George Bush
Will Soon Be
Free To Do
Just What He
Wants
The raid on
Syria is a
dark
portent. The
current
president
has three
long,
unaccountable
months to
cement his
legacy
By Jonathan
Freedland
October 31,
2008 "The
Guardian" --
- We are about
to enter the
twilight
zone, that
strange
black hole
in political
time and
space that
appears no
more than
once every
four years.
It is known
as the
period of
transition,
and it
starts a
week from
today, the
time when
the United
States has
not one
president
but two. One
will be the
president-elect,
the other
George Bush,
in power for
12 more
weeks in
which he can
do pretty
much
whatever he
likes. Not
only will he
never again
have to face
voters, he
won't even
have to
worry about
damaging the
prospects of
his own
party and
its standard
bearer (as
if he has
not damaged
those enough
already).
From
November 5
to January
20, he will
exercise the
freest, most
unaccountable
form of
power the
democratic
world has to
offer.
How Bush
might use it
is a
question
that gained
new force at
the weekend,
when US
forces
crossed the
Iraqi border
into Syria
to kill Abu
Ghadiya, a
man they
said had
been
funnelling
"foreign
fighters"
allied to
al-Qaida
into Iraq.
That
American
move has
touched off
a round of
intense
head-scratching
around the
world, as
foreign
ministers
and analysts
ask each
other the
time-honoured
diplomatic
query: what
did they
mean by
that? To
which they
add the
post-Nov 4
question:
and what
does it tell
us about how
Bush plans
to use his
final days
in the White
House?
You can
choose from
two
versions.
Call the
first the
"no big
deal"
theory. It
holds that
the Sunday
raid was no
more than
standard
operational
procedure in
the war on
terror.
Sure, it
meant
violating
the
sovereignty
of an
independent
nation
state, but
that's not
so new:
there was a
similar
incursion
into
Pakistan in
September.
Indeed,
there may be
more
relevant
precedents.
A former
official in
the Bush
administration
confirmed to
me yesterday
that the US
has lunged
into Syrian
territory
several
times
before: it's
just that
Damascus
chose to
keep quiet.
In which
case, the
interesting
question is
why the
Syrians went
public this
time.
In this "no
big deal"
version, Abu
Ghadiya was
simply too
irresistible
a high-value
target to
let slip
away. "They
saw
something
they wanted
to hit and
they hit
it," says
one European
diplomat
resignedly.
The most
extreme
version of
this
shoulder-shrugging
account
holds that
the decision
may not even
have been
taken at the
political
level, but
in the
field, by
General
David
Petraeus.
Not so
implausible,
since Bush
in effect
ceded
command of
the Iraq war
to Petraeus
a long while
ago.
Nonsense,
says the
other school
of thought.
It is a
massive deal
to strike at
a sovereign
state in
this way: in
an earlier
era, before
2001, we
would have
called it an
act of war.
Pakistan is
no
precedent,
because in
that case
there was a
degree of
cooperation.
Not now.
This was a
deliberate
act,
calculated
to send a
series of
messages.
First, to
the Syrians,
reminding
them who's
boss in the
region and
strong-arming
them to do
more to
crack down
on al-Qaida.
Second, to
the
Europeans
who have
been moving
towards a
rapprochement
with
Damascus.
Nicolas
Sarkozy may
have invited
President
Assad to
Paris and
David
Miliband may
have been
hosting the
Syrian
foreign
minister,
Walid al-Muallem,
in London
this very
Monday, 24
hours after
the raid -
but no
matter. Bush
gets to
remind both
these uppity
Europeans
who's in
charge.
Third, the
president
could have
been sending
a message to
his own
administration.
Perhaps this
was a memo
to his
secretary of
state,
Condoleezza
Rice, who
had dared
meet Muallem
at the UN
just last
month in a
meeting that
apparently
she
requested.
If so, it
would fit
with the
pattern of
wildly mixed
signals that
has emanated
from the
administration
in recent
months. Two
days before
Rice sat
down with
Muallem, for
instance,
Bush had
used his UN
address to
denounce
Syria as a
state
sponsor of
terror.
