The Bush Era
EDITORIAL The Bush Era "At State' Powell and others were alarmed by the t-\ Wolfowitz drumbeat," the Washington Post's Bob .L. AWoodward reports in his series on the early days of the war on...
...He has taken the war on terrorism beyond a police action to round up the perpetrators of the September 11 attack, and transformed it into a campaign to uproot dangerous tyrannies and encourage democracy, making the world much safer for free peoples...
...By declaring a new "Axis of Evil" comprising brutal dictatorships with far-advanced programs to build weapons of mass destruction, Bush has charted the course of an expansive new American foreign policy, a paradigm shift equal to the inauguration of anti-Communist containment more than a half century ago...
...Even the nervous nellies of the establishment, we suspect, will end up applauding...
...He understands that failing to act decisively—and if need be preemptively—against the nexus (or call it the axis) of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction will leave this country and its friends in increasing and unacceptable peril...
...We hope and trust the president and his trusted lieutenants are ready for the establishment backlash...
...And we wonder how long it will take for that establishment to accommodate itself to the realities of the Bush era...
...Meanwhile, assorted low-level officials from the Clinton administration complain that the president has overstated the threat and underestimated the difficulties of backing up his words with deeds...
...Not since Ronald Reagan upended U.S.-Soviet détente for a policy of unilateral arms buildup and ideological confrontation has an American president so boldly flouted the foreign policy establishment's conventional wisdom...
...The Times managed to bring up the Vietnam War twice, to underline their warning against the "promiscuous" use of military power...
...Indeed, in his only reference to the Middle East, he reversed decades of American indifference to the peoples of the Arab and Islamic worlds, proclaiming that "America will take the side of brave men and women" who support the principles of liberty and justice around the world, "including the Islamic world...
...People are fretting about the president's calling the Iranian regime "evil," just as they fretted when Reagan called the Soviet Union "evil...
...AWoodward reports in his series on the early days of the war on terrorism...
...It is now time, Bush suggests, for America to assist all people who hope to enjoy rights and liberties that Americans and Europeans take for granted...
...The answer is yes...
...But contrary to what purveyors of conventional wisdom assert, this will not discourage those Iranians who seek freedom...
...Indeed he seems to understand the requirements of the situation better than some in his own administration...
...To the contrary, the president emphasized that "an unelected few repress the Iranian people's hope for freedom...
...Robert Kagan and William Kristol...
...Then there are our European friends, whose fear of the "hyperpower" seems to be matched only by their disregard for the dangers Americans—and Europeans—still face...
...In doing so, Bush violated every rule in the establishment's book...
...The Iranian people know that their rulers are evil and will be encouraged, just as Soviet dissidents were, by hearing an American president tell the truth...
...In the days following President Bush's historic "Axis of Evil" speech, eyeballs were rolling up and down the New York-Washington corridor and in every European capital...
...The president knows what he has to do...
...By including Iran and North Korea with Iraq in the "Axis," President Bush took on the myth, so cherished in Europe and in some American quarters, that we should collaborate with today's Iranian regime, and never mind its weapons of mass destruction and arms shipments to West Bank terrorists...
...As the president said Tuesday night, the danger is growing and "time is not on our side...
...That great fountainhead of the conventional wisdom, the New York Times editorial page, instantly expressed alarm and discomfort that "the application of power and intimidation has returned to the forefront of American foreign policy...
...At the end of one early meeting of Bush's war cabinet, during which Rumsfeld had raised Iraq as a potential target, Powell approached Shelton and rolled his eyes...
...So many hard and important truths in one presidential address...
...What the hell, what are these guys thinking about?' asked Powell...
...France's Le Monde actually asks, "Is the threat as pressing as all that...
...Other establishment conceits went out the window, too...
...He neglected to mention either the United Nations or the Middle East "peace process...
...He seems to have thought more profoundly about the lessons of September 11 than the foreign policy establishment and the political elites of Europe or even of our own country...
...We're confident he will do it...
...Bush deserves enormous credit for grasping not simply the essential tasks in the war we now fight, but also the urgency of accomplishing them...
...And we're certain he'll have the support of freedom-loving people here and around the world...
Vol. 7 • February 2002 • No. 21