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The world will be a more dangerous place after Bush
CanWest News Service ^ | Aug. 23, 2007 | David Warren

Posted on 08/23/2007 10:39:56 AM PDT by USFRIENDINVICTORIA

With that arrogance and boorishness that is characteristic of diplomatic overtures from the Putin administration, the Russian military chief of staff, Yuri Baluyevsky, chose the 39th anniversary of the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia to advise Prague this week to "think again" about allowing radar installations for the U.S. missile defence shield to be installed on Czech soil.

"We say it will be a big mistake by the Czech government to put this radar site on Czech territory," he said, according to the Reuters report.

This is the kind of language that seems to appeal to Vladimir Putin himself -- the swagger of the old Cheka, whose product he was. It goes over well with a large section of the Russian electorate, still pining for the recovery of superpower status after the collapse of the Berlin Wall.

Baluyevsky did better than choose the ugliest possible moment to issue his threat. He then added the sarcastic suggestion that if the Czechs were contemplating the wrong decision, they should stretch out their decision-making process until after November 2008.

And in case that wasn't bald enough, he then explained that he was referring to the next U.S. presidential election.

Like al-Qaeda in Iraq and the many other adversaries America and the West must continue to face, the Russians are looking forward to the time after George Bush leaves office.

It is assumed that the American electorate has by now tired of playing policeman to the world and that the next president will be a liberal Democrat, eager to make unilateral concessions, slash military budgets to fund social programs and cut-and-run from foreign battlefields.

They might well be right.

One of the things the non-U.S. West fails to appreciate is the frustration of even the right-wing Republican constituency with allies who lack the will, and refuse to put up the money, for their own defence -- all the time assuming that the American taxpayer will pick up the slack and that the American military will be there to protect them should they ever really need it.

And that includes not only protection from potential invaders, but policing the high seas from pirates, monitoring airspace for intruders and providing an international rescue service after natural disasters.

(The most urgent aid to the areas worst hit by the Asian tsunami of 2005 was "naturally" delivered by the U.S. and Australian navies, while the United Nations and victim countries tied themselves up in red tape and whining.)

America is demonized as the "cowboy," going it alone, and Western politicians, especially on the left, score easy points by smugly playing to their domestic anti-American galleries.

The lethal enemies of the West cannot help but notice this dynamic, and from car bombings in Iraq to the rhetoric of Russian and Chinese military commanders, they exploit it to drive further wedges between the U.S. and her allies.

Against which backdrop the most encouraging thing we can see is the new tone in French foreign policy. President Nicolas Sarkozy has not only refused to resume his predecessor's condescending lectures to the Bush administration, he has made an important symbolic statement by sending the first French envoy to Baghdad, acknowledging that the fate of Iraq is of interest to all free peoples.

At a time when the British, under their new head of government, are squirming for ways to distance themselves from their historical special relationship with the U.S., the French gesture showed courage and maturity.

The fate of the Czech Republic, and all those frontier states that stand to benefit from the security conferred by the U.S. missile shield, must also be of interest to all free peoples.

The Russians complain an advanced system designed exclusively to intercept missiles from rogue states is necessarily a security threat to them.

Yet it can be only to the degree that Russia herself behaves as a rogue state. Lately, in a succession of aggressive posturings, from claiming the North Pole to resuming Cold War bomber flights over the Atlantic and Pacific to flourishing the oil weapon in most disputes with neighbours, they are doing seemingly everything in their power to confirm just such a status.

We are caught in a trap. The very success of the Bush strategy, in preventing another major terror strike on the U.S., confronting and arresting the progress of Islamist terrorism in the Middle East and elsewhere and also in consolidating the post-Cold War European gains of NATO and the European Union, contributes to an illusion of security in a world that has seldom been such a dangerous place. People forget what alliances require.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bush; bushdoctrine; bushdoctrineunfolds; china; cutandrun; czechrepublic; davidwarren; geopolitics; russianaggression; security; waronterror; wot; wotwaronterror
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To: avacado

I agree with you, I just wish it weren’t so. It suggests that we have to permit a certain level of murdering of our people to stay alert. Maybe I’m just wishing.


21 posted on 08/23/2007 11:41:02 AM PDT by Cyber Liberty (Did Dennis Kucinich always look like that or did he have to submit to a series of shots? [firehat])
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To: Antoninus
Duncan Hunter is going to appear on Neil Cavuto’s show 4 p.m. EST. Pass it along!

BTW, you’re right about Hunter standing up to the Russians.

22 posted on 08/23/2007 12:29:13 PM PDT by ishabibble (ALL-AMERICAN INFIDEL)
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To: dawn53

This is a great analysis. In fact, I believe a major attack will occur on the last week of Bush’s term, possibly the last day. Just a guess, but in line with your thinking.


23 posted on 08/23/2007 12:35:59 PM PDT by richardtavor (Pray for the peace of Jerusalem in the name of the G-d of Jacob)
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To: kabar
Look for the Chinese to test us on Taiwan if Hillary is elected.

No question about that. History will not look kindly on a US that tosses Taiwan to the Chinese barbarians. As for current events, when the Chicoms conquer we can be sure the MSM will avoid the phrase "Peace in our Time."

24 posted on 08/23/2007 2:13:10 PM PDT by Jacquerie (The Clintons - Above the Law, Beneath Contempt.)
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To: Little Rock Ag
Problem is, if a major attack occurs after Pres. Bush leaves office, *HE* WILL BE BLAMED.

I think they might go farther than just blame him.

With the far left becoming increasingly vicious, I think they will try to put both Bush and Cheney on some sort of trial for "war crimes", mysterious "crimes against the constitution", and even "crimes against the earth and environment". I don't believe he is even remotely guilty of such, but that is what they think.

It would just go to show that Bush was too nice to Clinton, he really did deserve to be prosecuted.

25 posted on 08/23/2007 4:25:17 PM PDT by SteamShovel (Global Warming, the New Patriotism)
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To: USFRIENDINVICTORIA
Lets not get ahead of ourselves now shall we. You speak of the successes - and that is all fine and dandy - but from my perspective I see a growing weakness. A weakness that is acting to embolden our enemies.

The War in Iraq is only one issue - But overall I see A nation and a people falling all over themselves to accommodate and appease their adversaries.

What do you think countries like China and Russia are thinking?

For Christ's sake we don't even have the courage to name our enemy - what is this "War on Terrorism" crap? What message do you think we send to "the world" when we make it clear that our hands are bound by political correctness?

There are a lot of factors in play here.

An American Expat in Southeast Asia

26 posted on 08/23/2007 4:37:46 PM PDT by expatguy (New and Improved ! - Support "An American Expat in Southeast Asia")
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To: expatguy
Your points are well taken — and the article doesn’t contradict them.

The irony is that the WOT (or whatever it should be called) has been so successful at keeping immediate threats away, that people have been lulled into a false sense of security. Democrats, and their ilk in other countries, have convinced themselves that there is no actual threat — or that everything done in the name of security has the opposite effect.

The world is probably in for a rude awakening in 2008.

27 posted on 08/23/2007 5:50:08 PM PDT by USFRIENDINVICTORIA
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