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Will the U.N. Bail Out Bush? He's in trouble big time!

 
 
Reply Fri 18 Jul, 2003 09:32 am
Will the U.N. Bail Out Bush?
Commentary by Jim Lobe - IPS - 7/18/03

WASHINGTON, Jul 18 (IPS) - Make no mistake: U.S. President George W. Bush is in very big trouble.

Whereas a week ago, people here were talking about the dread "V" word -- for Vietnam -- this week the dreaded "W" word -- for Watergate -- was back in vogue, even as the "V" word was still in use. Watergate plus Vietnam is about the worst combination for a sitting president that anyone could possibly imagine.

And the almost daily announcement on the news that another U.S. soldier was killed in an attack in Iraq, bringing to 32, 33, 34, the number of troops killed since Pres. Bush declared an end to major hostilities in the war recalls nothing so much as the daily reminders on the evening news 23 years ago that killed the presidency of Jimmy Carter: "Day 385 of the American hostage crisis in Iran".

Short of a miracle -- such as the discovery of a vast cache of weapons of mass destruction in an Iraqi mountainside in circumstances that clearly indicate that it was under Saddam Hussein's control as of Mar. 18, 2003, or the return of robust economic growth that can quickly bring the unemployment rate down to five percent -- there is probably only one way that Bush can save his presidency at this point.

But the cost in personnel, policy and pride will be extremely high.

To save his administration, Bush must now essentially abandon the aggressive unilateralism that has dominated his foreign policy since even before Sep. 11, 2001; ask forgiveness from U.S. allies who refused to join his "coalition of the willing" into Iraq; and return to the United Nations Security Council for a new resolution that will give the world body control over the occupation.

As India -- whose rejection of Bush's request for as many as 20,000 troops to act as mercenaries for U.S. foreign policy struck a devastating blow to the imperial dreams of the Pentagon hawks -- made clear this week, it, as well as other nations, would be willing to provide peacekeepers and other kinds of support to the occupation so long as the U.N. Security Council authorises it.

That is what U.S. lawmakers -- both Republicans and Democrats -- want desperately, as U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan found out during a brief visit with many of them after a White House visit with Bush himself Monday. That is also what U.S. foreign-policy establishment -- whose cautions about the rush to war were ignored or mocked by the neo-conservatives and right-wing hawks who hijacked foreign policy after 9/11 -- are calling for. That is even what Bush's own economic and political advisers have begun to whisper.

Their message: "The United States cannot by itself afford the burdens -- either economically or politically -- of occupying Iraq. We need help, and lots of it, even though we know that we will have to give up control to get it".

Even more, it is the message of what many here refer to as "the permanent government" -- the professionals and civil servants who staff the national-security bureaucracies, in particular. The are clearly fed up with the arrogance and hubris of the hawks centred in the offices of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Dick Cheney who in their view have driven the country into a quagmire.

Thus, CIA director George Tenet, grilled by senators in a closed hearing Wednesday, while taking full responsibility for the reference in Bush's State of the Union speech to Hussein's alleged efforts to obtain uranium from Africa, also deftly pointed his finger directly at hawks in the White House and the Pentagon as the parties who pushed hard for its inclusion.

Thus, Gen. John Abizaid, the new commander of allied forces in Iraq, hand-picked by Rumsfeld, explicitly contradicted his boss in his first appearance before Congress Wednesday when he said that U.S. forces there are facing a "classical guerrilla-type campaign" that is becoming more effective and may be organised at the regional level.

Thus, officials at the State Department and the CIA are leaking damning information about the hawks's efforts to silence, intimidate, and circumvent analysts who disagreed with their cocksure predictions about how the Iraqis would greet U.S. forces as "liberators", how few troops would be needed for the occupation, how easily the country could be transformed into a working democracy; and how quickly the economy would be back on its feet and pumping millions of barrels of oil to thirsty SUVs back in the U.S..

Come September, these deep throats are likely to be singing publicly in hearings on Capitol Hill, unless something changes radically.

Even if Bush and the hawks could stand up to them, however, there are also the soldiers who are actually in Iraq and who are making no secret about how angry they are. While radio talk show hosts debated whether the uranium reference in Bush's speech was justified or not this week, the story that carried the most wallop in Washington was the interviews on ABC's "Good Morning America" with troops in Fallujah that aired Wednesday.

"If Donald Rumsfeld were here," said one, "I'd ask him for his resignation", while another told his reporter that he had his own "Most Wanted" deck of cards. "The aces in my deck are Paul Bremer, Donald Rumsfeld, George Bush and Paul Wolfowitz". Meanwhile, career officers are telling reporters that the Iraq deployment threatens to destroy the army's ability to recruit and retain its troops.

