
lWe're
getting into very volatile territory in the Middle East.

"As Paul Bremer admitted last week, the cost of the Iraq adventure
is going to be spectacular: $2 billion for electrical demands and $16
billion to deliver clean water."
We're losing one or two American soldiers every day. Saddam and Osama
are still lurking and scheming -- the "darkness which may be felt."
After a car bomb exploded outside a Najaf mosque on Friday, killing
scores of people, including the most prominent pro-American Shiite
cleric, we may have to interject our troops into an internecine Shiite
dispute -- which Saddam's Baathist guerrillas are no doubt stoking.
With Iraqis in Najaf screaming, "There is no order! There is no
government! We'd rather have Saddam than this!," we had one more
ominous illustration that the Bush team is out of its depth and divided
against itself.
You can't conduct a great historical experiment in a petty and bickering
frame of mind. The agencies of the Bush administration are behaving
like high school cliques. The policy in Iraq is paralyzed almost to
the point of nonexistence, stalled by spats between the internationalists
and unilateralists, with the national security director, Condoleezza
Rice, abnegating her job as policy referee.
The State Department will have to stop sulking and being in denial
about the Pentagon running the show in Iraq. And the Pentagon will
have to stop being dogmatic, clinging to the quixotic notion that it
only wants to succeed with its streamlined force and its trompe l'oeil
coalition. Rummy has to accept the magnitude of the task and give up
running the Department of Defense the way a misanthropic
accountant would."
Big deeds need
big spirits. You can't have a Marshall Plan and a tax cut at the same
time.
It has also now become radiantly clear that we have to drag Dick Cheney out of
the dark and smog. Less Hobbes, more Locke.
So
far, American foreign policy has been guided by the vice president's
gloomy theories that fear and force are the best motivators in the
world, that war is man's natural state and that the last great superpower
has sovereign authority to do as it pleases
without much consultation with subjects or other nations. We can
now see the disturbing results of all the decisions Mr. Cheney made
in secret meetings.
The General Accounting Office issued a report last week noting that the
vice president shaped our energy policy with clandestine advice from "petroleum,
coal, nuclear, natural gas, electricity industry representatives and
lobbyists."
Favoritism to energy pals led to last week's insane decision to gut part
of the Clean Air Act and allow power plants, refineries and other industrial
sites to belch pollutants.
Another Bush-Cheney energy crony is Anthony Alexander of Ohio's FirstEnergy
Corporation, which helped trigger the blackout after failing to upgrade
its transmission system properly since deregulation. He was a Bush Pioneer,
having raised at least $100,000 for the campaign.
This logrolling attitude has led to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
allowing Halliburton -- which made Mr. Cheney a rich man with $20 million
worth of cashed-in stock -- to get no-bid contracts in Iraq totaling
$1.7 billion, and that's just a start.
All this, and high gas prices, too?
When he wasn't meeting secretly with energy lobbyists, Mr. Cheney was
meeting secretly with Iraqi exiles. The Iraqi National Congress leader
Ahmad Chalabi and other defectors conned Mr. Cheney, Rummy and the naïve
Wolfowitz of Arabia by playing up the danger of Saddam's W.M.D.'s and
playing down the prospect of Iraqi resistance to a U.S. invasion.
According to The Los Angeles Times, U.S. and allied intelligence agencies
are investigating to see if they were duped by Iraqi defectors giving
bogus information to mislead the West before the war.
Some intelligence officials "now fear that key portions of the prewar
information may have been flawed," the story said. "The issue
raises fresh doubts as to whether illicit weapons will be found in Iraq.
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