Monday, March 5, 2001, at 4:00 p.m. PT
During the campaign, George W. Bush accused President Bill Clinton of
overextending the armed
forces with namby-pamby, nation-building deployments, and of starving
it of the resources it needed
to do its job. "Our military is low on parts, pay, and morale," candidate
Bush warned in his
acceptance speech. "If called on by the commander in chief today, two
entire divisions of the Army
would have to report, ‘Not ready for duty, sir.' " But once ensconced
in the White House, Bush
climbed down, declaring that Clinton's military budget was sufficient
after all.
To cover his retreat, Bush assigned Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
to assess the military's
needs and only then determine if additional billions were needed. But
isn't it a tad peculiar to shoot
your mouth off about U.S. military readiness first, and then assign
fact-finders to verify?
Then last month, Bush climbed down again from his campaign sanctimony.
You may recall that during
the campaign Bush charged that Clinton had failed the test of leadership
in letting the Gulf War
coalition disintegrate, and that once elected president he'd bring
back the good old days when our
Arab allies obediently lined up against Saddam Hussein. But instead
of getting tougher on Saddam,
the Bush administration wants to "reinvigorate" the sanctions against
Iraq. What "reinvigoration"
means is that the administration wants to eliminate most or all sanctions
except for those specifically
on military supplies. Reinvigoration would even allow the transfer
of many "dual use" technologies that
have both civilian and military applications.
So why has the press given Bush so little heat for saying one thing
and doing another? 1) He's playing
against type: Most members of the press—who don't follow military matters
that closely
anyway—can't bring themselves to believe that Gulf War hands like Colin
Powell and Dick Cheney
are letting Saddam off easy. 2) Many commentators thought Bush's foreign
and defense policy
proposals were ill-considered and outlandish in the first place. They're
happy to ignore his
promise-breaking as long as he reigns in his previous "wacky" agenda.
Of course, had Clinton
relaxed sanctions, Republicans would have damned him for committing
Chamberlain-like
appeasement.
At some point, Bush is going to make some foreign policy move—like keeping
Americans in the
Balkans—that shows he's decided that Clinton's defense and foreign
policy were right after all.