Colin Powell is a Disgrace

Are Colin Powell and Richard Armitage going to leave office if George W. Bush serves a second term, as reported in the Washington Post today?

Couldn't happen soon enough. Here's Powell's most recent quote about North Korea:

Powell was asked about Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz's comment in early summer that Kim's administration was "teetering on the edge of economic collapse." Wolfowitz said that could be used as "a major point of leverage" against Kim.

"I don't have a basis for saying there is an imminent collapse," Powell said in the interview, which the State Department made public Sunday.

"Right now there is a government there. It's been there for a lot of decades, and that's what I have to deal with," Powell said. "What the situation would be following a catastrophic collapse, I don't really know. I don't think it's anything that any of North Korea's neighbors at the moment wish to see." [AP, August 4]

Anyone with any principles would say that if North Korea's neighbors wish to keep it in slavery for their own convenience, then to hell with them. Powell is a disgrace.

And so is Bush, who keeps supporting him:

"The president thinks he is doing an outstanding job and appreciates the job that he is doing," Press Secretary Scott McClellan said. "The president looks forward to Secretary Powell continuing to work with him in our foreign policy realm." [AP]

Recommended Reading:

  • Powell's Paper Tiger Show by Scott Holleran
    By having Colin Powell seek the world's sanction, President Bush has compromised the sanctity of America's defense.
  • Bush Should Fire Colin Powell by Robert W. Tracinski
    As secretary of state, Colin Powell's job is to be America's advocate. Yet, Colin Powell is willing to sacrifice America's essential interests for the sake of foreign governments. Bush should fire him.
  • Colin Powell: A Future Speaker for the Democratic Convention? by Andrew West
    It appears that Colin Powell intends to move the Republican party even further away from individual rights and freedom and closer towards collectivism and altruism.
  • Powell's Change of Heart? by Chip Joyce
    Powell's superficiality of supporting a war against Iraq is ultimately undermining the power of the US, which is the greatest threat to US security that exists.
  • Racist Secretary of State Colin Powell Should Resign by Nicholas Provenzo
    Powell does not see the public as a group of individuals, he sees them as racial proxies, representing whatever racial group they may belong to by virtue of their skin. This position is apparently Powell's antidote to the racism of the past--a new racism of the present.

Damn Leftists

From Cox and Forkum:

Writes Allen Forkum:

This The New York Times article has a telling headline: Centrist Democrats Warn Party Not to Present Itself as 'Far Left'. Notice it says "not to present itself as" instead of "not to be". Excerpts:

Al From, the founder of the [Democratic Leadership Council] organization and an ally of Mr. Clinton, invoked the sweeping defeats of George McGovern in 1972 and Walter F. Mondale in 1984 as he cautioned against a return to policies including less emphasis on foreign policy and an inclination toward expanding the size of government that he said were a recipe for another electoral disaster.

The article talks mostly about leftist pressure coming from presidential candidate Howard Dean but doesn't even mention the ultimate Democratic election crasher, Ralph Nader. Even Dean isn't immune to him. In the video of Dean announcing his candidacy, a Green Party supporter's sign bobs in the background until being blocked by Dean supporters.

Powell’s Paper Tiger Show Will Not Run a Second Season

From the Washington Post "Powell Won't Serve Second Term":

Secretary of State Colin L. Powell and his deputy, Richard L. Armitage, have signaled to the White House that they intend to step down even if President Bush is reelected, setting the stage for a substantial reshaping of the administration's national security team that has remained unchanged through the September 2001 terrorist attacks, two wars and numerous other crises.

Armitage recently told national security adviser Condoleezza Rice that he and Powell will leave on Jan. 21, 2005, the day after the next presidential inauguration, sources familiar with the conversation said. Powell has indicated to associates that a commitment made to his wife, rather than any dismay at the administration's foreign policy, is a key factor in his desire to limit his tenure to one presidential term.

Rice and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz are the leading candidates to replace Powell, according to sources inside and outside the administration. Rice appears to have an edge because of her closeness to the president, though it is unclear whether she would be interested in running the State Department's vast bureaucracy.

Writes Scott Holleran of the Concord Crier:

This is great news, though it will remove Bush's primary excuse for not fighting a real war; is Powell just jockeying for more power in a second Bush administration? Probably -- it's his method of beating the pro-defense Rumsfeld forces to date. And who knows whether Bush would appoint another appeasement liberal as secretary of state. But Bush without Powell would be an opportunity for Bush's real convictions to be tested]

Related Reading:

Powell's Paper Tiger Show at U.N. By Scott Holleran
"By having Colin Powell seek the world's sanction, President Bush has compromised the sanctity of America's defense."

