Posted on 05/16/2007 3:35:23 PM PDT by Sleeping Beauty
For the past few weeks the Bush administration has been bitterly divided over the best way to respond to growing calls for Paul Wolfowitzs resignation as World Bank president, according to people who have attended the White House meetings.
On Tuesday, Tony Snow, the White House spokesman, signalled an apparent change in the White Houses previously firm backing for Mr Wolfowitz when he said all options are on the table. But according to the White House insiders, one of those options still included Mr Wolfowitz staying on. The Bush administration is divided into three camps, which have very rarely seen eye to eye.
ADVERTISEMENT The first, which has been led by Hank Paulson, the US Treasury secretary, and two or three like-minded individuals in the White House, has consistently argued that Mr Wolfowitzs continued tenure at the bank would impose a mounting cost on American interests and on Washingtons ability to set the agenda at the World Bank. It might also endanger Americas continued right to nominate the head of the World Bank (Europe has an equivalent right for the International Monetary Fund), they argued.
The second, which has been led by Dick Cheney, the vice-president, and Karl Rove, who is Mr Bushs senior strategist, say the president should remain loyal to Mr Wolfowitz in the teeth of what they see as a European campaign to take revenge for the World Bank presidents pivotal role in pushing for the 2003 invasion of Iraq. They have scant interest in the health of multilateral institutions like the World Bank, said the insider.
And the third camp, which includes a number of mid-level operatives in the White House who were described as non-ideological conservatives, as well as at times Josh Bolten, the White House chief of staff, believe the longer the crisis continues the more it damages the US president. They are now arguing for Mr Wolfowitzs departure. Condoleezza Rice, the secretary of state, has recently added her voice to theirs.
There has been a food fight in the White House over Wolfowitz during the last four weeks and nobody really prevailed, said the insider. Whenever we felt that we were beginning to convince the president that it was not in Americas interests to keep delaying the inevitable [departure of Mr Wolfowitz] then somebody like Karl [Rove] or the vice-president would intervene and it would be back to square one.
Those pushing within the administration for an earlier resolution of the World Bank crisis say they have been hamstrung by the instinctive loyalty both Mr Bush and Mr Cheney feel towards Mr Wolfowitz. They say they argued that the longer the administration left Mr Wolfowitz in place, the less leverage the US would have with its increasingly frustrated European partners to ensure a smooth transition for whoever would replace him.
But Mr Wolfowitz was able to rally allies both within the administration and outside it to come to his aid. Paul has repeatedly called upon his neocon friends in the administration, the media and the think-tanks to come to his support, said another insider. There has been complete internal dysfunction as a result.
The situation has been complicated by the fact that few people within the Bush administration understand what the World Bank does, says another official. This has meant that the administrations shifting calculations have been mostly guided by day-to-day political deliberations rather than by an assessment of what would be in the longer-term interest of the US.
Not many people care about the multilateral institutions or have a view one way or another, said an official. At no point has the administration sat down and said: What do we think about the World Bank? How does it conflate with American interests?
Some in the first camp fear that the US has now left it too late to retain the degree of goodwill it would need to ensure that Mr Wolfowitzs [American] successor could help frame a positive agenda. The longer the White House has delayed the inevitable the weaker its hand has become, said one. From a strategic point of view we could not have played this any worse.
Meanwhile, which smart Freeper actually knows what the World Bank does -- and why it is so important to our US economy and US-based multinational corporations?
The answer to this question will reveal whether or not Wolfie "had sex with that woman" and why he is being thrown out on his ear.
The British press is working overtime to get rid of Wolfowitz.
Actually, I don’t think “Financiasl Times” should be grouped with the “British Press.” FT is pretty agnostic politically. But, they are generally pro Bush in the same way WSJ is.
The World Bank is a collection of international organizations that aids countries in their process of economic development with loans, advice, and research. It was founded in the 1940s to aid Western European countries after World War II with capital. The organization functions by providing loans and grants to nations, often in an effort to tackle some greater policy or project goal.
A group of Rinos are called a “Crash”. Bush doesnt have a team, but an aptly named “Crash”
http://www.funtrivia.com/askft/Question24675.html
Good job, Eagle. Now, what do they really do? And how does it help the US economy?
In short, it funnels taxpayer money to third world countries which don't want to compromise their anti-American standing by taking it from the US government directly. The money can either be called a 'loan', or they can be honest about it and call it a grant.
I didn’t see your response before I answered. I should have added you to my reply #8.
It’s NOT an affair! He’s single!
LOL. Did I say "affair?"
No. I said "sex."
The Financial Times I see is definitely anti-US and anti-Iraq war.
When the AP, Reuters, NY Times or another bearer of bad news reports a story, every one cuts and pastes it into their story. BTW, it is my understanding Wall Street Journal and Investors Business Daily are conservative, Financial Times leans liberal.
A good starting point, but basically they are a money funnel, not really successful “ridding the world of poverty” etc., but funding politically-based activitites on a broad front. This could and does take on a broad array of “causes”....this probably ranges from simple “grants” (gifts) to the funding of the one-world corporate (trade) monolith that so many of our pols are working hard to build (at America’s cost). My list could go on.
And, here's a secret-decoder clue:
Wolfowitz wanted to clean up corruption in the government of the borrowing nations (not at the World Bank, BTW). Why is it in the World Bank's interest that those borrowing nations have corrupt governments?
The facts in the article remain facts insofar as the topic of this thread go.
Why is it in the World Bank’s interest that those borrowing nations have corrupt governments?
:::
There is probably a multitude of answers to that question. Let us have yours. But I would say that there is definite advantage if the sourcing, use, costs and amounts of monies sourced by the World Bank being kept quiet, or incorrectly reported...can be easily bought and had. My gut feel, anyway.
It isn't.
and US-based multinational corporations?
It funds infrastructure so that the multinationals can build factories to outsource manufacturing jobs, so they can close higher cost facilities in the US.
Wolfowitz wanted to clean up corruption in the government of the borrowing nations
Given his personal actions (giving other folks money to his girlfriend, rather than his own), I don't really accept your anti-corruption premise.
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