Posted on 07/10/2004 1:16:19 PM PDT by SwinneySwitch
Developing Any Multilateral Policy Requires Not Insulting Faithful Allies
In a recent appearance, Senator Kerry was asked by reporter Craig Gilbert, of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Do you have any degree of responsibility having voted to give him (President Bush) the authority to go to war? Kerrys reply to the question included a telling phrase, what we did was vote with one voice of the United States Congress for a processthe process was to build a legitimate international coalition, go through the inspections process, and go to war as a last resort.
Kerrys use of this phrase prompted pundit Andrew Sullivan to ask in the New Republic magazine, Was the Clinton Kosovo war the product of an illegitimate coalition? Is Kerry now saying that only UN-sponsored coalitions are henceforth kosher? What signal does this send to those many countries who did join the coalition?
Kerrys remark at this forum was not the first time he has dismissed the contributions of the nations that joined the United States in toppling Saddam Hussein and reconstructing Iraq. In comments published in the Des Moines Register, Kerry declared, The greatest position of strength is by exercising the best judgment in the pursuit of diplomacy, not in some trumped-up, so-called coalition of the bribed, the coerced, the bought and extorted, but in a genuine coalition.
Just in case there was doubt that Kerry had changed his mind since the end of the Iraq war, he repeated the charge in an interview with Rolling Stone, The President made a series of promises of promises to usnumber one, that he was going to make every effort possible to build a legitimate coalition. He did nothe built a fraudulent coalition.
Kerrys repeated statements on the issue of allies beg critical questions. What exactly constitutes a legitimate coalition? Kerry supported the NATO campaign against Serbia under Milosevic in 1999, in which the U.S. acted without the support of the United Nations Security Council. So we hope it is safe to assume that the Senator does not believe that a legitimate coalition requires a UN mandate. But what exactly does he mean?
The next question is how a President Kerry intends to win more support for American foreign policy abroad by insulting those governments that have stood by us thus far.
There are now 10,000 troops, representing several European allies, under Polish command in southern Iraq. The Poles for their part have not been able to obtain the same privileged visa-free status that French and German travelers now hold to enter the United States. This remains State Department policy in spite of the fact that France and Germany, unlike Poland, are known to have terrorist cells operating on their soil.
Polish companies have found lucrative reconstruction contracts scarce in the new Iraq. So the Senators charge of a coalition of the bribed doesnt fit the facts, though such charges are heard loud and clear by the opposition in Warsaw. Indeed, they ask reasonably: why should we stick our necks out for Uncle Sam when there is so little quid pro quo, and the opposition party in America accuses us of being stooges? All of this comes on the heels of strains in Polands relations with its new EU partners, and sneering comments in major German publications referring to Poland as Americas Trojan donkey within the E.U.
Then there is the small matter of what could happen in the future if a President Kerry decided that military action had become unavoidable, and sought the support of the European Union.
If France and Germany were to oppose the U.S., Kerrys Administration would find itself without friends among Europes medium sized powers, Spain, Italy and Poland. Sending the none-too-subtle message that Warsaw and Rome should have deferred to their betters in Paris and Berlin is hardly going to win back support from the two largest nations at the heart of the EU, and in fact is more likely to earn their contempt. They would correctly perceive that Kerry sacrificed the principle of Presidents, Prime Ministers come and go in favor of pandering to a miniscule element of the American electorate, while being challenged by Governor Howard Dean.
Within Germany, this principle was invoked by opponents of Chancellor Schroeder in 2002, after he made opposition to a war Germany had not been asked to participate in the centerpiece of his campaign. Now it is Chancellor Schroeders government which may be on its way out, and the opposition Christian Democrats who urged a quiet, behind the scenes dissent towards Washington may yet reap the benefits.
Kerrys calculus thus makes little sense even from the standpoint of mending fences with Paris and Berlin.
The Bush Administration has sent American troops to operate alongside their French counterparts to restore order in Haiti, and hosted Chancellor Schroeder to discuss Germany leading the NATO peacekeeping effort in Afghanistan. France also has quietly, according to the U.S. Central Commands website, contributed troops and airlifts to ongoing NATO operations in Central Asia. Kerrys defenders may cry foul, pointing to the alleged vilification of France by the Bush Administration in the run-up to war in Iraq. While this an eye for an eye argument might satisfy partisans, it does nothing to address the question of whether the nation will in fact have a less ideological foreign policy, as Senator Kerry argues is his goal.
