Sunday, October 15, 2006

Time Travel: Somehwere Over the Rainbow

AN ALTERNATE 9/11 HISTORY
By staying 'humble,' as he promised in 2000, Bush preserved much of the post-9/11 good will abroad.
By
Jonathan Alter

Five years after 9/11, the world is surprisingly peaceful. President Bush's pragmatic and bipartisan leadership has kept the United States not just strong but unexpectedly popular across the globe. The president himself is poised to enjoy big GOP wins in the midterm elections, a validation of his subtle understanding of the challenges facing the country. A new survey of historians puts him in the first tier of American presidents.

As Bush warned, catching terrorists wasn't easy, but he kept at it. At the battle of Tora Bora, CIA operatives on the ground cabled Washington that Osama bin Laden was cornered, but they desperately needed troop support. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld immediately dispatched fresh forces, and the evildoer was killed. While bin Laden was seen as a martyr in a few isolated areas, the bulk of the Arab world had been in sympathy with the United States after 9/11 and shed no tears. After their capture, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and other 9/11 terrorists were transported to the United States, where they were tried and quickly executed.

Today, Al Qaeda remains a threat but its opportunities for recruitment have been scarce, and the involvement of the entire international community has helped dramatically reduce terrorist attacks worldwide. Because Bush believes diplomacy requires talking to adversaries as well as friends, even Syria and Iraq were forced to help. By staying "humble," as he promised in 2000, he preserved much of the post-9/11 good feeling abroad, which paid dividends when it came time to pull together a coalition to handle North Korea and Iran.

At home, some aides suggested that Bush simply tell the nation to "go shopping." But the president knew he had a precious opportunity to ask Americans for real sacrifice. He took John McCain's suggestion and pushed through Congress an ambitious national-service program that bolstered communities and helped train citizens as first responders.

Soon Bush put the country on a Manhattan Project crash course to get off oil. He bluntly told Detroit that it was embarrassing that Chinese automakers had better fuel efficiency, he classified SUVs as cars, and he imposed a stiff gas tax with a rebate for the working poor. To pay for it, he abandoned his tax cuts for the wealthy, reminding the country that no president in history had ever cut taxes in the middle of a war. This president would be damned if he was going to put more oil money into the pockets of Middle Eastern hatemongers who had killed nearly 3,000 of our people. To dramatize the point, he drove to his 2002 State of the Union address in a hybrid car. Sales soared.

When Karl Rove suggested that the war on terror would make a perfect wedge issue against Democrats in the 2002 midterms, Bush brought him up short. Didn't Rove understand that bipartisanship is good politics? Lincoln and FDR had both gone bipartisan during wartime, he reminded his aide. So when evidence of torture at the prison camp in Guantánamo Bay surfaced and Rumsfeld was forced to resign, former Democratic senator Sam Nunn got the job. With post-9/11 unity still at least partially intact in 2004, Bush was re-elected in a landslide.

Taking a cue from Lincoln's impatience with his generals, Bush was merciless about poor performance on homeland security. When the head of the FBI couldn't fix the bureau's computers in a year's time to "connect the dots," he was out. And Bush had no patience for excuse-making about leaky port security, unsecured chemical plants and first responders whose radios didn't communicate. If someone had told him that five years after 9/11 these problems would still be unsolved, Bush would have laughed him out of the office.

In 2003, Vice President Cheney advised the president to take out Iraq's Saddam Hussein militarily. But Bush was beginning to understand that his veep, while sounding full of gravitas, was in fact reckless. When it became clear that Saddam posed no imminent threat, Bush resolved to neuter him, Kaddafi style. When the president found, after a little asking around, that the 10-year cost of invading Iraq would be a crushing $1.2 trillion, he opted out of this war of choice. Five years after that awful September day, even Bush's fiercest critics have learned an important lesson: leadership counts. Imagine if we'd done the opposite of these things. This country—and the world—would be in a heap of trouble.

Sept. 18, 2006 issue
Newsweek
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14753927/site/newsweek/page/2/

6 comments:

Mariah Fleming said...

Ahoy fellow travelers,
Dan, that Iraqi Conflict Quagmire piece is clever. Know who wrote it?

Sharon, you're right, going a few days sans new posts IS a record! Anyway, thanks to you both for inspiring my latest post. I wish I had authored it! Wow! My cousin in Manhattan was so moved by the piece she called to read it to me over the phone! So it seems that I might be missing a bit of "fair(er) and (more) balanced" commentary a la Newsweek.

But our house is already overrun with magazines (sure beats watching the news!) Really, it's BAD. "Mother Jones" "Harpers" "The New Yorker" "Z" "Atlantic Monthly" "Ad Busters." My friends had a 'subscription addiction intervention' for me and I had to cut back my supply to one subscription. Aaack!! Just in time, I discovered reading online newspapers and mags from overseas. Gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "free press"...and it requires no shelf space!

P.S. My addictions to vinyl, cds, tapes, books, Eddie Izzard's comedy, and to my two Weimaraners who can clear off a shelf with the swipe of a paw (and!) open drawers are not negotiable!

Respect4u said...

Hi Mariah. I sure would love to go over the rainbow and have that be a REAL news story. ...But then, even the world we call "real" can have it's bright spots; like photos from Daniel and naughty shelf clearing Weimaraners that you wouldn't trade for any treasure the rainbow could offer!

"Whoosh"

Sharon

Mariah Fleming said...

Starla and Roy the comic Weimaraners reply to Sharon: "Today was extra fun. Starla swiped a lightbulb off the table. Then she carried it in her mouth across the saltillo tile to Mariah. You should have seen the look on that human's face! She didn't know whether she should tell her to "drop it" or not!!"

Ok, I promise I won't write any more posts in dog talk! I couldn't resist telling this true story. People say I should write a book about these two. I could call it 'how to disengage a 60 watt bulb from a big dog's mouth!" Slobbery, that's how.

vagabondvet said...

Howdy! No, Mariah, I'm afraid I don't know who wrote that Quagmire bit, but it is a good one, isn't it? Humor in a tragic context. This Time Travel post is good, too, and I'm pleased to see that Newsweek printed it. Kudos.

Mariah Fleming said...

This from the same magazine where Michael Isikoff
was in cahoots with whoever the woman was who blew the whistle on the stain on the blue dress affair. She's the one who secretly taped her conversations with Lewinsky and turned them over to him as I recall...maybe there is a learning curve for big media journalists after all!!

Do you ever read the Common Cause website? Today it's particularly interesting, and has stuff I had not heard about yet regarding more scandal for the administration. www.commoncause.org
OUTSTANDING group. Non profit like the Electronic Frontier Foundation www.eff.org
and they both are ethical and don't sell lists or send spam.

freespeak@gmail.com said...

Hey Sharon...... There is ANOTHER "Whoosher" in the world. Saw an episode of Dharma & Gregg on the telly, where Dharma "Whooshed" a rival girlfriend. Short line but definitely another version of "Whoosh". These TV writers know a good thing when it whooshes them!

Ronco