PRESIDENT BUSH has
been told to muzzle Donald Rumsfeld, his provocative
Defence Secretary, if he wants to ease European
misgivings about war with Iraq.
José María Aznar, the Spanish Prime Minister, spoke
for many European diplomats and officials, including the
British, when he delivered the message while staying at
Mr Bush’s Texas ranch last weekend.
“I did tell the President that we need a lot of
Powell and not much of Rumsfeld,” said Señor Aznar,
referring to Colin Powell, the US Secretary of State.
“Ministers of Defence should talk less, shouldn’t
they? The more Powell speaks and the less Rumsfeld
speaks, that wouldn’t be a bad thing altogether.”
Señor Aznar is the first leader to voice publicly
what many Europeans supportive of confronting Baghdad
feel strongly in private: that Mr Rumsfeld has made
their diplomatic work much harder.
The Spanish leader is thought to have been
particularly perturbed by Mr Rumsfeld’s recent
comparison of Germany’s “do nothing” approach to
Saddam Hussein with that of Libya and Cuba, two
countries on the US State Department’s list of
sponsors of state terrorism.
European officials blame Mr Rumsfeld’s acerbic
goading and confrontational style for deepening splits
between Washington, Paris and Berlin that could have
been resolved without either side losing face.
At the critical diplomatic juncture over Iraq in
recent weeks, Mr Rumsfeld angered France and Germany by
dismissing them as “old Europe”.
“He’s deepened suspicions overseas and made it
much harder to get people on side,” one diplomat said.
Mr Bush, intensely loyal to everyone on his team, has
given no public indication that he intends to rein in Mr
Rumsfeld. The veteran politician, 70, who is the
youngest and oldest man to serve as US Defence
Secretary, is very much his “own man”, and won cult
status for his daily televised briefings during the
Afghanistan war.
The White House is clearly concerned at the divisions
that its pursuit of Saddam Hussein has exposed between
the US and some of its oldest allies in Europe. When Mr
Bush and Señor Aznar met last weekend, Mr Bush asked
for ideas about how the US could heal the strained
relations.
Mr Blair was due to arrive in Madrid last night for a
working dinner with Señor Aznar before a joint press
conference this morning.
US diplomat quits
A US diplomat who has served abroad for more than 20
years has quit in protest at President Bush’s
“fervent pursuit of war with Iraq”. John Brady
Kiesling, 45, political officer in Athens, faxed his
resignation to Colin Powell, the Secretary of State,
saying that the US policy on Iraq “is driving us to
squander the international legitimacy that has been
America’s most potent weapon of both offence and
defense since Woodrow Wilson”.
Source: Times Newspapers Ltd.