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Bush policies and practices drive a wedge between the U.S. and key allies in Europe
SUNSPOT ^ | January 4, 2004 | Madeleine K. Albright

Posted on 01/04/2004 3:17:09 AM PST by sopwith

In the structure of a classical play, a problem is presented in Act 1. Complications arise in Act 2, and all is resolved in Act 3. In Iraq this spring, while much of Europe was still enmeshed in Act 2, George W. Bush plunged directly into Act 3, without acknowledging the complications or fully considering the consequences of his actions. The result was the most heated year in trans-Atlantic relations since the Suez crisis of 1956. The Iraq war ignited tinder already piled high by clashes over trade, arms control, the Middle East, global warming and the International Criminal Court. By March, when the war in Iraq began, surveys indicated that only a minority of Europeans held a favorable view of America, while in the United States pollsters found unprecedented animosity toward dissident allies France and Germany. In October I spent three weeks in Europe, hoping to find passions cooling and anti-American sentiments receding. Instead I was told, even by normally pro-American officials, that European hostility had only grown deeper as the months passed with no weapons of mass destruction being found in Iraq and without any sign of recognition by Bush that there had been any merit to Europe's prewar warnings. My European friends were not shy in telling me that Americans appeared to them simultaneously besotted with power and unnerved by terror, increasingly overbearing, jingoistic and rash. Europeans appreciated the trauma of the Sept. 11 attacks, I was told, but were baffled by the idea that an attack on Iraq should be the centerpiece of America's response. Saddam Hussein was a rotter, they conceded, but no imminent threat - and he was blameless for Sept. 11. As to current events, despite the Bush team's attempts to show a happy face, the Iraqi rebuilding looks at best like, in Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld's words, "a long, hard slog." Meanwhile the American president is unable to appear at public events, even in historically friendly Great Britain, for fear of being shouted down by protesters, and an October Gallup poll suggested that a majority of Europeans view the United States as a threat to peace. The antagonism that has crept into Euro-Atlantic relations must be reversed because it has the potential to undermine the entire web of institutions and arrangements created after World War II, not only to contain communism but also to build prosperity, control nuclear arms, advance democratic values and distinguish right from wrong in world affairs. If the Bush administration isn't careful, it will allow Hussein to do what four decades of Soviet leaders could not do: drive a wedge between Europe and the United States. One would hope, therefore, that the administration would devote itself to mending the trans-Atlantic bridge. Little would disarm the president's domestic critics more than the spectacle of America and Europe once again working together smoothly, combining their diverse talents to combat terror, democratize Iraq, stabilize Afghanistan, denuclearize Iran and promote the rule of law. After America's recent show of its aggressive and unilateralist capacities, a tilt back toward institution-building and alliance-strengthening would be welcomed in Europe and would likely attract bipartisan support at home. It would also be eminently sensible, given the challenges of the moment. Going the other way Alas, with elections looming, the administration seems to be adopting the opposite approach. The first Republican television ads forcefully - and unfairly - accuse Democrats of "attacking the president for attacking terrorists" and of planning to "put our national security in the hands of others," presumably meaning the United Nations or even France. The Republican National Committee is urging voters to call their congressmen "to support the president's policy of pre-emptive self-defense." Meanwhile, despite almost daily setbacks in Iraq, the Pentagon