Global Schoolmarm
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
President
Bush will hail his trip to Europe as a resounding success. He hails
everything he does as a resounding success regardless of the evidence
to the contrary. All politicians do that.
Lest you be spun by the spin, note that he comes home with only
one tangible result an agreement by NATO to assist in training
Iraqi forces, and a tepid assist it will be. Two of the NATO countries
have agreed to supply one man each. Nearly all of the training will
take place in Europe.
Well, such as it is, it's a good thing, as our own efforts to train
Iraqis don't seem to be going so well.
Nevertheless, Bush cannot resist acting as if God appointed him
schoolmaster of the world. He lectured everybody in sight. You,
Europeans, should not lift the arms embargo against China (they
are anyway), and you should stop being so soft on Iran. You should
forget all my past insults and get on the Iraqi bandwagon.
They won't forget, and they won't get on a bandwagon that is stuck
in the mire.
Hey, you Russians, listen up. You should be more democratic, and
you should stop taking up for Iran. You, Iranians, you stop your
nuclear-power program. You, Syrians, get out of Lebanon.
Mr. Bush has gotten Teddy Roosevelt's dictum exactly upside down.
He shouts loudly and carries a small stick.
Let me put into perspective just how small a stick he carries. The
European Union, in all but military power, is itself a superpower.
It has more people than we do, and it has a larger gross domestic
product. Its currency, the Euro, is very strong, and our currency,
the dollar, is very weak.
Russia remains a military superpower, and its economy is growing
faster than ours. It has recently undertaken an effort to modernize
its nuclear strategic forces and even today has more than enough
to blow us away. Furthermore, it recently signed a strategic defense
agreement with China.
As to that part of the world, China and India, both with more than
a billion people each, have rapidly growing economies (in part thanks
to thousands of American jobs exported to their countries). China,
in particular, has undertaken a military buildup, and, of course,
all three Russia, India and China are nuclear powers.
If Bush ever looked past his immediate political goals, he might
foresee a future tripartite alliance that would mean big trouble
for America.
In short, we are not the world's only remaining superpower, as the
Washington cliché says, and if Bush could see past his ego,
he would recognize that. Our economy is shaky. Federal, corporate
and private debt is in the trillions, and Japan and China could
wreck our economy just by dumping the debt paper they hold on the
market.
One should remember what Osama bin Laden said. He did not say he
would conquer us and convert us all to Islam. He said he would bankrupt
us. If Bush gets us further mired in the Middle East by attacking
Iran and Syria, as he seems likely to do, bin Laden might very well
succeed. War is always a drain on the economy. War always produces
death, destruction, debt and taxes. It hasn't been a profitable
undertaking since the Mexican War, when as war booty we took most
of what is today the American Southwest.
In short, real-world circumstances require careful, skillful and
quiet diplomacy not bombast. I fear, however, that we have
put in place the wrong administration at the wrong time. Science,
economic smarts, diplomatic skills and military experience are woefully
in short supply in the Bush administration, which is filled with
academics, spinners and ideologues.
The rise or fall of empires in the final days always depends on
the right or wrong decisions made by the leadership. As American
peons, there is nothing we can do but pray that God will intervene
and make Bush give up hubris like he once did whiskey.
February
28, 2005
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years, reporting on everything
from sports to politics. From 196971, he worked as a campaign
staffer for gubernatorial, senatorial and congressional races in
several states. He was an editor, assistant to the publisher, and
columnist for the Orlando Sentinel from 1971 to 2001. He
now writes a syndicated column which is carried on LewRockwell.com.
Reese served two years active duty in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner.
Write to Charley Reese at P.O. Box 2446, Orlando, FL 32802.
©
2005 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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