Bush Doctrine Is Expected to Get Chilly Reception
By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, January 23, 2005; Page A01
When President Bush flew to Canada in his first international trip following his reelection, the White House portrayed it as the beginning of a fence-mending tour to bring allies back into the fold after a tense first term. But after Bush left, the Canadians were more furious than before.
They were stunned when Bush leaned across a table in a private meeting and lectured Prime Minister Paul Martin about opposing the U.S. missile defense system. And they were later taken aback by a speech filled with what they considered the same "old Bush" foreign policy pronouncements that opened the divide with the allies in the first place.
"If he's going to take that speech to Europe," said a top Canadian official who attended the meeting between Bush and Martin, "he's not going to get a good reception."
For all the talk of fresh diplomacy and rebuilding frayed alliances, Bush heads into his second term still demanding that the rest of the world meet him on his terms -- and now he has redefined those terms to an even more provocative degree with an inaugural address articulating a grand vision for spreading democracy and "ending tyranny" in "every nation." With his eye on history, Bush wants to change the world. The rest of the world is not necessarily so eager to be changed.
While administration officials have since tried to tamp down expectations of a radical shift in policy, the inaugural speech reflected a worldview dramatically at odds with that in many parts of Europe and the Middle East, where it has only confirmed the image of Bush as an American unilateralist pursuing his own agenda with messianic fervor.
To the neoconservative thinkers who have long sought a leader in the White House willing to champion American ideals abroad, Bush has the chance to be a transformative figure. The first-term efforts to build democratic institutions in Afghanistan and Iraq, they hope, will expand in the second term, though not necessarily through armed force.
"His importance as a world leader will turn out to be far larger than the sort of tactical issues that are widely debated and for which he is sometimes reviled," said Richard Perle, an influential former adviser to the Pentagon. "Put this in a historic perspective: He's already created profound change. All around the Middle East, they're talking about the issue of democracy. They're talking about his agenda. It's an extraordinary thing."
Yet many Democrats, as well as Republicans from the traditional school of U.S. foreign policy, see Bush heading down a treacherous road that will further unravel a half-century of international relationships. The rupture over Iraq, they fear, may presage a widening divide with the rest of the world over the next four years.
"The proposition is being tested, and the proposition is we can reorganize the world from the base of American power and exceptionalism and that, like it or not, history will comply and other powers will back down," said Leon Fuerth, who was national security adviser to Vice President Al Gore in the Clinton administration. "It seems to me this is a formula for dispersing American power and influence rather than building it."
The inspiration for Bush's thinking lately has been Natan Sharansky, the former Soviet political prisoner turned conservative Israeli politician. Bush read Sharansky's book "The Case for Democracy: The Power of Freedom to Overcome Tyranny and Terror" and invited him to the White House in November to talk about its ideas. Since then, Bush has been recommending the book to nearly everyone he sees, from friends to journalists to foreign leaders, telling CNN last week that "this is a book that . . . summarizes how I feel."
In the book, Sharansky outlines what he calls the "town square test," meaning that a country is not free if its citizens cannot go to a public place and express dissent from the ruling power without fear of reprisal -- a test Secretary of State-designate Condoleezza Rice embraced during Senate testimony last week.
The book takes on conservative "realists" who focus on preserving stability and national interests rather than advancing noble causes such as democracy -- the approach espoused by Rice before Bush's 2000 election in a Foreign Affairs magazine article called "Promoting the National Interest." In that article, she defined U.S. national interests as rebuilding military power, expanding free trade agreements, confronting "rogue regimes," renewing relationships with allies and building ties with "great powers" such as Russia and China.
Rice's thinking has since evolved along with that of her president. The most striking personification of the thinking Sharansky rejects is none other than President George H.W. Bush, whose approach to foreign policy emphasized alliances and order over romantic crusades. At one point during his administration, the elder Bush resisted independence for Ukraine out of fear of destabilizing the Soviet Union, even as his defense secretary, Dick Cheney, advocated quick recognition of a free Kiev.
Like Sharansky, the current president's philosophical statement effectively repudiates the former president. "It's the opposite of his father, not a departure but the opposite," said Kenneth Adelman, a former Reagan administration official and Cheney confidant. The current president wants "to be a transformational leader rather than a transactional leader. I can't imagine how much further it could be from the views of his father. He's just a different kind of leader."
The Bush doctrine will face an early and probably skeptical audience abroad when the president travels to Europe next month for talks with NATO allies and European Union leaders. After Brussels, Bush plans to visit Germany, the center of European opposition to the Iraq war; then he is scheduled to meet in Slovakia with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Putin logically would be Bush's first test of his inaugural pledge to confront "every ruler" about domestic oppression and predicate relations on "the decent treatment of their own people." Under Putin, the Kremlin has taken over or shut down independent television networks, ousted democratic reform parties from Parliament through manipulated elections, imprisoned or driven into exile Russian business magnates who defied him, and eliminated the election of regional governors.
