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I don't know whether to laugh or cry when I hear the president
and vice president slamming John Kerry for saying that he hopes
America can eventually get back to a place where "terrorists
are not the focus of our lives, but they're a nuisance." The
idea that President Bush and Mr. Cheney would declare such a statement
to be proof that Mr. Kerry is unfit to lead actually says more about
them than Mr. Kerry. Excuse me, I don't know about you, but I dream
of going back to the days when terrorism was just a nuisance in
our lives.
If I have a choice, I prefer not to live the rest of my life with
the difference between a good day and bad day being whether Homeland
Security tells me it is "code red" or "code orange"
outside. To get inside the Washington office of the International
Monetary Fund the other day, I had to show my ID, wait for an escort
and fill out a one-page form about myself and my visit. I told my
host: "Look, I don't want a loan. I just want an interview."
Somewhere along the way we've gone over the top and lost our balance.
That's why Mr. Kerry was actually touching something many Americans
are worried about - that this war on terrorism is transforming us
and our society, when it was supposed to be about uprooting the
terrorists and transforming their societies.
The Bush team's responses to Mr. Kerry's musings are revealing because
they go to the very heart of how much this administration has become
addicted to 9/11. The president has exploited the terrorism issue
for political ends - trying to make it into another wedge issue
like abortion, guns or gay rights - to rally the Republican base
and push his own political agenda. But it is precisely this exploitation
of 9/11 that has gotten him and the country off-track, because it
has not only created a wedge between Republicans and Democrats,
it's also created a wedge between America and the rest of the world,
between America and its own historical identity, and between the
president and common sense.
By exploiting the emotions around 9/11, Mr. Bush took a far-right
agenda on taxes, the environment and social issues - for which he
had no electoral mandate - and drove it into a 9/12 world. In doing
so, Mr. Bush made himself the most divisive and polarizing president
in modern history.
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By using 9/11 to justify launching a war in Iraq without U.N.
support, Mr. Bush also created a huge wedge between America and
the rest of the world. I sympathize with the president when he says
he would never have gotten a UN consensus for a strategy of trying
to get at the roots of terrorism by reshaping the Arab-Muslim regimes
that foster it - starting with Iraq.
But in politicizing 9/11, Mr. Bush drove a wedge between himself
and common sense when it came to implementing his Iraq strategy.
After failing to find any W.M.D. in Iraq, he became so dependent
on justifying the Iraq war as the response to 9/11 - a campaign
to bring freedom and democracy to the Arab-Muslim world - that he
refused to see reality in Iraq. The president
seemed to be saying to himself, "Something so good and right
as getting rid of Saddam can't possibly be going so wrong."
Long after it was obvious to anyone who visited Iraq that we never
had enough troops there to establish order, Mr. Bush simply ignored
reality. When pressed on Iraq, he sought cover behind 9/11 and how
it required "tough decisions" - as if the tough decision
to go to war in Iraq, in the name of 9/11, should make him immune
to criticism over how he conducted the war.
Lastly, politicizing 9/11 put a wedge between us and our history.
The Bush team has turned this country into "The United States
of Fighting Terrorism." "Bush only seems able to express
our anger, not our hopes," said the Mideast expert Stephen
P. Cohen. "His whole focus is on an America whose role in the
world is to negate the negation of the terrorists. But America has
always been about the affirmation of something positive. That is
missing today. Beyond Afghanistan, they've been much better at destruction
than construction."
I wish Mr. Kerry were better able to articulate how America is going
to get its groove back. But the point he was raising about wanting
to put terrorism back into perspective is correct. I want a president
who can one day restore Sept. 11th to its rightful place on the
calendar: as the day after Sept. 10th and before Sept. 12th. I do
not want it to become a day that defines us. Because ultimately
Sept. 11th is about them - the bad guys - not about us. We're about
the Fourth of July.
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