Booman Tribune

Bolton Worse Than Kirkpatrick for U.N. Post. Plus Poll

by Meteor Blades
Mon Aug 1st, 2005 at 09:08:21 PM EST

[From the diaries by susanhu.]
[Cross-posted at The Next Hurrah
]

Not so long ago, I found it hard to imagine that we could wind up with a worse U.N. Ambassador than Jeane Kirkpatrick, a neoconservative at a time when few on the left even knew what a neocon was. Although she was a Democrat when Ronald Reagan appointed her to that post in 1981, she was from that branch of the party - the hawkish Henry "Scoop" Jackson wing - that failed to learn much from the Vietnam War.

A member of the rejuvenated Committee on the Present Danger, which argued against arms control measures with the Soviet Union, she took the position that the U.S. could not deal with the Kremlin because it was populated solely by hard-liners. This at a time when the antiques of the post-Stalinist era were doddering old men and the reformist Mikhail Gorbachev had ascended to the Politburo. Egged on by her friends at the CPD, the Pentagon in the early years of the Reagan Administration began producing an annual  document called "Soviet Military Power," a document riddled with factual errors, exaggerations and lies, making it barely more than raw propaganda to bolster the neocon idea that the Soviets had embarked on a huge armed forces build-up that could only be countered by a larger U.S. build-up.

Kirkpatrick practically invented the notion of "no moral equivalency," an our-shit-don't-stink argument saying, in essence, that when the CIA overthrew a government or supported a murderous dictator, it wasn't immoral, but when the KGB did the same, it was. Though little remembered nowadays, Kirkpatrick showed exactly how this theory worked in practice when she publicly toasted General Jorge Videla's pre-Falklands killer regime in Argentina while privately asking him to help the contras in their own murderous campaign in Nicaragua.

Kirkpatrick left the ambassadorship in 1985 and went on to other jobs, including a widely distributed column for the Los Angeles Times Syndicate, which I was, ironically, assigned to edit in 1990.

As I said, hard to imagine someone worse than her as U.S. spokesperson at the U.N. But now we have one thanks to George Bush's recess appointment of John Bolton.

"The abuse of power and the cloak of secrecy from the White House continues," Kennedy said. "It's bad enough that the administration stonewalled the Senate by refusing to disclose documents highly relevant to the Bolton nomination. It's even worse for the administration to abuse the recess appointment power by making the appointment while Congress is in this five-week recess. It's a devious maneuver that evades the constitutional requirement of Senate consent and only further darkens the cloud over Mr. Bolton's credibility at the U.N."

Of course, recess appointments are nothing new; they are specifically accounted for in Article II of the Constitution. George Washington made the first one. Ronald Reagan made 243 of them, Bill Clinton, 140. Nor are they always to minor, uncontroversial posts. Thurgood Marshall found his way to a federal appeals court via a recess appointment. Fifteen justices have wound up on the Supreme Court thanks to recess appointments. And in United States v. Allocco, the Supreme Court ruled that the President has broad authority to make such appointments.

So, while Dubyanocchio is certainly "abusing" the process, it doesn't mean squat, practically speaking.

Bolton qualifies as worse than fellow neocon Kirkpatrick for the U.N. post, but not because he's a hard-ass with his staff or has a nasty personality. Those can be useful traits, after all, in a rough-and-tumble world. And not because he has tough things to say about North Korea's dictator or the willingness of too many Americans to believe that a signature on a treaty automatically makes us all safer. It's rather because Bolton, like the other neocons, sees most forms of internationalism as appeasement, disparages treaties and international law in general, communicates like an autocrat when diplomacy is demanded and has a deserved reputation for undermining efforts that can lead, and have led, to reduced tensions and menaces, such as Libya's attempt to acquire nuclear weapons.

That the President has taken the backdoor approach to put someone with so many negatives into the U.N. post marks another step in America's loss of standing worldwide. While there will be plenty of pundits and rightist politicians who think ideological gunslingers like Bolton will enhance U.S. clout, the opposite is true. He's probably only got 17 months in job, but a lot of damage can be done in so short a time.



Poll
John Bolton ...
. ...will be disastrous for the U.S. at the United Nations. 62%
. ...will harm America's already deteriorated global reputation but only marginally because his term will be short. 37%
. ...seems like a poor choice now, but will turn out to be pretty good. 0%
. ... is the right man for the job. 0%
. I don't know 0%

Votes: 29
Results | Other Polls
Display:
Of course, recess appointments are nothing new; they are specifically accounted for in Article II of the Constitution.

This was a huge "fuck you," though. Note that he did, right after congress recessed. And he's appointed someone who likely could not have gained congressional approval, and is extremely controversial. This authority was never intended to be used to repeatedly sidestep congressional authority, but that is exactly what they're doing. Bolton, like so many in this administration, is a sociopath. I shudder to think how much damage he can do in a relatively brief period. We are living under the tyranny of the weak.

"I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat or prostitute." ~ Rebecca West

by Recordkeeper on Mon Aug 1st, 2005 at 03:10:25 PM EST
I saw the announcment Bush made on TV. He just couldn't help but allow himself a little smirk when he said that he was taking this action because of the "constitutional power" invested in him.

Our leader is a snotty-nosed little bully. It is just so unbelievable that the American people see this man as fit to run a country. He's not even a grown-up.

Hopefully the rest of the world is not so easily swayed. What success will Bolton have at the U.N. if all the other diplomats despise him?

by tauri on Tue Aug 2nd, 2005 at 02:11:37 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Our leader is a snotty-nosed little bully. It is just so unbelievable that the American people see this man as fit to run a country. He's not even a grown-up.

