A few Rice links

by Ted on April 8, 2004

Von at Obsidian Wings has an interesting point about Rice’s testimony.

It seemed that the Democrats were more partisan in their questioning than the Republicans. That is, the Democrats on the panel aggressively challenged Rice (as you might expect). The Republicans, however, didn’t defend — or help — Rice nearly as much as I had expected. Indeed, some of them even launched mild attacks on Rice (Kerry’s comment about “swatting flies,” for example, seemed to resonate).

What to conclude? Well, if you take a dim view of human nature (as I do), you don’t conclude that the Republicans were behaving honorably and in a nonpartisan manner. (Though perhaps they were.) You conclude that there may be something in the classified documents that casts doubt on Rice’s defense.

We may know more when the PDB is released. (And it will be released.)

* Atrios, as you might imagine, has much more. This would be a good time to burnish my moderate credentials, by saying that both sides will have something to take from this. That’s true, of course, but I don’t see how the net effect can be anything but negative for the Administration. I see a number of movement conservatives complaining about Kerrey and Ben-Veniste. I didn’t watch the testimony- maybe they came across as real jerks- but complaining about them isn’t going to earn a lot of votes.

* This seems like news: Bob Kerrey, on the August 6th, 2001 memo titled “Bin Laden Determined to Strike Inside US”:

“In the spirit of further declassification, this is what the August 6th memo said to the president: that the FBI indicates patterns of suspicious activity in the United States consistent with preparations for hijacking.

That’s the language of the memo that was briefed to the president on the 6th of August.”

* From MSNBC

Under questioning, Rice acknowledged that she had spoken too broadly once when she said that no one had ever envisioned terrorists’ using planes and crashing them into buildings. She said aides came to her within days and reported that there had been memos about that possibility, but she said she had not seen them.

To paraphrase Dave Barry, at least when Dick Cheney says something like this, you know he’s lying. But with Rice, you get a sinking feeling that she might be telling the truth.

* Then there’s this:

CLAIM: “While we were developing this new strategy to deal with al-Qaida, we also made decisions on a number of specific anti-al-Qaida initiatives that had been proposed by Dick Clarke.”

FACT: Rice’s statement finally confirms what she previously – and inaccurately – denied. She falsely claimed on 3/22/04 that “No al-Qaida plan was turned over to the new administration.” [Washington Post, 3/22/04

* Finally:

Members of the audience, including some relatives of Sept. 11 victims, applauded as Ben-Veniste demanded that the entire report be declassified, pointedly adding that even its title had been kept secret until it was revealed at Thursday’s hearing. All nine other members of the commission, including the five Republicans, echoed Ben-Veniste’s call.

If I was a Republican with any kind of influence, I’d be telling the White House to get that memo out tomorrow evening, rather than trying to claim privilege over it. For what it’s worth.

{ 28 comments }

1

Justin 04.08.04 at 9:16 pm

2

Father Son 04.08.04 at 9:59 pm

you are sad

3

David Lloyd-Jones 04.08.04 at 10:22 pm

Naw, not sad. Just one more datum on wingnuts living in a world of total unreality.

4

the Brahma 04.08.04 at 11:02 pm

I think while Condi is mugging for the cameras, Clarke is going to pull a foreign object from his trunks….! Katy, bar the door…this one is just getting started!

5

norbizness 04.09.04 at 1:14 am

Hold the pronouncements from Don King:

http://abcnews.go.com/sections/WNT/US/clarke_interview_transcript_040408-2.html

I wonder if agreeing with an out of the loop, disgruntled malcontent constitutes the only fireable offense in the Bush Administration?

6

wsm 04.09.04 at 2:29 am

I remember as a college student being really puzzled by politics, and wondering how people could make such passionate, detailed arguments saying exactly opposite things, until I realized that (in politics, anyway, unlike boxing maybe) there is no such thing as objective truth. So I decided to go to law school instead of grad school, and now I believe whatever I get paid to believe.

