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Entries in George W Bush (6)

Friday
Nov212008

Bush Gets Snubbed

This video has been doing the rounds but for those of you who haven't seen it, here's George W Bush seemingly being ignored while all the other kids shake hands at the G20 summit:

[youtube]http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=k6Y_ncOVlDw[/youtube]

[via Boing Boing]
Thursday
Nov202008

From the Archives (3 June 2008): Reservoir Academics and US Foreign Policy

Playing "Reservoir Academics" with US Foreign Policy: A Response to Timothy Lynch and Robert Singh was first published on Watching America at Libertas: The Centre for US Foreign Policy

I returned from vacation to an excellent discussion with a well-placed contact, complete with very good lunch at an Iranian restaurant (whatever you think of the Axis of Evil, it does have some quality food), about the state of US politics now and in 2009. The economic situation, the likely shifts in Congress after November, the possibility (or lack of such) of a meaningful American initiative on Israel-Palestine, even that perennial question "How 'anti-American' is American Studies?" were worked over and worked out.

When I returned to my office, I encountered a far different approach to these issues of “What Next”. Our colleagues Timothy Lynch and Rob Singh had e-mailed us their analysis from the Wall Street Journal to reprint on the Guest Blog page (thanks to both of them for the opportunity). Their argument is all in the headline, "Don't Expect a Big Change in US Foreign Policy."

For Lynch and Singh, “none of the main candidates has disavowed the war on terror". And, as past US presidents have deployed US forces overseas, so the next occupant of the White House will also have US forces overseas. Let's put aside any thought of "a peacenik vision of immediate withdrawal" from Iraq.

It seems that there’s nothing of difficulty to see here, folks. Move along. Because, if you’re a Bush-basher, your celebration of foreign policy after George is no more than "the joy of fools".

As an alleged Bush-basher, I am pleased to find that I share some common ground with Messrs. Lynch and Singh. I, too, don't expect a major change in US foreign policy in January 2009. US military forces are well-embedded in Iraq. The Bush Administration, despite opposition from almost every major Iraqi political faction apart from Prime Minister al-Maliki, is pursuing the Status of Forces Agreement that exempts American personnel from any oversight under Iraqi law (and exempts the President from going to Congress for approval of a formal treaty). A disturbing article in the Washington Post this week set out the latest American long-term investments, including a new prison north of Baghdad.

Contrary to the hopes expressed by others such as Joseph Nye, I don't expect a significant move by a new Administration on Israel-Palestine. Barack Obama, scrambling to cover his electoral flanks, is having to defend by distancing himself from engagement with the spectre of Hamas --- his appearance before the America-Israel Political Action Committee this week is already being framed in defensive terms, with demands that he distance himself from contacts with mad, bad, and dangerous people like Columbia University's Rashid Khalidi. Ditto re engagement with Iran, at least openly rather than through back channels. And, with every expert in Washington these days reducing Latin America to bad boy Hugo in Venezuela and, thus, someone who can be the good boy (Uribe in Colombia), even the prospect of a coherent American approach to the Western Hemisphere seems remote.

In other words, seven years of defining US foreign policy via a War on Terror to bolster policy judgements has succeeded in painting a global house of good and evil. Indeed, it's been such a success that the new President is handed the brush to carry on, only to find himself standing in one corner of one room.

Where I differ from Lynch and Singh's explanation of continuity in US foreign policy is that they forego the burden of these complexities in their portrayal of Life After George. It's only one leap of faith from a perpetual War on Terror --- "the debate is over how, where, and when" --- to victory: "We're winning the war in Iraq." Never mind that the next American administration is likely to jettison the phrase "War on Terror", since it has been distinctly unhelpful in the US political and military campaign from Afghanistan to Iraq to Europe. Never mind that Iraq (and indeed Afghanistan, which is absent from Lynch and Singh’s article) has long since moved beyond the easy sticker of "Mission Accomplished", since the issue is not of perpetual military dominance but of the failure to get a stable political resolution. Anyone questioning of both the US mission and its undoubted success can be brushed aside, not through everyday evidence but through reference to their dubious status --- "Euro-liberal", "Latin American leftist", "radical Islamist" --- and the reassurance that Bush is only doing what previous Presidents have done (he's just doing it bigger and better).