Politics of course has never stopped at the waters edge, and vigorous and even fierce debate is historically the American way of foreign policy making. But if there is to be hope for moving on to a new bipartisan foreign policy, the debate must not be poisoned by insults directed against both the governments that supported the Bush Administration in Iraq and those who did not.
Absolutely! May I state that State should be on the list of endangered species with an asterisk (extinction preferred).
If they are not worth spit to the French, why should Kerry have any use for them?
not in some trumped-up, so-called coalition of the bribed, the coerced, the bought and extorted, but in a genuine coalition. Not nice not nice not nice
Dear America friend polish people will help America. Grom will help. I want your great president. America strong is good. That evil person not good.
July 10, 2004
Dear Senator Kerry
Dear DNC and Senator Kerry,
I would first of all like to congratulate Senator Kerry on his nomination
and also thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak my mind.
I lost my job this past year. When Clinton was president, I worked in a
prosperous enterprise. But in this last year, we had to close our
operations. Far worse, I lost two of my sons in Bush's evil war in Iraq.
They gave their lives for their country, and for what?
My pain of losing my sons is indescribable. While it is trivial next to the
loss of my sons, I regret to say that I also lost my homes. I simply had
nothing left.
I am a senior citizen with various medical problems. I'm not in a position where I can begin a new career. I was reduced to the point where I was
homeless, all because of President Bush. And when the authorities found me, did they have any compassion for my misfortune and ailments? No, I was
arrested. If I had any money left, I would donate it to the Democratic
party. If Al Gore had been elected in 2000, I guarantee you, I would still
have a job, a home, and most importantly, my sons!
Regards,
Saddam Hussein
Sent to me by Woody.
grouchyoldcripple.com
This bum better not win the election. He must be repudiated like the Dukakis-wannabe he is. Let kerry go to France and eat cake!
I trust this applies equally to France, Germany, Canada, Belgium, and the rest that were being bribed by Saddam with Iraqi oil money.
LOL - you really weren't paying attention, were you? That would have meant he was being honest. I doubt he'd do that, even accidentally. Aren't you glad you reread it? You could have gone through life believing kerry was once accidentally honest. Whew!
I almost rammed my Mustang into a minivan with a kerry bumper sticker, but at the last second I realized the lib guts would eat through my paint.
'That person is evil cretin.'
for someone still struggling with the English language, you certainly have chosen the PERFECT word to describe JF'nK. Your comments are always interesting and enlightening.
I just wrote a letter to the Polish Ambassador to the United States to praise the GROM commandoes and to thank their brave nation for helping to defend civilization. The Polish government needs to hear the opinions of American citizens, because they're getting an earful from Jacques "Poland missed an opportunity to keep silent" Chirac and the EU. If other Freepers want to thank the Poles, they can write to:
His Excellency Przemyslaw Grudzinski
Ambassador of the Republic of Poland
Embassy of the Republic of Poland
2640 16th Street NW
Washington, DC 20009
Remember to make the salutation "Excellency:" in proper diplomatic style.
Good summation of the recklessness--the foolishness--of Kerry's (the left's) rhetoric on this issue of the coalition.
This bothers me. Poland has very few Muslims and little if any terror activity. (France and Germany have huge Arab Muslim populations with a significant number of radical Islamists supporting al-Qaeda. I think that France and Germany are actually high-risk countries, right up there with the Middle East. Muslims with Western European passports, in my opinion, deserve greater scrutiny than almost anyone else coming into the US.) Google "bearers of global jihad" for a report on this.
And Poland has been a much better friend to the US than France and Germany.
(I will give the French and Germans props for their work in Afghanistan, but this has been in spite of some idiot leaders, especially Chirac.
Chirac is a major a**hole- his latest thing was trying to stop deployment of NATO's rapid-reaction force to provide security in Afghanistan - in that case he may have overstretched. I hope so.)
Just remember: There is no pro-Kerry. There's only anti-Bush.
Good afternoon dear America friend.
Grom salute to great America friend. Grom salute to great America. Thank you great America friend thank you.
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