7

Ted Barlow 04.09.04 at 2:56 am

Rather reminds me of the Simpsons:

Jimbo: I don’t believe in nuthin’ no more! I’m going to law school!

Homer: NOOOOOOOO!!!

8

Warren 04.09.04 at 3:26 am

The most remarkable thing Rice said was NOT about the past but about the future.

Rice’s testimony repeated Bush’s statement that the way to deal with the deep anti-Americanism of the Muslim world is to install democracy.

Previously, she said, the US had turned a blind eye toward tyranny in the mideast — no longer.

Points:

1. If the US project in Iraq results in peace, prosperity and democracy in the mideast, or even just in Iraq, then George W Bush will go down as one of the greatest statemen in US history.

2. Result #1 is highly counter-intuitive. However, I would gladly eat crow on this issue.

3. This Democracy Project raises the question of how far-reaching a policy the President has the authority to create. This democracy project is big enough to span decades and cost billions more.

4. The democracy project is the Bush administration answer to the charge that fighting in the mideast will only enflame the Arabs.

5. By the way, I think the “Enflame” argument is often bogus. It’s arguing that we should not fight our enemies because they might get angry!

6. There is always a chance that the Democracy approach is just a convenient thing to say to try to sound good on TV.

9

richard 04.09.04 at 5:25 am

I was surprised and gratified that the question was asked: ‘what is the cause of these attacks, why are people discontented in the mideast and do we intend to do anything about that discontent?’ Previously, nobody in power has felt it politically expedient to put this question publicly: it has seemed sufficient to say ‘the cause of the attacks is terrorism’.

Rice’s answer (the Democracy Project) unfortunately translates simply into: “when the Arabs look and feel exactly like us there will be no more terrorism.” Aside from being a false proposition (we do still have terrorism, as the people of Oklahoma City can attest) it imagines that a capitalist, western-style democracy, imposed by a western power, will be welcomed as the natural, reasonable system of government by all, and that through its natural goodness it cannot help but spread peace and order to its neighbours, who will see the virtue in a democratic system when it’s geographically close to them, which they don’t see in countries further away.

Her hopes for a peacefully multi-ethnic society are laudable, but there is no plan for creating such a thing, and I think no appreciation of what the ethnic problems are.

Finally it refuses to address the widespread feeling that the middle east is being brutally exploited by the US, as it was by European powers beforehand; its governments installed, manipulated and removed in order to further US control over their oil, the people being treated as unfortunate complications sitting atop a resource that the US regards as fundamentally its own. Although little of the actual democracy plan has so far been unveiled it does not seem to be moving towards the sort of true self-government that Rice purports to hope for, and it’s hard to imagine that an independent, politically secure nation could come out of it (i.e. one capable of disagreeing with the US in the future). Moreover, all the actions of the occupying force so far seem to have been geared purely towards moving Iraqi oil and American taxpayer money into the hands of the contracting companies (such as Halliburton) under the bold name of ‘reconstruction,’ when Iraqi companies exist (or did, before their systematic destruction under the occupation) that would be able to reconstruct the country’s infrastructure faster, more peacefully and at enormously lower cost, while (almost accidentally) serving to kick-start the Iraqi economy.
It’ll take some impressive spin to turn that into a success story for democracy and peace.

10

Barry 04.09.04 at 12:08 pm

norbizness, the only detectable firing offense in this administration is truth.

Incompetancy and negligence are OK. Corruption is the purpose of the administration, so it’s more than OK.

11

Barry 04.09.04 at 12:09 pm

One possible reason for the relative lack of GOP zeal is that the administration pissed off the GOP members too much. This would be extremely stupid on the part of the administration, but it would fit into the general arrogance of the administration.

12

No Preference 04.09.04 at 2:33 pm

Rice’s answer (the Democracy Project) unfortunately translates simply into: “when the Arabs look and feel exactly like us there will be no more terrorism.”