This is poison for a president.

There are signs that Bush realises this, particularly after meeting with Annan. Before this week, Washington showed little interest in returning to the U.N. for a new resolution. But that changed this week, as Secretary of State Colin Powell began sounding out U.S. allies -- including German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer -- about what kind of resolution could persuade Berlin to help out.

Annan himself was encouraging. Diplomatic sources pointed to his statement Wednesday in which, after noting the divisions that existed on the Council before the war, he stressed that "now that the war is over, we should focus on stabilising and building a peaceful and prosperous Iraq".

"It's getting more and more obvious that the Council's leverage (vis-a-vis Washington) is increasing," said one source who noted the growing sense in the U.S. capital that the optimistic predictions of the hawks had put the president in serious peril.

The question is what will be the U.N.'s price for bailing the administration out, and will Bush be willing to pay it?
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NickFun
 
  1  
Reply Fri 18 Jul, 2003 10:53 am
Seeing as how GW is such a heckuva guy maybe they should bail him out. Just because he totally ignored the UN's request not to invade Iraq and arrogantly brought us into a war that should never have started and just because he needlessly killed thousands of people and destroyed a country and left thousands homeless and wiped out an entire nation and killed hundreds of American soldiers is no reason not to help him. Um...second though...Kill the bastard.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Fri 18 Jul, 2003 11:16 am
Copied from BBB's post above: ""If Donald Rumsfeld were here," said one, "I'd ask him for his resignation", while another told his reporter that he had his own "Most Wanted" deck of cards. "The aces in my deck are Paul Bremer, Donald Rumsfeld, George Bush and Paul Wolfowitz". Meanwhile, career officers are telling reporters that the Iraq deployment threatens to destroy the army's ability to recruit and retain its troops.

This is poison for a president."

It seems to this observer that most Americans are incapable of understanding the implications of what this administration has done regarding everything they have been responsible for during the past three years. c.i.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Fri 18 Jul, 2003 11:17 am
Make that "less than three years." c.i.
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au1929
 
  1  
Reply Fri 18 Jul, 2003 03:12 pm
What do you mean he Kemo sabe. We the people of the US are in big trouble.
He sits fat, dumb and happy on his duff in the WH.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Fri 18 Jul, 2003 03:18 pm
au, The big question is will it get worse or better for the People of the World during the next 18 months? c.i.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Fri 18 Jul, 2003 03:19 pm
This administration pretty much destroyed everything they touched, but we can never know. c.i.
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realjohnboy
 
  1  
Reply Fri 18 Jul, 2003 05:02 pm
Hi, I consider myself to be reasonably knowledgeable about Iraq, but I can't remember why it is that Mr Bush seems so opposed to
allowing UN participation in the "reconstruction."
The US has 150,000 soldiers there. They are tired, unloved and untrained for the task.
Mr Blair, in his address to Congress and in the press conference later, seemed to nibble around the issue of the UN.
Thank you. -rjb-
0 Replies
 
au1929
 
  1  
Reply Sat 19 Jul, 2003 06:45 am
Could it be as king of the hill he does not want to share power. Or could it be based on his child like mentality he feels that he must get even with the UN because they defied him.
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au1929
 
  1  
Reply Sat 19 Jul, 2003 07:16 am
U.S. May Be Forced to Go Back to U.N. for Iraq Mandate

By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS

WASHINGTON, July 18 — The Bush administration, which spurned the United Nations in its drive to depose Saddam Hussein in Iraq, is finding itself forced back into the arms of the international body because other nations are refusing to contribute peacekeeping troops or reconstruction money without United Nations approval.

The big bird is getting his wings clipped and his nose tweaked.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/19/international/worldspecial/19DIPL.html?th
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 19 Jul, 2003 10:48 am
Shiite Cleric to set up rival Iraq government & army
Prominent Shiite Cleric Denounces U.S.-Picked Council, Vows to Set Up Rival Body and Shiite Army
By Borzou Daragahi Associated Press Writer
Published: Jul 19, 2003

KUFA, Iraq (AP) - An influential Shiite Muslim cleric condemned Iraq's U.S-picked Governing Council as made up of "non-believers" and vowed to create a rival body, as his followers in a historic mosque shouted "Death to America."

Muqtada al-Sadr also called on Iraqis to volunteer for an independent Shiite army, though he condemned recent attacks on U.S. troops, saying that "right now" they were not condoned by Shiite leaders.

