Fortunes from fortune cookies currently in my wallet:
"You are smart, for you do things smartly."
"People in your background will be more co-operative than usual."
Monday, March 17, 2003
One for the History Books
In my opinion, that of someone who thinks that Bush generally fails to do well, tonights speech was the best I have ever heard him give. Period. With the sole exception of claiming links between Iraq and Al-Quaida on the basis of inconclusive evidence, he laid out a very logical and compelling case for war. Excluding possible terrorist ties, the case for action against Saddam Hussein is still strong. Personally, I would like to emphasize that one of our main reason for war should be to give the Iraqi people a rest from the 12 years of hell Saddam has put them through.
Bush hit all the right notes in his speech, including going over Saddam's refusal to disarm and obstruction of disarmament for 12 years and over a dozen resolutions before tonight. Saddam has had 12 years to disarm. The U.S., eventually, gave him several more months and one and a half more resolutions as a last chance to merely continue his brutal fascist regime. In the end he decided not to. Bush may have not been very diplomatic in seeking to eliminate Saddam's weapons. He has not always been forthright in his intentions. He may have been inconsistent and contradictory in his position on Saddam Hussein. But it should be obvious that Saddam Hussein had many opportunities to avert a war and maintain power, and took none of them. The only person who has full implicit responsibility for this conflict occuring is Saddam Hussein, a man who epitomizes all that is evil in dictatorships.
Good luck to all the troops in Iraq, and please come back home alive. And to the Iraqi people: I hope that the deposing of Saddam will quickly lead to a free, safe, and prosperous society, and that the world will do much to help you make that transition. May our future shine brighter than the present.
As a side note, I stand by my designation of midnight, March 18, Baghdad Time, as the end of diplomatic action. I think that no diplomatic action other than an act of a higher being will avert either exile for Saddam or war.
Let's hear it for diplomacy.
In my opinion, that of someone who thinks that Bush generally fails to do well, tonights speech was the best I have ever heard him give. Period. With the sole exception of claiming links between Iraq and Al-Quaida on the basis of inconclusive evidence, he laid out a very logical and compelling case for war. Excluding possible terrorist ties, the case for action against Saddam Hussein is still strong. Personally, I would like to emphasize that one of our main reason for war should be to give the Iraqi people a rest from the 12 years of hell Saddam has put them through.
Bush hit all the right notes in his speech, including going over Saddam's refusal to disarm and obstruction of disarmament for 12 years and over a dozen resolutions before tonight. Saddam has had 12 years to disarm. The U.S., eventually, gave him several more months and one and a half more resolutions as a last chance to merely continue his brutal fascist regime. In the end he decided not to. Bush may have not been very diplomatic in seeking to eliminate Saddam's weapons. He has not always been forthright in his intentions. He may have been inconsistent and contradictory in his position on Saddam Hussein. But it should be obvious that Saddam Hussein had many opportunities to avert a war and maintain power, and took none of them. The only person who has full implicit responsibility for this conflict occuring is Saddam Hussein, a man who epitomizes all that is evil in dictatorships.
Good luck to all the troops in Iraq, and please come back home alive. And to the Iraqi people: I hope that the deposing of Saddam will quickly lead to a free, safe, and prosperous society, and that the world will do much to help you make that transition. May our future shine brighter than the present.
As a side note, I stand by my designation of midnight, March 18, Baghdad Time, as the end of diplomatic action. I think that no diplomatic action other than an act of a higher being will avert either exile for Saddam or war.
Let's hear it for diplomacy.
"And as the drive to war enters its 400th day..."
Its T -30 minutes to midnight in Baghdad. If Saddam doesn't start heading for the airport soon, U.S. troops will get the green light. To which I say that I am so sick of debating the pros and cons of taking out a petty third-world dictator that my opinion has become, "Bring on the US hegemony." Honestly, that so many people could spend so much time debating whether or not to take out a dictator with no redeeming qualities whatsoever, is completely absurd.
I do not really care about the problem of war from a long-term view, but have issues with how a war on Iraq will affect us in the short-term. There are too many unknowns about any possible retaliation from Saddam Hussein in a last ditch attempt for revenge, which I outlined here. I would like to add that I would not put it past Saddam Hussein to begin indiscriminately wiping out his own cities to leave Iraq in as bad a mess as possible, and I also think that Rumsfeld overstates how easy a war on Iraq will be, as we got bogged down in Iraq just trying to retake Kuwait in Gulf War I.