Very, very well put. The unspoken underlying view behind the “mission civilisatrice” excuse for the occupation is that there is something fundamentally wrong with Arab societies and Arabs themselves which the US has the right to try to fix, by force of necessary. If they are ungrateful we have the right to shoot them.

Unfortunately for everyone, a large part of our country seems to be in sympathy with this highly self-flattering fallacious view.

13

Jeremy Pierce 04.09.04 at 3:01 pm

Here’s what Rice said in the WAPO piece:

“In response to my request for a presidential initiative, the counterterrorism team, which we had held over from the Clinton administration, suggested several ideas, some of which had been around since 1998 but had not been adopted. No al Qaeda plan was turned over to the new administration”

Here’s what she said now:

“While we were developing this new strategy to deal with al-Qaida, we also made decisions on a number of specific anti-al-Qaida initiatives that had been proposed by Dick Clarke.”

Those seem to me to be in complete agreement.

14

Steve Carr 04.09.04 at 3:04 pm

I guess I’ll just make the obvious point. There is something fundamentally wrong with Arab societies. I wouldn’t say the US has the right to try to fix them. But there is a complicated question at work here. You cannot, in all seriousness, believe that western-style democracy (whether of the social democracy variant or otherwise) is good in any sense that matters deeply and not believe that it is good for all people. Otherwise you’re just saying your politics are a matter of taste, roughly analogous to saying “Americans like hamburgers, Arabs like hummous.” If you believe that western-style democracy — an admittedly broad term, but one that I think we can sketch the broad outlines of pretty easily –is good, then Arab societies are appalling. People there — especially women, but generally just about everyone — are living under conditions that are simply unacceptable.

So, if you believe that something is deeply wrong, and you have the ability to change it, should you sit by and do nothing?

The “look to the beam in your own eye” first argument doesn’t work here. America and Europe’s democratic and economic structures are certainly flawed (in different ways). But they’re vastly superior to anything in the Arab world. Nor does the “why intervene there if you’re not intervening in Pakistan, Congo, Liberia, etc.” argument fly, either. You shouldn’t refrain from stopping your next-door neighbor from beating up his girlfriend because you might not do the same the next time it happens.

None of this means that what the Bush administration is doing in Iraq really has/had anything to do with bringing Western-style democracy to the Middle East. But if it did, I’m far from convinced that it was the wrong thing to do. That doesn’t mean, of course, that it was a possible thing to do. It may be that fundamentalist Islam — which assumes that the law has been determined once for all, and therefore does not and cannot be changed by human vote –is irreconcilable with genuine democracy, which assumes that people should always be free to change the rules under which they live. But the idea that we should respect Arab political and social arrangements out of some notion of multiculturalism seems to me deeply flawed, both philosophically and practically.

15

No Preference 04.09.04 at 3:24 pm

I guess I’ll just make the obvious point. There is something fundamentally wrong with Arab societies.

There are very serious political and social problems in Arab societies. There are also strengths which the US could certainly learn from, including hospitality and a tradition of kindness and tolerance that stems from Islam itself.

Arab societies are appalling. People there — especially women, but generally just about everyone — are living under conditions that are simply unacceptable.

Pompous, ignorant, sweeping poppycock.

I wouldn’t say the US has the right to try to fix them. . . So, if you believe that something is deeply wrong, and you have the ability to change it, should you sit by and do nothing? . . . None of this means that what the Bush administration is doing in Iraq really has/had anything to do with bringing Western-style democracy to the Middle East. But if it did, I’m far from convinced that it was the wrong thing to do. That doesn’t mean, of course, that it was a possible thing to do.

The incoherence here is a good reflection of the quality of thinking behind this line of argument.

But the idea that we should respect Arab political and social arrangements out of some notion of multiculturalism seems to me deeply flawed, both philosophically and practically.

