By Michael Freund In recent weeks, US foreign policy has undergone
a sharp turnaround, as Washington increasingly has abandoned its
principled stances of the past seven years on just about every major
foreign policy issue, and has begun to mimic the previous
administration.
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | Will the real George W. please stand
up?
After seven years of fearlessly confronting evil, both rhetorically and
militarily, the Bush administration in Washington seems to have faded
away, replaced instead by a meek shadow of its former self.
Firm resolve has given way to disappointing frailty, as the shape and
direction of US foreign policy increasingly resembles something taken
straight out of Bill Clinton's playbook.
Across the board, on nearly every major issue of the day, from Iran to
Syria to North Korea, the Bush administration is in retreat, abandoning
the principled stands of yesteryear and replacing them with the
unscrupulous and inexplicable policies now being pursued by the
Department of State.
The turnabout is breathtaking in its scope, rivaled only perhaps by
Britney Spears' rapid descent from pop superstar to tabloid curiosity.
But unlike the blonde starlet's fate, this is something that actually
matters.
Take, for example, the donor conference held in Paris this week, where
the nations of the world unashamedly gathered to prop up the corrupt,
incompetent and ineffectual Palestinian regime headed by Mahmoud Abbas.
Leading the charge, the US pledged more than $550 million in aid to the
Palestinians in 2008. But while American diplomats were busy filling
out checks to Abbas, Palestinian terrorists in Gaza continued to target
Israeli civilians. On Sunday, they fired a rocket which struck an
Israeli home in Kibbutz Zikim and wounded a 2-year old child. Needless
to say, neither the toddler nor his parents will be receiving any
Western assistance.
Watching the news on television, I thought back to a bright summer day
five years ago, on June 1, 2002, when a man named George W. Bush gave a
stirring speech to the graduating class at the West Point military
academy. In clear and unequivocal terms, the president said, "All
nations that decide for aggression and terror will pay a price… We will
lift this dark threat from our country and from the world." Then I
thought to myself: just what "price" have the Palestinians been made to
pay for using violence and terror against the Jewish state? Instead of
paying a price, they are being rewarded for their actions with American
largesse and support. Isn't that exactly what Bill Clinton sought to do
when he convened the Camp David talks at the end of his presidency?
THEN THERE is North Korea. On December 1, Bush took the unusual step of
sending a personal letter to Pyongyang's thug-in-chief Kim Jong Il,
essentially pleading with him to tell the truth and to disclose all of
his country's nuclear programs by the end of the year.
In exchange, the archaic Stalinist regime can expect to receive
American recognition and, of course, large infusions of aid.
So once again I turned to Bush's 2002 speech, and there it was in
black-and-white: "We cannot defend America and our friends by hoping
for the best. We cannot put our faith in the word of tyrants, who
solemnly sign non-proliferation treaties, and then systemically break
them."
Yet that is precisely what Bush seems ready to do. He is putting his
faith in Kim Jong-Il's promises, just as Clinton did when he signed a
similar deal with Pyongyang in October 1994 which later proved
worthless.
And what of the regimes in Iran and Syria, which have aided and abetted
insurgents in Iraq in their efforts to kill American servicemen? In
both instances, the Bush administration has adopted a policy of
diplomacy and talk, rather than action. Indeed, Damascus was even
invited to take part in the Annapolis conference, granting further
legitimacy to Syrian President Bashar Assad and his repressive regime.
Who said that killers of Americans have anything to fear? What a sharp
contrast to that speech five summers ago, when the president enunciated
a clear moral vision underlying his policy, which came to be known as
the Bush Doctrine. He said at the time, "There can be no neutrality
between justice and cruelty, between the innocent and the guilty. We
are in a conflict between good and evil, and America will call evil by
its name. By confronting evil and lawless regimes, we do not create a
problem, we reveal a problem. And we will lead the world in opposing
it."
Sadly, Washington now seems all too ready to yield on matters of
principle. Or, as former US ambassador to the UN John Bolton told the
German magazine Der Spiegel this week, American foreign policy "is in
free fall. The president is acting against his own judgment and
instincts under the influence of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice."
The result has effectively been a quiet coup, as George W. Clinton
replaces Bush. And that spells trouble, big trouble, in the War on
Terror — not only for Israel, but for America too.
It is not that the Bush Doctrine is dead — it most certainly isn't. But
the way things are going of late, it sure seems to be in need of
resuscitation
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