On the grounds of presentation rather than substantive analysis, I admire Lynch and Singh. Their forthright bravado, in the context of wobbly British academia, is quite clever. The masculine hyper-confidence, which has not just shades but colourful reflections of US writers like Victor Davis Hanson and Robert Kagan, gives them a distinctive platform, in contrast to other analysts who have to acknowledge the problems and challenges that have arisen from the last seven years of US foreign policy. With their duet, they provide reassuring music for the dwindling but still prominent orchestra in the United States (Wall Street Journal on first violin) claiming that American greatness is, always has been, and always will be assured.

This is not a posture without merit. It is useful to note that the fires set by the War on Terror, even as the term is set aside by those framing US foreign policy, still burn brightly. It is worthwhile to predict that they will not be extinguished in the near-future. To celebrate that firestorm, however, is useful more as a marketing pose --- let’s call it Reservoir Academics --- than as a constructive analysis of 2009 and beyond.
Friday
Nov142008

Newsflash: That Bush Speech for Economic Salvation

Non-Event of the Day

The President, who had to give a boiler-plate speech at the UN yesterday on religious belief and common values (which, forgive me, still doesn't square with Iraq 2003), then took on his important task. At the Manhattan Institute, he gave a keep-the-faith, flight-from-reality speech:

People say, are you confident about our future? And the answer is, absolutely. And it's easy to be confident when you're a city like New York City. After all, there's an unbelievable spirit in this city.

Bush's mission was to explain to the true believers --- not the religious one, the free-market ones --- that, after this weekend's global economic summit got through its first four tasks (like "understanding the causes of the global crisis"), it would get to the most important duty:

"reaffirming our conviction that free market principles offer the surest path to lasting prosperity"

That, of course, is not an action plan. It's a slogan, like the mantra from the Bush Administration's key global document --- the 2002 National Security Strategy --- of "freedom, free markets, and free trade".

Bush, however, had to cover his possibly-not-so-free market backside, having pushed for $700 billion of Government money to prop up the financial and banking sectors as well as the nationalisation of America's largest mortgage brokers. So he murmured, "I'm a market-oriented guy, but not when I'm faced with the prospect of a global meltdown," and then said...

Well, nothing of substance, really. Regulation of credit default swaps, financial co-operation, and other tinkering phrases. Filler to get to this, the opener for the second half of the speech:

While reforms in the financial sector are essential, the long-term solution to today's problems is sustained economic growth. And the surest path to that growth is free markets and free people.

Well, George, you can put the faith all you want but "sustained economic growth" isn't exactly the Number One Prospect right now. Recession is, and any speech of meaning --- rather than ideological flutterings --- would recognise the immediate dilemma for the US Government.

Paul Krugman, who doesn't hold elective office and thus doesn't owe that office to activists in places like the Manhattan Institute, grabbed hold of Dilemma Horns this morning:

We are already, however, well into the realm of what I call depression economics. By that I mean a state of affairs like that of the 1930s in which the usual tools of economic policy — above all, the Federal Reserve’s ability to pump up the economy by cutting interest rates — have lost all traction.

Krugman then gets to the heart of the matter and thus his recommendation:

All indications are that the new administration will offer a major stimulus package. My own back-of-the-envelope calculations say that the package should be huge, on the order of $600 billion.

It's a suggestion that would have Bush's speech into a real event, especially if Krugman had put the down-side half of his proposal: how do you finance that $600 billion when the Federal Government is on the verge of a $1 trillion deficit in 2009?

Instead, here's your Presidential economic reassurance:

We saw [America's] resilience after September the 11th, 2001, when our nation recovered from a brutal attack.

Of course, only the worst-taste blogger would extrapolate from this: America's economic salvation lies in another Al Qa'eda spectacular.



Tuesday
Nov112008

I like the poodle best

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U-A-KcMiVtc[/youtube]

Amnesty International reveals the hitherto unknown talents of monsieurs Putin, Bush and Ahmadinejad. [via Very Short List]
Monday
Nov102008

Scott Lucas on BBC World Service "Newshour"

I had the chance to discuss today's Bush-Obama "transition" meeting --- in a very light-hearted spirit --- with Robin Lustig of the BBC at 1300 GMT today.

The interview is just after the News Update at the halfway point of the programme.