Time until midnight in Baghdad: 13 minutes
Its T -30 minutes to midnight in Baghdad. If Saddam doesn't start heading for the airport soon, U.S. troops will get the green light. To which I say that I am so sick of debating the pros and cons of taking out a petty third-world dictator that my opinion has become, "Bring on the US hegemony." Honestly, that so many people could spend so much time debating whether or not to take out a dictator with no redeeming qualities whatsoever, is completely absurd.
I do not really care about the problem of war from a long-term view, but have issues with how a war on Iraq will affect us in the short-term. There are too many unknowns about any possible retaliation from Saddam Hussein in a last ditch attempt for revenge, which I outlined here. I would like to add that I would not put it past Saddam Hussein to begin indiscriminately wiping out his own cities to leave Iraq in as bad a mess as possible, and I also think that Rumsfeld overstates how easy a war on Iraq will be, as we got bogged down in Iraq just trying to retake Kuwait in Gulf War I.
Time until midnight in Baghdad: 13 minutes
Friday, March 14, 2003
Wednesday, March 12, 2003
The commemoration of Douglas Adams will be postponed to April 22, exactly 42 days after Douglas Adams birthday. As Douglas Adams would have agreed, it was not important when Douglas Adams was born and when he died, as what did in between.
Deep Thought, supercomputer: "The answer to the Ultimate Question; to Life, the Universe, and Everything, is..."
Descendant of Supercomputer designers: "Yes, go on!"
"You're really not going to like this."
"It doesn't matter if we don't like it, we must know the answer!"
"...You're really, really not going to like this."
"Tell the answer!"
"Oh, all right.
"The answer to the Ultimate Question; to Life, the Universe, and Everything, is...
"...42."
(long pause)
"We're going to be lynched."
-"Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy", radio series
Deep Thought, supercomputer: "The answer to the Ultimate Question; to Life, the Universe, and Everything, is..."
Descendant of Supercomputer designers: "Yes, go on!"
"You're really not going to like this."
"It doesn't matter if we don't like it, we must know the answer!"
"...You're really, really not going to like this."
"Tell the answer!"
"Oh, all right.
"The answer to the Ultimate Question; to Life, the Universe, and Everything, is...
"...42."
(long pause)
"We're going to be lynched."
-"Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy", radio series
Tuesday, March 11, 2003
Monday, March 10, 2003
Kurdistan Update:
Turkey's now-Prime Minister has stated that, "Turkey will not remain silent against developments for its security and Iraq’s territorial integrity." First he wanted to follow U.S. troops into Iraq, now he wants to respect Iraq's "territorial security?" Kurdistan will only contribute to Turkey's insecurity by encouraging other Kurdish revolutionaries to act. There has been no Kurdish terrorism coming from northern Iraq, and if there was, the armies they have amassed at the Iraq-Turkey border would stop them from getting through. They would also stop the refugees he complains about.
Kurdistan Update Update: Northern Iraq and Eastern Turkey were actual territory of the country Kurdistan until 1925, when Iraq, Iran, and Turkey invaded it. So when Turkey says it wants to preserve Iraq (and its own) territorial integrity, it is really saying that it conquered the land fair and square. There are also small Turkoman populations(near end of editorial) that want independence from Iraq, which suggests that Turkey will pull a Cyprus. (I also recommend reading this, from the Kurdish National Congress of North America. Also, a report from the front.)
Turkey's now-Prime Minister has stated that, "Turkey will not remain silent against developments for its security and Iraq’s territorial integrity." First he wanted to follow U.S. troops into Iraq, now he wants to respect Iraq's "territorial security?" Kurdistan will only contribute to Turkey's insecurity by encouraging other Kurdish revolutionaries to act. There has been no Kurdish terrorism coming from northern Iraq, and if there was, the armies they have amassed at the Iraq-Turkey border would stop them from getting through. They would also stop the refugees he complains about.
Kurdistan Update Update: Northern Iraq and Eastern Turkey were actual territory of the country Kurdistan until 1925, when Iraq, Iran, and Turkey invaded it. So when Turkey says it wants to preserve Iraq (and its own) territorial integrity, it is really saying that it conquered the land fair and square. There are also small Turkoman populations(near end of editorial) that want independence from Iraq, which suggests that Turkey will pull a Cyprus. (I also recommend reading this, from the Kurdish National Congress of North America. Also, a report from the front.)
