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There are reasons why Americans want to ignore the rest of the world
UK Independment Argument ^ | 21 September 2002 | Fergal Keane

Posted on 10/24/2002 9:26:11 AM PDT by vannrox

There are reasons why Americans want to ignore the rest of the world

Most are related to those who fled persecution in the old world. It leaves them disinclined to get mixed up in our troubles

Fergal Keane

21 September 2002

Maybe it was the television reception in this hotel in the middle of nowheresville, Central America, but I thought I detected a look of desperate gratitude on the face of Kofi Annan earlier this week. When news came through of Saddam Hussein's mother-of-all-offers on weapons inspectors, the Secretary General of the United Nations quickly headed for the microphones.

Mr Annan's public announcement gave President Saddam's offer the sheen of something significant, and how the Secretary General must have hoped he was again pulling us back from the brink. Remember his flight to Baghdad in 1998 as allied armies were assembling around the Gulf? The Secretary General had two meetings with President Saddam (described wonderfully by William Shawcross in his book Deliver Us From Evil). Even then the Iraqi leader was being warned that negotiations were out of the question. Mr Annan had come to accept his unconditional agreement and nothing less. Saddam sort of caved in and war was averted. Kofi Annan was hailed as a saviour. But the so-called presidential sites remained immune from inspection and soon Saddam was back to his old tricks. The inspections regime collapsed in the face of Iraqi deceit and obduracy.

But that was a different America and the Clinton administration was happy to grab the way out offered by the Secretary General's mission. Now that things have changed so dramatically the public hopefulness of Kofi Annan this week seemed out of touch. Don't misunderstand me. Mr Annan is a good man who is desperate to avoid a war whose potential consequences he, better than most, can see clearly. But he and the organisation he represents have been nudged firmly into the background.

The latest declaration by Colin Powell, supposedly the leading dove in the Bush administration, that the US will find ways to thwart any inspection mission that goes ahead without a fresh resolution from the Security Council, tells you all you need to know about the new realities. This Iraqi conflict will be played out on America's terms and nobody else's. Which means that with or without a new security council resolution authorising force, we are going to have a war against Iraq, probably (as I have been saying for months now) beginning in December. And the game is about getting rid of Saddam. Period.

When President George Bush addressed the General Assembly of the UN he was not speaking as a supplicant but as the most powerful man in the world going through some required motions. The real message was not about America's desire to work with the international community for a restoration of the weapons-inspection regime, but a thinly veiled warning to the UN: act with us and grant a tough new resolution or be regarded as an irrelevance.

Have people forgotten how Mr Bush divided up the world in the wake of 11 September? You are either with him in the rapidly expanding war on terror, or you are no friend of America. For the hawks around Mr Bush, the UN speech was a gesture too far to an organisation they privately regard as a dangerous nuisance. The glad reception given by members of the Security Council to President Saddam's latest offer will only confirm the feelings of Dick Cheney, the Vice-President, and Paul Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary for Defence, whose impatience for an attack on Iraq grows by the hour.

Of course all states will try to look after their national interests, but only the world's last superpower can make sure those interests are served most of the time. The events of 11 September have hardened American resolve and, after a brief season of unease, the politicians in Washington look like they are about to come out on Mr Bush's side. In all of this he has been far more concerned with events and opinions on Capitol Hill than he has with the arguments at UN headquarters in New York. Leaders like Vladimir Putin and Jacques Chirac get telephone calls. The House leaders and key Republicans get face time.

The lobbying effort in Washington has paid off and Mr Bush is about to be rewarded with a Congressional resolution that will allow him to do pretty much what he wants with Iraq. In an amazingly broad formulation, Mr Bush is mandated to take whatever action is necessary to protect US security and national interests and – this is the real master stroke – restore peace and stability in the Middle East. This amounts to one of history's great blank cheques. So, while we can expect continuing efforts by Colin Powell to drum up international support, Mr Bush has all the authorisation he feels he needs.

American wariness (to put it at its most polite and benign) about international institutions didn't begin with the UN or Iraq. Go back to the founding of the UN's unfortunate precursor, the League of Nations, in 1919 and you find the beginning of a familiar pattern. It was a US President, Woodrow Wilson, who fought to bring the League into being, yet it was US congressmen and senators who made sure his own country would not be among the founding members.

A refugee from the Nazis who became a US citizen framed the first laws to outlaw genocide, yet his own country waited decades to ratify the Genocide Convention. Today, both the legislative and executive branches oppose the US joining the International Criminal Court. This isn't an argument that separates hawks and doves, Republicans and Democrats. It is a deeply felt antipathy towards any kind of international entanglement that might restrain America from protecting its interests, or which might render Americans liable to judgment and sanction by foreigners.