You don’t have to respect it, but you should have the wisdom to recognize what the US can do, and what we have the right to do. The invasion of Iraq has made things worse. Your post shows how spectacularly unqualified the US is to reform Iraq.

16

marky 04.09.04 at 3:30 pm

Steve Carr,
I don’t know enough about Arab societies to comment on them, but I’d like to discuss your assertion that Western style democracy cannot be good unless it is good for all people. I don’t agree with your principle; as a matter of fact, I think this belief is symptomatic of a problem with Bush foreign policy. Here are a few problems I see.

First of all, when you say “Western Democracy”, which model do you mean? There is quite a bit of variation. These range from the difference between the parliamentary system and the U.S. structure; the lack of a bill of rights in the UK; the higher value placed on social welfare spending in Sweden than the U.S., etc.
I don’t think you can gloss these over as trivial.

Next, I really don’t see the fundamental principle that says Western Democracy —whatever that may be—is necessarily the best form of government. If there is a core value the two of us share, I think it is the belief in self-determination, and elections are obviously a way of achieving this.
If you’re only speaking of a belief in a self-determative process, then I’m with you—but our system is much much more.
Our political system is closely tied with certain economic values—belief in the free market and consumerism—that do not appear to be universal or even always beneficial. I don’t know why a people can’t choose to have a government that has more of a religious flavor and still be self-determinative. I wouldn’t care to live in such a country, but if the other values are reasonable, I wouldn’t mind so much.

I guess I’m ramblinb a bit. I think your point is worth discussing. I hope some other people can take it up.

17

Steve Carr 04.09.04 at 3:40 pm

It is unacceptable and appalling when people do not have the right to choose the laws under which they live and the people who govern them. It is unacceptable and appalling when women are treated, as a rule, as second-class citizens and inferior to men and denied education. It is unacceptable and appalling when a huge percentage of a country’s population is left without real employment and with no hope of improving their lot in life. This is not poppycock. It’s simply true.

The idea that Western secular democracies could learn about tolerance from Arab societies is utterly bizarre.

Hospitality and kindness are good, and I wish there were more of them in the West. But it does not change the fact that Western-style democracy is better for all human beings than authoritarianism.

Finally, you’re not engaging with the real question. “What the US can do” is a practical one, and as I said it may not be possible to reform the Arab world from without. “What we have the right to do” is a philosophical one, and unless you think that nations should never act to change things that they are clearly wrong, you need a more coherent argument for why intervening in the Middle East is specifically wrong (rather than being a practical mistake).

18

Steve Carr 04.09.04 at 3:54 pm

Marky, I agree that the differences between, say, Swedish-style social democracy and the U.S.’ brand of free-market democracy are not trivial. But I do think that there are core principles that are fairly easy to agree on (even if they weren’t embraced by most Western democracies until fairly recently): suffrage for all adults; regularly scheduled elections; freedom of the press, speech, and religion; education open to all, regardless of gender, race, ethnicity, or religion; no legal discrimination on the basis of religion, race, gender, or ethnicity; and, finally, a shared assumption that laws need to be revisable (so it’s not one man, one vote, one time). There may be other criteria you would want to add, but roughly speaking I’d say that any society that started from these principles would be better, for all human beings, than an authoritarian one or a clerically-ruled (whether Christian, Islamic, or Jewish) one.

19

No Preference 04.09.04 at 4:51 pm

It is unacceptable and appalling when people do not have the right to choose the laws under which they live and the people who govern them. It is unacceptable and appalling when women are treated, as a rule, as second-class citizens and inferior to men and denied education. It is unacceptable and appalling when a huge percentage of a country’s population is left without real employment and with no hope of improving their lot in life. This is not poppycock. It’s simply true.

Iraqis today “do not have the right to choose the laws under which they live and the people who govern them”. The condition of women is worse than it was under Saddam. A huge proportion of Iraqis are unemployed right now – that’s one of the factors fuelling the unrest. Polls show that Iraqis do have hope for the future, and most of them would prefer not to enter that future under American tutelage.