Friday, March 07, 2003
Eugene Volokh Misses the Forest for the Trees:
In answering Michael Kinsley's question, "Why are nuclear weapons in Iraq worth a war but not nuclear weapons in North Korea?" Volokh makes a table comparing the situation of Iraq and North Korea. Go read that.
Back? Okay, he does answer correctly that the reason why has something to do with the fact that North Korea is much more of a military power than Iraq, and in more position to do harm. However, he is wrong in saying that North Korea probably has nuclear weapons. There has been no intelligence indicating that North Korea's nuclear program has already made a nuclear weapon. Self-incriminatingly, Volokh notes "There might well be lots of sound criticisms of the Bush Administration's policies with regard to North Korea." Newsflash: there are lots of sound criticisms of the Bush Administration's policies, notably the lack thereof. From last night's press conference:
As a historical note, I would like to flashback to the 2000 election, to an article written by Stephen Walt, a Harvard professor. This article was published in Foreign Affairs.
It appears that they still don't have an alternative policy for dealing with the same situation. We have been talking to the Chinese, Russians, South Koreans, and Japanese for months now, apparently. Unless there is a breakthrough in the next month that results in North Korea deciding to stop, because of a "diplomatic solution" created by all the other nations in the region except North Korea, the months of constant talk won't do any good at stopping North Korea's program from starting to produce a nuclear bomb a week. Before North Korea gets the bomb, we can probably win a war against North Korea with major damage only to South Korea. If they have several bombs, Seoul will be completely gone, and Japan may lose a few cities. If we're lucky, they don't hit the West Coast with their missiles.
Compare the IAEA bringing the issue to the Security Council, after they were kicked out, to Bush's proactiveness in the UN on Iraq. Bush has started all US action on Iraq in the UN, yet is silent in the UN on North Korea. Can you seriously imagine Bush trying to get a "diplomatic solution" to deal with Iraq, in the face of more flagrant violations of UN orders than have happened? Also from the press conference:
Basically, we're for trying to convince other people to deal with a threat that is far more pressing than Iraq, and hoping things work out. Anytime a Democrat advocates that we take this position on Iraq, he or she is derided by conservatives, but when Bush decides to take this policy on North Korea, almost the only person who cares is Joshua Marshall.
This issue cannot be ignored. If North Korea does obtain nuclear weapons, how long will it be before America's inaction in the face of aggression, leads to the use of nuclear weapons as a deterrent/threat to keep the US from intervening in an invasion of South Korea? What will Bush do to stop North Korea from trading nuclear weapons once it has them? Bush doesn't seem to be able to answer these questions. If a military strike was a bad idea in 1994, it will be much worse if North Korea actually has a nuclear arsenal and missiles that can hit the US. We have options other than a unilateral war. We can restart diplomatic talks with North Korea, we can advocate for immediate action by the UN, and/or we can go to NATO and persuade them to declare war on North Korea. Bush has refused to do the first one of these, and has shown no sign of taking action on either of the other two. Bush is not solving the problem, he is delaying it. Going to war with North Korea is a bad idea, doing nothing is worse.
In answering Michael Kinsley's question, "Why are nuclear weapons in Iraq worth a war but not nuclear weapons in North Korea?" Volokh makes a table comparing the situation of Iraq and North Korea. Go read that.
Back? Okay, he does answer correctly that the reason why has something to do with the fact that North Korea is much more of a military power than Iraq, and in more position to do harm. However, he is wrong in saying that North Korea probably has nuclear weapons. There has been no intelligence indicating that North Korea's nuclear program has already made a nuclear weapon. Self-incriminatingly, Volokh notes "There might well be lots of sound criticisms of the Bush Administration's policies with regard to North Korea." Newsflash: there are lots of sound criticisms of the Bush Administration's policies, notably the lack thereof. From last night's press conference:
Q: Thank you, Mr. President. If I can follow on Steve's question, on North Korea. Do you believe it is essential for the security of the United States and its allies that North Korea be prevented from developing nuclear weapons? And are you in any way growing frustrated with the pace of the diplomacy there?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think it's -- I think it's an issue. Obviously, I'm concerned about North Korea developing nuclear weapons, not only for their own use, but for -- perhaps they might choose to proliferate them, sell them. They may end up in the hands of dictators, people who are not afraid of using weapons of mass destruction, people who try to impose their will on the world or blackmail free nations. I'm concerned about it.
