Condi and the isolationists
By Patrick Buchanan
06/16/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- To buttress crumbling support for his
interventionist policy, President Bush played his ace of trumps,
sending his most popular champion, Condi Rice, to the Southern
Baptist Convention.
If seven standing ovations and 20,000 Christians bursting forth
into a spontaneous signing of "God Bless America" at the close
is any measure, the secretary succeeded splendidly in her
speech.
Yet in carrying forward the faux-Churchillian,
stand-up-to-the-isolationists theme of the State of the Union,
Condi employed a device readily recognizable to any student of
rhetoric.
She presented the good Baptist folks with the false alternative.
America has a choice, she said: to stand by a courageous
president, or to conduct a cowardly retreat from the challenges
of our time:
"Here, ladies and gentlemen, is the choice before our country,
before us as Americans. Will we lead in the world, or will we
withdraw? Will we rise to the challenges of our time, or will we
shrink from them?"
Washington Post reporter Glenn Kessler seems to have been
well-briefed on whom Condi was targeting.
"Rice did not specifically refer to isolationists, but her
inference was clear. ...
"President Bush first raised concerns about isolationism in his
State of the Union Address this year. Since then, the outrage
over the potential sale of U.S. port operations to a Dubai-based
company and the drive to build a wall along the border with
Mexico have added to the worries of administration officials.
They fear that it could result in demands even from the
president's strongest traditional supporters to pull out troops
from Iraq and Afghanistan."
Why, one wonders, do President Bush and Rice not tell us who
these dreaded isolationists are and how they could conceivably
seduce the Southern Baptists into questioning Bush policy?
The truth: If Southern Baptists are peeling off from the Bush
coalition for moral imperialism and democracy crusades, the
reason may not be that they wish to flee the world, but that
they see the Bush-Rice policy as failing. At a great cost in
blood and treasure, we seem to be reaping a rising harvest of
hatred.
The same day the report on Rice's speech appeared in the Post,
the Washington Times reported on a remarkable rise of
anti-American sentiment in the Muslim world. In a wide-ranging
survey of opinion on Iran's nuclear program and Islamic
attitudes toward the United States, a group called Terror Free
Tomorrow, which boasts John McCain among others on its board,
reported that:
Seven in 10 Pakistanis favor Iran's acquiring nuclear weapons.
Two of three Pakistanis have a negative opinion of the United
States, a figure that rises to 71 percent among citizens of NATO
ally Turkey and an astonishing 89 percent in Saudi Arabia.
Two-thirds of all Saudis, Turks and Pakistanis believe those
mocking cartoons of Muhammad printed in the Danish newspaper and
reprinted across Europe reflect Western hostility toward their
faith.
Did isolationists create such animosity toward America among our
closest allies in the Muslim world? How? And who are they?
Answer: No such beasts exist. The people who have produced such
results for America are the decision-makers themselves – Bush,
Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice – and their advisers, the
neoconservatives.
To understand who is truly responsible for a situation where a
U.S. secretary of state has to go before a convention of
religious conservatives to try to hold their support for a
president they put in office, Rice might ask herself some
questions.
Is it the isolationists who cannot end a column or commentary
without howling for new pre-emptive strikes on "Islamofascists"?
Was it isolationists who reveled in those Danish cartoons,
reprinting them and declaring them to be a fine expression of
Western values?
Was it isolationists who sent an army storming into Baghdad in
search of weapons of mass destruction that did not exist,
resulting in tens of thousands of Iraqi army and civilian dead,
three bloody years of "collateral damage" to Iraqi women and
children, and the inevitable horrors of guerrilla war, such as
Abu Ghraib and Haditha?
Is it isolationists who are supporting Israel's strangulation of
aid-dependent Palestinians, the purpose of which was wittily
described by Sharon sidekick Dov Weisglass: "The idea is to put
the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger"?
Presumably, the hungry Palestinian children are to pressure
Hamas to recognize Israel. One wonders. Do the good Christian
folks gathered at Greensboro, N.C., think what we are doing to
these people is a godly thing to do?
In Afghanistan, the Taliban are making a comeback. In Iraq, the
new democratic government Bush celebrated in his surprise visit
is considering amnesty for Sunni insurgents who only killed
Americans.
Why did Condi rip into isolationism at the Baptist convention?
Because it is a less daunting task than defending the fruits of
a foolish interventionism that are now lying right in front of
us.
© 2006 Creators Syndicate Inc.
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments -
Click Here For Comment Policy
Are Comments Offensive? Unsuitable? Email us