shows no sign of a serious effort to internationalize the occupation. Protestations to the contrary notwithstanding, the administration seems to have concluded that unilateralism in foreign policy is not a weakness but a strength, at least where electoral politics is concerned. If this is in fact Bush's view, the 2004 election will constitute a virtual referendum on whether Americans have any desire to continue the trans-Atlantic partnership. The Republican strategy could play well among those persuaded by the administration's implicit claims that the invasion of Iraq was essentially a retaliatory measure for Sept. 11 and that attacking Saddam Hussein was simply another way of attacking Osama bin Laden. Although unsupported by the facts - Bush himself has acknowledged that there is no evidence linking Iraq to Sept. 11 - this argument casts the war not as a subject for pragmatic discussion but rather as a moral test. The Germans and French failed this test, those advocates say, essentially deserting under fire. The spectacle of the lone sheriff facing down the bad guys while the cowardly townspeople tremble in the background, crystalized in the classic film High Noon (1952), has deep resonance for the American electorate. Casting Bush as the rugged individualist taking on terrorists might well appeal to voters more than any Democratic insistence that the terrorist threat can be confronted and turned back only with the aid of old alliances and established institutions. Combustible change If the Republicans pursue an ideological campaign and win, the world will change in highly combustible ways. It is one thing for an American administration to depart from traditional policies under stress and for a limited time, but it would be quite another for a president to win election with a mandate to make that departure permanent. How would Europe react? Even Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain probably would find it necessary, for his own political survival, to distance himself from American policies. The current disturbing trends in European public opinion about the United States would worsen, I fear, and without the lubricant of a security partnership economic disputes would be even harder to resolve. The European Union would become more resistant to American influence, and NATO and the United Nations would be hobbled. None of this is inevitable. The Democratic presidential candidates are divided on Iraq, but they're generally united in challenging the Bush administration's unilateralism, its emphasis on pre-emption and its penchant for ignoring international institutions. Some of the candidates also argue that the Iraq invasion has diverted resources from the battle against al-Qaida, alienated world opinion and created a new rallying point for terrorists. Opposition strategy The eventual Democratic nominee can be expected to attack Bush for squandering international support after Sept. 11, for failing to develop a long-term strategy to defeat terrorism and for exposing American troops to unnecessary danger through incoherent planning in Iraq. These arguments might well make sense to an American public increasingly troubled by developments abroad. If his opponent begins to find traction with such charges, even after the capture of Saddam Hussein on Dec. 14, it is possible that Bush will have no choice but to switch gears once again, running for re-election as a born-again internationalist who treasures NATO and reads the United Nations Charter every night before bed. We might even see him resuscitate his 2000 campaign slogan, "I am a uniter, not a divider." At the moment, however, it appears that in 2004 American voters will be offered a clear choice: reaffirm their country's strategic alliance with Europe or replace it with a strategy dependent, in the end, on American strength alone. If so, their choice will be historic and will go a long way toward determining, once the curtain falls, whether or not Bush's Act 3 ends up as a tragedy. Madeleine K. Albright was secretary of state in the Clinton administration. She is the author of the best-selling "Madam Secretary: A Memoir" (Miramax Books, 2003).

