Decision Brief     No. 05-D 19                                        2005-04-25

 

(Washington, D.C.): They’re back. The people who tried to defeat George W. Bush are the same people who are now trying to defeat his nominee for the United Nations, John R. Bolton. And George Soros, MoveOn.org, the Democratic Party machinery and, not least, John Kerry are hoping to demonstrate, by so doing, that they were right all along on what is, arguably, the most important national security issue of our time: Does America need to pass a “global test” to protect its vital interests?

 

Recount ’04

 

Never mind that the voters of the United States last Fall decisively rejected the team that argued that proposition in the affirmative. The truth is as former Secretary of State George Shultz (who, by the way, is one of five – count ’em, five – former occupants of that office who support the Bolton nomination) has caustically observed, nothing ever gets decided in Washington. At least that’s the case if the electorate or the President or the Congress make a decision not to the liking of Democratic partisans: Undeterred by defeat, they immediately go to work trying to undo their reversal and to prevail over their opponents.

 

Rarely has that reality been more evident than in the fight over the Bolton appointment to the United Nations. In the 2004 campaign, John Kerry and his friends savaged George Bush for having an appropriately low regard for the current state of that institution. They reviled him for refusing to accede to the will of UN members like France, China and Russia – who, it turns out, were being paid handsomely by Saddam Hussein to veto any U.S.-led action to liberate Iraq. They heartily agreed with Secretary General Kofi Anan that such action was “illegal” because it ultimately was undertaken without the UN’s blessing.

 

In the face of this assault, George W. Bush made no apologies. He took his case to the American people that the United Nations had ceased to function as its founders had envisioned – namely, as an engine for the protection and expansion of freedom. He argued that, if the institution were not to go the way of the feckless and ultimately disastrous League of Nations, it had to be willing to enforce its resolutions when, as with Iraq, they were critical to international security. And he explicitly sought a renewed mandate for providing American leadership when the UN could not, or would not, do so.

 

George Bush won on that platform . John Kerry and his ilk lost. George Bush wants an ambassador to the United Nations who supported the aforementioned policies and stances and who will effectively represent them on the East River. John Kerry, Joe Biden, Barbara Boxer and Christopher Dodd think we should have, instead, an ambassador who reflects their popularly repudiated view.

 

Strategic Misdirection

 

Now, if it were absolutely clear this is what’s going on, even moderate Republicans like Lincoln Chafee and Chuck Hagel – to say nothing of conservative ones like George Voinovich and Lisa Murkowski – would not think twice about supporting the Democratic team’s agenda over their own. And, indeed, that was how things appeared to be shaping up when Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Richard Lugar called for a vote last Tuesday. But, because the Democrats recognized that a transparent reprise of Bush v. Kerry I would probably come out the same way a second time, they have cynically chosen to portray the Bolton nomination fight as something else altogether: Protecting U.S. interests at the UN from someone who has allegedly been known to get angry with incompetents, malfeasant bureaucrats and enemies of this country.

 

It is certainly true that the United Nations has plenty of all three. Even if it were equally true that John Bolton cannot avoid speaking plainly to those sorts, the people who reelected George Bush probably would have no problem being represented at the UN by such a man. Especially at a time when the go-along-to-get-along types preferred by the people who did not vote for George Bush would be certain to give us more of the same out of the “world body” – more corruption, more scandals, more coddling of dictators, more unchallenged proliferation, more virulent anti-Americanism.

 

The Bottom Line

 

Does anyone really think that the rejection of John Bolton and his replacement by someone more to the liking of John Kerry and the UN uber alles crowd is going to produce the systemic reform of the United Nations to which even the latter folks are currently paying lip-service?

 

Republican Senators should recognize that John Bolton is an outstanding choice for UN ambassador who is being opposed on ideological and political grounds, not because there is real reason to fear he is temperamentally unsuited to sensitive diplomatic posts. In fact, Secretary Bolton has conducted himself with a restraint few – if any – Senators would long exhibit in the face of active efforts by subordinates and superiors alike to undermine him and the President he has faithfully served.

 

The fact that Mr. Bolton’s critics have, to date, been rewarded rather than repudiated for their character assassination of this accomplished public servant and for the cynical misdirection of attention it represents from their true agenda cannot be allowed to alter the outcome: Bush v. Kerry II must end the same way as the first round did.

 

 

Frank Gaffney, Jr.
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