the nature of reality," said Jonathan Winer, Kerry's counsel from 1983 to 1994. "John takes the opposite approach: 'Don't assume you know where I am. Don't assume I know what I think. We'll talk it through.' It's a deliberate suspension."...>>