The idea that Western secular democracies could learn about tolerance from Arab societies is utterly bizarre.

Read the “March 06” post from salam pax here. Also read this column published in the Independent shortly after Sept 11.

Finally, you’re not engaging with the real question. “What the US can do” is a practical one, and as I said it may not be possible to reform the Arab world from without. “What we have the right to do” is a philosophical one . . .

It’s hardly “philosophical”. People in the Middle East (not to mention the entire rest of the world) do not believe that the US has a right to change their societies through violence. If they see our attempts to change them as illigitimate, what possible hope is there of doing so? None. Now it boils down to “we have the right to kill them to reform them”, which is your completely bankrupt idea in it’s esentials.

you need a more coherent argument for why intervening in the Middle East is specifically wrong (rather than being a practical mistake).

I need a more coherent argument? I do, eh? Well, here’s one for starters. One of the traditional Catholic criteria for a “just war” is that
there must be serious prospects of success
.

20

Brian Weatherson 04.09.04 at 4:53 pm

But I do think that there are core principles that are fairly easy to agree on … suffrage for all adults.

Given the amount of effort the GOP has put into making sure that isn’t the case in the USA, in passing and over-enforcing laws against felons, even _released_ felons, voting, I’m not sure that it should be taken for granted that this is a bedrock principle of Western Democracy.

21

Kip Manley 04.09.04 at 6:42 pm

Actually, Brian, I think it might better be seen an argument that the GOP stands in opposition to one of the bedrock principles of Western Democracy.

22

Steve Carr 04.09.04 at 6:48 pm

Brian, I guess I’d say that what the GOP has done and is trying to do in Florida and elsewhere is oppose democracy.

As for conditions in Iraq today, it’s no argument to say that conditions during an ongoing war or during the occupation after it (depending on where you think we are in the process) are worse than they were beforehand, so therefore that’s evidence that conditions beforehand weren’t so bad. Life for most Germans was a lot worse in from 1945-1947 than it was from 1933-1943. No serious person would argue that the Germans weren’t better off afterward than they were under Hitler. Same goes for Japan.

And what’s with the link to a column about Srebrenica? I don’t think Serbia tells us much about what Western secular democracies are like. And frankly, I don’t know why you’re bothering. You can’t honestly believe that, for the most majority of people, Arab societies are more tolerant, more free, or better places to live in than Western democracies. Just admit that and then we can argue about whether trying to impose democracy from without makes any sense.

Finally, if the U.S. had intervened to stop the Hutus from massacring the Tutsis in Rwanda, that would have constituted an attempt to “change a society through violence.” Are you honestly arguing that the U.S. would have been unjustified in doing so?

23

No Preference 04.09.04 at 9:58 pm

No serious person would argue that the Germans weren’t better off afterward than they were under Hitler.

I don’t deny that the Iraqis will have a chance for a better life than they had under Saddam. But that can’t happen until we leave. The reason for that is that the Iraqis in general don’t accept the legitimacy of our rule; don’t want us telling them how to live; and they want to be able to organize their own society.

And what’s with the link to a column about Srebrenica?

I didn’t link to a column on Srebrenica.

If the U.S. had intervened to stop the Hutus from massacring the Tutsis in Rwanda, that would have constituted an attempt to “change a society through violence.”

Hardly. It would have been to stop genocide. There was nothing like the massacre of the Tutus going on in Iraq at the time we invaded.

And frankly, I don’t know why you’re bothering. You can’t honestly believe that, for the most majority of people, Arab societies are more tolerant, more free, or better places to live in than Western democracies.

