Quote from OPTIONAL777:
And Human Rights For All
With Saddam's weapons of mass destruction nowhere to be found, the president's Iraq talking points now center on the humanitarian upside of having ousted the Butcher of Baghdad. His speeches are liberally peppered with mentions of "mass graves," "torture chambers," and encomiums to "freeing the people of Iraq from the clutches of Saddam Hussein." He's all but doused himself in the sweet-smelling scent of human rights and put on an Amnesty International t-shirt.
But, OK, let's say we take the president at face value and buy his new argument that ending humanitarian crises through military force is good foreign policy. Then how can he justify embarking on his first trip to sub-Saharan Africa next week without including on his itinerary Congo and Liberia?
His five-day visit will include stops in Senegal, Botswana, Uganda, Nigeria, and South Africa -- but not the absurdly named Democratic Republic of Congo, site of what one African expert has labeled "the worst humanitarian situation on the entire face of the earth."
You'd think a president willing to send 200,000 U.S. troops to Iraq because of Saddam's mass graves might want to check out firsthand the 20 mass graves recently unearthed in the Congo, freshly filled with close to 1,000 victims of genocidal massacres. There's your causus belli right there -- that is, if there is any substance to this new Bush doctrine that evil dictators who abuse their own people must be deposed, by force if necessary, even if they pose no imminent threat to the United States.
But I guess the 3.3 million people who have died in the Congo since 1998 -- to say nothing of the horror stories of macheted infants, incinerated villages, and soldiers mutilating and even cannibalizing their victims -- are not enough to justify a second muscular application of the Bush human rights doctrine. They aren't even enough to motivate the president to squeeze a Congo stopover into his African schedule and bring some much-needed international attention to this massive humanitarian crisis. I'm not talking about making nice with dictators; I'm talking about using the power of his office to help stop the bloodshed.
He also won't be going to war-torn Liberia, a nation of 3 million with historical ties to America, where 200,000 people have been killed, a million more displaced, disease is running rampant, and beleaguered citizens are pleading with the United States to intervene.
After 700 people were massacred in a rebel attack on the capital city of Monrovia two weeks ago, African leaders called on President Bush to send in 2,000 U.S. troops as part of an international peace keeping force. Both the Pentagon and the State Department are in favor of such a move, but the White House has so far declined to expand its adventures in dictator-eradication to Africa.
Of course, that hasn't stopped the president from paying lip service to alleviating the suffering going on there. Just last week he said: "We are determined to help the people of Liberia find the path to peace." But, apparently, not determined enough to go to the country himself to facilitate a ceasefire agreement between the warring factions.
Instead, he's dispatched 35 -- that's not a typo, "thirty-five" -- U.S. troops to the country, as he put it, "solely for the purpose of protecting American citizens and property." Wow, I bet Liberian President Charles Taylor is quaking in his jackboots. Taylor, whose murderous regime could teach Saddam a thing or two about torture and mass murder, was last month indicted for war crimes by a U.N. court
While trying to drum up outrage at Saddam earlier this year, the president catalogued a list of his atrocities, including mutilation and rape, and proclaimed: "If this is not evil, then evil has no meaning." But the president's fly-over of Africa's hearts of darkness, riven by mutilation and rape, shows that it's his humanitarian rhetoric that has no meaning. Here is true evil, but next week will instead be dominated by a series of photo-ops with smiling children and platitudes about the virtues of democracy.
If more proof of the hypocritical selectivity of Bush's moral outrage were needed, look no further than the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, when, in the name of liberating the Iraqi people, the White House gladly linked arms with a host of countries its own State Department had castigated for significant human rights violations -- including Uzbekistan, Colombia, Georgia, Eritrea, Macedonia, Rwanda, Uganda, Ethiopia, Azerbaijan, and the Dominican Republic. Given these countries' dismal human rights record, maybe we should have called them the Coalition of the Willing to Torture, Execute, and Rape.
The suddenly fashionable humanitarian justification for the war in Iraq is nothing more than yet another White House deception designed to cloak the fact that the original justification -- Iraq as an imminent threat -- hasn't panned out.
Which is just too darn bad for the long-suffering souls of Congo and Liberia.
http://www.ariannaonline.com/columns/files/070203.html
Criticizing a President for not visiting countries in states of chaos and civil war is a ludicrous cheap shot, and, even if we accept for sake of argument the article's simplistic and dubious characterization of the administration's Iraq war aims, justifications, and alliances, the overall theme that the failure to address human catastrophes in one area devalues attempts to address them in others is as shallow as it is obvious. From this perspective, any policy that didn't address every problem, and send an army of saints to do the work, would represent "hypocritical selectivity."
Arianna has, in my opinion, been spending far too much time with fellow parents of students at the exclusive, insanely politically correct Pacific Palisades private school where she sent her kids. Amongst the Hollywood super-elite, such notions probably qualify as clever and original, just as the criticisms in that pathetically dishonest op-ed of hers that you posted on another thread, addressing Bush's supposed psychopathology, probably count as thoughtful and cutting.
In the meantime, events in Liberia appear to be justifying the care with which the the Bush people have addressed the situation: Taylor appears to be on the way out, but there are complications, and it wouldn't make any sense to send American Marines into a situation where they'd have little or no chance of succeeding.
As for the Congo, it's possible that we could or should have intervened there, but a meaningful expedition to that vast, landlocked country, in which several neighboring countries have already intervened militarily in what has been called "Africa's World War," would have to be a massive, costly, and uncertain operation - Somalia to the tenth power. No doubt, America's critics would determine that we were really there to secure Congo's vast mineral resources for ourselves. (Similar criticisms were offered in regard to Somalia, as to Iraq and Afghanistan more recently.) Any use of force to establish order would be criticized for its brutality. Any failure to use force would be criticized as a sign of our unseriousness. If we launched operations against one or another troublesome faction, we'd be accused of ignoring local sensitivities. If we failed to launch such operations, we'd be accused of effectively supporting that same faction despite its horrible record. Ditto if we sought to patch together a ceasefire and negotiations involving all parties, though, if we excluded anyone, we would again be accused of taking sides and ignoring local desires and aspirations. (Imagine the criticisms if any excluded party happened to be associated with Islamism or the French...) If we left early, we would be accused of abandoning the people. If we stayed, we'd be called imperialists, and the same critics would claim we'd stumbled into a quagmire. If we fed the starving, we'd probably be accused of seeking to establish dependency on agribusiness interests and genetically modified foodstuffs. If we encountered logistical difficulties that delayed the delivery of aid, we'd be be accused of not really caring, and just putting on a show.
And what about Burma? What about Zimbabwe? What about Chechnya? What about the poor and unemployed back home? How dare we expect credit or appreciation for efforts in [take your pick] when we've left desperate people elsewhere to fend for themselves?
Compared to Arianna's twaddle, Ann Coulter's over-the-top but at least intelligent and somewhat grown-up columns are looking better and better.