It's denial and cognitive dissonance. A President can't possibly be a mental defective. It's not possible. So, they look right at glaringly odious behavior and don't even see it. It's the same mindset that says an American Presidential Administration could not just brazenly lie a country into war. Or, a man who's risen to John Bolton's position could not possibly the kind of psycho who would chase a woman through a hotel, screaming and throwing things at her, so she must be lying.

This is something con men know. It's their modus operandi. People will not likely suspect you of things they would not do themselves. Fundamentally decent people can't wrap their minds around sociopathic behavior. If you have a conscience, you can't imagine someone not having one. You measure the people you encounter based on what you would do, not on what they might actually be capable of. That's why an administration made up of sociopaths and malignant narcissists is able to lie, cheat, and steal, in plain sight of the American people, and continue to get away with it.

"I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat or prostitute." ~ Rebecca West

by Recordkeeper on Tue Aug 2nd, 2005 at 11:13:27 AM EST
[ Parent ]
.
spoken earlier about the Florida recount man John Bolton.


Florida Recount 2000

FM Ben Bot ...   from the Netherlands
A surprised appointee as Dutch FM after Bush | Powell approved Jaap de Hoop Scheffer as NATO Secretary General in Januari 2003.

So George Bush & Condoleezza Rice have to put up with Ben Bot as Dutch FM of a tiny but staunch ally, the Netherlands in the Atlantic Alliance. An experienced ambassador at the EU in Brussels, FM Bernard Bot can use his wisdom and experience of decades in foreign affairs, when he meets with Condi Rice and exchange frank opinions.

Blunt opinion of Dutch Foreign Minister Bernard Bot:
Dutch Foreign Minister Ben Bot "does not quite understand" why newborn multilateralist George Bush picked John Bolton as his man at the UN. Minister Bot recently described Bolton as being 'anti-UN' and thought his nomination was at least 'peculiar' if not worse, reports the Dutch Elsevier Magazine on April 11th.

The Dutch however always believed that in the end Bush would choose, or be forced to choose, multilateral solutions to international problems. Not only has Bolton always been very sceptical towards the UN, he has also been a fierce opponent of the International Criminal Court of which The Netherlands are the proud hosts. Minister Bot must fear that with Bolton at the UN, the ICC might once again come under heavy pressure.


BTW the above link to CBS website is excellent for IN DEPTH reading on the North Korean issue and history.

A furious Mr Straw told Colin Powell
British officials "at the highest levels" [re: Jack Straw - Ed] had persuaded the White House to keep Mr Bolton off the team negotiating with Libya to give up its nuclear programme in 2003.

FM Straw from the United Kingdom
According to the official, Newsweek reports, Powell then turned to an aide and said, "Get a different view on [the Iranian problem]. Bolton is being too tough."  

  • My diary on Nominee Bolton

    ~~~

  • by Oui on Mon Aug 1st, 2005 at 03:15:53 PM EST
    As a side note, and not entirely off-topic, I was glad to see MB make this reference to the so-called cold war:
    Egged on by her friends at the CPD, the Pentagon in the early years of the Reagan Administration began producing an annual  document called "Soviet Military Power," a document riddled with factual errors, exaggerations and lies, making it barely more than raw propaganda to bolster the neocon idea that the Soviets had embarked on a huge armed forces build-up that could only be countered by a larger U.S. build-up.

    There was never any real threat to the U.S. from the Soviet state, but it served as a convenient cover under which munitions manufacturers and sellers became extremely powerful and very rich.

    Just look at Russian history from the early 19th century on. It's all about creating buffer areas to protect them from invasions.

    But the fear on this side of the Atlantic, carefully nurtured by politicians and industrialists, created the climate in which inadequate people like Cheney, Bush, and Bolton could come into positions of prominence.

    Fear, fear, all the time. The so-called war on terror is nothing new. It's just a repackaging and resale of something that's been going on for generations.

    A politician is a man who will double cross that bridge when he comes to it. -- Oscar Levant

    by Mnemosyne on Mon Aug 1st, 2005 at 03:32:15 PM EST
    It is very important to understand these connections to the Reagan era.  The neo-con dominance of the Bush administration, and terrorism in the Middle East, can only be understood as a continuation of the Reagan era.

    We need to be reminded of these connections, continuities and echoes.  They will be a key to the strategies that can lead to the downfall of this Bush administration.  

    "The end of all intelligent analysis is to clear the way for synthesis." H.G. Wells "It's not dark yet, but it's getting there." Bob Dylan

    by Captain Future (captainfuture is at sbcglobal.net) on Mon Aug 1st, 2005 at 09:49:43 PM EST
    that even worries his handlers. It's that even when told to do something by the people he professes loyalty to, if he thinks they're wrong he'll disobey them too. Cheney I'm sure knows this; knows that Bolton is uncontrollable, that he's pathologically unable to perform any task at all he disagrees with. Cheney & Co I'm sure know that Bolton will eventually betray even them, even the presidency, if any conflict of opinion arises between what he's told to do and what he wants to do.

    Denial is our most dangerous adversary.
    by sbj on Mon Aug 1st, 2005 at 10:10:07 PM EST
    and if so, what's stopping a recess of Roberts, or do they just know that's over-board
    by Tirge Caps (churchofhuckfinnATsbcglobalDOTnet) on Mon Aug 1st, 2005 at 02:40:15 PM EST
    Fear is manufactured in this country.Make a fear and you make money.
    by shycat (painebillATHotmail) on Mon Aug 1st, 2005 at 09:36:02 PM EST
    despised by the people of the world, it is now time for Bolton to make the governments of the world hate the US.
    by observer393 on Tue Aug 2nd, 2005 at 12:40:25 AM EST


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