(Excerpt) Read more at sunspot.net ...


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: albright; armchairnobodies; maddyhalfbright; madeleine
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1 posted on 01/04/2004 3:17:10 AM PST by sopwith
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To: sopwith
I'm starting to wish that Dubya did have Osama bin Laden stashed somewhere, so that these demented Clintonistas could be thrown in with him.
2 posted on 01/04/2004 3:22:09 AM PST by Slings and Arrows (Am Yisrael Chai!)
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3 posted on 01/04/2004 3:22:55 AM PST by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: sopwith
overbearing, jingoistic and rash.
4 posted on 01/04/2004 3:24:52 AM PST by dasboot (Overbearing, jingoistic, rash: proud to be an American.)
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To: sopwith
Maddie sounds....shrill.
5 posted on 01/04/2004 3:26:43 AM PST by dasboot (Overbearing, jingoistic, rash: proud to be an American.)
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To: sopwith
This clown has got to be the worst SoS that we have ever had. After the debacle with North Korea you would think that she would at the very least keep quite. Liberals are without shame and incompetent.
6 posted on 01/04/2004 3:30:33 AM PST by CasearianDaoist
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To: sopwith
Sounds like a liberal red herring to transfer attention away from their own failed foreign policies.
7 posted on 01/04/2004 3:40:34 AM PST by tkathy (The islamofascists and the democrats are trying to destroy this country)
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To: sopwith
Eight years of the putzfrau and the serial rapist doing the Lewinsky on the French while failing to respond to terrorist attacks really left the world a safer place, didn't it? Makes Jimmy Carter look like Churchill instead of the Chamberlin he is.
8 posted on 01/04/2004 3:45:08 AM PST by Feckless
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To: sopwith
Sounds like Maddie's been at that "Seattle style" ground beef again...
9 posted on 01/04/2004 3:46:43 AM PST by Caipirabob (Democrats.. Socialists..Commies..Traitors...Who can tell the difference?)
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To: sopwith
No, hell no..... I'll say what I really mean. The SS are only 20 min away......
We should be driving a brigade of M1A2s through the center of Paris. We should be driving B52's over Berlin with madame and the serial scumbag strapped to 2000 pounders ala Slim Pickins. We should be bitch slapping the A-holes everytime they open their fat socialist UN butt kissing mouths.
10 posted on 01/04/2004 3:50:00 AM PST by Feckless
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To: sopwith
Albright the Sage defending the likes of the French and the Germans...does this inspire anyone?
11 posted on 01/04/2004 3:58:08 AM PST by wunderkind54
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To: Slings and Arrows
As soon as I noticed who the *author* was, I decided it wasn't worth reading. Stevie Ray Wannabe can't play guitar and she knows exactly that much about foreign policy.

Don't you love these born-again Jews who found out at a very late age that their stepfather "might" have been Jewish? LOL
Didn't Hitlery do that too? Her grandmother's second husband was Jewish or some ridiculous thing.
Ridicule is all they are worthy of.

Am Yisrael Chai.
NIX


2

FROM THE WARROOM
QUINN'S SUICIDER

12 posted on 01/04/2004 5:18:53 AM PST by Nix 2 (http://www.warroom.com QUINN AND ROSE from 6-10 AM-104.7 FM in da Burgh-as of Jan. 5)
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To: wunderkind54
Three weeks in Europe,bashing President Bush and seeking donations for Hillary's! run for the presidency in 2004 with Mad shrill Maddy as VP?
13 posted on 01/04/2004 5:20:19 AM PST by BARLF
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To: Feckless
"...putzfrau..."

ROFLMAO. Mind if I use it elsewhere?

14 posted on 01/04/2004 5:21:18 AM PST by CPOSharky (Liberal method - Repeat lie until someone else quotes it, then use that quote as proof.)
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To: dasboot
overbearing, jingoistic and rash, and can't even format her ravings into paragraphs!
15 posted on 01/04/2004 5:22:34 AM PST by j_tull (created by God and endowed by Him with certain inalienable rights which no civil authority may usurp)
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To: j_tull; sopwith
(I hope you don't mind, sopwith.)

In the structure of a classical play, a problem is presented in Act 1. Complications arise in Act 2, and all is resolved in Act 3.

In Iraq this spring, while much of Europe was still enmeshed in Act 2, George W. Bush plunged directly into Act 3, without acknowledging the complications or fully considering the consequences of his actions.

The result was the most heated year in trans-Atlantic relations since the Suez crisis of 1956. The Iraq war ignited tinder already piled high by clashes over trade, arms control, the Middle East, global warming and the International Criminal Court.

By March, when the war in Iraq began, surveys indicated that only a minority of Europeans held a favorable view of America, while in the United States pollsters found unprecedented animosity toward dissident allies France and Germany.

In October I spent three weeks in Europe, hoping to find passions cooling and anti-American sentiments receding. Instead I was told, even by normally pro-American officials, that European hostility had only grown deeper as the months passed with no weapons of mass destruction being found in Iraq and without any sign of recognition by Bush that there had been any merit to Europe's prewar warnings.

My European friends were not shy in telling me that Americans appeared to them simultaneously besotted with power and unnerved by terror, increasingly overbearing, jingoistic and rash.

