Posted on 05/28/2006 3:13:24 PM PDT by Pokey78
AT A TIME when divorce is evidently getting easier and more lucrative, it is touching to see one couple soldiering on despite their domestic difficulties. Admittedly this marriage is between two men, which would raise eyebrows (and possibly shotguns) in the senior partners native Texas. It is, though, the family of the other partner that remains most shocked, mortified indeed, by the enduring liaison. All of which was revealed last week when Tony Blair met George W. Bush in Washington. To some, nothing else during the Prime Ministers time at No 10 has seemed so surreal. And not only does the Labour Party feel betrayed and humiliated by the spectacle of Mr Blair and Mr Bush in action. So do the Democrats. How, they ask, could a politician of the Centre-Left turn so effortlessly from the embrace of Bill Clinton to a redneck Republican equivalent of Vlad the Impaler?
Hence the cynicism over what was sold as the swansong summit. Two deeply unpopular leaders seeking solace in each other, both dragged down by a conflict in Iraq that one of them did not have to start and the other was under no obligation to approve. It is a morality tale of sorts and a rather traditional one at that; a warning against tying the knot with someone who is disapproved of by your kith and kin.
Yet I, for one, am prepared to defend this unorthodox romance. The attacks on Mr Blair for his dealings with Mr Bush are based on a false nostalgia for the Clinton era, a failure to appreciate the realities that a Prime Minister faces in foreign affairs and a reluctance to admit that liberal interventionism often involves conservative methods.
The recasting of the Clinton years is risible. The former President is depicted as a sage diplomat, measured and consistent, who spoke European (unlike his successor, who can barely speak English) and with an astute strategy for global politics.
This is nonsense. Mr Clintons approach to international relations was rather like his attitude to women: he either wanted his hands everywhere or he ignored the body concerned entirely. He came into power demanding that Europe take charge alongside him in Bosnia and then retreated when a relatively minor military debacle elsewhere (Somalia) drained him of personal authority. After that he was such a feeble commander-in-chief that when Osama bin Laden started his terrorist campaign against American targets the response from the Oval Office was to bomb so-called chemical factories in Sudan but only after local security guards had finished their night shift and there was no danger of them being hit by missiles. That must really have put the frighteners on al-Qaeda.
Then there was Kosovo. Six years after declaring the behaviour of the Serbs in one part of the Balkans to be utterly unacceptable, Mr Clinton had to be dragged kicking and screaming by Mr Blair into a neighbouring area where the atrocities committed were worse still. The split between the two men then was more profound than any that has occurred since Mr Bush entered the White House. It happened not because Mr Clinton was being measured, let alone consistent. He behaved as he did because he did not want to risk his poll ratings. Too often, Mr Clinton did not speak European he spoke with a forked tongue. Whatever Mr Bushs faults may be, as the Prime Minister has frequently observed, you do know where he stands and where you stand with him.
The truth also is that Mr Blair had little choice but to stand with the President. Britain is a country that punches above its weight in world matters. It does so mostly because of its intimate connections with what has become the lone remaining superpower.
The Prime Minister appreciated immediately that September 11, 2001, would transform American overseas activities and hence fundamentally alter the direction of ours, too. If Britain were to opt out of either the intervention in Afghanistan or the invasion of Iraq, then it would sacrifice its standing not just with this Administration, but others that would follow. It would discard a special relationship for a mere amiable association.
There are some enthusiasts for the EU who would prefer that Mr Blair watered down the transatlantic alliance. Yet even if he wanted to take Britain much closer to the heart of Europe, could he? France and Germany are not looking for a ménage à trois with this country and British voters (mercifully) will not tolerate euro membership, which is the minimum price for admission. Furthermore, experience suggests that the EUs concept of a common security and foreign policy is not common, secure or much of a foreign policy.
Thoughtful critics of Mr Blair from within his own ranks understand much of this and articulate a more sophisticated thesis. They accept that his room for policy manoeuvre was limited and assert that the liberal interventionism that he espouses trying to right outrageous wrongs in the world whenever possible, using force if needed is right. The tragedy of Iraq, they say, is that it devalued the cause that he champions.
There is much in this that has to be conceded. Mistakes made in the aftermath of the overthrow of Saddam Hussein have been costly. Some of them were avoidable. Others, on the other hand, were inevitable. The idea that there can ever be such a thing as Fairy Liquid warfare conflict that leaves your hands feeling cleaner and smoother afterwards is an illusion. Liberal intervention will always demand imperfectly conservative methods. It is a price that has to be paid.
The essence of Mr Blairs words in Washington are that he sticks by that view. He is correct. His might be an arranged marriage with Mr Bush, but it would be madness to break the marriage vows now.
Great article about Tony & George. For ever!
The political partnership of Bush and Blair is more than just a cynical marriage of convenience
Wow!
If this "marriage" does not stick, the members of the "family of man" are ALL going to be wearing burkas. That is, the ones that survive and are not murdered.
1000 words (maybe) and no mention of the History of Reagan and Thatcher. Those that do not learn from History are doomed to repeat it, or some such.
God Bless ALL our Veterans and our Commander in Chief.
I love this photo - they both knew Iraq was going to become sovereign while they were sitting there at the NATO meeting .. and it was several days ahead of the schedule - and caught the media unprepared! LOL!.
This picture was taken right after the announcement was made about the handover of sovereignty to Iraq.
Do I detect a hint of Mark Steyn in that phrasing?
I received a call from my mother today who caught Hardball's show, and a video of Bush and Blair singing "My First Love". She loves W, was hysterical, said it was soooooo funny.
bttt
"...turn so effortlessly from the embrace of Bill Clinton..."
Please! I just had dinner! ;)
No mention of The Odd Couple...Reagan and Thatcher? They were thick as thieves. And rightly so. :)
I wonder how Vincente Fox feels.
Jorge signed his high school yearbook "BFF".
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