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djon
05-04-2005, 03:47 AM
Perhaps the neocons got it right in the Middle East

We should not be blinded by liberal prejudice when assessing Bush

Max Hastings
Wednesday May 4, 2005
The Guardian

Those of us who work on the gloomy side of the prediction industry about Iraq, the prospects for Middle East peace, and the sanity of the Bush administration, have been given plenty to think about lately. On the one hand, on Monday the 87th British soldier was killed in Iraq, while suicide bombs and armed clashes have accounted for more than 40 Iraqi deaths since last week. On the other, the Bush administration is in triumphalist mode. A friend who visited the White House recently described the president's buoyant account of his Iraqi crusade, which highlighted the fact that a national government has been formed. Some progress is claimed towards normalisation in Shia and Kurdish regions. Syrian withdrawal gives Lebanon a chance of making something of democracy. Washington asserts that it is involving itself more than ever in the Middle East peace process.

None of these claims should be dismissed out of hand. The greatest danger for those of us who dislike George Bush is that our instincts may tip over into a desire to see his foreign policy objectives fail. No reasonable person can oppose the president's commitment to Islamic democracy. Most western Bushophobes are motivated not by dissent about objectives, but by a belief that the Washington neocons' methods are crass, and more likely to escalate a confrontation between the west and Islam than to defuse it.
Such scepticism, however, should not prevent us from stepping back to reassess the progress of the Bush project, and satisfy ourselves that mere prejudice is not blinding us to the possibility that western liberals are wrong; that the Republicans' grand strategy is getting somewhere.

Article Continues (http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1475994,00.html)

ElHombre
05-04-2005, 09:19 AM
this is like saying 'okay, the bus driver took us over a 500 ft cliff and we all died fiery deaths when we hit the bottom, but at least our bodies were flung to where we wanted to go in the first place!'

<Gypsum Fantastic>
05-04-2005, 09:31 AM
this is like saying 'okay, the bus driver took us over a 500 ft cliff and we all died fiery deaths when we hit the bottom, but at least our bodies were flung to where we wanted to go in the first place!'

:lol: Very good!

I think if Bush and Blair had said "We are going to end all dictatorships" they would have had great support. Instead they made up a load of crap about WMDs and links to Al Qaeda (Who are idological enemies of Saddam).

That's how Bush should be assessed.

Tim Nice But Dim
05-04-2005, 09:49 AM
Perhaps the neocons got it right in the Middle East

rofl

joka
05-04-2005, 11:26 AM
We should not be blinded by liberal prejudice when assessing Bush

Isn't that contradictory, two sentences down the article. Implying that liberals are prejudiced is somewhat prejudiced in itself is it not.

von_Moo142
05-04-2005, 11:51 AM
Interesting timing, considering the number of Guardian readers thinking about voting for the Lib-dems tommorrow because of Iraq and our co-operation with the Bush administration. p-)

Hastings writes pretty well (I'm actually reading one of his books at the moment), IMO, and he's certainly done well here. "We should not be blinded by liberal prejudice when assessing Bush" is one title, but we could just as easily call the piece "It's OK to detest Bush et al and admit that our involvement in Iraq isn't as bad as all that".