War of prevention

The Washington Times

The interim report issued last week by David Kay, head of the Iraq Survey Group [ISG] looking into Saddam Hussein’s weapons programs, ought to dispel all doubt on the central point leading to the decision to go to war: The Saddam regime belonged in the category of those uniquely dangerous to peace and stability. The security concerns on which this war of prevention were based were all too real.

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A pledge in the Balkans

The Washington Times

To judge by my own reaction, perceptions are lagging reality a bit when it comes to the former Yugoslavia. The beautiful lakeside town of Ohrid, Macedonia, was the scene this weekend of a conference bringing together leading officials from the Balkans. The years of upheaval in the former Yugoslavia, all agree, are past. The horrible, bloody and uncertain decade of the 1990s is over. The lives and the opportunity for progress lost are to be mourned. But it is time to move forward, and that was the agenda at Ohrid.

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Clark the contender

 The Washington Times

When I first met Wes Clark at a small Washington dinner party when he was supreme allied commander in Europe, I quickly concluded that he had a bright political future if he was inclined to pursue it. That he might well be so inclined once his military career came to a close was an impression he did little to dispel. In addition to an obvious intelligence and the demeanor of complete self-assurance that is common in the top ranks of the military, he spoke about foreign policy and the importance of the spread of freedom in neo-Reaganite terms. This was especially important to me at the time, coming as it did as some of us were working on making the case for the enlargement of NATO to the territory of the former Warsaw Pact [and since, of the former Soviet Union itself].

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For better and worse

The Washington Times

Democrats and allied pundits more or less universally panned President Bush’s speech on Iraq from a week ago Sunday. The more responsible voices of opposition welcomed Mr. Bush’s commitment to doing whatever is necessary to ensure that postwar Iraq is a success, taking the $87 billion price tag as occasion to change the subject to Mr. Bush’s tax cut and the ballooning federal budget deficit. This is honest partisan criticism – and a point to which we will return.

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President Bush gets it right

The Washington Post

In politics, as one of my favorite adages holds, you begin where you are. It is folly to act out of a wish that the past can be undone. Likewise, is it folly to imagine you can skip ahead to the future without the bother of getting there from the here-and-now. Those who fail to appreciate either aspect of beginning where you are usually find themselves vexed by those who get it.

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The value of trade

The Washington Times

The worst news for organized labor this Labor Day week is that the postwar agenda of trade liberalization now seems to be getting back on track. Congress solidly approved new bilateral agreements this summer with Singapore and Chile. Later this month, the World Trade Organization [WTO] convenes a meeting of trade ministers in Mexico, at which point it should become clearer whether momentum is gathering for a broad multilateral reduction in tariffs worldwide. Meanwhile, the Bush administration has to consider whether or not to undo its worst economic decision to date – the 2002 imposition of steep tariffs on imported steel, which the WTO ruled out of bounds this summer.

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