Europeans appreciated the trauma of the Sept. 11 attacks, I was told, but were baffled by the idea that an attack on Iraq should be the centerpiece of America's response. Saddam Hussein was a rotter, they conceded, but no imminent threat - and he was blameless for Sept. 11.

As to current events, despite the Bush team's attempts to show a happy face, the Iraqi rebuilding looks at best like, in Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld's words, "a long, hard slog."

Meanwhile the American president is unable to appear at public events, even in historically friendly Great Britain, for fear of being shouted down by protesters, and an October Gallup poll suggested that a majority of Europeans view the United States as a threat to peace.

The antagonism that has crept into Euro-Atlantic relations must be reversed because it has the potential to undermine the entire web of institutions and arrangements created after World War II, not only to contain communism but also to build prosperity, control nuclear arms, advance democratic values and distinguish right from wrong in world affairs. If the Bush administration isn't careful, it will allow Hussein to do what four decades of Soviet leaders could not do: drive a wedge between Europe and the United States.

One would hope, therefore, that the administration would devote itself to mending the trans-Atlantic bridge. Little would disarm the president's domestic critics more than the spectacle of America and Europe once again working together smoothly, combining their diverse talents to combat terror, democratize Iraq, stabilize Afghanistan, denuclearize Iran and promote the rule of law.

After America's recent show of its aggressive and unilateralist capacities, a tilt back toward institution-building and alliance-strengthening would be welcomed in Europe and would likely attract bipartisan support at home. It would also be eminently sensible, given the challenges of the moment.

Going the other way

Alas, with elections looming, the administration seems to be adopting the opposite approach. The first Republican television ads forcefully - and unfairly - accuse Democrats of "attacking the president for attacking terrorists" and of planning to "put our national security in the hands of others," presumably meaning the United Nations or even France. The Republican National Committee is urging voters to call their congressmen "to support the president's policy of pre-emptive self-defense."

Meanwhile, despite almost daily setbacks in Iraq, the Pentagon shows no sign of a serious effort to internationalize the occupation. Protestations to the contrary notwithstanding, the administration seems to have concluded that unilateralism in foreign policy is not a weakness but a strength, at least where electoral politics is concerned.

If this is in fact Bush's view, the 2004 election will constitute a virtual referendum on whether Americans have any desire to continue the trans-Atlantic partnership.

The Republican strategy could play well among those persuaded by the administration's implicit claims that the invasion of Iraq was essentially a retaliatory measure for Sept. 11 and that attacking Saddam Hussein was simply another way of attacking Osama bin Laden.

Although unsupported by the facts - Bush himself has acknowledged that there is no evidence linking Iraq to Sept. 11 - this argument casts the war not as a subject for pragmatic discussion but rather as a moral test. The Germans and French failed this test, those advocates say, essentially deserting under fire.

The spectacle of the lone sheriff facing down the bad guys while the cowardly townspeople tremble in the background, crystalized in the classic film High Noon (1952), has deep resonance for the American electorate. Casting Bush as the rugged individualist taking on terrorists might well appeal to voters more than any Democratic insistence that the terrorist threat can be confronted and turned back only with the aid of old alliances and established institutions.

Combustible change

If the Republicans pursue an ideological campaign and win, the world will change in highly combustible ways.

It is one thing for an American administration to depart from traditional policies under stress and for a limited time, but it would be quite another for a president to win election with a mandate to make that departure permanent.

How would Europe react? Even Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain probably would find it necessary, for his own political survival, to distance himself from American policies. The current disturbing trends in European public opinion about the United States would worsen, I fear, and without the lubricant of a security partnership economic disputes would be even harder to resolve. The European Union would become more resistant to American influence, and NATO and the United Nations would be hobbled.

None of this is inevitable. The Democratic presidential candidates are divided on Iraq, but they're generally united in challenging the Bush administration's unilateralism, its emphasis on pre-emption and its penchant for ignoring international institutions.

Some of the candidates also argue that the Iraq invasion has diverted resources from the battle against al-Qaida, alienated world opinion and created a new rallying point for terrorists.