Cartoon: Liberia and Moral Responsibility

From Cox and Forkum:

Comments Allen Forkum:

This AP article gives some background on what Liberian militants having been doing to each other in a near perpetual 14 years of conflict. Excerpts:

Each side is accustomed to executing captured enemies. [Liberian President Charles] Taylor's side, in particular, is accused of often torturing them first. Routinely, combatants in Liberia hack off slain rivals' body parts as magic totems or simply to terrify. [...] Both sides use child fighters. Taylor pioneered the formal recruitment of Small Boys Units during the 1989-1996 civil war.

The Liberian-on-Liberian violence is not limited to militants. Fighting since June has killed more than 1,000 civilians, who are also being raped and looted. A Fox News story today indicates nine more civilians have been killed by shelling, including four children.

In much of the media coverage of Liberia (which is extensive), there is an underlying implication that America is morally obligated to intervene in this situation, not for America's interest, but for "humanitarian" reasons. This AP photo shows a mural of a Liberian shaking hands with Uncle Sam and saying, "We've come a long way, Big Brother. It's still rough! We are suffering." The caption indicates the consequence of America not immediately acting on this expected brotherly responsibility: "Many Liberians are becoming increasingly angry with the delay in sending peacekeepers to their war-torn West-African nation[...]."

But are we morally obligated? Should the lives of our troops be risked for such a mission? By what standard should troops be deployed?

The Ayn Rand Institute answers those questions and more in an op-ed by Peter Schwartz: Foreign Policy and Self-Interest. Excerpts:

Those who claim that the United States has a moral obligation to send troops on a "humanitarian" mission to Liberia have it exactly backward: our government has a moral obligation not to send its forces into areas that pose no threats to America's well-being. It is America's self-interest that should be the standard for all foreign-policy decisions -- and not just because such a standard is practical, but because it is moral. [...]

We desperately need some courageous official who is willing to state categorically that a moral foreign policy must uphold America's self-interest -- and that by shipping troops to Liberia, we are sacrificing our interests. We are telling our soldiers to risk their lives in a senseless attempt to prevent, temporarily, rival warlords from butchering one another.

Contrary to the assertions of all who have suddenly become eager for a new American military presence abroad, offering ourselves as sacrificial fodder on "humanitarian" missions is not a virtue, but a moral crime.

There is no doubt that the situation in Liberia is horrible. But America's limited military capabilities should stay focused on preventing the horror of another 9/11.

***

My local paper, The Tennessean, ran an article (headlined "Liberians look to their kindred Uncle Sam for aid") that emphasizes the family analogy and makes explicit the alleged moral obligation of America (here is an online version). Excerpts:

"America? I call it home. It's my sister home," said the silver-haired Porte, who left the United States [for Liberia] with her father when she was a year old.

Her sense of kinship, widespread in Liberia, helps explain Liberians' craving for American peacekeepers. Some Liberians go further, saying the United States has a moral obligation to restore order to their war-torn nation.

"They set up their own little America here," said Sister Barbara Brilliant, an American nun from Maine who's lived in Liberia for 26 years. "Liberia is waiting for its parent to come and say, 'I'll take care of you.'"[...]

"I think the Americans oughta help us," Porte said, "'cause we are all family."

Al-Qaeda’s PR Machine

From MRC:

Newsweek's Eleanor Clift thinks "al-Qaeda is probably finding it more hospitable in Baghdad today than they did before" President Bush launched a war on terrorism, she charged on McLaughlin Group over the weekend. Clift opined: "Overturning Saddam is not a central battle in that war against terrorism. In fact, al-Qaeda is probably finding it more hospitable in Baghdad today than they did before."

US Should Withdraw from California?

James Taranto of Opinion Journal, has a hilarious post that polks fun at the anti-Bush media and the Leftist Republic of California, but noting its similarities to Iraq:

California is a desert land roughly the size of Iraq. It is also an object lesson in the dangers of trying to impose democracy in a culture that is not ready for it. California "is degenerating into a banana republic," writes former Enron adviser Paul Krugman in his New York Times column. Leon Panetta, himself a Californian, writes in the Los Angeles Times that California is undergoing a "breakdown in [the] trust that is essential to governing in a democracy." Newsday quotes Bob Mulholland, another California political activist, as warning of "a coup attempt by the Taliban element." Others say a move is under way to "hijack" California's government.

What isn't widely known is that the U.S. has a large military presence in California. And our troops are coming under attack from angry locals. "Two off-duty Marines were stabbed, one critically, when they and two companions were attacked by more than a dozen alleged gang members early Thursday," KSND-TV reports from San Diego, a city in California's south.

How many young American men and women will have to make the ultimate sacrifice before we realize it isn't worth it? Is the Bush administration too proud to ask the U.N. for help in pacifying California? Plainly California has turned into a quagmire, and the sooner we bring our troops back home, the better.

(Hat Tip: Paul Blair)

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