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To: Machaon who wrote (4027)4/16/1999 12:49:00 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 17770
 
<<Getting a BJ in the White House is a lot more forgivable then committing Genocide against the Kosovo Albanians.>>

And that is the sum total of bill clintons weaknesses and evil acts. Try again ignoramus.



To: Machaon who wrote (4027)4/18/1999 3:57:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17770
 
Clinton's Foreign Policy
Skills Face Questions
01:42 p.m Apr 18, 1999 Eastern

By Laurence McQuillan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As
criticism of U.S. policy on Kosovo
increases, the war in the Balkans is
fueling new questions about
President Clinton's foreign policy
skills and the impact of the crisis
on other diplomatic fronts.

The three-day NATO summit that
begins Friday in Washington has
been dramatically altered by the
escalating intensity of the daily air
strikes in Yugoslavia.

What once was to be a triumphant
gala celebration of the alliance's
50th anniversary, instead will be a
far more somber affair.

The gathering, which will be
attended by the heads of the 19
NATO countries plus some 25
other world leaders, comes as
Clinton faces a growing number of
questions about his foreign policy
results in places like Russia, China
and the Mideast, as well as
Kosovo.

''There is a very, very big problem
here and it is exemplified in
Kosovo,'' said John Steinbruner, a
foreign policy expert with the
Brookings Institution, in discussing
Clinton's ventures in diplomacy.

''At the core of the problem is his
tendency to see all foreign policy
issues simply as an extension of
immediate domestic American
politics, which is what he
understands,'' Steinbruner said.

While saying outside intervention
was necessary in Kosovo,
Steinbruner agreed with an
increasing number of critics who
fault Clinton for ruling out the use
of ground troops before the air
war even began -- a decision
driven by domestic concerns.

''We're hurting the things that we
say we're trying to help, that's
what's so discouraging ... He's left
us with a legacy of misjudgments
and tremendous consequences for
those misjudgments,'' Steinbruner
said.

With some 33,000 Air Force
reservists likely to be activated
soon because of the steady
increase in air attacks on
Yugoslavia, members of Congress
increasingly are calling for a clearer
picture of where Clinton's policy in
Kosovo will lead.

Sen. Max Cleland, a
wheelchair-bound hero of the
Vietnam War, spoke for many in
his generation when he talked of
the policy mistakes that cost so
many of his comrades their lives or
their limbs. He said he was
searching for ''some coherent
sense of where we are and what
we ought to do'' in Kosovo.

''I am convinced that one of the
tragedies of the Vietnam
experience was that it was both no
win and no exit,'' the Georgia
Democrat said, echoing criticism of
the current U.S. approach.

''We can't afford to repeat that
mistake in Kosovo. We either
have to come up with a policy to
win militarily, or come up with a
good exit strategy or both,''
Cleland told fellow members of
Congress.

He noted the U.S.-led attacks on
the forces of Yugoslav President
Slobodan Milosevic have hurt
relations with Russia, where
once-ignored hard-liners have
gained new political life, and with
China, which had hoped to sign a
deal ending trade barriers to its
markets.

''We are paying a price,'' he said
of Kosovo. ''I think we lost a
trade agreement with China
because of that. I think we have a
deteriorating relationship with
Russia ... We have strained
relationships in NATO, and not to
mention the incredible strain on the
neighboring states -- Albania,
Macedonia, and others.''

The unusually blunt assessment
from a fellow Democrat
underscores the risk Clinton has
taken with his presidency.

''The economy is great, they
couldn't pin Monica on him but
boy Kosovo may hang him if he
doesn't find a good way out,'' said
Valerie Hudson, a foreign policy
professor at Brigham Young
University.

''He's never been in the military,
and that was by his own design,''
she said. ''Now he's calling other
people's sons and daughters to
war ... There's some very deep
ironies here that can't help but
undermine him in his role as
commander-in-chief.''

She echoed the concern expressed
by numerous foreign policy experts
about the impact of the Kosovo
war.

''Americans are now worried
about looking like the biggest idiots
on the world stage,'' she said.

Copyright 1999 Reuters Limited.