We are working hard to bring a diplomatic solution. And we've made some progress. After all, the IAEA asked that the Security Council take up the North Korean issue. It's now in the Security Council. Constantly talking with the Chinese and the Russians and the Japanese and the South Koreans. Colin Powell just went overseas and spent some time in China, went to the inauguration of President Roh in South Korea; spent time in China. We're working the issue hard, and I'm optimistic that we'll come up with a diplomatic solution. I certainly hope so.
As a historical note, I would like to flashback to the 2000 election, to an article written by Stephen Walt, a Harvard professor. This article was published in Foreign Affairs.
After consideration of a preemptive strike against North Korea's nuclear facilities in 1994, cooler heads prevailed, and the administration eventually crafted a diplomatic solution. North Korea agreed to cease plutonium production at the Yongbyon research reactor, and the United States, Japan, and South Korea agreed -- under appropriate international safeguards -- to provide North Korea with two light-water reactors for its power needs. Hard-liners have criticized Clinton for rewarding North Korea's defiance of the nonproliferation regime, but they have yet to offer an alternate policy that would have achieved as much with as little.[my emphasis]
It appears that they still don't have an alternative policy for dealing with the same situation. We have been talking to the Chinese, Russians, South Koreans, and Japanese for months now, apparently. Unless there is a breakthrough in the next month that results in North Korea deciding to stop, because of a "diplomatic solution" created by all the other nations in the region except North Korea, the months of constant talk won't do any good at stopping North Korea's program from starting to produce a nuclear bomb a week. Before North Korea gets the bomb, we can probably win a war against North Korea with major damage only to South Korea. If they have several bombs, Seoul will be completely gone, and Japan may lose a few cities. If we're lucky, they don't hit the West Coast with their missiles.
Compare the IAEA bringing the issue to the Security Council, after they were kicked out, to Bush's proactiveness in the UN on Iraq. Bush has started all US action on Iraq in the UN, yet is silent in the UN on North Korea. Can you seriously imagine Bush trying to get a "diplomatic solution" to deal with Iraq, in the face of more flagrant violations of UN orders than have happened? Also from the press conference:
So, therefore, I think the best way to deal with this is in multilateral fashion, by convincing those nations they must stand up to their responsibility, along with the United States, to convince Kim Jong-il that the development of a nuclear arsenal is not in his nation's interest; and that should he want help in easing the suffering of the North Korean people, the best way to achieve that help is to not proceed forward.
Basically, we're for trying to convince other people to deal with a threat that is far more pressing than Iraq, and hoping things work out. Anytime a Democrat advocates that we take this position on Iraq, he or she is derided by conservatives, but when Bush decides to take this policy on North Korea, almost the only person who cares is Joshua Marshall.
This issue cannot be ignored. If North Korea does obtain nuclear weapons, how long will it be before America's inaction in the face of aggression, leads to the use of nuclear weapons as a deterrent/threat to keep the US from intervening in an invasion of South Korea? What will Bush do to stop North Korea from trading nuclear weapons once it has them? Bush doesn't seem to be able to answer these questions. If a military strike was a bad idea in 1994, it will be much worse if North Korea actually has a nuclear arsenal and missiles that can hit the US. We have options other than a unilateral war. We can restart diplomatic talks with North Korea, we can advocate for immediate action by the UN, and/or we can go to NATO and persuade them to declare war on North Korea. Bush has refused to do the first one of these, and has shown no sign of taking action on either of the other two. Bush is not solving the problem, he is delaying it. Going to war with North Korea is a bad idea, doing nothing is worse.
Wednesday, March 05, 2003
Instapundit quote a prediction of an oil market where the Third World demands most of the world's oil, where I think the Middle East could wield even more influence than they currently do by threatening to embargo developing nations if they step out of line. (Personal Internal Thought: This would also be an excellent situation for someone with far less scruples than the US to get tired of dealing with the Middle East and invade and/or bomb it to take some of the oil reserves, and "just because.")
Kurdistan-Turkey relations go from bad to worse.
