Bush's
disastrous 'democratic fundamentalism'
By Patrick J. Buchanan
08/08/06 "WND" -- --
Things are as they are, and their consequences
will be what they will be. Why, then, should we seek to be
deceived?"
Columnist Stewart Alsop, dead now these 30 years, once closed a
column with this quote from the philosopher Bishop Berkeley. His
column, I believe, was about Vietnam.
As we approach the fifth anniversary of 9-11, we, too, can see the
shape of things to come.
In the ideology of "democratic fundamentalism" to which George W.
Bush converted after 9-11, we are simply in a rough patch on the
glory road to a democratic Middle East and "the end of tyranny on
this earth."
In reality, our situation has never been more grim.
The successful experiment that featured the "freest, fairest
elections ever held" in Palestine is dead. Over 125 Palestinians
have been killed in Gaza. The Gaza Strip is a shambles. The terror
wing of Hamas will have no trouble recruiting in the rubble.
The same is true of Lebanon. The "Cedar Revolution" was a Bush
success, a beacon of hope. That Hezbollah won a dozen seats only
seemed to prove that the elections had indeed been free, fair and
open to all.
Now Lebanon is in ruin. The 900 dead, thousands wounded, the million
refugees, the smashed infrastructure and the scores of thousands of
Westerners who have fled means years before Lebanon recovers, if
ever she does. Arab hatred of Israel and America is pandemic.
Hezbollah ignited the hostilities. But it was Israel that escalated
to rain destruction on a people and nation that had not countenanced
or condoned Hezbollah's provocation, but condemned it.
Think back. Had Reagan done to Lebanon, when half a dozen Americans
were seized as hostages, what Israel has done, when two soldiers
were taken hostage, Democrats would have denounced Reagan as a war
criminal. Conservatives would have begged him to ease up.
Yet, almost to a man and woman, our politicians are falling all over
one another to express their 100 percent support of what Israel has
done to Lebanon. Even Israelis must feel a measure of contempt for
this kind of groveling.
Indeed, in Israel, dissent against the blitzkrieg is rising, and the
Olmert regime is being challenged and even condemned by courageous
Israelis for letting the air force have a free hand to smash
Lebanon.
Moving on to Iraq, where the war has lasted as long as our war on
Nazi Germany, Gen. John Abizaid is warning that a descent into civil
war is now possible, and Bush concedes that, three years and three
months after "Mission Accomplished," the situation in Baghdad is
"terrible."
Questions now on the table are: Will America let go? Will Iraq break
apart? Americans are not all that far away from a strategic
disaster.
Whatever happens to Joe Lieberman in Connecticut, the new center of
gravity of the Democratic Party is anti-war. Democratic hawks are a
dying species. Al Gore now emerges, given his authentic anti-war
credentials and emergence as a world leader of the global-warming
movement, as the left's best hope for the nomination.
Kerry and Edwards, the 2004 ticket, know which way the wind is
blowing. Both have declared that had they known in 2002 what they
know today, they would not have voted for the war. Hillary senses
the ground shifting beneath her feet. Last week, she scourged
Rumsfeld, called for his resignation and denounced Pentagon
mismanagement of the war.
Two years and three months before November 2008, the Democratic
Party has pulled out of the Bush coalition; two-thirds of the nation
considers Iraq a mistake; and a majority wants the troops home.
Can Bush sustain support for the war as the news from Iraq gets
worse and worse? For, if this war is lost on the home front, the war
will be lost in Mesopotamia.
In Afghanistan, the Taliban are fighting in larger units and,
colluding with drug lords, killing more Afghans and allied troops
than they have in five years. Hamid Karzai reigns in Kabul but does
not rule. U.S.-NATO forces are not losing battles, but they are
insufficient in number to win the war.
Iran, fearful of Bush in 2003, is now rejecting U.S.-EU bribes and
rejecting any suspension of its uranium enrichment program. Bring it
on, Ahmadinejad seems to be saying to Bush. As for Pakistan, the
Islamists there remain but a bullet away from custody of an atomic
bomb.
While all these are trends, none seems to be going our way.
The Israeli-American ace of trumps, raw military power, is still
able to defeat armies and destroy states, but it has proven less
effective in eradicating guerrillas, and counterproductive in
changing Islamic hearts and minds.
If neither U.S. party is willing to show any independence of Israel,
if America will not address the root causes of Arab animosity, and
if we will not even negotiate with our enemies, we should probably
pack up and get out of the Middle East. Before we are thrown out.
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