A Vote for Senator Kerry
by Jude
Wanniski
by Jude Wanniski
Memo
To: Website Fans, Browsers, Clients
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Making Up My Mind
There
are a lot of little reasons why I should be voting for the re-election
of President Bush, for whom I gladly cast my vote in 2000. The one
big reason why I will vote for Senator Kerry next Tuesday is that
he is an internationalist, as am I, and Mr. Bush has become an imperialist
one whose decisions as Commander-in-chief have made the world
a more dangerous place. Until this week, while I had privately decided
to vote for Kerry, I had not planned to share that news with you
until after Election Day. But I have been getting lots of mail from
website fans urging me to vote for Kerry, or to help them decide
between Kerry and Nader. Or from my Wall Street clients urging me
to vote for Bush for all the little reasons economic, social
or political of the kind that led me to the Republican Party
in 1968 after my early adult years as a Democrat.
A
week ago, my old friend Pat Buchanan endorsed the Presidents
re-election in his American Conservative magazine, entitled
Coming Home. I told him his column was well-reasoned
and beautifully written, but I could not agree with his argument
that conservatives should not vote against Mr. Bush in order to
punish him for Iraq because they would only be punishing America.
The fact is, while neither Pat nor I consider ourselves imperialists,
I actually believe in the international institutions that were designed
in the last year of World War II, with the United Nations at the
core, and he does not seem to trust them at all.
As
an America First nationalist, Pat is an Old Guard Republican
who vehemently opposed the war in Iraq because he never believed
Baghdad was an imminent threat to our homeland. My opposition was
based on the conviction that Saddam Hussein had been rendered powerless
as a threat to the region, that he had been disarmed and could be
kept that way by the United Nations inspections regime and that
the goal of Team Bush had from the start been an imperialist one.
Yes, the United States is at the pinnacle of world power and has
great responsibilities to be the manager of world affairs. Ive
never believed in the neo-con Project for a New American Centurys
concept of directing that power at preventing another country from
replacing the U.S. at the top of the heap. The very idea is a dark
one, I think, even sinister, far more insular than Pat Buchanans
nationalism. It conveys to the world that we are going to do what
we wish and need not even explain our motives because we have
the power to do so.
If
there is anything Ive learned about Senator Kerry in this
campaign, it is that he is an internationalist who believes in hearing
out and taking seriously the opinions of the other countries of
the world. When he says that if he had been President, we would
not have gone to war with Iraq, there is not the slightest doubt
in my mind that he is telling the truth. And it would not have been
because the U.N. Security Council would not have given him a
permission slip, but because the rest of the world could plainly
see that the diplomacy of the U.N. was working, that UNMOVIC and
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had concluded there
were no existing weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and no WMD
programs in operation. If Saddam Hussein had shown any resistance,
Mr. Bush would have gotten the UNSC resolution he wanted and Senator
Kerry would not now be able to make the case that the war was a
great mistake.
At
the outset, I said I decided this week that Mr. Bush had made the
world a more dangerous place with his unilateral decisions, I had
to add in the news that came from the IAEA about the disappearance
of 380 tons of weapons from a cache 30 miles from Baghdad. Senator
Kerry has sharply criticized President Bush for not securing this
arms depot from looters. Vice President Cheney responded by pointing
out that since the war ended, 400,000 tons of weapons have been
destroyed. Cheney misses the point, and in a way so has Mr. Kerry,
by saying the missing explosives no doubt have been used to kill
American troops with roadside bombs. The reason the IAEA got involved
in the 380 tons and not the other 400,000 is that the small cache
contained explosives capable of setting off nuclear weapons. It
is a far more serious problem than Kerry realizes.
When
President Bush 18 months ago indicated he no longer trusted the
IAEA inspection regime and would have our forces disarm Saddam,
the IAEA inspectors left Iraq and have not returned since. As soon
as the war formally ended last year, the IAEA asked U.S. permission
to return to secure those sites that contained dual-use materials
that could be used for WMD purposes. The Al Qaqaa site near Baghdad
was one of them, containing HMX and RDX explosives of the type a
terrorist would have to have in order to set off a nuke in an attack.
As Gordon Prather explained to me when he learned of the missing
explosives: If a terrorist group were to get their hands on 100
pounds of highly enriched uranium, it would be relatively easy for
them to make a nuke of Hiroshima power. They could, say, load it
into a truck and cart it into Washington on Inauguration Day. But
without HMX or RDX, they could not detonate the nuke, and it would
be impossible for terrorists to make the explosives suitable for
the triggering device on their own. The process is more complex
than making the nuke.
What
Prather fears is that Iraqi scientists had already cast some of
the HMX into the lenses needed in such a device, lenses the IAEA
had under its control and seal, and that these are now loose in
the region. Can you imagine, the IAEA had nuclear materials
in Iraq under seal dating back to the 1970s and none of the seals
were broken even during the Gulf War. It was our responsibility
to secure those sites as soon as we went in and instead looters
have carted them off. Amazing.
By
this time, with one revelation after another of the mismanagement
of foreign policy and national security under President Bush, Id
hoped he would find a way to signal the electorate that things would
be different in a second term; that would require a change in personnel
at the top. It would have meant Dick Cheneys replacement with
a GOP internationalist. It would also have meant a clean sweep of
the neo-cons who cooked up the war and who misled a President
who did not have the experience to be able to figure out he had
been manipulated into realizing their imperial fantasies. Sadly,
there is no indication a second term would be any different than
a first, as all the speculation we read on personnel still has Cheney
in the drivers seat with Condi Rice, Paul Wolfowitz and Donald
Rumsfeld readily at hand.
Because
Mr. Bush has told us repeatedly about how he is strengthened by
his faith in God, with that faith sustaining him through his tough
decisions, it goes without saying that it he is re-elected he will
be filled with the spirit of vindication. There not only would be
no changes in the teams view of how the world must be dealt
with. There would also be less restraint in George W. Bush's willingness
to shape the world to his divinely inspired vision.
Ill
still vote Republican for the rest of the ballot on Tuesday, where
I find the smaller issues more to my taste in the G.O.P. But I will
cast my first vote for the Democrat in a presidential contest since
I pulled the lever for Lyndon Johnson in 1964. And I will do so
with enthusiasm for the Senator's views on how to manage the world,
having come to appreciate the way his mind works. It changes with
new and better information. If he does win, he will have a Republican
House and probably a Republican Senate to work with, finding acceptable
common ground on important domestic issues. But most of all, I think
he will little by little make the world a less dangerous place than
it has become these last four years.
October
28, 2004
Jude
Wanniski [send him mail]
runs the financial/political advisory service Wanniski.com.
(If you subscribe,
and check LewRockwell.com in the referring website pull-down,
LRC gets 10%.)
Copyright
© 2004 Jude Wanniski
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