Pelosi and Syria
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
The White
House's huffing and puffing about Nancy Pelosi's visit to Syria
is just a bunch of hooey. Congress is an independent and coequal
branch of our government. Its members can go anywhere they wish
to go, and that includes the current House speaker, Pelosi.
As for the
Bush administration's stated desire to "isolate" Syria,
that is just another of the president's inside-the-bubble delusions.
He seems to think that saying something makes it so. Syria is not
isolated. It is a normal country with normal relations, commercial
and diplomatic, with most countries in the world. Mr. Bush is not
emperor of the world, and most of the world ignores whatever he
manages to say.
Furthermore,
as many Americans more experienced in foreign policy than the president
have advised, the U.S. should be engaged with Syria. Its location
between Iraq and Lebanon and its relative power make it a player
in the region that cannot be ignored. A basic rule of diplomacy,
which the president seems unable to grasp, is that one talks to
people with whom one disagrees.
So the exchange
of views between the speaker and the president of Syria is a good
thing, even if neither convinced the other of anything. The U.S.,
taking its cue from the Israeli lobby, has branded Hezbollah and
Hamas as terrorist organizations. Since they and other organizations
have offices in Syria, the U.S. considers that "state sponsoring
of terrorism."
There again,
not everyone in the world considers them as terrorist organizations,
even though some members of both organizations have committed acts
of terrorism in the past. So, for that matter, has Israel, which
generally is credited with being the inventor of the car bomb. So,
for that matter, have we, though we call all the thousands of innocent
civilians we kill with our bombs "collateral damage,"
which is one of the more morally obscene euphemisms in this age
of propaganda.
At any rate,
Speaker Pelosi is as committed to the Israeli lobby as the president,
so her visit changed nothing in policy matters. It did, however,
pay dividends in good personal relations. We sometimes forget that
countries are not abstract concepts, but places run by individual
human beings. Personal relationships can make a difference.
Let us not
forget, either, that the speaker of the House is second in line
to succeed the president. That doesn't mean that we should have
multiple foreign policies, but it does mean that it's not a bad
idea for those members of the House and Senate with an interest
in foreign policy to make their own contacts and collect their own
information. After all, "briefings" by this executive
branch have been shown to be unreliable.
Nor is it
true that the Constitution puts foreign policy exclusively in the
hands of the president. It does no such thing. All ambassadors and
all treaties have to be ratified by the Senate. Every penny of funding
for anything overseas, including the military, is the responsibility
of Congress. In fact, the Constitution assigns several functions
involving foreign policy to the legislative branch.
Other than
appointing ambassadors and making treaties, both with the advice
and consent of the Senate, the only reference to foreign-policy
duty assigned to the president by the Constitution is to "receive
ambassadors and other public ministries."
Clearly,
the current president is at odds with the authors of the U.S. Constitution.
A simple reading of that document will assure any doubters that
the man temporarily occupying the White House is not a monarch,
dictator or emperor. And the Constitution is truly the supreme law
of the land.
April
7, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Charley
Reese Archives
|