We tend to put this down to unthinking isolationism. But that's a lazy analysis. If we are going to call Americans isolationist we need to look at why that might be the case. We forget that America is not so much a country as a continent filled with the descendants of many nations, tribes and faiths. Most are related to those who fled hunger or persecution in the old world (our world). The collective folk memory surely leaves them disinclined to get mixed up in our troubles.

Yet the evidence of the last century does not suggest an America blind to the world's suffering or eternally reluctant to engage. The US has donated large amounts in aid and financial assistance and intervened in two major wars in Europe. The complaint of many Europeans, and those who have felt the meddling hand of Uncle Sam in places like Latin America or lately the Middle East, is about the terms upon which America engages with us.

But we might as well recognise that, for the time being, foreign complaints will fall on the deafest of ears in Washington. A powerful sense now prevails of a country that intends to follow its instincts come what may. Right now those instincts are for war. What comes later, and whether the UN again has a serious role in mediating international conflicts ... I am at a loss to say.

The writer is a BBC Special Correspondent



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: 911; binladen; bush; democrat; dnc; iraq; israel; liberal; powell; resolution; saddam; uk; un; unlist; war; wtc
A surprisingly good article.
1 posted on 10/24/2002 9:26:13 AM PDT by vannrox
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To: vannrox
Americans want to focus on the rest of the world. Its the media that prevents us. 800 Russians possibly will die today by Islamic extremists. What does it deserve -- 3 minutes over 24 hours?
2 posted on 10/24/2002 9:31:18 AM PDT by Naspino
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To: *UN_List; Ernest_at_the_Beach; madfly
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
3 posted on 10/24/2002 9:44:32 AM PDT by Free the USA
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To: Naspino
So what are you suggesting....that we occupy and reconstruct Russia?
4 posted on 10/24/2002 9:44:46 AM PDT by Austin Willard Wright
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To: vannrox
"...we are going to call Americans isolationist... and those who have felt the meddling hand of Uncle Sam..."

Ah yes. The familiar "meddling isolationist" argument.

I am always astounded how the europeans, with their superior education and thinking skills, always miss the obvious on this subject.

When you are a tiny country that can't do anything on your own, of course, you wan't all decisions made by a committee of nations. And when you are large enough to protect your self-intersets, of course, you are going to do it.

Back when England was still a major power it didn't go around asking for permission to declare war on Germany did it?

Now it is a 2nd world power that resents that we aren't. They feel they we don't deserve to be a super power.

Short analysis: penis envy.

5 posted on 10/24/2002 9:47:28 AM PDT by TheLooseThread
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To: Thud
ping
6 posted on 10/24/2002 9:50:07 AM PDT by Dark Wing
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To: Austin Willard Wright
I don't want Russia, just Siberia.
7 posted on 10/24/2002 9:50:09 AM PDT by Just another Joe
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To: Austin Willard Wright
So what are you suggesting....that we occupy and reconstruct Russia?

I have no idea what you are talking about or where you got that from based on my message. Enlighten me.

8 posted on 10/24/2002 9:56:48 AM PDT by Naspino
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To: Dark Wing
ping
9 posted on 10/24/2002 9:57:36 AM PDT by Thud
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To: vannrox
Yes, it is. Maybe Fergal meant it to be a criticism of sorts, but no American is going to take it that way. He's saying, "Hey, we can squeal all we want, but these guys are pretty sure they're right." And to that, I think, most of us can agree.
10 posted on 10/24/2002 10:21:20 AM PDT by big gray tabby
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To: Austin Willard Wright
He is suggesting that the media stop replaying film of cut tree stumps in Tacoma and act like the world wide news organizations they claim to be, and get some reporters and cameras outside the Moscow theater, and let us and the world know what Islamic terrorists are doing in the capital of one of the world's major powers, as we speak. Instead the US media is still on sniper aftermath 24-7, while the print journalists like this BBC guy endlessly speculate about how lone-nut like, wigged out, inexplicable, and crazy it is for Americans to be up in arms about Islamic terrorism. Because doing their actual jobs might make it look just a little more crazy that Putin is ready to veto a security council resolution of ours in order to protect a Muslim facist dictator, while Muslim terrorists are threatening to blow up a chunck of his capital city.
11 posted on 10/24/2002 12:15:07 PM PDT by JasonC
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To: vannrox
Yeah, it's actually somewhat fair. This author seems to be trying to understand our positions and why. It seems more balanced than most.
12 posted on 10/24/2002 4:53:38 PM PDT by dsutah
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To: dsutah
Uh, I should've said: "This article is more balanced than most."
13 posted on 10/24/2002 4:57:19 PM PDT by dsutah
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To: vannrox
Mr Annan is a good man...
He really lost me there. I wnet anead and read the rest of the article because of your comment. Still, it ain't all that.
14 posted on 10/25/2002 4:56:59 AM PDT by philman_36
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