As I predicted earlier, Kurds announce they will shoot Turkish soldiers on sight.
As I predicted earlier, Kurds announce they will shoot Turkish soldiers on sight.
Tuesday, March 04, 2003
Monday, March 03, 2003
Sunday, March 02, 2003
Apocalyptic Nexus of Evil and Ignorance, Part 2
Kurdistan
Talking Points Memo beat me to this, but only because I delayed writing it for several days. It seems as if the folks in Washington weren't sure enough of getting mired in a difficult war, so they had to setup the conditions for another Vietnam. Turkey has so far demanded two things in exchange for getting the parliament to vote on letting US troops use Turkey as a staging area. First they demanded that we give them an aid package to compensate for the disruption of the cash flow their getting from Iraq's oil for food program renting Turkey's pipeline. Now they want to send Turkish troops into northern Iraq, to prevent Kurdish revolutionaries from obtaining Iraqi weapon. This is such a blatant falsehood that it is not surprising the Kurds will resist a Turkish occupation. First the obvious.
The Iraqi weapons will probably be closest to these Kurdish revolutionaries when there being fired at them. If there was a real danger of the Kurds obtaining weapons that could be used for terrorist purposes, or for protecting an independent Kurdistan from foreign suppresion, the US forces could easily take care of that problem on their own. The Turks claim that their troops will provide humanitarian aid is hypocritical, given that they are having troops placed on the Turkey-Iraq border to prevent Kurdish refugees from escaping possible slaughter by the Iraqis.
Also, Turkey has not exactly been supportive of Kurdish nationalism. They have banned several Kurdish independence groups in Turkey, imprisoned politicians, such as Leyla Zana, who advocated the peaceful establishment of a Kurdish state. The Kurds are generally treated as second-class citizens in Turkey and Iran, and in Iraq the Mi-24 helicopter was excluded from the ban on military aircrafts in northern Iraq, which made it easy for the Iraqi to continue to slaughter Kurds. (see an Air & Space magazine from a few years ago with a cover story about the Mi-24)
Turkey is sending troops in so many Kurdish leaders can be shot in "defensive actions against Kurdish attacks." They will go in there and do whatever they can get away with against the Kurdish nationalists. But they aren't in it just to suppress the Kurds; they want to protect the oil town of Kirkuk so that the Kurds don't claim it in an independent state and stop paying Turkey to send oil from it through Turkish pipelines. Its very possible the response of the Kurdish nationalists to Turkish troops in the region will be to shoot at any Turkish soldier they see. Then Turkey will complain to the U.S. about unprovoked Kurdish attacks on Turkish troops, request U.S. assistance, and pretty soon we're embroiled in someone else's war to persecute an ethnic group that has been suppressed since the 1800's. The fact that we'll be fighting in desert and not jungle won't make the war winnable, it will make it more horrific.
The Kurds are perhaps the most under-recognized oppressed people in the world. People routinely denounce China for continuing to occupy Tibet, violence against an ethnic group on a litlle Island called Timor on the other side of the world is international news, and rhe Palestinians who aren't even an ethnic group have an observer on the UN and a whole comittee devoted to them. Somehow, when it is Jews "oppresing" an ethnic group the Arabs created, it is the worst crime since the Holocaust (Yes, it is a #$%@$ stupid comparison, but some people actually make it), but when three Arab nations suppress the nationalistic ambitions of an Arab people, it's "okay." And neither the UN nor the US want to make an issue of it. Perhaps a generation from now Kurds will curse not Saddam Hussein, but George W. Bush.
Kurdistan
Talking Points Memo beat me to this, but only because I delayed writing it for several days. It seems as if the folks in Washington weren't sure enough of getting mired in a difficult war, so they had to setup the conditions for another Vietnam. Turkey has so far demanded two things in exchange for getting the parliament to vote on letting US troops use Turkey as a staging area. First they demanded that we give them an aid package to compensate for the disruption of the cash flow their getting from Iraq's oil for food program renting Turkey's pipeline. Now they want to send Turkish troops into northern Iraq, to prevent Kurdish revolutionaries from obtaining Iraqi weapon. This is such a blatant falsehood that it is not surprising the Kurds will resist a Turkish occupation. First the obvious.
