Bush Must Negotiate to Make America Safer, Say Former Generals
By Aaron Glantz
08/18/06 "OneWorld" -- -- Twenty-one former generals and high
ranking national security officials have called on United States
President George W. Bush to reverse course and embrace a new area of
negotiation with Iran, Iraq, and North Korea. In
a letter released Thursday, the group told reporters Bush's 'hard line' policies have
undermined national security and made America less safe.
Of particular concern for the generals was increased saber rattling
between Washington and Tehran over the development of an Iranian
nuclear program.
"We call on the administration to engage immediately in direct talks
with the government of Iran without preconditions to help resolve
the current crisis in the Middle East and to settle differences over
an Iranian nuclear program," their letter read.
"An attack on Iran would have disastrous consequences for security
in the region and U.S. forces in Iraq," they argued. "It would
inflame hatred and violence in the Middle East and among Muslims
everywhere."
In a telephone news conference Thursday morning, the former security
officials took particular aim at the Bush Administration's policy of
refusing to negotiate with terrorists or with states that support
them.
"That seems strange since Ronald Reagan was willing to negotiate
with the Soviets even though they were the 'Evil Empire," said
retired Lt. General Robert Guard, who served as special assistant to
Defense Secretary Robert McNamara during the Vietnam War and now
works at the non-profit Center for Arms Control and
Non-Proliferation. "One wonders why George Bush can't negotiate with
the Axis of Evil."
The generals further argued that the Bush Administration's invasion
of Iraq is at least partially responsible for Iran's drive to
develop a nuclear program.
"When you announce an axis of evil of three countries and invade one
and then say that Iran should take that as a lesson, it does seem
that it may give them an incentive to do precisely what they don't
want them to do," Guard said, "develop a nuclear weapon."
Former director of Policy Planning for the State Department, Morton
Halperin, said the same goes for North Korea. The more belligerent
the Bush Administration behaves, he said, the faster North Korea
will work to develop nuclear weapons.
"The North Koreans want to talk to us directly," said Halperin, who
now works for the Washington, DC-based Center for American Progress.
"Their concern is about getting security assurances from us and
about getting diplomatic recognition. We should not be afraid to
talk to our opponents."
At the White House, Bush's spokesperson Tony Snow dismissed the
letter.
"In a political year people are going to make political statements,
including retired generals, and they're perfectly welcome to," Snow
told reporters at his daily briefing. "It's an important addition to
the public debate. But we're also--the president is a guy who has
got real responsibility here. Now, I've got to tell you, just given
to what I said...in response to the sort of ongoing cost of
promoting freedom around the globe, do you not think a president
will do everything in his power to succeed? And the answer is, yes.
He's not sitting around saying, boy, I'm stubborn, I'm going to
stick with it.
"That's not the way the president is," Snow said, insisting the Bush
administration is planning policy changes while declining to offer
specifics.
But the generals who signed the letter say Bush has been stubborn,
and a poor student of history.
General Joseph Hoar, the Commander in Chief of U.S. Military Central
Command under presidents Bill Clinton and George H. W. Bush, said
the George W. Bush administration would be advised to remember the
French occupation of Algeria, which lasted 134 years.
Nationalist rebels launched an insurgency against the French in
1954. After eight years of insurgent bombings and counter-terrorism
operations, France was finally forced to quit Algeria in 1962.
Hoar says like the Battle of Algiers the current war on terror is a
war of ideas.
"Until we get away from the idea that we can solve these problems
through the use of military force and begin to change the political
problems causing discontent by providing security and services,
we're not going to win this war," he said.
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