Posted on 04/20/2005 12:00:48 PM PDT by Republican Red
Ohio Republican Sen. George Voinovich rolled like a marble yesterday. After an hour of ranting by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Democrats about the nomination of John Bolton as United Nations ambassador, Voinovich pronounced himself in need of more information about Bolton before he could vote, even though he didn't attend either of the hearings related to the nomination last week and even though the committee has conducted extensive interviews about the (minor) controversies swirling around Bolton. If Voinovich still hasn't gotten a chance to read the transcripts we know how busy he is he should check out the committee's website at http://foreign.senate.gov/. Democrats figured if they did enough caterwauling yesterday and threw out enough new dirt on Bolton including a decade-old charge from a woman who founded the Dallas chapter of "Mothers Against Bush" maybe a Republican would roll. Voinovich obliged.
His refusal to vote gave Democrats a key procedural victory. All along their strategy has been, if they can't defeat the nomination outright, at least to delay it as much possible, in the hopes of eventually coming up with something, anything to derail it. Ranking minority member Joseph Biden has pursued this course at the price of his own personal credibility. He had assured Chairman Richard Lugar two weeks ago that if Bolton's hearing were delayed a week that both the hearing and the committee vote would take place last week. But when it came time to vote last week, Democrats objected. When it came time to vote yesterday, Democrats objected again, forcing Republicans to take extraordinary parliamentary steps to allow the committee even to meet. And when it finally did, Voinovich came to Biden's rescue.
Committee chairman Richard Lugar had no choice but to put off the vote again, because otherwise with Voinovich voting nay the committee would have deadlocked 9-9, defeating the nomination. But we have no faith in the agreement Lugar cut with Democrats during the meeting to hold after more questioning of Bolton a vote three weeks from now. Given Biden's bad faith to this point, this agreement is not worth the paper it's not written on.
Some Republicans are acting shamefully.
Democrats will use the extra time to pick away at every possible Bolton peccadillo to prove he lacks the "temperament" to serve at the U.N. They have been investigating a dispute Bolton had with a woman over her maternity leave when she worked for him at the Justice Department in 1988. This is silly. Next we'll hear that Bolton shoved someone during recess when he was a schoolboy. The attack on Bolton's temperament is an obvious misdirection anyway. Democrats simply object to his kind of multilateralism that aggressively pursues international support for the goals of President Bush's foreign policy rather than simply kowtowing to international institutions for its own sake. In other words, Bolton will "serve" the president rather than the U.N.
That some Republicans are willing to take at face value the Democrats' personal attacks on Bolton is shameful. Sen. Chuck Hagel (R., Furrowed Brow) pronounces himself troubled by the allegations. But he supported John McCain for president in 2000 since when is a docile temperament his test of whether someone can be an important public servant? Hagel is a fairly reliable conservative vote on routine matters. It's just when the chips are down that you can't count on him.
In the key allegation against Bolton, he is said to have intimidated a State Department intelligence analyst who objected to Bolton's supposedly too-dire assessment of Cuba's bioweapons program. But Bolton aide Fred Fleitz has testified that the analyst in question, Christian Westerman, wasn't straight with Bolton or his staff giving Bolton plenty of reason to be upset. At issue was language in a speech Bolton was to deliver about Cuba. It was Westerman's responsibility to run the proposed language by the CIA, but when he did so he attached his own prejudicial language dissenting from Bolton's views. When Fleitz learned this, Westerman falsely denied having done it, leading to the infamous confrontation in Bolton's office. Two of Westerman's supervisors subsequently apologized for how he handled the matter. That Bolton is now the one being pilloried for this spat Sen. Chris Dodd said his conduct should be "indictable" is absurd. In any case, as Lugar pointed out in a statement earlier this week, in an environment characterized by contentious policy disputes as Bush's foreign policy team was in the first term you can expect some personal contention.
Those policy disputes are at the bottom of the charges against Bolton. This is the revenge of the State department bureaucracy and its former servants Colin Powell and Dick Armitage. Contrary to former State department bureaucrat Carl Ford's smear of Bolton as a "kiss up, kick down" kind of guy, Bolton repeatedly clashed with Powell and Armitage over substance. Now they are hitting back. It is difficult to believe that Powell's former chief of staff Lawrence Wilkerson would viciously attack Bolton on the record in the New York Times without Powell's assent. Although perhaps we should be grateful for an on-the-record Times quote by a Powell loyalist for a change. If the Bolton nomination is beaten, it will be a lesson to conservatives that they dare clash with a recalcitrant Washington bureaucracy only at great potential personal cost. Which is one of just many reasons why President Bush should use every bit of leverage at his disposal to win Bolton's confirmation. The Editors
Not really. The MBNA Board of Directors doesn't care whether Bolton gets confirmed or not. ;)
Thanks for that information
This is the same old story. Rail against a conservative and try to put pressure to get some mushy grape-like moderate in tht post. It happened with Nixon and we got Blackmun, it happened with Reagan and we got Kennedy. Bush seems to like to shove back and is not backing down. If Bolton is defeated, Bush should find somebody even more odious to the democrats. Is there anybody else around that used to work for Agnew??
I believe it was on NRO that it's the people at State that supported Powell and Armitage that are the problem.
But don't forget, Armitage was furious at being passed over.
That about sums up the entire United States government, IMO.
I hate to think this is payback and thought more of Powell than this kind of petty behavior. I know that Powell isn't universally liked here, but I have had a lot of admiration for him in the past.
Does anybody know what Voinovich's reason is that he missed the Bolton hearings? I've yet to find out where he was that kept him from attending.
I did too. Maybe I'm being too harsh on Powell, I don't know. I do think Armitage has a mean streak though. And anymore I put nothing past the UN lovers at Foggy Bottom.
Well, there may well be a very good reason that so many freepers don't like Powell, or trust him. I had just thought more highly of him than to engage in petty personal attacks like this. He always seemed to be his own man and didn't seem interested in power, which generally speaks well for him.
I agree with you on that.
Thanks for the Ping, Howlin.
Sleuth....you are on to something there.
Powell was no puppet.
And the State Dept. has assets that are often used in the intel field.
So if they are gonna spread some words...he has to take some too.
"Come on guys, FIGHT THESE GUTTER RATS!!!
You got it right. Where is President Bush? He should be leading the fight, instead of running around the Country with SS. The heck with SS. Those brain dead AARP don't want to rebuild the soon to be broke system. Meanwhile we are falling apart."
Really. Where is Karen Hughes? He needs her advice NOW.
F*#* SS. Get the right judges appointed as well as Mr. Bolton. He needs to get his butt home and kick some serious a*@.
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