Surprise, surprise

The Washington Times

This is the second year I’ve attended the Munich Conference on Security Policy, a venerable gathering of defense ministers, generals, eminences and (my role) assorted hangers-on dedicated to two days’ of jawboning the state of trans-Atlantic relations and international security. The first time you do something, it’s all new; the second time, you’ve got a baseline against which to be surprised. This one was full of surprises.

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Serve the cause of freedom

The Washington Times

That President Bush’s second inaugural address is still being parsed and argued over is itself an indication of the consequence sober listeners attributed to it at the time. Nevertheless, there was a passage in the “Freedom Speech” that hasn’t received much attention and probably deserves more, especially in light of the most memorable moment of Mr. Bush’s State of the Union speech – the extended embrace between Janet Norwood, mother of slain Marine Sgt. Robert Norwood, and Safia Taleb al-Suhail, whom the president described as “one of Iraq’s leading democracy and human rights advocates” and whose father was killed by Saddam Hussein.

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Bush’s second inaugural

The Washington Times

Let’s see, how did that Elisabeth Kubler-Ross ditty go? Ah yes, “anger, denial, bargaining, depression, acceptance.” This has resonance not merely in terms of coping with the prospect of dying, but also with regard to coping with George W. Bush. In what I suppose is progress, his critics seem to be making the passage from “anger” into “denial.” His second inaugural address last week was intellectually the richest such speech since Lincoln’s second, to which it bears comparison. Lincoln wrote his own, of course, and that will always be taken into consideration. On the other hand, it is the essence of Mr. Bush’s claim that the call of freedom is something everyone yearns for and can hear – and something more and more people recognize that everyone yearns for and can hear (the latter being the neglected critical point).

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Spreading democracy

The Washington Times

During the remarkable round of interviews he gave to major newspapers last week, President Bush spoke often of his commitment to the spread of democracy, sometimes in startling terms. As he told the Wall Street Journal in an aside after the end of the formal interview, “I understand there are many who say ‘Bush is wrong.’ I assume I’m right. It’s exciting to be part of stimulating a debate of such significance. It really is the philosophical argument of the age.” I don’t know which is the more remarkable: An American president who thinks in terms of “the philosophical argument of the age.” Or that, well, yes, Mr. Bush is right, the question of the spread of democracy really is the philosophical argument of the age.

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