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MARK STEYN: Bush said he'd do it ... and he did
The Sunday Telegraph ^ | April 13, 2003 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 04/12/2003 4:47:32 PM PDT by MadIvan

Last week, The New York Times reported on the President's reaction to Don Rumsfeld's daily press conference. As the Times tells it, a Bush aide stepped into the Oval Office to warn him that "the unpredictable Defence Secretary" had just threatened Syria. The President looked up from his desk. "Good," he said. Then he went back to work.

If that story isn't true, it ought to be. First, because it confirms the Euro-Hollywood crowd's article of faith that Bush, Rummy and Co are anxious to invade anywhere at the drop of a hat. But, second, because it captures the President's management style: he doesn't worry about phoney media crises; he accords his lieutenants a generous degree of latitude; and he doesn't get distracted from his own priorities. As for Syria, there will be no need to invade. Damascus has since announced it has closed its porous border with Iraq, and any Syrian jihadi anxious to expel the infidel from Baghdad will have to take the long way round. The supply routes for its murkier import/export businesses have been greatly disrupted.

The Damascus branch of the Ba'ath Party is about to find itself in the unusual position, for an Arab dictatorship, of being a psycho island in a sea of comparative civilisation (Turkey, Free Iraq, Jordan and Israel). Syria is already feeling the effects of the Iraqi transformation. I wouldn't bet on Boy Assad having many more Ramadans in the presidential palace: the Third Infantry Division will not be required to remove him.

I realise that all the above - the idea of this President as a smart, savvy chief executive with a patient, methodical eye on the long-term - will strike his many British detractors as a lot of bosh. But then, as the placard of a gratefully liberated Kurd put it on Thursday, "THANK YOU BOSH".

No doubt, even now, the Bush moron jokes will be starting up again. When all your fondest hopes fail - the Iraqi people turn out to be less Ba'athist than the French, Baghdad isn't Stalingrad, the USAF didn't leave millions of dead kids - it's only natural to retreat to your one great surefire crowd-pleaser: "Shrub" (ha-ha) is an idiot, a "stupid white man", a Texan, a born-again Christian fundamentalist nutbar who would be speaking in tongues if he could string three syllables of gibberish together, and any day now he's sure to say something really dumb again and we can all stand around howling with laughter at the poor boob way out of his league, as a BBC correspondent recently revealed that the British press corps did, listening to the President in the overflow room at Camp David.

But if I may make a suggestion to my friends on the Left, do yourselves a favour and chuck the moron gags. It's insufficient to your needs. In case you still haven't noticed, Bush always winds up getting at least 90 per cent of everything he wants, and it can't all be dumb luck. A year ago the President told Trevor McDonald, "I made up my mind that Saddam needs to go". Well, Saddam has gone. In between came a lot of entertaining diplomatic dances in national costume, but, like the third act of The Nutcracker, they didn't impact on the plot: in the end, the nut got cracked.

Some of his allies - the Prime Minister of Britain - have overcome their squeamishness to regime change. Some of his opponents - the Prime Minister of Canada - were still objecting to regime change even after the regime had changed. But it was Bush's position that counted: one of his strengths is that he won't sacrifice the objective to the process. By contrast, it wasn't always apparent that his predecessor had objectives: what exactly was the desired end when Mr Clinton bombed that aspirin factory in the Sudan? In foreign policy, Clinton had tactics, not strategy: his inability to reach what the special prosecutor Ken Starr called "completion" extended far beyond Monica's gullet. On his tax cuts, on missile defence, on Saddam, Bush is completion-focused.

I mention Clinton for two reasons: first, because I miss being able to coast on oral sex gags for two-thirds of the column; and second, because Mr Bush, like his predecessor, has become one of those figures who unhinges his enemies. Clinton drove a lot of the Right loopy, Bush has done the same for the Left - as a casual glance at the "Bush Is Hitler" end of the peace march will confirm.

Most of the objections to him seem to be aesthetic - he's too hokey and Texan - and, from this stylistic revulsion, a whole host of stereotypes follow. As a line of attack this is ineffectual, because Bush doesn't care about aesthetics, or celebrity, or any of the other lenses through which the modern media view affairs of state. (The New York Times's Maureen Dowd complained during the 2000 campaign that he didn't know anything about pop culture.) Bill Clinton saw himself as the star of The Bill Clinton Show surrounded by various dull straight men (Bill Cohen, Sandy Berger); Bush sees himself as the unflashy CEO of a first-rate board (Cheney, Rummy, Condi, Colin).

