firehand

Prometheus 6   

Do not make the mistake of thinking that because my conclusion is the same as another person's that my reasoning is the same

November 20, 2003

 

This could be quite insulting

You know, if BUsh changes course for the British after refusing to do so for Americans, you'd have to wonder about his loyalties.



You Gotta Have Friends
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

LONDON � So I step off the plane in London and the British customs guy sees on my form that I'm a journalist and asks, "Is it true there are more police to protect your president in London than there are in Baghdad?" Then I pick up The Independent to read in the taxi and I see that London's left-wing mayor, Ken Livingstone, has denounced President Bush as "the greatest threat to life on this planet that we've most probably ever seen." Then I check out The Guardian, which carried open letters to the president, one of which is from the famous playwright Harold Pinter, who says: "Dear President Bush, I'm sure you'll be having a nice little tea party with your fellow war criminal, Tony Blair. Please wash the cucumber sandwiches down with a glass of blood."

No, Dorothy, we're definitely not in Kansas anymore.

We're in the U.K., our closest ally in the Iraq war � a country where Mr. Bush still has many supporters, but also a legion of detractors. But if this is how some of our best friends are talking, imagine how difficult it is going to be to win over America's more ambivalent allies � to widen support for the rebuilding of Iraq. To be sure, some people simply will never be winnable because they hate America above all else. (That may explain why you don't see any protesters here carrying signs saying, "Death to bin Laden," "Saddam: How many Iraqis did you kill today?" or "Mr. Bush: Thanks for believing in Arab democracy.")

But there is also a whole constituency in Europe and the Middle East who are upset with Mr. Bush because of what he does, not who he is. They can be won over, or at least neutralized, so their governments can be more supportive on Iraq. But it will require a policy lobotomy by the Bush team.

Tom Malinowski, from Human Rights Watch, perfectly described Mr. Bush's core problem: When you look at the muted reaction to the president's important speech on the need for democracy in the Arab world, you see that "President Bush has moral clarity, but no moral authority." He has a vision � without influence among the partners needed to get it moving. His is a beautifully carved table � with only one leg.

Posted by P6 at November 20, 2003 05:03 AM | Trackback URL: http://www.prometheus6.org/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2335
Comments

Don't worry -- he won't change course. His course is based on principle.


Posted by at November 21, 2003 01:08 PM 

I agree he won't change. I disagree about the reason.


Posted by at November 22, 2003 12:33 AM 
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