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


To: michael97123 who wrote (186170)5/4/2006 5:18:05 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Say Uncle, Rummy
_________________________________________________________

By MAUREEN DOWD
Columnist
The New York Times
April 29, 2006

Even some State Department officials thought it was like watching a cranky, eccentric uncle with an efficient, energetic niece.

Rummy was ordered to go to Iraq by the president, but he clearly has no stomach for nation-building, or letting Condi run the show. He seemed under the weather after a rough overnight ride on a C-17 transport plane from Washington into Baghdad. And Condi's aides were rolling their eyes at the less than respectful way the DefSec treated the SecState as she tried to be enthusiastic, in her cheerful automaton way, about what she considers the latest last chance for Iraq.

A reporter in Baghdad asked Rummy about the kerfuffle when Condi talked of "thousands" of tactical errors in Iraq. Rummy later noted that "I don't know what she was talking about, to be perfectly honest" and that anyone who said that had "a lack of understanding" about warfare. She's just a silly girl, after all.

He could have taken the opportunity to be diplomatic about the diplomat, but he's incapable of that, so he just added more fuel to the fire.

"She's right here, and you can ask her," he said, pointing to Condi, who said she had not meant errors "in the military sense." She must have meant mismanagement in the civilians-mucking-up-the-military sense.

The former "Matinee Idol," as W. liked to call him, is now a figure of absurdity, clinging to his job only because some retired generals turned him into a new front on the war on terror. On his rare, brief visit to Baghdad, he was afraid to go outside Fortress Green Zone, even though he yammers on conservative talk shows about how progress is being made, and how the press never reports good news out of Iraq.

If the news is so good, why wasn't Rummy gallivanting at the local mall, walking around rather than hiding out in the U.S. base known as Camp Victory? (What are they going to call it, one reporter joked, Camp Defeat?)

In further evidence of their astute connection with the Iraqi culture, the cabinet secretaries showed up there without even knowing the correct name of their latest puppet. It turned out that Jawad al-Maliki, the new prime minister-designate, considered "Jawad" his exile name and had reverted to Nuri Kamal al-Maliki.

On the cusp of the third anniversary of "Mission Accomplished," Rummy was still in denial despite the civil war, with armed gangs of Shiites and Sunnis going out and killing each other and Balkanizing whole communities.

When a reporter asked him what the U.S. had to do to get the militias under control and stop the sectarian dueling, he answered bluntly: "I guess the first thing I have to say is we don't, the Iraqis do. It's their country. It's a sovereign country. This is not a government that has an 'interim' in front of it or a 'transition' in front of it. It's a government that's in for a period of years and undoubtedly, unquestionably, will be addressing the question as to how they can best provide for the security of all of their people."

Yeah, let's leave it up to what's-his-name. We broke it. What's-his-name can fix it.

The assertions that Iraq is largely peaceful were belied yesterday by our own government. A State Department report on global terrorism counted 8,300 deaths of civilians in Iraq from insurgent attacks — more than half of all those killed by terrorists worldwide — and noted that violence is escalating. The elections have clearly not quelled the violence, and terrorists are said to be trying to turn Iraq's Anbar province into a base for Al Qaeda and other militants. (And since it's our State Department, you've got to figure they're soft-peddling it.)

April was the most lethal month for U.S. soldiers this year; at least 67 died.

The Bush II hawks were determined to restore a Reaganesque muscular, "moral" foreign policy, as opposed to the realpolitik of Bush I. But with no solution in sight, Congress is pressing for some realpolitik. With W.'s blessing, lawmakers are sending his father's old consigliere, James Baker, to Iraq to look for a way out.

As Iran vows to go ahead with its nuclear ambitions, the administration finds itself relying for help on the very people it steamrolled and undermined before the Iraq war: the U.N. and international arms inspectors.

"The Security Council is the primary and most important institution for the maintenance of peace and stability and security, and it cannot have its word and its will simply ignored by a member state," Condi said after a NATO meeting on Thursday.

Rummy may get prickly with his office niece, but who else but the automaton could make that threat with a straight face?

The New York Times Company



To: michael97123 who wrote (186170)5/4/2006 6:59:01 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Warner brings his blunt talk to Seattle

By JOEL CONNELLY
P-I COLUMNIST
seattlepi.nwsource.com

Seven weeks before being elected governor of Virginia in 2001, Mark Warner stood on the roof of his campaign headquarters in Alexandria and watched the Pentagon burn.

"It still burns me up when I hear Karl Rove accuse Democrats of having a 'pre-9/11 worldview,' " reflected Warner, who is exploring a presidential bid, during an interview in Seattle on Monday.