The question is not whether Arab societies are “better” or “worse” than than ours. We can’t change them, and we absolutely have no right to try, unless we can appreciate what’s good about them. Your posts show no knowledge of that. In that you are in the company of the Arab-haters like Doug Feith who planned the occupation. The whole premise was doomed before the start.

steve, in addition to the impracticality of the vision of the US regenerating Iraqi society according to our wishes, you are ignoring the eveidence that there is great reason to doubt that our real goals in Iraq are identical to our stated goals. There is reason to believe that the purpose of the invasion was not to liberate, but to subjugate Iraq, to take control of its oil, and (particularly important to neocons in the administration) to permanently remove a threat to Israel. You may be eager to ignore that, but Iraqis can’t. A poll showed that only about 3% of Iraqis believe that the US invaded Iraq to help them. Personally I think they’re right.

You never explained how the invasion of Iraq conformed to the Christian criteria for a just war, speaking of the superiority of western values.

24

marky 04.09.04 at 10:55 pm

I think the last word it that steve Carr’s argument is moot.
This administration did not enter Iraq with the best of intentions, and they couldn’t even carry out their plans. Once Garner (who seemed like a good deal for the Iraqis) was fired, the emphasis was on privatizing Iraq’s economy, for the good of Bush and Chalabi’s cronies. Democracy also took a back seat to stratagems designed to keep the Shiites from gaining power.

My view of the war is that Bush’s obsession with invading Iraq gave everyone else in the administration an opportunity to pursue their own private goals.
There was no coordination from the top, so we saw conflicting operations, backstabbing and chaos. Rumsfeld in particular seems more interested in making Powell fail than Iraq succeed.

25

Steve Carr 04.09.04 at 11:12 pm

I’m a little confused by your first point. Are you saying that now that we’ve toppled Saddam, giving Iraqis a chance for a better life, we should leave? Or are you saying, as you seem to have been, that we should never have toppled Saddam in the first place? If the second, I confess that I don’t understandwhy it’s somehow morally preferable for a people to be ruled by a dictator who has no intention of ever giving up power, but who’s of their own nationality, instead of ruled by an occupying force that has been explicit about its intention to hand over power to a democratically elected government. Again, the latter may be a hopeless mission, but to argue that because Saddam was born in Iraq, he had a right not to be toppled by the United States (which is, when it comes down to it, what you’re saying) is, at best, perplexing.

“We can’t change them, and we absolutely have no right to try, unless we can appreciate what’s good about them.” I don’t think that I can’t appreciate what’s good about Arab culture. But frankly, whether I do or not doesn’t matter. What I’m saying is that the mission to make Arab countries into democracies — as defined above — is the right one, and it’s the right one regardless of what Arab culture is like. I don’t believe there’s anything inherent in Arab culture that is inimical to democracy, full-fledged political rights for women, and a rejection of theocracy. But if there is, it’s the culture that has to change, not these ideals.

As to the last point, I have no doubt that the Bush administration’s motives in invading Iraq were deeply impure, that they’ve fought the war very badly, and that they have given the Iraqi people reason to distrust their motives. But that’s not what we were arguing about here. You suggested that there was something wrong with the very idea of the “mission civlisatrice” rationale, and I’ve suggested there isn’t. Again, there is something fundamentally wrong with Arab societies, and Iraq was the wrongest of all of them.

By the way, your second link — http://www.themodernreligion.com/terror/wtc-scribes.html — was a link to a column that used Srebrenica to argue against the idea that Islam was intolerant. So how you can argue you didn’t link to a column about Srebrenica?

26

Jeff Bogdan 04.10.04 at 2:29 am

I find myself agreeing with Steve Carr that there something shared by all Western Democracies, however different they are from one another, and that that shared core is a good thing, probably the best thing ever devised for maximizing justice and liberty. Which is not to say, obviously, that it works like a well-oiled machine, maximising good automatically like a thermostat or an invisible hand. Everyone knows it’s rickety and prone to errors and breakdowns, and there is no democrat who has not at some point daydreamed about how much better things would be if only everyone would listen to…me. As the old saying goes, democracy sucks, but the alternatives are worse.