Because he doesn't operate on Media Time, whereby 14 months is a precipitous "rush to war" but a 14-day war is a Vietnam-style quagmire, Bush doesn't get thrown off-course. He is a personally modest man with no particular desire to be on television all day long, which is why he's happy to let Tony Blair take as much of the limelight as he wants and why he was willing to fly to Belfast to emphasise the non-poodle nature of the Prime Minister's relationship: this business of who accords whom the honour of visiting whose village is an obsession of Arab mukhtars, not Texans.

In a sense, Mr Bush's view of Iraq is merely an extension of his view of Mr Blair: his buddy Tone may be somewhat weird and intense and unnaturally hung up on outmoded multilateral institutions, but in the end their common humanity overrides all that. Likewise, Bush doesn't see why children in Mosul are so different from those in Crawford: why shouldn't they have the same freedoms? You can mock this if you wish. It seems very odd that the Left, which routinely bemoans the injustice of Barbara Bush's son having greater opportunities than the son of a crack whore in the inner city merely because of an accident of birth, then turns around and tells 20 million Iraqis that they have to accept their lot and live in a prison state forever. Julian Barnes, Iowa's Democratic Senator Tom Harkin and a zillion others continue to feel this way - even after Saddam's fall.

Whether or not Mr Bush can succeed in his most ambitious objective - to democratise the Middle East - it is surely hard to deny that, next to the shriveled condescension of Barnes and co, his is the progressive position - adopted in the teeth of cynical opposition, not least from his own State Department.

I think Bush will pull off his grand project. In Paris, Mr Chirac is hoping for a pliant strongman he can do business with - this year's Laurent Kabila, the prematurely terminated heir to Mobutu's Congo. Even in less cynical chancelleries, the talk is of some star name among the Iraqi exiles - this year's Father Aristide, the supposed Ghandi of Haiti. But, when you speak to fellows in the Administration, the plans are at once grander and lowlier - they are thinking about the small civic institutions necessary to breathe life into the old Ottoman vilayets of Mosul, Baghdad and Basra. They're looking to build a functioning state, not to install a client.

Bush has a strong team and he likes to delegate, and the people to whom he delegates have strong teams to whom they delegate. It was the commanders on the ground who set the pace to Baghdad. If President Bush is looking for a system of effective decentralisation to bequeath to Iraq, his own Administration these past four weeks is a good working model.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; US: District of Columbia; United Kingdom; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: blair; bush; commanderinchief; dontmesswithtexas; iraq; iraqifreedom; marksteyn; marksteynlist; next; saddam; steyn; syria; uk; us; war
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To: Defiant
Well ... they are from the Ba'ath party, which answers a lot of questions.

However, like I said - Assad has been a witness to what it means to defy the USA. Saddam had x42 as an example of the USA - Assad has George W. Bush!

Surely Assad can see what fate awaits him!
41 posted on 04/12/2003 6:28:11 PM PDT by CyberAnt (( America - You Are The Greatest!! ))
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To: MadIvan
It seems very odd that the Left, which routinely bemoans the injustice of Barbara Bush's son having greater opportunities than the son of a crack whore in the inner city merely because of an accident of birth, then turns around and tells 20 million Iraqis that they have to accept their lot and live in a prison state forever.

LOL! Says it all, doesn't it?
42 posted on 04/12/2003 6:30:28 PM PDT by bdeaner
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To: Defiant
I don't know. We've cut off their oil feed from Iraq. A little persuasion might be all it takes to cut off their water feed from Turkey.

If not, well, perhaps the troops in Iraq would like a few days to rest up at the beach. Say on the Mediterranean...
43 posted on 04/12/2003 6:40:18 PM PDT by algol
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To: okie01
March 26...mmmm, that would have been just about 'quagmire' time, if I recall correctly.

Good time to jump on a bandwagon, eh?

BWAHHHHHAAAAAHHHHHAAAA ! Sucker. Fooled again !

44 posted on 04/12/2003 6:42:29 PM PDT by chiller (could be wrong, but doubt it)
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To: bdeaner
The libs get away with talking out of both sides of their mouth----because they're rarely challenged by the complicit media.

That s**t has got to stop! And is beginning to , imho, thanks to alternative media.

