- NEW YORK - "The world
now thinks the U.S. has lost its mind." This response to President
George Bush's bombastic state of the union address did not come from
"axis
of evil" Iraq, Iran, or North Korea, but from former U.S. secretary
of State Madeleine Albright. She is dead right.
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- America's allies and friends were initially reluctant
to openly criticize Bush's philippic, but in recent days the president's
aggressive, triumphalist policies have come under fierce attack around
the world, and particularly so in Europe.
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- France's normally cautious foreign minister, Hubert
Vedrine,
called Bush's views on terrorism "simplistic." He warned about
Bush's policy that "reduces all problems in the world to the struggle
against terrorism," predicting Europe would go its own way if the
U.S. maintained its policy of unilateralism.
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- More sharp criticism came from Germany, Italy, Spain,
the EU, Asia and America's Mideast allies. Even Britain, America's most
faithful satrap, warned against attacking Iraq or Iran. South Korea's
government
angrily blasted Washington for derailing efforts to promote better
relations
with North Korea.
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- European leaders also took aim at American-Israeli
efforts
to eclipse Yasser Arafat and crush Palestinian resistance.
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- "European countries do not agree with the White
House Middle East policy and think it is a mistake to support Ariel
Sharon's
purely repressive policies," said Vedrine, speaking for the entire
European Union.
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- Bush administration spokesmen reject all foreign
criticism.
Secretary of State Colin Powell increased war fever by blasting Iran for
"meddling" in Afghanistan. This is rich, coming from the U.S.,
which just invaded Afghanistan, overthrew its government, installed a
client
regime in Kabul, and is setting up permanent military bases there.
Threatening
war against Iran for seeking to advance its interests in neighbouring
Afghanistan
shows just how irrational and imperially arrogant the Bush administration
is becoming. India and Russia are also deeply involved in Afghanistan;
in fact, Russia has virtually taken over the north. Yet there was not a
peep from Washington about these interlopers.
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- ISRAELI ARGUMENTS
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- As part of the growing merging of policy between
Washington
and Jerusalem, the Bush administration has adopted two longstanding Israeli
arguments to justify aggressive actions. First: we have suffered
enormously.
This gives us the absolute right to attack anyone we deem a threat,
including
assassinating potentially dangerous individuals.
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- Second: we are faced by a mortal threat from terrorists.
To hell with the world, we'll do precisely as we see fit. The UN, the EU,
the Geneva Convention, international law - all of them be damned.
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- Fifty years of painful efforts to build a framework of
international law are being swept away by the Bush crusaders, who seem
to have convinced themselves they are re-fighting World War II rather than
dealing with a dangerous criminal conspiracy made up of a few thousand
individuals.
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- Listening to the Bush people preach about the need to
liberate Iranians and Iraqis from oppression is Olympic-class hypocrisy.
If Bush really wanted to promote justice and human rights abroad, he should
begin with those nations that are American protectorates: Morocco, a
medieval
police state with a frightful record of poverty, torture, and abuse;
Tunisia
and Egypt, both military dictatorships with odious human rights records;
Turkey, another military state disguised as a democracy, where torture
and murder of political opponents are the norm; Arabia's oil monarchies,
which are propped up by U.S. troops. And last, but certainly not least,
Palestine, where an entire people are being crushed by a brutal army using
U.S.-made tanks, and U.S.-made helicopter gunships, financed by U.S.
taxpayers'
dollars, and sheltered from worldwide condemnation by America's oft-used
UN veto.
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- While most Americans continue to cheer Bush's bellicose,
adolescent rhetoric and crusading zeal, quiet opposition is developing,
particularly among the thinking classes. Given the current climate of war
fever, hysteria, fear and anti-Muslim paranoia being whipped up by the
White House and parts of the media, few Americans are ready to criticize
government actions.
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- Liberals, moderate Democrats, and their powerful media,
who would normally be flaying the Republican Dr. Strangeloves now directing
U.S. foreign policy, are absolutely silent. Many liberals are ardent
supporters
of Israel. The Bush White House is perceived to be smashing Israel's
enemies,
so liberals are mum.
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- This loud silence and war fever have unbalanced the U.S.
political system, allowing a coterie of ideological super-hawks to
monopolize
policy and drive the U.S. toward highly irrational behaviour. Congress
and the media have become mere cheerleaders for the so-called war. Critical
analysis is urgently needed: remember the disastrous consequences caused
by lack of public challenge to America's entry into the Vietnam war.
America
has suffered mightily and grievously; but pain and suffering are no excuse
for acting foolishly, dangerously, or dictatorially.
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- Wiser heads abroad are cautioning their American friends.
Europe and Japan do not intend to become spear carriers in Bush's
anti-Muslim
crusade. Canada had better start thinking about this, as well.
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- To many foreign governments, the real danger is not
Bush's
preposterous "axis of evil," nor "rogue states" like
Iran, Iraq, or North Korea. They are far more worried about a rogue America
running amok and igniting conflicts around the world.
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- http://www.canoe.ca
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