Blodgett : Musings on science, art and society
Updated: 5/4/2003; 6:35:45 PM.

 

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Wednesday, April 23, 2003

 

Yes, the state with two megaseasons ... well, the arrival of spring has been much delayed. At least the daylight hours are longer, but it's stuck in the high 40s (unseasonably, I should add). And tonight, snow showers are forecast!

Roll on summer (to be honest, we don't get a spring: it lasts about two days, years like this).


12:57:55 PM    comment []

 

Reading the NYT Op-Ed page is a depressing experience; especially on days when the moronic Maureen Dowd runs off at the mouth with her uninformed, unperceptive, kneejerk liberal horseshit. She's so convinced that she is 'witty.' Duh. But today, Thomas Friedman -- often not right, but never illiterate or trivial -- makes a good point about the thoroughly evil, two-bit gangster Yassur Arafat ... he wants Old Beaverchops Marrowfat gone too ...

"There is a natural deal here among America, Europe and the Arabs: the Europeans and Arabs use their influence to force Mr. Arafat to accept Mr. Abbas on his terms, and the Americans use their influence on Mr. Sharon to produce an immediate settlements freeze, the rollback of all illegal settlements and a resumption of negotiations after a new Palestinian security force, under a new prime minister, is in place.

The Europeans and Arabs missed their chance to be part of Saddam's removal. But they can contribute now by being part of the easing aside of Mr. Arafat. At the same time, U.S. conservatives who supported war against Iraq need to understand that if they miss this chance to help nurture an alternative Palestinian leadership — by refusing to make demands on Mr. Sharon — not only will Israel be less safe in the long run, but chances of President Bush succeeding in Iraq will be diminished. "



12:45:06 PM    comment []

 

Here's a couple more that really need it ...

Tibet. No question about it.

Palestine. Boot Arafat out, once and for all. The time is ripe.


10:29:20 AM    comment []

 

Joe Queenan is a funny fellow, very non-PC, and in today's WSJ takes on the issue of Katy 'Insipid' Couric swapping jobs with Jay 'Humorless' Leno for a night ... he comes up with this little classic ...

"Public television's Jim Lehrer hasn't been able to get a straight answer out of anyone in the State Department in years, so my vote for a one-night replacement is Tom Arnold from Fox Sports Network's "The Best Damn Sports Show, Period." Always ready to say the first thing that comes into his head, and not afraid to approach the limits of good taste, Tom's in-your-face approach might finally intimidate Doris Kearns Goodwin, Joe Biden or Tom Ridge into telling us something we don't already know. How Mr. Lehrer fares with the likes of Charles Barkley and David Wells on Mr. Arnold's show is anybody's guess; these guys both claim to have been misquoted in their own autobiographies. On the other hand, Mr. Lehrer did spend eight years talking to people in the Clinton administration, so it's not like he's a complete stranger to mind-boggling deceit."

 


10:26:24 AM    comment []

 

So, we're chatting with the Pyongyang gangsters in Beijing. Personally, I'd have picked some more hygienic place, in view of the SARS epidemic.

Blodgett style diplomacy would say it all in two sentences: "Have you been watching CNN lately? Well, you're next, if you don't cut this shit out."


10:22:05 AM    comment []

Another brief 'holiday' -- working -- for Blodgett, but I have the sense that nothing much has happened ... except, the 'return of the stooges':

The WSJ got it right this morning ...

"French audacity has it charms, but sometimes even they get carried away. Consider President Jacques Chirac's transparently self-interested generosity yesterday in suddenly proposing that U.N. sanctions against Iraq be "suspended."

At least the French are figuring out that it doesn't look good for them to fight openly to maintain Saddam-era sanctions on newly free Iraqis. But in proposing merely to suspend, rather than lift, sanctions, the French also suggested leaving the U.N. in control of Iraqi oil revenues. A final lifting of sanctions would then have to wait for a clean bill of health from . . . Hans Blix and his U.N. weapons inspectors. Really."

Yes, it was truly amazing to see Blix defending his 'credibility' at the UN yesterday. The round-shouldered old troll is quite convinced of this. Well, his credibility for not finding any damned thing, and his ability to be bamboozled is not in doubt.

