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The Powelling
Jewish World Review ^ | Feb. 6, 2003 | David Warren

Posted on 02/06/2003 6:09:10 AM PST by SJackson

Colin Powell's presentation to the U.N. Security Council yesterday was a waste of time and energy. While his show was effective enough in itself, and met the demanding criterion of entertainment, by holding its audience, no one was swayed by it one way or the other. It is impossible to gauge the effect on world public opinion, which is anyway impossible to measure given contextual differences from country to country. But my gut sense is that the effect on opinion outside the United States will be slight.

Mr. Powell showed irrefutable evidence, in satellite imagery, intercepted radio and telephone conversations, and the repeated testimony of recent Iraqi defectors. He demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt that Iraq is in flagrant breach of each of the three requirements of Resolution 1441.

Iraq has failed: 1. to declare promptly and truthfully the extent of its illegal weapons programmes and stocks, 2. to co-operate fully and candidly with U.N. inspectors, and 3. to publicly and verifiably disarm. In addition to which, Mr. Powell hinted at the existence of much broader material demonstrating active co-operation between the Iraqi government and agents of Al Qaeda and other international terrorist organizations.

Punches were nevertheless pulled. The media have avoided explaining to the general public the constraints under which the Bush administration must operate, in providing such evidence. By doing so they expose war targets, they provide not only Saddam but other evil regimes with the means to assess U.S. intelligence sources, which in turn means putting the lives of brave people at additional risk. The publication of sensitive security material moreover creates a legal nightmare, for much of the declassification is itself prevented by U.S. law. The President himself could be open to legal challenge in authorizing such disclosures.

To go to this trouble and risk for nothing raises further questions of judgement. The calculation was that only by providing such evidence would the U.S. be able to win the support of hesitant allies. By this morning, it should be clear that it was a miscalculation. It was wrong to take critics demanding proof at their word.

In this sense, it is the final failure of the course of action Colin Powell himself recommended within the Bush administration. As we now know, it was he who successfully argued, over strong objections from Donald Rumsfeld, and others, that the U.N. route was worth taking. President Bush decided on balance that it was worth giving "collective security" a chance.

It is more complicated than that, for Mr. Powell's argument did not win on its merits alone. It has become increasingly clear that there were hard logistical reasons for the U.S. to delay an attack on Saddam. The chief problem here has been the need to step up the supply of a new generation of ordnance. Pentagon budget cuts under the last administration had left the U.S. military with short inventories of a wide range of weapons, from cruise missiles to "smart bomb" kits, and worse, without contingency plans to suddenly step up production. (An attack with much more plentiful stocks of older, less accurate ordnance would result in much more "collateral damage"; this could only serve as a fallback position.)

The public transformation of Secretary Powell himself from "dove" into "hawk" is a direct consequence of his success in arguing for the involvement of the U.N. It was his bright idea, and thus President Bush left him to salvage it.

At this moment, I doubt there is anyone in the Bush administration as angry with the French, in particular, as Mr. Powell is. It is widely understood that in return for the U.S. concession of a long and enervating horsetrade over Resolution 1441, the French undertook to support the U.S. decisively later on. The key date was Jan. 27th. If Hans Blix was unable to assure the Security Council that Saddam was disarming by this date -- and he wasn't -- then France would help lead the cry for action. President Chirac is believed to have given personal assurances of this to Mr. Powell, in return for specific amendments to the Resolution which the U.S. was resisting. Mr. Powell in turn assured President Bush that this difficult NATO ally would be finally onside. But the political situation changed, Mr. Chirac subsequently came to another arrangment with the German Chancellor, Gerhard Schroeder, and, to put a fine point on it, Mr. Powell was betrayed.

The response to this from elsewhere in the Bush administration is much less surprised. They had a low opinion of the French to start with. The line that is now going around Washington is that of a former undersecretary of defence, who observed, "Going to war without the French is like going deerhunting without an accordion."

Ditto other erstwhile allies who will be missing from the "coalition of the willing" that removes Saddam -- it now appears towards the Ides of March, unless Saddam strikes sooner.

For as delegates to the Security Council showed in their responses to Mr. Powell's presentation -- especially China, France, Russia -- they simply are not interested in proof. Indeed, nothing that Mr. Powell said would have come as a revelation to anyone who had been reading pro-American media, including the writings of yours truly. The satellite pictures we had not seen, nor the specific transcripts of conversations, but most of us were aware of every item on Mr. Powell's list. It is not as if a general understanding of Saddam's deceits and perfidies were previously unavailable.