45 posted on 04/12/2003 6:47:35 PM PDT by chiller (could be wrong, but doubt it)
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To: Defiant
We will not have to invade Syria. Assad will roll over and lick the American hand because he has inherited his father's instinct for survival-and-hang-the-principle. When we suggest that he should stop allowing Pals into Syria and that, in fact Hassan-Bob and Billy-Mohammed shouldn't be in Syria right now, Hassan-Bob and Billy-Mohammed will turn up somewhere just outside the border trussed or dead. Then we start suggesting that Syria needs the benefit of some western companies in its market, etc. As for Iran we will feed the dissidents and give them high fives and they will do the dirty without our overt intervention. The Sauds will collapse somewhere along the way.
46 posted on 04/12/2003 7:25:16 PM PDT by arthurus
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To: MadIvan
Wow ... of all the brilliant Steyn columns, this might be the best. God bless Steyn. And God bless my British, Australian, Spanish and Polish brothers who love freedom, and who see the preciousness of liberty.
47 posted on 04/12/2003 7:40:41 PM PDT by Urbane_Guerilla
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To: MadIvan; Howlin; riley1992; Miss Marple; deport; Dane; sinkspur; steve; kattracks; JohnHuang2; ...
Thanks!

Steyn ping.

48 posted on 04/12/2003 7:40:48 PM PDT by Pokey78
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To: Pokey78
Syria, you're next bump.
49 posted on 04/12/2003 7:57:35 PM PDT by JusPasenThru (Eliminate the ninnies and the twits...)
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To: Pokey78; MadIvan
Thanks for the ping, Pokey78.

Steyn says it all and says it well.

50 posted on 04/12/2003 8:06:39 PM PDT by metesky (My retirement fund is holding steady @ $.05 a can)
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To: MadIvan
you seem to always find gems. thanks for posting this.
51 posted on 04/12/2003 8:14:12 PM PDT by demosthenes the elder (The Jesuits TRAINED me - they didn't TAME me)
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To: MadIvan
Truly one of Steyn's best!!!!!
52 posted on 04/12/2003 8:27:20 PM PDT by lawgirl (Infinite Rider on the Big Dogma)
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To: MadIvan
[Bush] doesn't operate on Media Time, whereby 14 months is a precipitous "rush to war" but a 14-day war is a Vietnam-style quagmire....

Another great sentence from Steyn.

53 posted on 04/12/2003 8:29:37 PM PDT by expatpat
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To: MadIvan
"Last week, The New York Times reported on the President's reaction to Don Rumsfeld's daily press conference. As the Times tells it, a Bush aide stepped into the Oval Office to warn him that "the unpredictable Defence Secretary" had just threatened Syria. The President looked up from his desk. "Good," he said. Then he went back to work."

It would not surprise me one bit if this was a true story. President Bush is a man who knows how to get things done.

54 posted on 04/12/2003 8:38:52 PM PDT by Joan912 (stanley cup playoffs = best in the world)
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To: MadIvan
I love Steyn. He churns out one amazing article after another.
55 posted on 04/12/2003 8:39:12 PM PDT by NH Liberty
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To: Pokey78
Thanks for the ping, Pokes.
56 posted on 04/12/2003 9:01:35 PM PDT by Brian Allen (I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny ....)
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To: MadIvan
BTTT
57 posted on 04/12/2003 11:37:04 PM PDT by patricia
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To: Psycho_Bunny
I have 50 bucks that says that's a complete fabrication on the part of the paper. Who talks like that?

I think the phrase "unpredictable defence secretary" is the Times's characterization of Rumsfeld, not the Bush aide's description.

58 posted on 04/12/2003 11:49:05 PM PDT by WarrenC
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To: WarrenC
There are quotes (") around the phrase...meaning it's a direct quote.

Were it a editorial comment it would be proper to use a single quote (').

Unless I'm wrong for some reason...which is possible...I was a failure at Struck and White.

59 posted on 04/12/2003 11:53:10 PM PDT by Psycho_Bunny
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To: Psycho_Bunny
Oh...I see what you're saying...that Mark put the quotes there to point up that it's the paper's characterization. But then the "Good" part is confusing because it's phrased as a direct quote of the President.

It's a confusing paragraph, now that you pointed that out to me....I'm gonna be tossing and turning all night over it. Thanks. >:P

60 posted on 04/12/2003 11:56:48 PM PDT by Psycho_Bunny
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