By Cernig
Today I read Bush's speech at the Knesset and thought "Aye, there's yet another another 'wink and a nod' to Israel for an attack, if they want it."
Some seem to believe we should negotiate with terrorists and radicals, as if some ingenious argument will persuade them they have been wrong all along. We have heard this foolish delusion before. As Nazi tanks crossed into Poland in 1939, an American senator declared: "Lord, if only I could have talked to Hitler, all of this might have been avoided." We have an obligation to call this what it is � the false comfort of appeasement, which has been repeatedly discredited by history.
...America stands with you in breaking up terrorist networks and denying the extremists sanctuary. And America stands with you in firmly opposing Iran's nuclear weapons ambitions. Permitting the world's leading sponsor of terror to possess the world's deadliest weapon would be an unforgivable betrayal of future generations. For the sake of peace, the world must not allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon.
Most American pundits want to see Bush's remarks as an attack on Barrack Obama but folks - it's not always about your country and your political races. For one thing, as Brian Katulis adroitly notes, if negotiating is appeasement then the Bush administration has done an awful lot of appeasement itself over the last seven years. And Brian doesn't even mention working with Sunni Awakening members in Iraq who not too long ago were terrorists attacking US forces! For another, if Bush's remarks were really intended to help John McCain, the latter wouldn't go shooting himself in the foot like this:
�Yes, there have been appeasers in the past, and the president is exactly right, and one of them is Neville Chamberlain,'� Mr. McCain told reporters on his campaign bus after a speech in Columbus, Ohio. �I believe that it�s not an accident that our hostages came home from Iran when President Reagan was president of the United States. He didn�t sit down in a negotiation with the religious extremists in Iran, he made it very clear that those hostages were coming home.'�
Need I say that "Iran-Contra" and "appeasement" really do belong in the same sentence together?
No, (probably) even Bush's speechwriters aren't so crass as to make such a blindingly partisan move in the American electoral race when their dummy is acting as Head of State of both Democratic and Republican Americans at a major international event. We need to look beyond purely domestic motivations - and we'll find them in the aspirations and dreams of the neoconservative lobby and their Very Serious Person enablers in the media.
Yesterday, University of Columbia journalsim Professor Todd Gitlin had a very timely post at Talking Points Memo which, I think, points to Bush's real agenda.
I'm attending Shimon Peres' President's Conference on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the State of Israel... for two days now, so many speakers have been preoccupied with Iran, and talking rather casually about the prospect of a preventive strike.
The sense of threat here is vivid, it is deeply felt, it is completely comprehensible, and it rises occasionally, or more than occasionally, to a well-nigh hysterical pitch--so much so that the Amerian strategist Edward Luttwak arose Monday night at a banquet at Peres' house to warn assembled luminaries against fearing annihilation at the hands of an Ahmadinejad who, after all, was not Hitler but Mussolini, and an inept one at that. It is not lost on any Israeli that Ahmadinejad, in his usual delicate manner, last week called Israel a "stinking corpse."
Weirdly, at a Wednesday afternoon workshop, the selfsame Luttwak declared that Iran's reformers would actually welcome a sharp outsider's attack on their nuclear facilities. No other panelist disputed his suggestion, which was greeted with much applause from a largely Israeli audience.
Which explains Bush's thinly-veiled threats of regime change in his speech.
After Luttwak's proclamation, and a game but much less applauded attempt by UCLA Professor Steven L. Spiegel to speak up for an alliance-negotiation approach to Iran instead of a mlitary attack, the session moderator, Israel's former ambassador to the US, Itamar Rabinovitch, somehow intimated--I'm sorry I didn't take down his exact words--that Israel's government would put it to Bush that if he didn't take action, Israel would.
Just outside the hall, I ran into a friend, also a liberal Jew, who had attended the same session, wasn't sitting with me but heard the same implicit threat. Alarmed (can one be too alarmed about such matters?), and assuming that Rabinovitch would be well informed, we checked out our dire impression with a sober, well-connected European official. This person isn't quite sure what's up against Iran but also worries that such an attack might be in the offing even if no government in Europe would be onboard.
And veteran British political reform campaigner Anthony Barnett adds in comments to Gitlin's post:
I have heard the same concerns in London. The 'urgency' is that the Russians are providing significant ground-to-air systems which apparently are likely to be operational by September and could be relatively effective given the distances and the need for more than one strike and therefore the lack of surprise. It seems that the Bush administration is regarded as too weak and the US military too opposed for an American strike to be considered - so it has to be an Israeli one permitted by Washington over the summer.
Bush, in his speech to the Knesset, signalled clearly that his administration will quietly support Israel if it decided to take direct action against Iran - as it did recently against Syria. It's worth noting that any Israeli attack on Iran would almost certainly have to transit Iraqi airspace.
It was both, methinks. He was articulating the neocon philosophy about as baldy as one can. Of course that attacks Obama, and also agitates for war, but your specific point shouldn't be overlooked. What's alarming is how Bush's vanity is being played again, in some accounts - only he has the vision and strength to attack Iran. The necons - unfailingly wrong, eternally dangerous.
ReplyDeleteMost American pundits want to see Bush's remarks as an attack on Barrack Obama but folks - it's not always about your country and your political races.
ReplyDeleteGee, Cernig, I never thought I'd see you channeling the White House Press Secretary. This is where the flying pigs come in, right? :)
if negotiating is appeasement then the Bush administration has done an awful lot of appeasement itself over the last seven years.
Yeah, but when have facts made any difference to these guys? Same goes for Iran-Contra, the Republicans simply ignore the fact that it had anything to do with the hostages release.
In any case, I disagree with you. The Iran stuff may be a wink and a nudge, but it isn't substantively different from what he's been saying for the last couple of years. This was a partisan attack, and not a subtle one at that. Whatever the other motivations, Bush's wars have always been about proving he and the Republicans are the tough, serious people who understand the real dangers out there, (the ones they keep creating), and that the Democrats are a bunch of wussy appeasers. This was just a more blatant attack in an unusual setting, but entirely within character.
As for launching such an attack at a foreign event while he's supposed to be representing all Americans, apparently he's learned from his soulmate Prime Minister Harper, who has been launching his nastiest criticisms of domestic opponents while at overseas functions for the last couple of years.
Hi BJ,
ReplyDeleteTomorrow, depending on what get's said by Bush and his flacks, I may disagree with myself too. :-) Perino's admission that Obama was one of those his remarks were aimed at suggests Batocchio has it correct.
But I don't think the Israelis heard it as a domestic attack on his party's rival. That's the most important bit - the bit where guns and bombs, rather than votes, get involved.
Regards, C
Heck, Cernig, you don't have to go all the way to Iran-Contra for Reagan's negotiations with Iran:According to Mr. Hashemi, William Casey, who had just become Ronald Reagan's campaign manager, met with him in late February or early March 1980 at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington. Mr. Casey quickly made it clear that he wanted to prevent Jimmy Carter from gaining any political advantage from the hostage crisis. The Hashemis agreed to cooperate with Mr. Casey without the knowledge of the Carter Administration.
ReplyDelete