Putin usually bristles at even mild U.S. criticism, and others around the world seem no more eager to listen to a proselytizing president. A survey of nearly 22,000 people in 21 countries by the BBC World Service last week found that 47 percent see U.S. influence in the world today as largely negative and 58 percent believe Bush's reelection will make the world more dangerous.
Some foreign leaders had hoped for a more collaborationist second term, reasoning that other U.S. presidents had matured by the time they were reelected. Rice sent signals of a more diplomatic approach with some of her early appointments and statements at Senate confirmation hearings.
In Europe, "there may be more readiness to deal with [Bush] in a second term than before because many of them have the illusion, the hope, that he will abandon some of his almost contemptuous unilateralism," said Fritz Stern, a German-born historian at Columbia University and former member of the Trilateral Commission.
Richard Holwill, a former Reagan administration diplomat, said Rice would make a difference at State because of her close relationship with Bush. "They're going to greatly improve the administration's foreign policy machinery," he said.
But he added that the administration needs to rethink its approach to fighting terrorists. "Bush presents everything in very black-and-white moralistic terms," Holwill said, "and I truly hope that we get a more sophisticated approach to the war against the Salafists," or Islamic radicals, "because they are gaining ground on the Arab street."
Strobe Talbott, who was deputy secretary of state under President Bill Clinton and now is president of the Brookings Institution, said he was optimistic Bush would do a better job of reaching out to allies in the second term. "Certainly his stock was low in Europe, but the good news is he has nowhere to go but up," Talbott said. "The administration came into office with some mistrust and, let's say, less regard for diplomacy as such because diplomacy is about compromise and they weren't in a very compromising mood." Now, he said, "I think you're likely to have a lot more diplomacy."
Still, Bush has sent mixed signals in that regard. In a pre-inaugural interview with The Washington Post, he acknowledged the discomfort in Europe, the Muslim world and elsewhere. "We need to work on a public diplomacy effort that explains our motives and explains our intentions," he said.
"That line," said Talbott, "particularly stood out as the interview was read on Embassy Row. The Europeans would like to see more than better explanations of American positions. They would like to see actual dialogue. . . . They want some give and take."
The Canada trip offered a case study in the tension between Bush's ideals and allies' expectations. When Bush agreed to go to Ottawa after the November election, the gesture was seen in Canada as a long-overdue olive branch. Like France and Germany, Canada broke from the United States over the Iraq war and felt alienated from Washington. Martin, the new prime minister, was eager to smooth the waters.
To avoid any unpleasantries, Martin sacked a shrill critic of Bush from his governing party, and Bush aides steered the president away from speaking to Parliament, where he might have been heckled. Canadian officials said their U.S. counterparts assured them that Bush would not put Martin on the spot on his refusal to join the U.S. missile defense system.
But Bush did confront Martin and used the sort of language that sets Canadians on edge. "He leaned across the table and said, 'I'm not taking this position, but some future president is going to say, 'Why are we paying to defend Canada?' " said the senior Canadian official who was in the room and noted that he had been assured by Rice and Secretary of State Colin L. Powell personally that Bush would avoid the subject.
"Most of our side was trying to explain the politics, how it was difficult to do," the official said. But Bush "waved his hands and said, 'I don't understand this. Are you saying that if you got up and said this is necessary for the defense of Canada it wouldn't be accepted?' "
The next day Bush gave a speech in Halifax that to the Canadians sounded as tough and uncompromising as ever. "We were all looking at each other and saying this is a speech for somebody else. It certainly wasn't for Canadians."
Correspondent Doug Struck contributed to this report from Toronto.
© 2005 The Washington Post Company
[Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on January 27, 2005]
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First the destruction of the United States as a potent symbol of freedom and democracy in the world. These people believe that a country should be ruled by an elite that enslaves its people with pseudo-religious and nationalistic moral purpose. Hence the reason for the increase of flag-waving morons, symbolism and the gutting of the constitution and the bill of rights.<br />
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Second demolishing the middle east to facilitating the way for Islamic Extremist Government throughout the middle east, ergo the establishment of the Caliphate. This to prepare the way for a final conflict between the jews of Israel and the muslims of the middle east. The religious crazies see this as the day of reckoning and the neocon crazies see this as useful symbolism to rule the world."<br />
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taken from lennart<br />
<a href="http://dailywarnews.blogspot.com/">http://dailywarnews.blogspot.com/</a><br />
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Washington Post is an organ of the PTB, the Illuminati, Leviathon.... because.......<br />
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"in wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies" W.Churchill<br />
Canada should just ignore bush for the next four years and sign nothing with his government. he is a war criminal and so is much of his inner circle. Bush will be seen in history for just what he is.
Americans will have enough of the far right as they always do, then we can get back to getting ahead. Until then, the boy-king next door should be shunned.
Canada, like most of NATO, has not carried its weight in defence matters and still refuses to. If any military force is needed, NATO automatically looks to the United States - like in the Balkans for example.
Missile defence is coming to North America because despite documents and blather about 'Arms Agreements' - the fact is they never work, they're a bromide for public opinion and a stop-gap measure while nations build up the expertise and finances to build weapons.
Missile technology is readily available these days and so is nuclear technology - no responsible President in his right mind is going to leave the US wide open to threats of nuclear attack or actual nuclear attack.
