Posted on 11/10/2003 8:08:35 AM PST by Ragtime Cowgirl
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November 10, 2003, 8:51 a.m. Bush's speech was the latest effort by the administration to stop the slipping support for the U.S. occupation of Iraq at home and abroad. Though he had previously mentioned the spread of Mideast democracy as a justification for the invasion of Iraq, Bush elevated that rationale to primacy yesterday, making no mention of weapons of mass destruction and only passing reference to national security and terrorism.Could this be so? Has President Bush somehow done a Woodrow Wilson makeover? Has the president changed the rationale of the war from defending the United States from terrorism to a selfless "crusade" for democracy? Well, not exactly. Bush's argument in his landmark address before the National Endowment of Democracy on Thursday was in fact far more interesting and challenging than reported.
His argument has been largely misunderstood because it draws upon an almost-forgotten foreign-policy tradition in America one that is neither strictly "realist" nor "idealist." Bush's speech hearkens back to the "idealistic realism" of Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge. The case President Bush made is not the Wilsonian one of making the world safe for democracy. Rather, his abiding concern, as was TR's, is to make the world safe for the United States. Here's what Bush said: He pointed out that 60 years of a cold, calculating "realism" in our foreign policy towards the Middle East one that accommodated despots as long as they were on "our side" made the country neither safe nor served our national interest. Now, in making this acknowledgment, Bush was hardly offering a Clinton-like apology for past wrongs committed by the United States. He was simply pointing out that the old policy in the Mideast had failed to deliver. It was, one might say, not at all realistic about the true agenda of all those "friendly" kings, princes, and strongmen who currently rule over the Arab world. Authoritarian states like Iraq and Saudi Arabia, no matter how much oil they might sell us, do not serve our genuine national interests. There can be no community of concern between democrats and non-democrats. As Bush put it, "in the long run, stability cannot be purchased at the expense of liberty. As long as the Middle East remains a place where freedom does not flourish, it will remain a place of...violence ready for export." Bush is an idealist of sorts. He sincerely wants to share the blessings of liberty with the Arab word. And he believes liberty is for all peoples, not just for the culturally fortunate. As he said, echoing Thomas Jefferson and the Declaration of Independence, "We believe that liberty is the design of nature." In other words, freedom is everywhere and always desired. It is not culturally and historically conditioned. However, Bush has set the country on the course of democracy-promotion in the Middle East less for the sake of the Arab peoples (though it's certainly the right thing to do) than for our own safety and security. True enough, he made scarcely any mention of weapons of mass destruction and terrorists in his address. But these dangers did not go exactly unexamined. Securing democracy in Iraq and the Middle East is, he declared, "worth our effort, it is worth our sacrifice, because we know the stakes. The failure of Iraqi democracy would embolden terrorists around the world, increas[ing] dangers to the American people." In September 11 was to be found a great horror, but also the premonition of much worse to come. Do the American people agree with the president? Do they see the "stakes" as he sees them? According to a recent CNN-USA Today-Gallup Poll, 54 percent of respondents disapprove of the president's policy in Iraq. Meanwhile, the Democrats smell blood in the water. Many opposed Bush's $87 billion aid package for Iraq, and most of the Democratic candidates running in the primaries favor a rapid withdrawal from Iraq. They have turned their backs even on Wilsonian idealism to embrace instead the deep and self-defeating pessimism of George McGovern and Jimmy Carter. The election next year will very likely be a referendum on the Iraq war and Bush's foreign policy of democracy promotion in the Middle East. One should not underestimate the obstacles to Bush's foreign-policy aims: The most difficult of these begin not in Iraq's Sunni "triangle" but at home. Can the president convince enough Americans that his is the best course of action? Securing democracy in Iraq alone will require at least a second Bush term in order to see through the policy. The victory of a Democrat in 2004 would likely mean an American withdrawal from Iraq or handing the problem over to the United Nations hardly a friend of democracy or America's best interests. Unlike during much of the Cold War, when it could reasonably be expected that a change of administrations would not mean a radical change in the policy of containment, there is no bipartisan consensus in the post-9/11 world. The perils are great indeed. The war in Iraq was launched in the name of American security, but it was also inevitably a promissory note of sorts to the Iraqi people: for a better, freer life, and more decent, representative government. To pull out of Iraq before this is accomplished would be to break this promise, and to turn Iraq over to the terrorists bent on America's destruction. Thus Bush's most-urgent task is the creation of a bipartisan consensus on the fundamentals of his Mideast policy. Such a consensus cannot be formulated in Washington, D.C. by striking deals with the likes of Senator Ted Kennedy or horse-trading one program for another. A bipartisan consensus must start not from above, but be built from the ground up. It must be rooted in a broad and abiding public opinion. The 2004 election will be the most momentous at least since 1980 when Americans chose Reagan's defense build up over four more years of drift and appeasement under Carter. Just as Reagan became a shaper of public opinion, so too must Bush. Only in doing so can he insure that the new policy he calls "a forward strategy of freedom" will endure in the years and decades ahead, whether a Democrat or a Republican is in charge. These are the stakes. Adam Wolfson is editor of The Public Interest. |
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CNN poll shows a majority of the American people disapprove of our efforts have been misinformed by CNN re. our efforts in Iraq.
