[lit-ideas] Re: with or without Bush

  • From: JulieReneB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 3 Aug 2004 23:02:25 EDT

_http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-kerry3aug03,1,3025125.story_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-kerry3aug03,1,3025125.story) 

========Original Message========
Subj: [lit-ideas] Re: with or without Bush  Date: 8/3/2004 2:34:17 AM Central 
Daylight Time  From: _mccreery@xxxxxxxx (mailto:mccreery@xxxxxxx)   To: 
_lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (mailto:lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)   Sent on:    

On 2004/08/03, at 15:49, Andreas Ramos  wrote:

> After 9.11, even if one took the most generous pro-Bush  position, one 
> must admit that the US
> government could have done  very little because, as the Report points 
> out in overwhelming
>  detail, the government system has been completely incapable at all 
>  levels of dealing with al
> Qaeda. Even if Bush were George Washington,  Abraham Lincoln, and 
> Albert Einstein all in one,
> he would not  have been able to do much.


Sad, but all too predictable to anyone  with a sense of history. The 
United States military and intelligence  agencies and the 
military-industrial complex of which they form an integral  part are a 
vast bureaucratic labyrinth born of the two World Wars and the  Cold War 
that followed them, in which the underlying assumption is that war  
involves nation states, organized in competing alliances. To reorganize  
the labyrinth to deal with what the experts call "asymmetric" conflict  
involving nations on the one hand and fluid transnational networks of  
terrorists on the other will be a herculean task.

What we do know,  however, about the Bush administration is that it 
didn't even try prior to  September 11, its policies being focused on 
national missile defense  (another great military-industrial complex 
boondoggle) and the rise of China  as a potential new great power 
competitor. The threat that Al Qaeda  represented was totally off its 
radar. (Bill Clinton was, despite the  personal issues that distracted 
him during the last years of his term, at  least aware of the problem. I 
can testify to that, having been in the  audience that heard him speak 
at my daughter's Commissioning Week at  Annapolis in 1998.)

The attacks on both Afghanistan and Iraq reflect the  same 
nation-centered mindset, in which the "realistic" thing to do is to  
attack "state sponsors" of terrorism--ignoring the fact that  
transnational terrorists, like transnational corporations, act largely  
independently of national borders.

What, then, of John Kerry? He will  certainly confront the same 
entrenched mindsets, turf wars, and bureaucratic  inertia that any other 
administration would. But he will bring to the table  (1) an inquiring 
and thoughtful mind and a willingness to address the  problem instead of 
sweeping it under the table and (2) a commitment and the  ability to 
rebuild the multinational alliances on which the global campaign  
against terrorism will, to be successful, inevitably depend.

Kerry  knows what that other Vietnam veteran, Bob Kerrey, says so 
precisely: When  it comes to security and the job of combatting 
terrorism "the homeland is  the planet." Those who would try to make of 
the United States of America  either a new Rome or a gigantic gated 
community are doomed to fail. Only  those with the will and the ability 
to cultivate strong friends around the  world stand any chance at all. 
Kerry claims to have that will and that  ability. George "Dubya"Bush 
demonstrably has neither.



John L.  McCreery
International Vice Chair, Democrats Abroad

Tel  81-45-314-9324
Email mccreery@xxxxxxx

>>Life isn't fair.  Democracy should be. <<

To learn more about Democrats Abroad, see  these websites

In Japan: http://www.demsjapan.jp
Worldwide:  http://www.democratsabroad.org


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