Posted on 05/19/2007 8:01:06 AM PDT by DCBryan1
Carter pipes up, calls Bushs way worst in history
Foreign relations at ebb, he says
Copyright 2007, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc. BY FRANK LOCKWOOD ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE
In a stinging rebuke to President Bush, former President Carter on Friday called the current administration the worst in history when it comes to international relations.
During a telephone interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette from the Carter Center in Atlanta, the ex-president also accused the current White House occupant of eliminating the line between church and state and of abandoning Americas basic values.
I think as far as the adverse impact on the nation around the world, this administration has been the worst in history. The overt reversal of Americas basic values as expressed by previous administrations, including [those of] George H.W. Bush and Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon and others, has been the most disturbing to me, Carter said.
The 39th president said that during Bushs two terms in office, he has radically departed from every other U.S. president.
We have a new policy now on war, Carter said. We now have endorsed the concept of pre-emptive war where we go to war with another nation militarily, even though our own security is not directly threatened, if we want to change the regime there or if we fear that some time in the future our security might be endangered. But thats been a radical departure from all previous administration policies.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner, who brokered the Camp David accords between Egypt and Israel, also faulted Bushs Middle East diplomacy skills. For the first time since Israel was founded, weve had zero peace talks to try to bring a resolution of differences in the Middle East. Thats a radical departure from the past, he said.
Carter, who signed the SALT II (Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty) with the Soviet Union in 1979, said the current White House has also abandoned or directly refuted every nuclear arms control agreement ever negotiated down through history. And I think weve had a radical departure in my opinion.
On the environment, Bush also has failed, Carter suggested. Weve had an abandonment of almost every previous administrations policy on environmental quality. Many of the basic laws were passed under Richard Nixon and other Republican presidents as a matter of fact. Weve pretty well abandoned those.
But the Baptist Sunday School teacher saved some of his harshest criticism for Bushs faithbased agenda.
Citing an article in The New York Times, Carter said hundreds of millions of dollars in federal earmarks are now going to fund religious institutions.
Individual churches and religious seminaries and other strictly religious organizations have their own lobbyists now in Washington to make sure they get their share of taxpayers funds. And, as you know, the policy from the White House has been to allocate funds to religious institutions, even those that channel those funds exclusively to their own particular group of believers in a particular religion. Those things in my opinion are quite disturbing, Carter said.
As a traditional Baptist, Ive always believed in separation of church and state and honored that premise when I was president, and so have all other presidents, I might say, except this one.
Tulane University presidential historian and Carter biographer Douglas Brinkley said the comments were unprecedented by the 39th president.
This is the most forceful denunciation President Carter has ever made about an American president, Brinkley said. When you call somebody the worst president, thats volatile. Those are fighting words.
Carter made the comments while promoting his new audiobook series, Sunday Mornings in Plains a recording of the weekly Bible lessons he teaches at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, Ga. In March, Simon & Schuster Audio released Leading a Worthy Life, a four-disk set. This week, the second title, Measuring Our Success, went on sale.
The latest release was actually recorded about the same time we invaded Iraq, so I interrelate my condemnation and criticism of this unnecessary invasion with the ministry of Christ as the prince of peace, Carter explained.
The ex-presidents comments come at a time when Bushs public support is dropping. A Newsweek poll this month showed that only 28 percent of Americans approve of the job hes doing the lowest presidential ratings in about three decades. (Carters approval rating dipped to 28 percent in 1979.)
Brinkley said Bush and Carter are on opposite sides of the seesaw on international affairs. Carter stressed diplomacy during his presidency. Bush has preferred muscular militarism, Brinkley added.
A White House spokesman, Blair C. Jones, didnt comment, referring a reporter to the Republican National Committee. Republican National Committee spokesman Amber Wilkerson questioned why a Sunday School teacher would attack the commander in chief.
Apparently, Sunday mornings in Plains for former President Carter includes hurling reckless accusations at your fellow man, she said. Its hard to take a lecture on foreign policy seriously from President Carter considering hes the same person who challenged Ronald Reagans strategy for the Cold War.
I think most Americans will probably take his criticism with a grain of salt considering history has proven him wrong in the past, she said. Foreign policy experts, however, were less likely to dismiss Carters criticisms.
It is somewhat unusual for a former president to be this outspoken, but in this case, it might be warranted, said Christopher A. Preble, director of foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, based in Washington. Bushs open-ended, ill-advised military adventures have been costly and ineffective, Preble said.
Peter Beinhart, a senior fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations, said he wasnt terribly surprised by Carters statements. Hes more ideologically polarizing than most ex-presidents. Hes taken some positions that are very controversial. Labeling the Bush administration as the worst is a pretty harsh statement, [but] I think he may be right, Beinhart added.
Carlos Pascual, vice president and director of foreign policy studies at the Brookings Institution, said recent polling indicates that Americas image has been tarnished since Bush took office.
Generally around the world, the U.S. is not well-regarded. Theres a lack of trust and confidence in the United States as a partner. Even in most European countries, the U.S. was considered a greater threat to international security than Iran, Pascual said. This president and this administration is seen as acting unilaterally without consent or regard for the international community. Officials at the conservative Heritage Foundation and the American Center for Law and Justice werent available for comment.
But Gerald A. Dorfman, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, said he wouldnt describe the current president as the biggest failure. Its very difficult from an intellectual point of view to come down and describe a particular president as the worst, he said. Presidents go up and down. When I was a kid, Harry Truman was regarded as the bottom of the barrel. Now everybody, Republican and Democrat, wants to claim him as their own.
Carter speaks - and an Arab owned ass farts.
No Carter, You were the worst President Ever! and you are the worst EX- President ever, you even surpass Bill Clinton.
The irrelevant one speaks....
http://exposingtheleft.blogspot.com/2007/05/former-us-president-calls-britains.html
Carter? hmmmmm lets go back in history and check out his failure as a president...he should have stuck to peanut farming and hammers.
He really has a record he can be proud of. Such as the sorriest POS president we have had in a long, long while.
Gee, and I thought botching a rescue in the desert was the worst way... now who was behind the debacle in the desert???
This coming from the guy who gave away sovereign US territory to another country.
During the Jimmy Carter Years... The prime rate hit 21.5% in December 1980, the highest rate in U.S. history under any President.
All these people care about is themselves.
bttt
Carter who? Never heard of him.
Carter = pure comedy
LOL Carter is just trying to lay his well earned mantle on someone else. Though I’m sure he is intelligent, he’s still an idiot. Thanks for the ayatollahs Jimmah, not.
New Jimmy Carter nickname: Panama PeaNUTS!
For one of the biggest embarrassments in US history (Jimmah Carter) to attack another President shows his senility. Had Jimmah Carter dealt with Iran back in the 80’s, we wouldn’t be in this mess now. What an ass!
Finally Carter speaks on a subject in which he has some expertise.
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