This is why the publication of actual proof is so anticlimactic. The people demanding proof were not going to change their positions after it was supplied. They predictably shifted the criteria for action another step higher, so that now they demand even more U.N. inspectors.

They want peace, and are willing to pay any price for it. The French and Germans -- who have incidentally been exposed as Saddam Hussein's most copious suppliers of ingredients and technology for biological and chemical weaponry (with the Russians in third place) -- have openly stated that war is the worst thing that can happen. From this position, any kind of sell-out or betrayal is preferable to the use of physical force.

As wise old Alistair Cooke said on Britain's BBC, we're hearing an old song from the 1930s. "Most historical analogies are false because, however strikingly similar a new situation may be to an old one, there's usually one element that is different and it turns out to be the crucial one. It may well be so here. All I know is that all the voices of the thirties are echoing through 2003."

This is the fact. The appeasers of Saddam have used the same arguments and the same language as the appeasers of Hitler. They have relied on the same fundamental reasoning -- that there is no price too high, if we can win "peace in our time" -- and under the same inspiration, a pant-wetting fear. They want to believe, in the face of any evidence that is presented to them, that security can be obtained by some kind of negotiation. They chant all the old 'thirties mantras about "collective security", and invoke the United Nations as their grandfathers invoked the League of Nations.

An element that is different is George W. Bush. In my judgement, though he may not be the equal in mind and spirit of Winston Churchill -- the one man growling the night Prime Minister Chamberlain came home with the Munich treaty, when all Europe cheered -- he is proving a worthy successor. A Clinton, a Gore, indeed any "normal" politician in President Bush's shoes would have noted all the alarm bells ringing, and have done what Chamberlain did. They would "go the extra mile" to Munich, or in this case Baghdad.

Continued........

(Excerpt) Read more at jewishworldreview.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government
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1 posted on 02/06/2003 6:09:10 AM PST by SJackson
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Yehuda; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; ...
If you'd like to be on or off this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.
2 posted on 02/06/2003 6:09:33 AM PST by SJackson
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To: SJackson


3 posted on 02/06/2003 6:12:31 AM PST by TaRaRaBoomDeAyGoreLostToday!
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To: SJackson
Powell's speech was highly productive. It put American opinion further behind the President and prompted all of eastern and central Europe to sign on to the coalition. It thinned the ranks of the opposition and put the President's adversaries on the defensive. The Security Council was a tertiary audience.
4 posted on 02/06/2003 6:25:30 AM PST by Man of the Right
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To: SJackson
It's my understanding that Powell's evidence caused such fear that the French have now surrendered to Iraq. Germany is sure to follow.
5 posted on 02/06/2003 6:28:21 AM PST by Conspiracy Guy (White Flag)
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To: Flurry
I loved the line someone coined here earlier, "Going to war withOUT the French is like going deer hunting without an accordion."
6 posted on 02/06/2003 6:38:43 AM PST by el_texicano
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To: SJackson
Its infuriating that leftists Europe and the liberals in our own country cared not about anything they feign concern about now when Klinton bombed Serbia. Klinton did not have to go through all of these formalities and nonsense that Bush does with a far better case for military action.
7 posted on 02/06/2003 7:15:04 AM PST by KC_Conspirator
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To: SJackson
"Colin Powell's presentation to the U.N. Security Council yesterday was a waste of time and energy."

NO, it wasn't. This puts out a marker for the UN. It means that if absolute proof will not cause them to support us, then the UN is indeed irrelevant.

Going to war without the French, and going to war without the UN are in the same category.

8 posted on 02/06/2003 7:33:13 AM PST by sd-joe
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To: SJackson
"Pentagon budget cuts under the last administration had left the U.S. military with short inventories of a wide range of weapons, from cruise missiles to "smart bomb" kits, and worse, without contingency plans to suddenly step up production."

That's the line for public consumption. But I also know (because I saw it on televison) that there is a factory somewhere in MidAmerica churning out 1200 smart bimbs PER DAY EVERY DAY. There IS PLENTY of smart ordnance. Smart bimbs.

The author is largely correct about the media failing to tell the nation about the perils of presenting evidence openly in public. But this is to be expected, since a Republican is in the WH and the GOP controls both houses of Congress. If there were a DEM in the White House, the media would all say that they'd seen the evidence, that it's plenty convincing, but to publicize it would compromise national security.

Michael

9 posted on 02/06/2003 7:40:39 AM PST by Wright is right!
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To: el_texicano
The US and Great Britain will bring the soldiers, the French will bring the wine, cheese, and the white flag.
10 posted on 02/06/2003 9:27:20 AM PST by Conspiracy Guy (White Flag)
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