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FROM TIME MAGAZINE
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101030728-465817,00.html
George W. Bush ducked the first question he was asked during a
joint press conference with Tony Blair after the British Prime Minister's
brilliant speech to Congress last Thursday. The question had two
parts. Did he take responsibility for the false claim in his State
of the Union message that Iraq had recently sought to buy uranium
in Africa? And why were the allies having so much trouble finding
other countries to help us in Iraq? The President who seemed
a mite tetchy, as he often does when things aren't going well
glowered: "I take the responsibility for making the decision...to
put together a coalition to remove Saddam Hussein, because the intelligence...made
a clear and compelling case [that Saddam] was a threat to security
and peace."
Right, but that wasn't the question, and one wonders why Bush didn't
simply say, "Yep. My fault. Some hard-working guy at the National
Security Council got a little overenthusiastic and stuck in that
sentence. I didn't take it out. Won't do that again." End of
story. Instead, we have the two-week spectacle of Bushies on the
run and the President undermining his reputation as a straight shooter
by forcing his CIA director, George Tenet, to take the fall. Clint
Eastwood would never do that.
Why has the uranium story puffed up so huge? It wouldn't have been
a very big deal without the deepening crisis in Iraq. But it also
has ballast because it clarifies an aspect of George W. Bush's essential
character specifically, the problem he has with telling the
truth. I am not saying Bush is a liar. Lying is witting: "I
did not have sexual relations with that woman." This is weirder
than that. The President seems to believe that wishing will make
it so and he is so stupendously incurious that he rarely
makes an effort to find the truth of the matter. He misleads not
only the nation but himself. Every worst-case Saddam scenario just
had to be true, as did every best-case post-Saddam scenario. Bush's
talent for self-deception extends to domestic and economic policy.
He probably believes that he's a compassionate conservative, even
though he has allowed every antipoverty program he favors to be
eviscerated by Congress. This week's outrage is the crippling of
AmeriCorps, which he had pledged to increase in size. He probably
believes that his tax cuts for the wealthy will help reduce the
mammoth $455 billion budget deficit (which doesn't include the cost
of Iraq), even though Ronald Reagan found that the exact opposite
was true and had to raise taxes twice to repair the damage done
by his 1981 cuts. And Bush probably believed, as the sign said,
that the "mission" had been "accomplished" in
Iraq when he landed on the aircraft carrier costumed as a flyboy.
He may even have believed that he was a flyboy.
But the country can no longer afford the President's self-delusions.
He is entering the most crucial six months of his presidency. As
a team of experts hired by the Pentagon reported last week: "The
window for cooperation may close rapidly if they [the Iraqis] do
not see progress." Which brings us back to the second part
of the question the President didn't answer last week: Why is no
one helping us in Iraq? A simple answer: Why on earth should they?
The situation is a mess, in large part because of American arrogance.
We insisted on doing the reconstruction on our own (only 13,000
of the 148,000 troops on the ground are British). It seems plain
now that going it alone isn't working. Even Donald Rumsfeld came
very close to admitting that on Meet the Press a few weeks ago.
Asked if we should turn Iraq over to the United Nations, he said,
"At some point, I think that--" and then he caught himself
and said, "They're already playing an important role."
In fact, the current military situation is extremely dangerous,
not just to the troops on the ground but to our national security
in general. We are pinned down in Iraq and will be for years. We
don't have the forces to meet another challenge in North
Korea, or Afghanistan, or anyplace else. We don't even have the
forces necessary to relieve our tired troops in Iraq. Last week
India made clear as France and Germany have that it
won't help us without the U.N.'s imprimatur. And now there is serious
talk within the White House about going back to the U.N. and asking
for help.
Help will not come easily. "You can't have burden sharing
without power sharing," a diplomat told me. The U.N. was humiliated,
and its weapons inspectors denigrated, by the Bush Administration
before the war. Some public groveling from the President may now
be in order. Indeed, Bush also owes the American people a speech
explaining just how difficult the situation is, how long it's likely
to remain that way and how much it will cost. Last week he took
"responsibility" for the war. Now he must take responsibility
for the peace.
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