The Iraqi weapons will probably be closest to these Kurdish revolutionaries when there being fired at them. If there was a real danger of the Kurds obtaining weapons that could be used for terrorist purposes, or for protecting an independent Kurdistan from foreign suppresion, the US forces could easily take care of that problem on their own. The Turks claim that their troops will provide humanitarian aid is hypocritical, given that they are having troops placed on the Turkey-Iraq border to prevent Kurdish refugees from escaping possible slaughter by the Iraqis.
Also, Turkey has not exactly been supportive of Kurdish nationalism. They have banned several Kurdish independence groups in Turkey, imprisoned politicians, such as Leyla Zana, who advocated the peaceful establishment of a Kurdish state. The Kurds are generally treated as second-class citizens in Turkey and Iran, and in Iraq the Mi-24 helicopter was excluded from the ban on military aircrafts in northern Iraq, which made it easy for the Iraqi to continue to slaughter Kurds. (see an Air & Space magazine from a few years ago with a cover story about the Mi-24)
Turkey is sending troops in so many Kurdish leaders can be shot in "defensive actions against Kurdish attacks." They will go in there and do whatever they can get away with against the Kurdish nationalists. But they aren't in it just to suppress the Kurds; they want to protect the oil town of Kirkuk so that the Kurds don't claim it in an independent state and stop paying Turkey to send oil from it through Turkish pipelines. Its very possible the response of the Kurdish nationalists to Turkish troops in the region will be to shoot at any Turkish soldier they see. Then Turkey will complain to the U.S. about unprovoked Kurdish attacks on Turkish troops, request U.S. assistance, and pretty soon we're embroiled in someone else's war to persecute an ethnic group that has been suppressed since the 1800's. The fact that we'll be fighting in desert and not jungle won't make the war winnable, it will make it more horrific.
The Kurds are perhaps the most under-recognized oppressed people in the world. People routinely denounce China for continuing to occupy Tibet, violence against an ethnic group on a litlle Island called Timor on the other side of the world is international news, and rhe Palestinians who aren't even an ethnic group have an observer on the UN and a whole comittee devoted to them. Somehow, when it is Jews "oppresing" an ethnic group the Arabs created, it is the worst crime since the Holocaust (Yes, it is a #$%@$ stupid comparison, but some people actually make it), but when three Arab nations suppress the nationalistic ambitions of an Arab people, it's "okay." And neither the UN nor the US want to make an issue of it. Perhaps a generation from now Kurds will curse not Saddam Hussein, but George W. Bush.
Friday, February 28, 2003
Jonah Goldberg goes off the deep end
Next thing you know he'll be claiming all Catholics are agents of the Pope. One thing about the American Communist Party: Rosa Parks went to a training camp run by them. Try calling her a treasonous communist. Goldberg has just insulted hundreds of people whose lives were ruined by the Comunist witch hunts. What proof of spying was he talking about exactly? There is a little thing called free speech in this country, Jonah, where even if you did support the Holocaust it doesn't become treason. It is not a crime to be a Communist any more than it is to be a Republican. Just because somebody is wrong doesn't mean they must be treated as criminals. His implication that the Hollywood Ten were traitors because they were Communists and refused to be badgered by McCarthy is pure nonsense. If this is mainstream conservative thought I fear for the future of this republic.
Next thing you know he'll be claiming all Catholics are agents of the Pope. One thing about the American Communist Party: Rosa Parks went to a training camp run by them. Try calling her a treasonous communist. Goldberg has just insulted hundreds of people whose lives were ruined by the Comunist witch hunts. What proof of spying was he talking about exactly? There is a little thing called free speech in this country, Jonah, where even if you did support the Holocaust it doesn't become treason. It is not a crime to be a Communist any more than it is to be a Republican. Just because somebody is wrong doesn't mean they must be treated as criminals. His implication that the Hollywood Ten were traitors because they were Communists and refused to be badgered by McCarthy is pure nonsense. If this is mainstream conservative thought I fear for the future of this republic.
Sunday, February 23, 2003
Apocalyptic Nexus of Evil and Ignorance, Part 1
Two crisises threaten to coincide that could very well be the most important events since the fall of the Soviet Union.
