Memo To:
The White House
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Terrorizing the IAEA
I hear reports today of public-opinion polls not only showing
President Bush disliked by the great majorities of practically
every European country, but also for the first time the polls
show a narrow majority of Europeans disliking the American people.
The reason of course is the war in Iraq. They could forgive us
for making a mistake in believing once we got on the ground we
would find those weapons of mass destruction and maybe even links
to Al Qaeda and 9-11. But now they watch us destroying Iraqi cities
and towns, adding to the estimated 150,000 military and civilian
Iraqi deaths every day, and rigging “elections” with our handpicked
interim government – all the while asking their political leaders
in Europe to send money and troops to help out good old Uncle
Sam.
And now, to top it all off, they see good old Uncle Sam seemingly
eager to do it all over again in Iran. The same bloodthirsty neo-conservatives
who have packed your administration via the good offices of Vice
President Cheney are now insisting that Tehran has a nuclear-weapons
program. And unless we have “regime change” in Tehran, nothing
else will satisfy them that an Iranian nuke is just around the
corner. That’s why they have to get rid of Mohamed ElBaradei,
the chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Last week the neo-crazies that populate your administration
had UN General Secretary Kofi Annan in their gunsights, having
long ago decided he keeps getting in the way of their plans for
a New American Imperium. What a relief it was, White House, to
see you allow President Bush to announce his support for Kofi
and his own investigation of charges of corruption in the U.N.’s
“Oil-for-Food” program instead of joining the G.O.P. hardliners
who are demanding his resignation. If Paul Volcker, arguably the
most respected senior political figure in the U.S., doesn’t have
the credibility to conduct the investigation on behalf of the
United Nations, we are really living in a madhouse.
Mohamed ElBaradei, which the White House is openly campaigning
against on the spurious grounds that he should only have two terms,
is this week’s neo-con victim. And if there is any political figure
in the world these days who has greater respect in the international
community than ElBaradei, I can’t imagine who it would be. Hans
Blix, his counterpart in the UNMOVIC chem./bio. inspection team,
hardly distinguished himself during the UN Security Council hearings
in advance of the war. While Blix took the slightest openings
to question Baghdad’s compliance with UNSCR #1441, ElBaradei was
absolutely firm in his conclusions that Iraq had no nukes, no
nuke programs and no means of reconstituting them. It was ElBaradei’s
IAEA that took only 24 hours to announce that the Niger “yellowcake”
document proving Saddam was buying uranium on the sly – a document
that U.S. and British intelligence swallowed as genuine – had
been forged.
Dear White House: Don’t you see that you are permitting the
President to look ridiculous in the eyes of the world, by attacking
the one man who we now can certify has been absolutely honest
and accurate throughout these last troubled years? It is incomprehensible
to a great many Americans, let alone Europeans, how Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld has been asked to stay on for a second term when
practically every last thing he did in the first term was tantamount
to misfeasance, if not malfeasance. He should have been booted
just over the Abu Ghraib scandal, not to mention the much graver
errors he made in planning for the aftermath of the war he helped
promote with his neo-con pals. And I say this as an old friend
and admirer of Rummy, who I tried to promote as Reagan’s running
mate in 1980 (the job the President’s father got instead).
So here you have Mohamed ElBaradei, who has been 100% correct
in all his judgments, an international public servant who deserves
the highest prizes for his competency, his honesty, and his diplomatic
skills that are even now working to avoid further American blunders
in Iran and North Korea. Yet, over the weekend, we discover through
the Washington Post that you had authorized the wiretapping
of ElBaradei’s phone calls in his discussions with Tehran, hoping
to find some dirt on him. And today, we read in the Australian
press that your folks at State have been browbeating the Howard
government asking it to browbeat Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
to campaign for ElBaradei’s job. The Aussie press reports Downer
has run for the woods hoping to hide out from the neo-crazies
until they get the message he does not want to topple the most
respected Muslim public servant in the world and climb onto Uncle
Sam's lap with Tony-you-know-who.
My recommendation, White House, is that you take this OPPORTUNITY
to invite ElBaradei to 1600 Pennsylvania for a fireside chat with
the President, have the photographers in for a picture of the
two men shaking hands, with the President smiling as big as he
can, and have it be known that your boss has decided to get fully
behind a third term for his friend Mohamed. What a nice holiday
gift it would be to the world!! I guarantee, people everywhere
would see the picture and their political leaders would explain
to them that George W. Bush seems to have turned over a new leaf
for the New Year, and maybe Americans aren’t so bad after all.