Is foreign policy Bush's quart of strawberries?
Paul Krugman writes of George W. Queeg :
Aboard the U.S.S. Caine, it was the business with the strawberries that finally convinced the doubters that something was amiss with the captain. Is foreign policy George W. Bush’s quart of strawberries?
[…] Mr. Bush’s inner circle seems amazed that the tactics that work so well on journalists and Democrats don’t work on the rest of the world. They’ve made promises, oblivious to the fact that most countries don’t trust their word. They’ve made threats. They’ve done the aura-of-inevitability thing — how many times now have administration officials claimed to have lined up the necessary votes in the Security Council? They’ve warned other countries that if they oppose America’s will they are objectively pro-terrorist. Yet still the world balks.
And Howard Fineman waits for war .
I’m waiting for war to break out—not in Iraq, but in the Bush administration. I’m wondering what’s going through Colin Powell’s mind. The secretary of State is looking pretty grim these days, like a man going through the motions. Might he bail out after a not-too-distant decent interval? Friends say no, he’s a team player. “But he’s not a happy camper,” one admits.
A friend of mine pointed out to me recently that Colin Powell is maybe the one person in the universe who could bring this administration down in half an hour with one well-made speech if he got it in his head to do so.
Not that he will, but it's a pleasant fantasy.
Posted by Scott on March 19 2003 16:40
I also like Marissa's fantasy:
Posted by Zed on March 19 2003 22:05