Bush Indicts Saddam

EDITORIAL Bush Indicts Saddam Here's the measure of President Bush's success in assembling support for regime change in Iraq. Following his speech to the United Nations last week, National Public...

...Yep, that's NPR, the voice of hyper-liberalism and the counterculture...
...But what if Saddam accepts the harsh, new terms...
...Daschle has noted that a congressional resolution authorizing Desert Storm in 1991—which he opposed—came after the U.N...
...He simply "has an unwillingness to accept weapons inspectors," a U.S...
...As impressive as Bush was in the weeks after September 11, his performance in the past two weeks has been his finest hour...
...That would move the political dynamic even further in his favor than it is now...
...Bush can easily overcome Democratic foot-dragging by asking publicly for a vote on a resolution...
...As things stand, Bush plans to ask for a war resolution, preferably a bipartisan one, the last week of September...
...The best guess is Saddam will say no...
...The only applause came when the president said the United States will return to UNESCO...
...Opponents of intervention in Iraq would rather put off their no vote until after the November 5 midterm elections...
...All that's happening as the world moves toward his position on Iraq was caused by the president—the U.N...
...Bush, in fact, outlined what he expects of Iraq in his U.N...
...Instead, Bush presented the most compelling argument so far in his administration's campaign to gain support for regime change in Iraq...
...That's unknowable, except that democracy would have a chance to take root, lives would be saved, and weapons of mass destruction in even the most remote underground facilities would be found and destroyed...
...The days of muddling along, of off-and-on negotiations over the return of arms inspectors, of deliberations on lifting sanctions—those days are over...
...What the U.N...
...deliberations, the House and Senate hearings, the proposals like French president Jacques Chirac's that would put enormous pressure on Saddam, the support from a growing number of Democrats, notably Sen...
...Bush has turned the corner in his pursuit of regime change in Iraq...
...A public request by Bush would make that certain...
...Daschle seeks to know what a post-Saddam Iraq would look like...
...And those were supposedly antiestablishment college kids...
...address was the toughest speech ever delivered to the international body by an American president, and it offered few sweeteners...
...It was hardly precedent-setting...
...Bush's U.N...
...A final point in praise of Bush...
...But the House isn't the problem...
...acts...
...House Democratic whip Nancy Pelosi says she requires evidence of an "imminent threat" from Iraq to back an attack...
...military is large enough and powerful enough to track down al Qaeda remnants in Afghanistan and around the world and still fight a war—probably a short war—in Iraq...
...Saddam has weapons of mass destruction and is in contact with terrorists, therefore the threat is constant...
...Another thought the case against Iraq is even stronger than Bush said...
...One student said moving against Saddam was long overdue...
...Tom U.N...
...Still another, an immigrant from Uganda, said Congress "should support the president...
...And the U.S...
...Otherwise, he would have grandly announced the day before the speech that inspectors could come to Iraq that day, September 11...
...Fred Barnes, for the Editors...
...Senate or House of Representatives saying, 'I think I'm going to wait for the United Nations to act before I decide,'" Bush said...
...John Kerry of Massachusetts, of delaying a vote until the U.N...
...By that time, the House may be on the verge of passing one...
...The options now are crystal clear, because Bush has made them so...
...does is less important than what Congress does...
...Answer: The invasion would be part of the war on terrorism...
...Following his speech to the United Nations last week, National Public Radio put together a focus group of college students at Penn State-Harrisburg...
...But this is no time for Bush to relax—and there's no indication he intends to...
...She misses the point...
...Then, he'll quickly lose control of his own government and fall from power, though perhaps not as quickly as he will if the United States invades...
...And Democratic strategists fear the debate over a war resolution would prolong the time in which Iraq, and not the Democratic agenda of domestic issues, would command national attention...
...It will push a resolution—another country, probably Britain, will formally propose it—to impose highly intrusive, coercive arms inspections on Iraq, backed by military force, along with other measures to take oil-for-food funds out of Saddam's hands, bar him from trafficking with terrorists, and force him to stop repressing his own people...
...The unanimous verdict: Bush had indeed made the case for military action to remove Saddam Hussein...
...And last week, a group of Democratic congressmen spent hours at the White House getting briefed by administration officials...
...I can't imagine an elected member of the U.S...
...speech, that a Senate vote before Congress adjourns in October is "likely...
...We can't either...
...Either the U.N...
...The week before Labor Day, Vice President Cheney delivered the first indictment, followed by Bush last week, and this week Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, CIA director George Tenet, and perhaps Secretary of State Colin Powell will testify on Capitol Hill...
...had passed a resolution...
...At the U.N., the administration plans to take a smart gamble...
...He's our commander in chief...
...official says...
...John Edwards of North Carolina, indeed the fact that Iraq dominates the world agenda...
...By acting boldly, by insisting Saddam must go, by declaring the United States is ready to remove him unilaterally, the president has all but guaranteed that Saddam's days are numbered...
...What about Democratic delaying tactics, questions, and complaints...
...And what about the harm an invasion of Iraq would do to the war on terrorism...
...A president can act without U.N...
...But that was merely a coincidence...
...Security Council will enforce rigorous and sweeping restrictions on Iraq likely to lead to Saddam's collapse, or the United States, with enough allies to constitute a serious coalition and with the approval of Congress, will take military action to remove Saddam, destroy his weapons of mass destruction, and install a democratic government...
...Many Democrats are opposed to this...
...But if Congress stands in the way, the president may pay a price (Congress may, as well...
...Approval of a war resolution authorizing military action would give Bush unequivocal political support for ousting Saddam to match the popular support that already exists...
...assent, as President Clinton did in Kosovo in 1999...
...The administration has recruited House Democratic leader Dick Gephardt, who agreed to set up a bipartisan working group on Iraq...
...Bush sneered at the notion, promoted by Daschle and Sen...
...That "would have gutted the president's speech," the official adds...

Vol. 8 • September 2002 • No. 2


 
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