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


To: Rascal who wrote (161769)5/11/2005 6:04:06 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Bolton is Bush's Frankenstein monster
_______________________________

By WALTER WILLIAMS
GUEST COLUMNIST
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Wednesday, May 11, 2005
seattlepi.nwsource.com

Too little attention has been paid to the most important aspect of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearings on the nomination of Undersecretary of State John Bolton to be the ambassador to the United Nations.

The hearings are a red flag. The testimony pinpoints the basic flaws of the Republican-controlled administration and Congress that have brought ineffective governance.

First, the effort to promote Bolton -- in spite of his incompetence and his egregious misuse of information to push his unsubstantiated claims -- reveals the political dogmatism that has made the Bush administration policies so ineffective.

Second, winning at any cost has morphed into the overriding Bush administration objective as party polarization has turned Washington, D.C., politics into a no man's land where the nation's needs are the main casualty.

Nowhere are these two points made more clearly than in the case of Bolton, who turns out to be President Bush's Frankenstein's monster, a figurative stitching together of the administration's worst traits. Yet, his inept performance neither got him canned from his undersecretary of state job nor stood in the way of his nomination to the even more important position of U.N. ambassador.

Numerous witnesses told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that Bolton was ill tempered, vindictive and abusive. He went ballistic when his judgments were challenged by subordinates, repeatedly misused information and pushed highly inflated claims about weapons of mass destruction, and disregarded any views that did not fit with his rigid ideology.

New York Times reporter Douglas Jehl, based on comments from former intelligence officials, wrote that Bolton in 2002 and 2003 "sought to deliver warnings about Syrian efforts to acquire unconventional weapons that the Central Intelligence Agency and other experts rejected as exaggerated." Jehl also quoted Bolton's widely rejected claim that Cuba, Libya and Syria were " 'rogue states intent on acquiring weapons of mass destruction.' "

John Wolf, an assistant secretary of state for nonproliferation under Bolton, told staff members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee: "I believe it would be fair to say that some of the officers within my bureau complained that they felt undue pressure to conform to the views of the undersecretary versus the views that they could support."

In Bolton's own testimony on another complaint about his abusing subordinates, he admitted that he wanted two analysts reassigned but said: "I didn't seek to have these people fired."

That misses the key point. It is unnecessary to actually fire professional analysts to silence them. The top decision-makers need only to stick to their unrealistic claims so as to make clear that any challenges to their ideological predilections will incur their displeasure, thereby threatening the analysts' careers.

Although they did not engage in Bolton's ill-tempered, vindictive histrionics, like him, Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice created an environment where any internal criticism was strongly discouraged.

The results, however, were the same: The top decision-makers' inaccurate data and unrealistic assumptions yielded misguided policies and inept implementation.

Bolton is not a caricature of the Bush administration. Indeed, he is Cheney's protégé. Like others high in the Bush government, his unswerving, outspoken commitment to the president's agenda trumps any managerial deficiencies.

The administration argued that Bolton, who during his career showed disdain for the United Nations, is the best person to remake the organization to fit the Bush administration image. For the Bush true believers, all that matters is to adhere strictly to the agenda. The competence factor is irrelevance.

That is nonsense. No matter how closely Bolton's views reflect those of the administration, his lack of the needed skills seems almost certain to doom him to fail to do the job right. Incompetence blights implementation.

Why, then, did the administration not nominate a more competent person with a similar view of the United Nations? The reason is that this ideology-driven administration fails to recognize Bolton's serious flaws or the debilitating consequences for policymaking flowing from them because his grave deficiencies mirror their own.

Whatever the Senate finally does, the intensity of the confirmation battle makes frighteningly clear how much political polarization has made Republican senators fear the wrath of the hard-line ideologues that now own the party.

These confirmation hearings are not "just politics." The serious battle over a person of such obvious unsuitability for the critical U.N. post signals the Republicans' incompetence to govern the nation.

Even more specifically, the Bolton hearings cry out that total commitment to an ideology -- be it that of the Bush administration or the religious fundamentalists -- is sufficient to protect the incompetents already in the administration and future nominees lacking the skills required to do the job right.
____________________________

Walter Williams is a professor emeritus at the University of Washington's Daniel J. Evans School of Public Affairs and the author of "Reaganism and the Death of Representative Democracy."



To: Rascal who wrote (161769)5/12/2005 10:15:01 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
War didn't and doesn't bring democracy

securingamerica.com

Reprinted with permission.

War didn't and doesn't bring democracy
By General Wesley Clark
Washington Monthly
May 2005

Operating on the theory that if you say something enough times people will believe it, the Bush administration and its allies have in the last few years confidently put forth an array of assertions, predictions, and rationalizations about Iraq that have turned out to be nonsense. They've told us that Saddam's regime was on the verge of building nuclear weapons; that it had operational links with al Qaeda; that our allies would support our invasion if we stuck with our insistence about going it alone; that we could safely invade with a relatively small number of ground troops; that the Iraqi people would greet us as liberators; that Ahmed Chalabi could be trusted; that Iraq's oil revenues would pay for the country's reconstruction; and that most of our troops would be out of Iraq within six months of the initial invasion.

Now, they tell us that recent stirrings of democracy elsewhere in the Middle East are a direct consequence of our invasion of Iraq, that the neoconservative vision of contagious democracy has been realized. Given the administration's track record, we would be wise to greet this latest assertion with suspicion.