"At least the French are smoother spin-artists than the Russians, who don't even bother to conceal their Iraq agenda. "We are not at all opposing lifting of sanctions. What we are insisting on is that Security Council resolutions must be implemented," Russian U.N. Ambassador Sergei Lavrov asserted.

In other words, the two countries that did the most to erode sanctions against Saddam Hussein's dictatorship are now joined at the pocketbook in attempting to maintain them in some form on a newly free Iraq. They were only too happy to do business with Saddam. But now they're just as pleased to use sanctions as leverage to get some Iraqi affirmation of their odious debts and oil contracts from the Saddam era. If Iraqi redevelopment is held back in the meantime, so what?

The polite word for this is blackmail. And on Manhattan's east side, it doesn't hurt their cause that the corrupt oil-for-food program helps the U.N. itself (the 2% or so its bureaucracy skims off the top for "administrative" expenses) or that the U.N. is desperate to prove its own relevance in post-Saddam Iraq."

The oil for food program was a cruel hoax, a complete scam. The money went into the pockets of French, Egyptian, Chinese, Jordanian and (especially) Russian suppliers. The food in return was grabbed by Saddam's goons -- why else were there warehouses stuffed with food and medical supplies in Basra, where people were starving?

"President Bush has for now delegated this thorny little problem to Foggy Bottom, which at least seems wise to the game. Sanctions should be lifted rather than suspended, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John Negroponte said yesterday. But we hope Mr. Bush is also prepared to make a moral issue of the sanctions, and from the Presidential bully pulpit if need be.

Holding hostage the only major source (oil) of hard currency for a newly liberated people isn't exactly an attractive position. But the French and Russians may get away with it so long as the U.S. remains reluctant to rebut the idea that either its occupation in Baghdad or any new Iraqi government require any kind of U.N. imprimatur."

I had thought that the administration -- and the US population in general -- were so pissed about the weasels, and the UN in general,  that this was not in any doubt.

"Mr. Bush could start by pointing out the extent to which the oil-for-food program served as little more than an instrument of Baath Party control. One reason American relief workers haven't been able to administer oil-for-food is because the Baath workers who previously ran it all melted away. General Tommy Franks's description of it as "oil-for-palaces" was entirely apt. The money intended for food and medicine went instead to finance, among other things, Uday Hussein's Olympic Committee. As this truth leaks out, even the French may find this hard to defend.

There is also a strong legal case to be made that the sanctions can simply be declared null-and-void, having been imposed on a regime that no longer exists. Russian oil companies and their lawyers are blustering that they will challenge any new oil sales. But the idea that it will be difficult to find buyers for Iraqi oil absent a U.N. seal of approval isn't credible; oil is a commodity and a slight price discount should find enough willing buyers."

Well, there's the main point: the sanctions were against Saddam, and he's history. This is farcical! And who can stop oil being sold? You bring the tanker to the terminal, you ship it. It'll get bought ...

"The other U.N. game of the moment is to get Hans Blix and his U.N. weapons inspectors back into Iraq. No one should deny Mr. Blix a tourist visa, if he wants to see for himself the wreckage of Saddam's rule. But Mr. Blix has made clear his hostility to the war so many times in recent weeks that one suspects he has a vested interest in not finding the weapons he didn't find the first time around.

The search for chemical and biological weapons is also about future security even more than past vindication. Something happened to Saddam's stockpiles of anthrax and botulin toxin, and it's vital that the U.S. learn if they were destroyed or moved somewhere else. That news is likely to come from interviewing Iraqi scientists and generals, and the U.S. needs to get that information first before it gets to U.N. inspectors (and perhaps other intelligence services)."

Right. The stuff is there, somewhere. Or, it's in Syria. We can put the squeeze on these gangsters, and find out the truth. What will a bunch of incompetent inspectors accomplish?

"Having liberated Iraq, the U.S. has no reason to be defensive about removing the U.N.'s sanctions and oil-for-food chokeholds over the Iraq economy. As for the validity of Saddam's debts and oil contracts, that should be up to a new Iraqi government to decide. Once that principle is established and declared non-negotiable, French and Russian behavior is likely to improve in a hurry."

Non-negotiable is right. Bystanders don't get to vote, period.


10:10:30 AM    comment []

© Copyright 2003 Peter Savage.



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