Now here’s the rub. I think that the most import thing that Western democracies share, the element that uniquely characterizes them and without which democracy is an empty electoral ritual, is suspicion amounting to paranoia about the capacity for evil that dwells both in individual men and women and in organizations and institutions both private and public.

Notice that in one way or another every Western democracy incorporates something like the notion of seperation of powers. How come? Because Western democrats know in their bones that no one, and no group, can aquire power past a certain threshold (we can’t define when that threshold is reached but we know it when we see it) without destructively metastasizing–without becoming a cancer in the body politic. And the only way to prevent that is to build in countervailing institutions that are in one degree or another always battling it out.

Isn’t it a paradox when that kind of society, with those kinds of assumptions, attempts to impose its will on another land with very different assumptions?

The democratic imperialist says, Question authority, value dissent, don’t let any group or institution get too powerful–but do what we say or else. As I recall, it didn’t work for the Athenians either.

High-minded talk aside, is there anyone who believes for a minute that the asses of evil, Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld, have any interest whatsoever in preserving democracy here, much less exporting it there?

27

Grand Moff Texan 04.10.04 at 4:18 am

Clarke justifiably claimed justification from Rice’s testimony, photoshopping by illiterates notwithstanding. She did not contradict him on any substantial point, but instead claimed powerlessness and ignorance. The latter is, I guess, considered strength in some quarters. As the warfloggers are so fond of repeating, “that is the difference between us and them.”

She testified because she had no choice, dragged kicking and screaming through a bogus argument about separation of powers. Once cornered, she played it safe, and told nothing that anyone who has read the chapter of Franken’s book entitled “Operation Ignore” didn’t already know.

As the VC people safely note, she was only partisanly aided by Republicans through voids, being provided with plenty of opportunities to parade how much she didn’t know. I say that they safely note it in the sense that, being voids, they do not mention it at all. And so the myth continues…

28

No Preference 04.13.04 at 9:08 pm

Or are you saying, as you seem to have been, that we should never have toppled Saddam in the first place?

You are right. I was against the invasion of Iraq, for many reasons. First, it was a violation of international law. Worse, it was done as the expression of Bush’s new National Security doctrine that says the US alone has the right to violate international law in that manner. Second, I didn’t believe that Saddam posed a threat to us or to his neighbors. Remember, the countries bordering on Iraq did not want the US to invade. Third, I thought the US was singularly unqualified to manage the reconstruction of Iraq because of our lack of understanding, and in fact contempt for Arabs and Islam. I think I have been shown to be right on all of those points, at least to my own satisfaction.

to argue that because Saddam was born in Iraq, he had a right not to be toppled by the United States (which is, when it comes down to it, what you’re saying) is, at best, perplexing.

See the point on international law above. William Pfaff, a columnist for the International Herald Tribune, described the Bush National Security Strategy, under which we invaded Iraq, as the most radical challenge to the principle of state sovereignty since the Communist Manifesto.

I don’t think that I can’t appreciate what’s good about Arab culture. But frankly, whether I do or not doesn’t matter. What I’m saying is that the mission to make Arab countries into democracies — as defined above — is the right one, and it’s the right one regardless of what Arab culture is like. I don’t believe there’s anything inherent in Arab culture that is inimical to democracy, full-fledged political rights for women, and a rejection of theocracy. But if there is, it’s the culture that has to change, not these ideals.

So you don’t know what Arab culture is like, but nonetheless you know that what we have is better. So much better that we have the right to force it on the Arabs. Once again, I have to point out the complete incoherence of your line of reasoning. If you suppose that you can carry an argument, let alone transform a society that you dislike, through such reasoning you are much mistaken.

So how you can argue you didn’t link to a column about Srebrenica?

The column wasn’t about Srebrenica. Srebrenica is mentioned in one sentence. I suggest that you actually read the article.

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