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عرّابة
المحافظين الجدد تعتبر الحرب في
العراق خطأً فادحاً مجلة
ذا نايشن الأمريكية - 9/4/2007 Neocon
Godmother Considered Iraq War a Mistake From
the grave, Jeane Kirkpatrick, the godmother of the
neoconservative movement, speaks: the Kirkpatrick,
best known as the combative UN ambassador during the
Reagan administration who argued that the It's
stunning criticism from a hawk who for over two decades
has been a guiding light for the neocons who cheerleaded
the nation to war in On
a personal note, I have dedicated much of my
professional life to reconciling what I consider the
twin goals of American foreign policy, and that is why
President George W. Bush's decision to go to war has
troubled me deeply. These
twin goals of our foreign policy are, first, ensuring
our security and, second, promoting democracy and human
rights. An appropriate balance between the two must
exist, and that balance must be determined within the
unique circumstances of any situation. Yet, for
democracy to take hold in a given region, it must be
preceded by institutions that are receptive and willing
to support democracy--because democracy requires
security as a prerequisite. That is why, throughout
history, if the single force of political stability in a
region is removed without critical institutions in place
to fill the resulting vacuum of power, the security of
societies and their budding institutions will be
precarious at best. Unfortunately,
what we face in Iraq today is a vacuum of power, a lack
of stable institutions needed to govern, and the problem
that the promise of democracy for which our nation
stands may be lost in the essential scramble for safety
and stability in the streets. This is one of the reasons
I am uneasy about the war we have made here--for we have
helped to create the chaos that has overtaken the
country, and we may have reduced rather than promoted
the pace of democratic reform. Kirkpatrick
suggests the Bush administration and her neocon
colleagues rushed into the war irresponsibly: Iraq
lacked practically all the requirements for a democratic
government: rule of law, an elite with a shared
commitment to democratic procedures, a sense of
citizenship, and habits of trust and cooperation. The
administration's failure involved several issues, but
the core concern is that they did not seem to have
methodically completed the due diligence required for
reasoned policy-making because they failed to address
the aftermath of the invasion. This, of course, is
reflected by the violence, sectarian unrest, ethnic
vengeance and bloodshed we see in No
"due diligence." Kirkpatrick is politely
charging that George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald
Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell
and other top administration aides invaded a nation
recklessly. Can there be a more damning indictment? In
the book, Kirkpatrick does not engage in self-criticism.
Before the invasion, she was part of the commentariat
that helped create the context for the war. Three weeks
after September 11, she suggested that Saddam Hussein
was behind the attacks on the In
a June 2002 interview with the Financial Times,
Kirkpatrick said that she had "some questions"
about whether it would be "prudent" to launch
a preemptive strike on Saddam's regime, noting such an
attack could "win recruits for the most radical
Islamists." But on October 9, 2002--the day after
Bush made a nationally televised speech asserting that
Iraq posed a direct threat to the United States because
it was loaded with weapons of mass of destruction and in
league with al Qaeda--Kirkpatrick appeared on PBS's
Newshour and praised the president for presenting an
"effective and clear explanation of the US
case...against Iraq." She voiced no reservations
about a preemptive war with Shortly
before Bush launched the invasion of Whatever
her private concerns, she publicly defended the war. In
a speech at the American Enterprise Institute on Kirkpatrick
is the latest in a parade of Bush aides and associates
who have expressed disappointment and dismay with Bush
and his war. Matthew Dowd, the chief campaign strategist
for Bush's 2004 reelection effort, recently told
The New York Times that he had lost faith in Bush and
believed US troops should be withdrawn from http://www.thenation.com/blogs/capitalgames?bid=3&pid=184240 ----------------- نشرنا
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