Mar. 10, 2003
Miami - Watching American TV can be a surreal
experience. Sandwiched between ads for instant weight loss products,
predigested fast food, and incontinence panties, cable TV commentators bay
like rabid dogs for war against Iraq, and subject nations daring to oppose
President Bush's crusade to venomous abuse or sneering disdain.
France, which speaks with the strongest, most logical
voice of those opposing war, has become the special target of vituperation and
hatred in American's leading neo-conservative media - Fox TV, Wall Street
Journal, National Review, New York Post - and the Bush Administration's
special bête noire. Particularly so, now that France and Russia vow to veto US
attempts to ram a war-enabling resolution through the UN Security Council.
France, many Americans claim, should do whatever
Washington orders out of gratitude for US `saving' it in two world wars. US TV
features angry veterans standing in American military cemeteries in Normandy,
denouncing France for `stabbing America in the back' - as if invading Iraq to
grab its oil and crushing Israel's enemies had anything to do with World War
II. I happen to be a US Army vet and member of the American Legion who thinks
France is doing exactly the right thing.
Few flag-waving pundits mention America sat out almost
40% of WWII until attacked by Japan. In 1940, the German armed forces were the
equivalent of the US armed forces today - a full military generation ahead of
all other nations. France's entire army was destroyed in battle by the
invincible Germans; had the US fought Germany in 1940, it too would have been
routed. The Soviet Union, not the US, defeated Germany, destroying over 100
Nazi divisions.
So enough with all the bombast about Word War II. In the
eyes of Europeans and most of the world, George Bush's administration looks
dangerously aggressive, dominated as it is by petrohawks and neo-conservative
ideologues linked to Israel's far right. These little Mussolinis have no time
for diplomacy or multi-nationalism. No wonder a recent Pew Research poll found
that formerly favorable ratings of the US have plummeted in 19 of 27 nations
surveyed.
It seems at times that President Bush is even more eager
to bomb Paris than Baghdad. In fact, the Administration has been treating
France like an enemy, rather than America's oldest ally and intimate friend.
Neo-conservatives even accuse France of anti-Semitism, a disgusting slander.
Far from being an enemy, France has been doing what a
true good friend should do: telling Washington its policy is wrong and
dangerous, unlike the handkissing leaders of Britain, Spain and Italy, who
crave Bush's political support, or the East European coalition of the
shilling, ex-communist politicians pandering to Washington for cash. Seventy
percent of British, and 90% of Italians and Spaniards oppose Bush's crusade.
France's President Jacques Chirac speaks for an
overwhelming majority of Europeans and, indeed, the world's people, in urging
the US to opt for diplomacy and UN inspections over a war that will not be
worth the loss of a single American soldier, not to mention tens of thousands
of Iraqis and chaos across Mesopotamia. So, too, warns the great and wise
Pope, John Paul II.
The contrast between France's reasoned diplomatic
response and Bush's belligerent behavior could not be more stark. As is the
dignified, logical tone set by President Chirac and Foreign Minister Dominique
de Villlepin compared to the bullying, low-brow, locker-room talk issuing from
the White House that has seriously damaged America's reputation and image
around the globe. This does not mean France will not join the oil-rush to
plunder Iraq when the US invasion appears inevitable, simply that wiser heads
in Paris realize that war is the worst solution to the now minor problem of
Iraq.
This week Turkey's new parliament, chosen in the first
truly democratic election in memory, followed Europe, courageously rejecting
Washington's bribes and demands US ground forces be allowed to attack Iraq
from Turkish territory. Washington's churlish response - withdrawing its
bribes, threatening punishment - contrasted curiously to Bush's claims his
goal in Iraq is bringing democracy to the Mideast. Democracy, its seems, is
fine so long as it does US bidding. Inconveniently, Turkey's people and
democratic government voted a resounding no to war. How long the Turks can
resist intense pressure from the US and its allies, Turkey's hardline
generals, remains to be seen.
Bush's crusade against Iraq will go on with or without
Turkey. The war will be akin to throwing a grenade into a huge hornet's nest.
France, which lives next to the Arab World and has 5 million Muslim citizens,
warns an invasion and occupation of Iraq will roil the entire region, spark
more terrorism, and hit Europe with a dangerous backblast. But Bush couldn't
care less, as he would say.
While Bush prepares war against demolished Iraq, he is
ducking the surging nuclear confrontation with North Korea, which, unlike
Iraq, truly threatens North America. His outrageous dereliction of duty over
Korea, obsessive warmongering against Iraq, crude, aggressive behavior worthy
of Leonid Brezhnev's Soviet Union, threats against the UN, US $400 billion
deficit that will infect the world with inflation, and damage to America's
reputation - such are Bush's `accomplishments' to date. Who needs enemies with
world-class blunderers like this in charge? Bush's tirade against Iraq last
Thursday simply confirmed that the US military is an army of lions, led by
asses.
America's friends and neighbors, led by France, the
mother of diplomacy, rightly warn the steroidal Bush Administration to halt
its rush to war. President Chirac and Foreign Minister de Villepin deserve the
Noble Peace Prize. Americans owe France an apology, and a hearty `merci.'