Negotiation is NOT Appeasement! (George Bush is an Idiot)
In a speech to the Israeli parliament Thursday, President Bush took a swipe at Barack Obama for his willingness to negotiate with evil regimes. "Some seem to believe that we should negotiate with the terrorists and radicals, as if some ingenious argument will persuade them they have been wrong all along," Bush said. "We have heard this foolish delusion before. As Nazi tanks crossed into Poland in 1939, an American senator declared: 'Lord, if I could only have talked to Hitler, all this might have been avoided.' We have an obligation to call this what it is -- the false comfort of appeasement, which has been repeatedly discredited by history."But if there is anything that has been discredited by history, it is the argument that every enemy is Hitler, that negotiations constitute appeasement, and that talking will automatically lead to a slaughter of Holocaust-like proportions. It is an argument that conservatives made throughout the Cold War, and, if the charge seemed overblown at the time, it seems positively ludicrous with the clarity of hindsight. The modern conservative movement was founded in no small part on the idea that presidents Truman and Eisenhower were "appeasing" the Soviets. The logic went something like this: Because communism was evil, the United States should seek to destroy it, not coexist with it; the bipartisan policy of containment, which sought to prevent the further spread of communism, was a moral and strategic folly because it implied long-term coexistence with Moscow. Conservative foreign policy guru James Burnham wrote entire books claiming that containment -- which, after the Cold War, would be credited with defeating the Soviet Union -- constituted "appeasement." Conservatives even applied this critique to one of the most dangerous moments in human history: the Cuban missile crisis, during which the United States and the Soviet Union nearly came to nuclear blows over Moscow's deployment of missiles 90 miles off the American coast. When President Kennedy successfully negotiated a peaceful conclusion to the crisis, conservative icon Barry Goldwater protested that he had appeased the Soviets by promising not to invade Cuba if they backed down. The Soviets withdrew their missiles in what was widely seen as a humiliation to Khrushchev, but Goldwater believed that Kennedy's diplomacy gave "the communists one of their greatest victories in their race for world power that they have enjoyed to date." To Goldwater, it was far preferable to risk nuclear war with the Soviets than to give up our right to roll back Fidel Castro. Ronald Reagan, whose election in 1980 was seen as the culmination of the conservative movement, dubbed SALT II "appeasement" as well, but the trope would come back to bite him. Although Reagan pleased the right enormously during his first three years in office with his military expansion, his call for rollback and his advocacy of missile defenses, conservatives reacted with horror once he began serious negotiations with the Soviets. When he and Mikhail Gorbachev signed the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty in 1987, which for the first time eliminated an entire class of nuclear weapons, Buckley's National Review dubbed it "suicide." The Conservative Caucus took out a full-page newspaper ad saying "Appeasement is as unwise in 1988 as in 1938." It paired photos of Reagan and Gorbachev with photos of Neville Chamberlain and Hitler.Containment, negotiation, nuclear stability -- each of these things helped protect the United States and end the Cold War. And yet, at the time, conservatives thought each was synonymous with appeasement. The Bush administration has been little different, refusing for years to talk to North Korea or Iran about their nuclear programs because it wanted to defeat evil, not talk to it. The result was that Pyongyang tested a nuclear weapon and Iran's uranium program continued unfettered. (By contrast, when the administration negotiated with Libya -- an act that its chief arms controller, John Bolton, had previously derided as, yes, "appeasement" -- it succeeded in eliminating Tripoli's nuclear program.) Alas, John McCain accused President Clinton of "appeasement" for engaging North Korea, instead calling for "rogue state rollback," and now he dismisses the idea of negotiations with Iran. Given conservatism's historical record, Obama's inclination to negotiate seems only sensible. When will conservatives learn that it is 2008, not 1938? http://www.latimes.com/news/pr... 0,647492.story
Channel: News & Politics
Uploaded: November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am
Author: AntiConformist911
Length: 09:16
Rating: 3.50
Views: 2169
Tags: Al attack Barack Bush George Hamas Hezbollah iran Iraq Israel Jewish John Mccain Obama president qaida terror vice war
Video Comments
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dbmcmillan (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
Rachel Maddow is disgusting.
Pjphoto (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
You missed the point. Ya,McCain equals fox, and the rest are in the bag for Obama.
JimmySmers (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
And Fox isn't elitist? They excluded the one true grassroots Conservative Ron Paul from their debate. You need to wake up and realize that Fox is just as globalist Anti-American as all of the other channels.
Pjphoto (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
Obama=all the rest of the elitist main stream media
JimmySmers (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
McCain= FOX
w00master (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
Both are biased, but you honestly believe that Fox is a *good* source of news? Seriously? Boy, you are part of that idiotic 20%. Get her head out of the sand. Seriously.
coonkiller92 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
LOL obama is such a tool
coonkiller92 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
hey where it Keith? oh yeah taken a SHIT!
Buzzardz (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
Paint it up any way you like. Its called Backing Down. Cowards back down and have no courage.
GBS990 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
PMS-NBC What did you expect? |
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