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SpeedRacer

another f&king Iraq thread

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Bush's Minimalist Mantra

By David S. Broder
The singular value of the presidential news conference, as it has
evolved over the years, is the insight it offers into the workings of the
mind of the chief executive. A secondary benefit is the way it forces
the White House press corps to organize its own agenda.

In the session President Bush held with reporters last week, we
learned something both compelling and disturbing about his mental process.
And we learned something I found worrisome about the news media.

The lesson we learned about Bush is the power -- and the danger --
that derives from his capacity to take even the most weighty presidential
decisions and refine them to the simplest terms.

It appears that the president chose to hold a news conference, a
rarity in his tenure, in order to show the American people and the world
the logic that has led him to the brink of war. Whatever he was asked,
Bush reiterated the almost formulaic set of propositions that leave him
convinced, as he put it, that if Saddam Hussein "should be disarmed, and
he's not going to disarm, there's only one way to disarm him" -- war.

The antecedents of that simple, three-step syllogism are almost as
bare-bones as the proposition itself. The United States was a victim of a
devastating terrorist attack on Sept. 11, 2001. He, George Bush, has
sworn an oath to protect his country from another such attack. Saddam
Hussein, if left unchecked, could execute or facilitate an even more
damaging assault with weapons of mass destruction. Hussein has defied
repeated United Nations calls to disarm. His continued defiance is
unacceptable. If the United Nations balks at removing him, the United States, for
its own security, must do so.

The logical force of that argument is so compelling that it is no
wonder Bush is described by everyone who deals with him as being
completely convinced of the rightness of his own position.

The logic has been there in all of Bush's speeches on the subject,
going back to his United Nations address last fall. What the news
conference revealed was his extraordinary capacity to reject any efforts to
put this matter in any broader context -- his ability to simplify what
otherwise would be a wrenching decision.

In the course of 20 questions, he was asked about a wide variety of
considerations that might be thought relevant or important: the doubts
of large numbers of his constituents; the opposition of major allies;
the potential impact of breaking with the United Nations; the precedent
he would set by invading a nation that has not attacked the United
States; the reaction in the Middle East and the Muslim world and the effect
on the struggle against terrorism; the challenge of rebuilding a
postwar Iraq and overseeing the creation of a peaceful and stable democracy
there; and the financial costs and economic consequences of such a war.

Each of those problems was dismissed in a word, a phrase or a
paragraph, after which the president reverted to a restatement of what he sees
as the essentials of the situation: The threat is real and
unacceptable; if Hussein does not disarm, he must be disarmed.

When asked twice why his approach to Iraq is so different from his
approach to North Korea, which is publicly well on its way to achieving
the kind of atomic arsenal that Iraq insists it does not have or seek,
Bush refused to be led into a discussion of any inconsistencies. The
Korean nuclear program is a regional problem, to be addressed through
multilateral diplomacy, he said. Iraq must be disarmed. Bush has placed
them in separate compartments of his mind, so don't try to confuse him.

As candidate and as president, Bush has demonstrated his belief that
persuasion for him is often reduced to simple repetition. His is the
rhetoric of the sound bite. It works well on the campaign trail, where
different audiences in different locales need to hear the same message.
However, when the same point is made over and over in the same words in
a single news conference, his rhetoric tends to sound scripted, and the
effect can be disquieting.

Blame some of it on a fixated press corps. I was astonished and
dismayed that in the first opportunity to quiz the president in four months,
not one question was asked about the shaky economy or the
out-of-control federal budget. The very next day came news of the largest monthly
jump in unemployment since the immediate aftermath of 9/11 and an
official estimate that Bush's budget proposals would add $2.7 trillion to the
national debt in the next 10 years. An economically cushioned set of
reporters seemingly couldn't care less about this looming disaster. Talk
about being out of touch!
Speed Racer
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