Posted on 04/21/2002 9:11:01 PM PDT by Pokey78
Edited on 04/23/2004 12:04:24 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
America must tell the world that the rules have changed.
From afar, European attitudes toward American policy in the Middle East seem a pastiche of rationalizations for inaction, resentment at being supplanted in world leadership, fear of their own Muslim populations, and cowardice political and personal.
(Excerpt) Read more at opinionjournal.com ...
Our best course of action is to consult in advance but act responsibly for the common good. Acting soley in our own interests may be necessary at times but is not the perrogative of a world leader that wants to be followed for very long.
In the case of Iraq, the sooner we get this over with the better. Many will complain when we act, but no tears will be shed for Saddam when the curtain falls.
That's not what kept the peace and there wasn't "peace".
To my knowledge
this is the first time
that a major newspaper has admitted
the likelihood that the 09-11-01 anthrax
came from Iraq.
(This editorial also was printed in today's hard copy of the WSJ)
The first step is to try and seriously understand them. In this they are remiss. Nobody speaks French or German, really.
While it is good to debate the Europeans, it is not neccessary to wait for their agreement. It might also be pointless since I'm not convinced the whining of European journalists or leaders of coalition governments really represent average European opinion, anyway.
If a rabid dog needs to be killed after it bit someone, it needs to be killed whether the world agrees with it or not...otherwise it can still bite. Having a mob determine it is OK will not make it more acceptable nor more neccessary than it already is to kill the dog. And having the mob oppose the killing won't cure the dog.
Unanimous consent or majority consent isn't what makes actions acceptable. Such consent is only neccessary when you have your own doubts and need reassurance, or when you desire to make others 'feel good' in case you might need them for something else in the future. If someone isn't potentially useful, their opinion is less relevant. So for some, their blessing might be worth obtaining, provided it doesn't interfere with the goal or slow down the timetable.
Interesting question. If we officially acknowledge the obvious, the next question from the public will be, "What did you know, and when did you know it?"
Regardless of the reasons (they are good), the average Joe will not like finding out the government knew a foreign nation attacked/threatened us with Anthrax, and scared us out of an immediate response.
Sooner or later, everyone is going to "get it," and I doubt very many will have complaints about the way this was handled. Besides, anybody who has been watching the anthrax story unfold for the last six months must be truly impressed with how easily public perceptions are managed during war time: so long as everything is smeared out over weeks and months, the public can be led anywhere you want to lead it. I really think that the PR aspects of this are the last thing on Bush's mind.
Well, the claim would probably be made that we didn't know until shortly before the announcement. After all, they even had a profile of the "domestic perpetrator," and that's currently the government's officially preferred theory.
But the reason I was thinking that the truth might not be revealed isn't so much a CYA response on the part of the politicians.
The problem with revealing the truth is that it might be thought to demonstrate our Achilles' heel. It's likely that other countries would figure, even after we defeated Iraq, that they could carry out the same kind of attack but more successfully. (The first barbarian attack on Rome didn't succeed in bringing the Empire down, but it gave people ideas. Of course, Rome couldn't pretend that it hadn't been attacked, and people must have come to realize that the Empire had a vulnerable underbelly.)
Somehow I believe that the anthrax was some sort of warning - the real threat is probably something less containable and more deadly - like small pox. I recently read that the vaccines will be ready in early October. They definitely know more than they are letting on for the sake of avoiding panic. The state of New Jersey just announced today that they have at the ready two potassium iodide tablets per person living within a 10 mile radius of NJ's 3 nuclear power plants in case of an accident. This coming a couple of weeks after finding the detailed plans of a NJ nuclear plant in a cave in Afganastan
Do not underestimate anthrax just because the initial use was in warning form. It could just as easily have been widely distributed and killed thousands. Whoever sent it has not been caught, and most certainly did not use up their supply. In other words, they can attack again, whenever they feel like it.
They definitely know more than they are letting on for the sake of avoiding panic.
You can say that again.
BTW: Smallpox is contagious and could kill many more people, but its use as a weapon is more difficult. That is because the attackers would have trouble protecting their own nations as the disease spread. That is why anthrax is cited as a military threat much more often than smallpox.
If you really want to worry, consider the danger if camelpox could be genetically engineered to be a human threat. The arabs believe they would be immune because of their exposure to camels, while we would not.
By no means did I intend to underestimate the widespread damage anthrax could cause. It's just a lot more difficult to disperse and we do have cipro. Unlike anthrax, smallpox (or indeed cowpox) is contagious and could be spread by a couple of suicide bioterrorists coast to coast.
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