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zimv20
Mar 16, 2004, 12:57 AM
link (http://nytimes.com/2004/03/16/opinion/16KRUG.html)


March 16, 2004
OP-ED COLUMNIST

Weak on Terror
By PAUL KRUGMAN

My most immediate priority," Spain's new leader, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, declared yesterday, "will be to fight terrorism." But he and the voters who gave his party a stunning upset victory last Sunday don't believe the war in Iraq is part of that fight. And the Spanish public was also outraged by what it perceived as the Aznar government's attempt to spin last week's terrorist attack for political purposes.

The Bush administration, which baffled the world when it used an attack by Islamic fundamentalists to justify the overthrow of a brutal but secular regime, and which has been utterly ruthless in its political exploitation of 9/11, must be very, very afraid.

Polls suggest that a reputation for being tough on terror is just about the only remaining political strength George Bush has. Yet this reputation is based on image, not reality. The truth is that Mr. Bush, while eager to invoke 9/11 on behalf of an unrelated war, has shown consistent reluctance to focus on the terrorists who actually attacked America, or their backers in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.

This reluctance dates back to Mr. Bush's first months in office. Why, after all, has his inner circle tried so hard to prevent a serious investigation of what happened on 9/11? There has been much speculation about whether officials ignored specific intelligence warnings, but what we know for sure is that the administration disregarded urgent pleas by departing Clinton officials to focus on the threat from Al Qaeda.

After 9/11, terrorism could no longer be ignored, and the military conducted a successful campaign against Al Qaeda's Taliban hosts. But the failure to commit sufficient U.S. forces allowed Osama bin Laden to escape. After that, the administration appeared to lose interest in Al Qaeda; by the summer of 2002, bin Laden's name had disappeared from Mr. Bush's speeches. It was all Saddam, all the time.

This wasn't just a rhetorical switch; crucial resources were pulled off the hunt for Al Qaeda, which had attacked America, to prepare for the overthrow of Saddam, who hadn't. If you want confirmation that this seriously impeded the fight against terror, just look at reports about the all-out effort to capture Osama that started, finally, just a few days ago. Why didn't this happen last year, or the year before? According to The New York Times, last year many of the needed forces were tied up in Iraq.

It's now clear that by shifting his focus to Iraq, Mr. Bush did Al Qaeda a huge favor. The terrorists and their Taliban allies were given time to regroup; the resurgent Taliban once again control almost a third of Afghanistan, and Al Qaeda has regained the ability to carry out large-scale atrocities.

But Mr. Bush's lapses in the struggle against terrorism extend beyond his decision to give Al Qaeda a breather. His administration has also run interference for Saudi Arabia — the home of most of the 9/11 hijackers, and the main financier of Islamic extremism — and Pakistan, which created the Taliban and has actively engaged in nuclear proliferation.

Some of the administration's actions have been so strange that those who reported them were initially accused of being nutty conspiracy theorists. For example, what are we to make of the post-9/11 Saudi airlift? Just days after the attack, at a time when private air travel was banned, the administration gave special clearance to flights that gathered up Saudi nationals, including a number of members of the bin Laden family, who were in the U.S. at the time. These Saudis were then allowed to leave the country, after at best cursory interviews with the F.B.I.

And the administration is still covering up for Pakistan, whose government recently made the absurd claim that large-scale shipments of nuclear technology and material to rogue states — including North Korea, according to a new C.I.A. report — were the work of one man, who was promptly pardoned by President Pervez Musharraf. Mr. Bush has allowed this farce to go unquestioned.

So when the Bush campaign boasts of the president's record in fighting terrorism and accuses John Kerry of being weak on the issue, when Republican congressmen suggest that a vote for Mr. Kerry is a vote for Osama, remember this: the administration's actual record is one of indulgence toward regimes that are strongly implicated in terrorism, and of focusing on actual terrorist threats only when forced to by events. *



yamabushi
Mar 16, 2004, 01:29 AM
I don't understand why the issues discussed in this article have failed to influence the opinions of many Americans to be more disapproving of the current administration regardless of their personal political ideology or party affiliation.

Thanatoast
Mar 16, 2004, 02:00 AM
I don't understand why the issues discussed in this article have failed to influence the opinions of many Americans to be more disapproving of the current administration regardless of their personal political ideology or party affiliation.
I can think of a couple of reasons. First, not many Americans have seen this information, or seen it laid out quite this plainly. Now that it's hit the mainstream media in the form of the NYT, hopefully it'll start picking up steam. Second, people don't like admitting they're wrong, or that they were duped. Third, people don't care. All they know is that the government is doing something, and as long as they can still get cheap gas and watch Friends on Thursdays, they're fine with whatever happens.

zimv20
Mar 16, 2004, 02:10 AM
as long as they can still [...] watch Friends on Thursdays, they're fine with whatever happens.
then i suppose things are about to change :-)

pseudobrit
Mar 16, 2004, 06:24 PM
I'm waiting very impatiently for Michael Moore's documentary about Bush's connections to the Saudi royal family and 9/11.

We need an outrageous exposé on the fact that Bush has allowed the real terrorists and their sponsors to go free while concentrating his personal wrath on a piss-pot dictator.

vwcruisn
Mar 16, 2004, 06:34 PM
I'm waiting very impatiently for Michael Moore's documentary about Bush's connections to the Saudi royal family and 9/11.

We need an outrageous exposé on the fact that Bush has allowed the real terrorists and their sponsors to go free while concentrating his personal wrath on a piss-pot dictator.


I havent heard about this? Do you have a link to any details? When is it due out? I now join your impatient wait.

numediaman
Mar 16, 2004, 07:05 PM
Juan Cole, a Professor of History at the University of Michigan, is often featured as a talking head on the subject of Iraq. He, like everyone else in the world, has a blog. (You do, too, don't you? -- if not, download iBlog).

He said the following today:
This year, the Bush administration will put $1 billion into Afghanistan, an immense country devastated by 25 years of war . . .

Instead of dealing with this growing and world-wide threat, the Bush administration cynically took advantage of the American public's anger and fear after September 11 and channeled it against the regime of Saddam Hussein . . .

The initial outlay for the war against Iraq was $66 billion. Then Bush came back and asked for another $87 billion. He will ask for a similar amount again after the November election if he is reelected.

It is outrageous that Congress allows him to postpone this request instead of being held accountable for it. The Iraq adventure is likely to have cost the US nearly $250 billion by next year this time. The US is no safer now than it was before the Iraq war, since Iraq did not have any weapons that could hit US soil and would not have risked using them even if it did.

Let me repeat that. Maybe $1.3 billion for Afghanistan. $250 billion for Iraq. Bin Laden and his supporters are in Afghanistan. What is wrong with this picture?

pseudobrit
Mar 16, 2004, 07:08 PM
It's called Fahrenheit 911 and is said to be funded by Mel Gibson.

There are rumblings about it but nothing official AFAIK.

IIvan
Mar 16, 2004, 07:58 PM
Looks like W's bull---- is coming back to bight him in the ass

Lets hope so

Sayhey
Mar 16, 2004, 08:57 PM
The horrible and outrageous statements against the Spanish people have some very insidious reasons behind them. First, it puts pressure on the Poles and the Italian to not follow suit, and second, it again reinforces the idea in the mind of US voters that a vote for anyone not following Bush's agenda in Iraq is a vote for al Qaeda. You can hear it now, "that Kerry is just like those cowards in Spain." Keep the lie up long enough and some folks begin to believe it.