Opposition strategy

The eventual Democratic nominee can be expected to attack Bush for squandering international support after Sept. 11, for failing to develop a long-term strategy to defeat terrorism and for exposing American troops to unnecessary danger through incoherent planning in Iraq. These arguments might well make sense to an American public increasingly troubled by developments abroad.

If his opponent begins to find traction with such charges, even after the capture of Saddam Hussein on Dec. 14, it is possible that Bush will have no choice but to switch gears once again, running for re-election as a born-again internationalist who treasures NATO and reads the United Nations Charter every night before bed. We might even see him resuscitate his 2000 campaign slogan, "I am a uniter, not a divider."

At the moment, however, it appears that in 2004 American voters will be offered a clear choice: reaffirm their country's strategic alliance with Europe or replace it with a strategy dependent, in the end, on American strength alone.

If so, their choice will be historic and will go a long way toward determining, once the curtain falls, whether or not Bush's Act 3 ends up as a tragedy.

Madeleine K. Albright was secretary of state in the Clinton administration. She is the author of the best-selling "Madam Secretary: A Memoir" (Miramax Books, 2003).

16 posted on 01/04/2004 5:31:08 AM PST by scan58
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To: sopwith; maica
George W. Bush

Notice how she doesn't put the word President together with the name Bush. Is this a continued attempt (successful with many of the ill-informed) by the left to claim that Republicans "stole" the election. To people like M. A., the good of the country means almost nothing when compared with their desire for power.

17 posted on 01/04/2004 5:39:11 AM PST by Freee-dame
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To: BARLF
This is one crazy"Bitch" who helped give every nuclear and space secret the USA had to China. She and Bubba were real "Brains".
Bubba Clinton brought Chinese military leaders over here to watch how our military operated and toured our War College along with signing the orders to sell the Chinese all of our technical knowledge with computers and space programs.
He and NoneBright paid the North Koreans not to further their nuclear capabilities and the North Koreans took the money and used it for nuclear exploration and too develope nuclear weapons, to which they, the North Koreans recently admitted.
Now the Democrats want us to suck up to the Russians,Chinese, France and anyone else who was supplying Saddam with weapons and supporting him while cutting our throats. No wonder we are being overthrown from within.
Just for reminders the Democrats still have "Leaky" Leahy from Vermont in Congress and dont forget he is the Senator from Vermont that leaked the information that caused over two hundred operatives of the US to be murdered and the good old "Mainstream Press: still covers that up because
"Leaky" allowed one of their own to view highly classified information that creates these type problems.
Now the Democrats want to execute someone for outing the Plame women who's husband exposed her to the world through their sexual escapades and she in one of their excited moments in the heat of passion divulged to him she was CIA. This I guess was before they were married and she was wanting to impress him. If this is the way our CIA and FBI operates hell Saddam may overthrow our government yet with the help of the Democrats, seems to me they are doing all within their power to aid him.
18 posted on 01/04/2004 5:40:38 AM PST by gunnedah
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To: sopwith
Where's the key allie?????????
19 posted on 01/04/2004 5:43:59 AM PST by Unicorn
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To: Unicorn
For Albright to use the analogy of the Suez Crisis of '56 is absurd. Suez drove a wedge between the US on the one hand and France, Britain and Israel on the other. Eden, a terrible mediocrity was soon dumped in Britain, post-Viet Nam France continued on its fissiparous path that would end with De Gaulle's return to power. Israel massaged its wounded psyche and made up with the US, and the Cold War continued apace. Most importantly, Suez did nothing to build respect for the US in the Arab World, and perpetuated the military dictatorship of Gabal abd al-Nasser.

Maddie could have used 1980 -- the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the Iraq war on Iran -- but that analogy (again a poor one) would have thrust the feckless Jimmie Carter onto stage center.
20 posted on 01/04/2004 6:03:38 AM PST by gaspar
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