Bush and the US administration has already been roundly criticized for not preventing the 9/11 attacks - as if they reasonably could have prevented them, they're not going to leave the US mainland defenceless to an even greater threat.
Just precious in its stunning lack of insight:
"no president would allow that"
Um, Bush IS allowing that! he IS making other nations strive to get nuclear weapons. he IS pushing a system that does not even work.
Even better:
"NATO hasn't been pulling its weight"
Wow what an insight into American rightwing dogma. Too bad its not based on any fact or even close to reality.
Just WHO is it that NATO is fighting? Just WHO is it that demands NATO countries must spend more? The only NATO member outside of Britain and Italy (for siding with the US) that needs to ramp up military expenditures is the US. Why? To protect themselves from their own actions overseas of course.
But in the la la land of rightwing politics, EVERYONE is expected to spend on the military and put their own people second, all just to protect America from itself.
And the most alarming aspect of rightwing dogma:
"blather about 'Arms Agreements'"
Oh, heck, yeh they are only mutually agreed upon agreements to the betterment of all. Yah, those are suckers agreements for everyone BUT America. Landmines, yep we need ‘em. Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, screw that, we got mini nukes to build. START II, ah, that’s for communists. Geneva conventions, nah, to quaint.
Hey, even the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, that doesn't apply to Bush’s America. The 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child, nope, not that either, that is for wimps. International Criminal Court, no way! We couldn't torture at will then eh?
No Arms agreements makes America safer. It sounds stupid, because it IS stupid.
No thanks to all that crap. While America is spending itself into oblivion, and dittoheads like yourself become useful idiots, the rest of the world is moving on without you.
Harsh words? Yep, you bet, but why should anyone or I cut these fanatics any slack? They want to destroy the world while pretending to be saving it. We don't allow firebugs to run free, and neither should we allow the far right any semblance of peace. They have declared war on the world in the name of ‘freedumb’, so in turn, the reality based world is declaring war on the propaganda and stupidity emanating from the far-right among us.
Fascism will only win when we turn our heads to it and allow it to creep into the daylight. Like a roach, it needs to be squashed at every opportunity.
Basically, any country owes its "sovereignty" to its ability to defend its borders. We sacrificed our sovereignty by outsourcing our defense to the Americans, while gutting our own military so that we could spend the money instead on bureaucrats coercing Canadians to learn French, subsidies to failed Quebec businesses and vote-buying for the Liberals through funding of "multicultural" initiatives in big cities.
We built up our welfare state and social engineering empires at the expense of our ability to defend ourselves against attack. And if we're not willing to do our part to defend the continent, that long border will no longer be "undefended".
What rationale is there for doing it, and what solution will they propose?
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The best argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with the average voter --
Winston Churchill
The useful idiots cannot counter fact and reason. They resort to stupidity in absolute stunning fashion. They hate that Canada is respected, and their beloved Bush Fuhrer's version of America is hated around the world. They still think the rest of the world has a problem. They refuse to look in the mirror and admit, they are backing a losing team. Like the Romans sitting around till the last days, these useful idiots will continue to churn out the absurd in the hopes of smoothing over their own inadequacies as America comes down around them.
Worse still are their denizens here in Canada. They eagerly lap at the alter of propaganda and repeat it like it’s fact. They will never even acknowledge something like being conned over WMD. For if they do that, they then know that their false utopia of dissolution will then see the light of day to be exposed in all its ignorance.
Like this one, trying to claim that Canada is getting some kind of 'free ride'. It is such an old and tired rightwing talking point, that has been disproved a thousand times, yet they keep trotting it out like it’s fact. It only goes to show just how bankrupt their position really is. They will never answer or even offer up just WHO it is we are being protected against, or WHY we even need to be protected from Americas own enemies, that just doesn't matter. Then trying to act smug, tries to claim that all I wrote is merely a Canadian hating America. It is nothing more than yet another clumsy attempt to distract others from the facts like America under Bush reneging on many Agreements and Treaties.
Welcome to the 21st century version of Americas brownshirts. They will do and say anything to protect the march of fascism that is gurgling out of Bush's America. They have declared war on rational thinking, so stand back and be amazed.
Keep em coming rightwingers, it is like taking candy from a baby.
When it comes to Missile Defense, anything good never needs to be 'sold', let alone pushed. Most Canadians know what is good and what is bad, and this lemon isn't selling.
Today, nuclear missile technology is much easier to come by, and in a few years from now when everyone who wants a missile will be able to have one, it will be a bit late to start building a defence against them. There is no lag time between the beginning of hostilities and needing a defence unless you count the 20 minutes it would take a missile to hit North America. 20 minutes is not enough time to develop and deploy a ballistic missile defence system by the way, just in case you were wondering.
VIOLENCE. It has never worked and it never will.
Can we at least pretend to learn from history?
You know what else? Try walking across an
international border. Those map-lines aren't actually
painted on the ground! Stop accepting wars
waged by men of politics.
Do not live in fear.
Please post your CanWest reactionary comment below,
where it belongs.