It's understandable that the administration would want to make this claim. After all, by any honest accounting, the Iraq operation has been a mess. The U.S. military has performed brilliantly for the most part. But we invaded the country for the express purpose of removing weapons of mass destruction that turned out not to exist. That effort has cost $200 billion and more than 1,500 American lives. It has strained our alliances, damaged America's reputation in the world, pushed the all-volunteer military to the breaking point, and left our troops exposed in a hostile country with an open-ended exit strategy. It would be convenient to be able to say that the intent all along was just to bring democracy to the region and that this was simply the necessary price. Convenient, but not true.

Certainly, the sight of Iraqis voting on January 30 was welcome, and a tremendous credit to the U.S. military efforts to provide security (though it was the Iraqis themselves who were most determined to hold the elections then, rather than delay the vote). The image of those purple Iraqi fingers was a powerful reminder that democracy knows no ethnic, religious, or geographic boundaries, and that freedom-loving hearts beat just as soundly under Arab robes as they do under grey suits.

At the same time, the demonstration effect of those elections has to be weighed against the immense damage our invasion has done in the region. Intensification of anti-Americanism and the ability of regional leaders to point to the chaos in Iraq as a reason to maintain the stability of current regimes are just some of the negative consequences of our invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Anyone who has traveled regularly to the Middle East over the years, as I have, knows that the recent hopeful democratic moves in Lebanon, Egypt, and the Palestinian territories have causal roots that long predate our arrival in Iraq, or that are otherwise unconnected to the war. American groups like the National Endowment for Democracy and numerous international organizations have been working with and strengthening reform-minded elements in these countries for years, and to some extent we are now seeing the fruits of that quiet involvement. But it is a mistake to believe that everything that is happening in the region—whether positive or negative—is a result of American military actions or rhetoric from Washington.

In Iran, for instance, the hopeful movement toward democracy went into remission after we invaded neighboring Iraq. Did our invasion cause democratic reform to falter in Iran? Not necessarily. There are many reasons—most of them internal—for why reform movements within a country wax and wane. But it is hard to claim that the Bush administration's invasion of Iraq was responsible for pro-democratic reactions in some Middle Eastern countries, but not for anti-democratic reactions in others.

Each of the positive developments that are currently bringing hope to the Middle East was more directly the result of a catalyzing local event than the consequence of American foreign policy. The death of Yasser Arafat made possible the democratic breakthrough within the Palestinian Authority and the progress we're now seeing between the PA and Israel. In Lebanon, it took the assassination of former Prime Minister Hariri and the outrage, both internal and international, that followed to spur Syrian withdrawal. And across the region, leaders like Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak have recognized the need to seek greater legitimacy by opening the door for democracy in order to stave off mounting threats from Islamic fundamentalists.

The administration has generally responded to these openings by adding to the pressure, calling for withdrawal of Syrian forces and for democracy. But like the rooster who thinks his crowing caused the dawn, those who rule Washington today have a habit of taking credit for events of which they were in fact not the primary movers. Many of them have insisted, for instance, that the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 was largely the consequence of President Reagan's military policies. As a military officer at the time, and a Reagan supporter, I would be happy to give the Gipper that credit. In truth, however, our military posture was only one factor. As in the Middle East today, individuals who labored for freedom within these countries performed the bulk of the work. Lech Walesa, Vaclav Havel, and other contemporaries looked at America as an ideal, not as the muscle, on every street corner. Other, truly transformative agents of Western influence, such as Pope John Paul II, the labor union movement, international commercial institutions, and the influences of next-door neighbors like the Federal Republic of Germany were at work.

Today, American democratic values are admired in the Middle East, but our policies have generated popular resentment. Although it may come as a surprise to those of us here, there is a passionate resistance to the U.S. “imposing” its style of democracy to suit American purposes. Democratic reformers in the Middle East don't want to have their own hopes and dreams subordinated to the political agenda of the United States. It's for this reason that the administration shouldn't try to take too much credit for the coming changes. Or be too boastful about our own institutions. Or too loud in proclaiming that we're thrilled about Middle Eastern democracy—mostly because it makes us feel safer. A little humility is likely to prove far more useful than chest-thumping.

As we work to help establish the conditions for democracy in Iraq, our most useful role elsewhere is surely behind the scenes. For example, the situation in Lebanon creates a power vacuum which could lead to the same kind of instability that ignited civil war there 30 years ago. We can, and should, be working diplomatically to provide the support, balance, and reassurances necessary for the revival of independent democracy in Lebanon. We should engage Syria to encourage cooperation in Iraq and liberalize its politics at home. At the very least, we should be helping to craft what comes next before we tighten the noose further on an already-shaky Assad. In our eagerness to help, we'd do well to heed the motto of my Navy friends in the submarine service: “Run silent-run deep.”

Democracy can't be imposed—it has to be homegrown. In the Middle East, democracy has begun to capture the imagination of the people. For Washington to take credit is not only to disparage courageous leaders throughout the region, but also to undercut their influence at the time it most needs to be augmented. Let's give credit where credit is due—and leave the political spin at the water's edge.



To: Rascal who wrote (161769)5/13/2005 6:15:45 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Waging War on War

alternet.org

"Any idiot can make war," Mapendere told an audience in California last weekend. "A single person can cause chaos. But making peace, that's where you need moral giants, real generals -- and there are very few."



To: Rascal who wrote (161769)5/20/2005 5:47:03 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Stop the Crime of the Century

axisoflogic.com