We'll just have to work harder.
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Exactly!
Neither of these involve President Bush.
More important, I would say. I would much rather speak German than Arabic...
In the long view, the fighting amongst the European powers and the USSR merely weakened us to the point where the ancient battles with the Islamic World could once again come to the fore. Much as the bickering between European kingdoms gave the opportunity to the Turk in days of yore.
I firmly believe that people will be talking about these days a thousand years from now, as a time that European civilization was either lost or won. What language they will be speaking remains to be seen.
When was the last time anybody heard the words, "politics stops at the water's edge"? I'll bet it was when klinton "wagged the dog" to draw attention away from his domestic felonies, and it was invoked by the RATS. Osama hit us on 9-11 because he judged, rightly, that klinton pulled out of Somalia out of cowardice. We lost 3000 people inside America murdered by klinton's bugging out of a minor sideshow like Somalia. What should we expect at home when some RAT orders a panicked pullout from Iraq?
A cliche from the 60's was "what if they gave a war and nobody came?" Islam has been hosting a war against America for ever 20 years, and most of the time we didn't show up. Look where that got us.
Bush has set the country on the course of democracy-promotion in the Middle East less for the sake of the Arab peoples (though it's certainly the right thing to do) than for our own safety and security. -the clueful Adam Wolfson
Why we are in Iraq. What I don't understand is why some folks just don't get it(and I'm talking about some Freepers also). -Valin
There has been ample debate on FR with those that decried Wilsonian neocons. They honestly cling to their views. One thing they have cited is the lack of cultural background compatible with Western-style democracy.
One thing about the cold war policy of containment was that it could be viewed concretely as a power struggle between USSR and USA. The countries on the map had one color or another. Even Carter could stomach fighting the Soviets via proxy in Afghanistan.
But the underlying force in World War III (The Cold War) was that in freedom lies strength. The people of the countries free from Soviet rule fueled ever more resistance to Soviet tyranny. To believe that this World War IV (War on Terror) will work requires more than following colors on a map. It requires believing in the strength of free Muslims and Arabs to take up the fight.
The parallel is that Reagan shifted from the status quo: "containment", i.e., don't harm the cancer--just "co-exist".
Reagan went for victory: win, and liberate, and ipso facto make the world safe for democracy.
He did all of that.
Bush now has the opportunity unique in history to change the region from enemy dictators to [ultimately] amiable democracies.
Of course the friends of Castro and haters of America [CNN in the vanguard] decry the "quagmire" for political gain, not national security.
The Left reveals itself absorbed in the former at the expense of the latter.
Unless the fifth column engineers a domestic 911-redux it is doomed to Dukakis II.
Even should it attempt such a Reichstag arson, the law of unintended consequences might consign it to a black hole just as effectively.
This is what history will record about the Bush administration. He is confronting decades of failed policy with an offense that includes not just military strength but the strength of belief in the human spirit and its fundamental desire for liberty. It's truly amazing how little of this the mainstream recognizes, comprehends or reports.
There has been ample debate on FR with those that decried Wilsonian neocons. They honestly cling to their views.
The problem I have with the paleo-cons is that they don't see that the world has gotten a lot smaller in the last 100 years. And it never was all that big.
It requires believing in the strength of free Muslims and Arabs to take up the fight.
I see no reason why they won't.
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