Might
Sunday's
raid have
been the
president's
attempt to
reassert
himself
against a
senior staff
all but
denuded of
its hawks?
Rumsfeld,
Bolton and
Wolfowitz
are long
gone; the
more
emollient
Robert Gates
is at
defence,
widely
tipped to
continue
under a
President
Obama. In
these last
days, Dick
Cheney has
only himself
for company.
However we
are meant to
read it, the
attack on
Syria looks
a lot like a
parting shot
from Bush,
an
end-of-the-movie
reminder of
what this
long and
bloody saga
has been
about. A
small
operation,
causing
eight
deaths, it
nevertheless
captures
much of the
Bush ethos
that has
ruled the
globe these
past eight
years. It
was
unilateral;
it trampled
on state
sovereignty;
and it
relied on
force as a
first, not
last,
resort. As a
souvenir of
the Bush
era, it
would be
hard to top.
But it may
not be the
final act.
For we have
not yet
entered the
twilight
zone proper.
That will
come only
when polls
close next
Tuesday.
When the
transition
begins, all
kinds of
surprises
are
possible.
Spool back
20 years, to
the dying
days of the
Reagan
administration.
In January
1989, the
president
officially
recognised
the PLO as
the
representatives
of the
Palestinian
people. It
was a
farewell
gift to
Reagan's
successor,
George HW
Bush: the
old man took
the flak so
that the new
president
would not
have to.
In December
1992, Bush
himself
proved
rather less
helpful to
his
replacement,
saddling
Bill Clinton
with the
deployment
of US forces
in Somalia,
an episode
whose
humiliating
conclusion
badly
hobbled
Clinton
thereafter.
Eight years
ago, it was
Clinton's
turn. He
sweated
until his
final hours
in office
trying to
close a deal
between
Israel and
the
Palestinians,
who seemed
then to be
just inches
apart. The
legacy was
the Clinton
parameters,
still
regarded as
marking the
basic
contours of
any future
agreement
for
Israel-Palestine.
So what will
emerge from
the twilight
of George W
Bush? Most
diplomats
are bracing
themselves.
"They're not
going to
sleep," says
one senior
British
official.
The
optimists
hope for a
repeat of
Reagan and
Clinton,
something
that helps
Middle East
peace. It's
true that
Rice and
Bush have
been eager
for a
breakthrough,
if only to
have a
presidential
legacy
untainted by
Iraq.
Perhaps
Israel and
the
Palestinians
might
initial a
provisional
document,
proof that
their
labours
since Bush's
Annapolis
summit of
2007 have
not been
entirely
fruitless.
But the bad
timing that
has cursed
the Middle
East so
often has
struck once
again.
Israel is
entering an
interregnum
of its own,
following
Tzipi
Livni's
failure to
form a
coalition.
It's hard to
believe an
interim,
caretaker
administration
could forge
a peace
deal.
That leaves
other
options.
Bush could
ape Reagan
and decide
to speak to
Hamas. More
likely would
be a shift
in policy
that helps
future
peacemaking
efforts: he
might, for
instance,
declare that
any changes
to the 1967
borders must
be equal,
with
Palestinians
compensated
inch for
inch for any
West Bank
land
conceded to
Israel. Or
he could
look further
afield in
the region,
contradicting
himself and
Sunday's
raid, by
reaching out
to Syria.
Or, as some
hawks fear,
he could
step up the
tentative
dialogue
with Iran. A
symbolic
gesture
would be to
open a US
visa section
in Tehran.
Of course,
Bush may be
thinking of
a parting
gift more in
keeping with
the record
of the last
eight years.
He and
Cheney might
decide, what
the hell, we
have one
last chance
to whack
Iran - and
let the new
guy clear up
the mess.
Not likely,
but
possible.
For in the
twilight
zone,
anything can
happen.
freedland@guardian.co.uk