Warner, 51, left office in January, basking in the fact that 150,000 jobs were created in the Old Dominion -- in Washington, D.C., suburbs as well as in small rural towns -- under his watch.

The governor's 80 percent approval ratings boosted a fellow Democrat, Tim Kaine, to succeed him in a Republican-leaning state. It started buzz that Warner is best equipped to emerge as the alternative-to-Hillary candidate in the Democrats' 2008 race.

A co-founder of the cellular phone company that became Nextel, Warner sounds more like a driven, analytical business or foundation leader than a hail-fellow politician of either party.

He faults President Bush for intellectual laziness, in not asking tough questions about Iraq and failing to show much curiosity about a world economy that is turning at Internet speed.

"The job of an executive is not just to go along with subordinates," he said. "It is to ask the next question. It is to find a hole in the plan. It is to keep questioning until you are satisfied.

"You have to be relentless. And you must also be willing to hear bad news. It's true even if you have the policy right. This is a gang that can't shoot straight when it comes to execution."

Warner draws bipartisan inspiration.

He lauds the unceasing pressure that President Kennedy put on subordinates with the solution that avoided nuclear war in the Cuban missile crisis. He credits President Reagan with implementing "real changes" in his administration after the Iran-Contra crisis enveloped ideologues in his administration.

In Warner's view, bad judgment by ideologues has left America with a list of bad options in Iraq. Iraq was to have become "a shining beacon in the Middle East," a dream fast dying.

"A failed Iraqi state right now is not in America's interests," Warner said. "This war, at the beginning, did not have anything to do with al-Qaida. Now, Iraq could be a base for al-Qaida. At the beginning, our intervention had nothing to do with Iranian expansionism. Now, a failed Iraqi state could serve Iranian expansionism."

What to do? Warner would give Iraq's feuding politicians "weeks, not months" to form a viable government. They would get "months, not years," to show progress at achieving order.

"At least we should not leave Iraq a significantly more destabilizing force than before we went in," he added.

Warner is more anxious to talk economics and jobs.

He confronted a ballooning shortfall in Virginia, and cut $858 million out of the state budget. After that, however, he persuaded a Republican-run legislature to push through a tax reform plan that significantly boosted spending on education.

He is proud to have brought tech jobs to rural towns, and broadband capacity to southern Virginia counties.

Looking at national policy, Warner notes that the federal government spends about $2 billion a year on energy research and development -- but $7.1 billion a month on the Iraq war.

"We're 16th in the world in broadband development in this country: This is the country that invented the Internet," Warner said. "We seem to have no strategy at all. We should be moving aggressively to tell small towns, 'Your kid does not need to move to a big city to find a job.'

"We have not built a know ledge economy in this country. Small-town America, what hope has it gotten in the last 20 years? Back to the last two years of Clinton, we've accumulated years of lack of focus, of lack of attention to competitive policy."

In his days of seeding telecommunications firms, Warner came to Seattle to deal with the McCaw cellular phone empire -- a bastion of local Republicanism.

He was on a whirlwind schedule Monday, meeting and greeting Democrats, huddling with King County Executive Ron Sims, and raising money for his political committee.

And Tuesday, there was a morning trip to Microsoft -- for presidential aspirants, our political equivalent of a pilgrimage to Lourdes.

"I have Sacramento and San Jose this week, and Israel next week," he joked. "It is like the longest road show in the world."

Virginia was home to several of America's early, visionary presidents.

In the past half-century, it has veered from the "massive resistance" policy of Sen. Harry Byrd toward school desegregation to the election of an African American, Douglas Wilder, as governor.

Wilder made a brief, disorganized bid for the 1992 Democratic presidential nomination.

Another Virginian touted as White House timber, Sen. Charles Robb, saw his career mortally damaged by attendance at cocaine parties and controversy over how he spent time with former Miss Virginia Tai Collins alone in a hotel room. (An affair, she alleged. A rubdown, he claimed.)

Two more formidable Virginians are potential contenders in the wide-open 2008 race. Republican Sen. George Allen Jr. has national ambitions, but must first get re-elected.

Of Warner, Democratic strategist Frank Greer observed yesterday: "He is competent and knows how to succeed and how to actually accomplish things."

P-I columnist Joel Connelly can be reached at 206-448-8160 or joelconnelly@seattlepi.com.



To: michael97123 who wrote (186170)5/5/2006 4:36:06 AM
From: geode00  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Nope michael97123, rightwingers are all talk and no sense.

You shouldn't threaten physical harm to anyone especially when hiding behind a keyboard...it's just too silly. You should meet up with Hawkmoon and play with his plastic soldiers.