North Korea
This is going to be controversial, but I think that Bush has made one of the worse foreign policy decisions in the history of the United States. I think he is lying about North Korea having a uranium nuclear program. The evidence he has given for it is a few intelligence reports that we don't know the source of that give circumstantial evidence, and North Korea's "admission," which they have repeatedly denied happened. If there is a smoking gun out there that I don't know about, please e-mail it to me at natfre -at- hotmail.com. Bush is manipulating the situation in North Korea for political gain. He has cut off aid, and had set the return of it conditional on the end of the uranium nuclear program the North Korean s aren't doing and the inspectors in North Korea haven't been able to find any evidence of. North Korea accused the U.S. of lying and threatening them, and proceeded to threaten to actually restart the plutonium program unless the U.S. started a dialogue throught the Governor of New Mexico, who was an ambassador to NK. Bush refused, and North Korea gradually kicked out inspectors and has now shipped out the spent fuel rods that the inspectors were guarding. Whe NK threatened to do this in 1994, it led to a major crisis that ended with the '94 Agreed Framework, which Bush broke. As perhaps should have been expected, Bush ignored this. It appears that Bush may actually be getting serious about NK 5 months after they should have been dealt with, having sent Colin Powell to talk to China about dealing with NK. The problem appears to be that the crisis in NK peaked too early, and that dealing "conclusively" with NK will happen as the invasion of Iraq is, not afterward as Bush planned.
The problem is that it gets worse. NK could have a nuke in a month. It is not bluffing. Sure claiming that you are going to get a nuke is a good bluff, butr actually trying to make one is an even better threat. The real problem is that by not taking NK serious when they made their first move towards getting plutonium nukes, Kim Jong-Il thinks that Bush will only take them serious if they have a nuke. In fact, he may have gone off the deep end, and decided that he doesn't need aid if he can use nukes to control Eastern Asia. Worst-case scenario: North Korea issuaes an ultimatum to the U.S.; send U.S. troops out of South Korea, opening it up to invasion, or Tokyo gets nuked. You figure out a non-messy solution to that. The reason I don't think Kim Jong-Il is going to be bluffing about anything is that he has made isolation and resilience of the nation into a cult. If he starts a nuclear war, he will simply send the Koreans into the countryside for who knows how long, surely plotting a return to power. North Korea is the most important issue in foreign policy right now, and Bush refuses to see that.
Two crisises threaten to coincide that could very well be the most important events since the fall of the Soviet Union.
North Korea
This is going to be controversial, but I think that Bush has made one of the worse foreign policy decisions in the history of the United States. I think he is lying about North Korea having a uranium nuclear program. The evidence he has given for it is a few intelligence reports that we don't know the source of that give circumstantial evidence, and North Korea's "admission," which they have repeatedly denied happened. If there is a smoking gun out there that I don't know about, please e-mail it to me at natfre -at- hotmail.com. Bush is manipulating the situation in North Korea for political gain. He has cut off aid, and had set the return of it conditional on the end of the uranium nuclear program the North Korean s aren't doing and the inspectors in North Korea haven't been able to find any evidence of. North Korea accused the U.S. of lying and threatening them, and proceeded to threaten to actually restart the plutonium program unless the U.S. started a dialogue throught the Governor of New Mexico, who was an ambassador to NK. Bush refused, and North Korea gradually kicked out inspectors and has now shipped out the spent fuel rods that the inspectors were guarding. Whe NK threatened to do this in 1994, it led to a major crisis that ended with the '94 Agreed Framework, which Bush broke. As perhaps should have been expected, Bush ignored this. It appears that Bush may actually be getting serious about NK 5 months after they should have been dealt with, having sent Colin Powell to talk to China about dealing with NK. The problem appears to be that the crisis in NK peaked too early, and that dealing "conclusively" with NK will happen as the invasion of Iraq is, not afterward as Bush planned.
The problem is that it gets worse. NK could have a nuke in a month. It is not bluffing. Sure claiming that you are going to get a nuke is a good bluff, butr actually trying to make one is an even better threat. The real problem is that by not taking NK serious when they made their first move towards getting plutonium nukes, Kim Jong-Il thinks that Bush will only take them serious if they have a nuke. In fact, he may have gone off the deep end, and decided that he doesn't need aid if he can use nukes to control Eastern Asia. Worst-case scenario: North Korea issuaes an ultimatum to the U.S.; send U.S. troops out of South Korea, opening it up to invasion, or Tokyo gets nuked. You figure out a non-messy solution to that. The reason I don't think Kim Jong-Il is going to be bluffing about anything is that he has made isolation and resilience of the nation into a cult. If he starts a nuclear war, he will simply send the Koreans into the countryside for who knows how long, surely plotting a return to power. North Korea is the most important issue in foreign policy right now, and Bush refuses to see that.