A U.S. soldier was fatally shot guarding a bank in the capital Saturday, while the U.S. military concluded two separate sweeps in and around Baghdad - arresting more than 1,200 people and seizing weapons, explosives and ammunition, the military said.

The death came a day after two separate attacks on convoys in which one soldier was killed. It brought to 149 the number of U.S. personnel killed in combat since the March 20 start of the war - two more than the 1991 Gulf War total for U.S. deaths in combat.

The Bush administration, struggling to quell the violence, is considering appealing to the United Nations to urge member states to supply troops and police, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Friday. Several countries - including Russia, France and India - have said they would not send peacekeeping forces to Iraq without a U.N. mandate.

Currently, there are about 145,000 American troops and 12,000 coalition forces including British, Poles and others in Iraq.

Secretary of State Colin Powell and U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan have discussed whether new U.N. action is needed, although a current U.N. resolution dealing with Iraq "encourages people to participate" in Iraq peacekeeping, Boucher said.

The daily attacks that have plagued U.S. occupation forces have been blamed on Sunni Muslim followers of ousted leader Saddam Hussein. Southern Iraq, home to most of Iraq's majority Shiites, has largely been calm.

But al-Sadr's call in a Friday prayer sermon reflected the deep rejection of the U.S.-led occupation felt by some sectors of the Shiite population.

"If you ignore the Governing Council, you'll be restoring good to your country," al-Sadr - the son of a revered ayatollah, Mohammed Sadeq al-Sadr, who was killed by Saddam's regime in 1999 - told worshippers during a sermon at the main mosque in the holy city of Kufa.

The U.S. administration led by L. Paul Bremer gave Shiites - who were harshly oppressed by Saddam - a majority on the new 25-member council. But most of the Shiite members are secular figures or moderate clerics. The council, which represents a wide range of factions and ethnic groups in Iraq, still must convince Iraqis it represents the people, though Bremer's administration still holds final word.

Another prominent Shiite cleric, whose movement is represented on the council, counseled patience with the body as he addressed worshippers at another mosque on Friday, in the nearby holy city of Najaf.

Mohammed Bakir al-Hakim said he believed the council would show its independence eventually because it "must be independent and represent the will of the Iraqis and not the will of the occupiers."

Al-Hakim heads the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, a movement that worked from exile in Iran to oppose Saddam's rule. Al-Hakim's brother, Abdel-Aziz, is a council member.

Al-Sadr, however, had only harsh words for the new governing body, dismissing it as a tool of the Americans, and vowed to set up a parallel one.

"I will do my best to create a Muslim country. I will collect as many voices as I can to strengthen this council. There will be two councils: one of wrongdoers and another of righteous people," he told thousands of the faithful, many bused from Baghdad for special prayers at the Kufa mosque.

Al-Sadr, said to be in his late 20s or early 30s, has drawn backing among some Shiites mainly from the popularity of his martyred father, and he has pushed for Shiite clerics to take an active role in Iraqi politics.

In the chaos following Saddam's fall, his backers took control of many local affairs in Al-Thawra, a sprawling Shiite-majority slum in Baghdad that is his center of power, and in parts of some southern towns. It is not clear how much support he enjoys in the larger Shiite community.

As al-Sadr spoke, his followers shouted that the council is "Zionist," chanting "Death to America, Death to Israel," and called for formation of an army to liberate Iraq from American occupation.

Al-Sadr called for "volunteers to register for the great army which will take orders from the Hawza," the 1,300-year-old Shiite seminary in Najaf.

But he condemned attacks on U.S. forces. "Right now, these strikes are not under the order of the Hawza and are therefore illegitimate," he said.

Al-Sadr also lashed out at the council for making its first official action the declaration of April 9 - the day Baghdad fell to the Americans and Saddam's regime collapsed - as a new holiday.

"On this day we replaced a little Satan with big Satan. Eventually, we'll have a referendum separate from the Americans and, God willing, elections separate from the Americans," he told the AP.
--------

AP reporter Bassem Mroue in Najaf contributed to this report.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Sat 19 Jul, 2003 11:00 am
This president and his henchmen continue to work towards their own goals without considering all of the consequences, because they're not paying the price. It's somebody else's family and friends losing their jobs, and their life. These heartless bastards needs to be replaced today - not in 2004. c.i.
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dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Sat 19 Jul, 2003 11:55 am
if the current cost to the US is @ 4 billion a month, what happens when we start adding in the cost of reconstruction what was promised?
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