Saturday, February 22, 2003
The FY2002 Budget and the Incredible Vanishing Surplus, Part 1
(Warning: Budget Figures Intensive, unlike certain other discussions of the budget)
Myth: The deficit can be overcomed by eliminating "pork-barrel" spending and making the budget leaner.
Fact vs. Reality
Fact: The amount of "pork-barrel" spending in the FY2002 Budget, according to Citizens Against Government Waste(a conservative watchdog group): $20.1 billion
Reality: Size of FY2002 Budget Deficit, according to U.S. Treasury Department: $157.7 billion
I think the numbers speak for themselves.
Sources:
FY2002 Budget Highlights: Financial Management Service, a branch of the U.S. Treasury Department
2002 Pig Book: A publication of Citizens Against Government Waste
(Warning: Budget Figures Intensive, unlike certain other discussions of the budget)
Myth: The deficit can be overcomed by eliminating "pork-barrel" spending and making the budget leaner.
Fact vs. Reality
Fact: The amount of "pork-barrel" spending in the FY2002 Budget, according to Citizens Against Government Waste(a conservative watchdog group): $20.1 billion
Reality: Size of FY2002 Budget Deficit, according to U.S. Treasury Department: $157.7 billion
I think the numbers speak for themselves.
Sources:
FY2002 Budget Highlights: Financial Management Service, a branch of the U.S. Treasury Department
2002 Pig Book: A publication of Citizens Against Government Waste
Friday, February 21, 2003
Saturday, February 01, 2003
"The Space Shuttle Columbia has disappeared over Texas..."
They're gone. Ilan Ramon, the first Israeli astronaut; Laurel Clark, a Navy physician from Wisconsin; David Brown, a 46-year old jet pilot/doctor on his first shuttle flight; Kalpana Chawla, an immigrant from India on her second spaceflight after making a mistake on her first; Michael Anderson, son of an Air Force pilot who followed in his father's footsteps, and went on to become one of the first few African American astronauts; Willian McCool, a Navy test pilot who was afraid of drawing blood; and Rick Husband, a test pilot who had a dazzling rise to the rank of Space Shuttle Commander. This is a cross-section of America, and of the brave. They handled the risk inherent in spaceflight with a bravery and fortitude that is exemplary, and they perished piloting the ultimate manned vehicle. Less than 0.000001% of the Earth's population has left our atmosphere, but those that have are living out the myths of such people as Daedalus' son, and like his son, some perish because they have soared so high, flown so fast. 22 astronauts and cosmonauts have died in space exploration; they are the martyrs of humanities quest to soar above the sky, and they are a testament to the human resolve to risk our life to discover and explore for the betterment of all. These are our pioneers, and should forever be honored for their sacrifice. May we return to space again, and may those who died today rest in peace.
"Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I shall fear no evil..."
-Psalm 23:4
They're gone. Ilan Ramon, the first Israeli astronaut; Laurel Clark, a Navy physician from Wisconsin; David Brown, a 46-year old jet pilot/doctor on his first shuttle flight; Kalpana Chawla, an immigrant from India on her second spaceflight after making a mistake on her first; Michael Anderson, son of an Air Force pilot who followed in his father's footsteps, and went on to become one of the first few African American astronauts; Willian McCool, a Navy test pilot who was afraid of drawing blood; and Rick Husband, a test pilot who had a dazzling rise to the rank of Space Shuttle Commander. This is a cross-section of America, and of the brave. They handled the risk inherent in spaceflight with a bravery and fortitude that is exemplary, and they perished piloting the ultimate manned vehicle. Less than 0.000001% of the Earth's population has left our atmosphere, but those that have are living out the myths of such people as Daedalus' son, and like his son, some perish because they have soared so high, flown so fast. 22 astronauts and cosmonauts have died in space exploration; they are the martyrs of humanities quest to soar above the sky, and they are a testament to the human resolve to risk our life to discover and explore for the betterment of all. These are our pioneers, and should forever be honored for their sacrifice. May we return to space again, and may those who died today rest in peace.
"Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I shall fear no evil..."
-Psalm 23:4