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Tue, Feb 05, 2002 - Page 19 News List

The world seen by president George W. Bush an axis of idiocy

By Patrick Smith  /  BLOOMBERG , HONG KONG

I lived through the 1950s once, and once was once more than enough. But to paraphrase that president who did more than any other to undermine what is good in the American ethos, here we go again.

They are having a parade day in Washington, aren't they? "An axis of evil," the ridiculous phrase poking out at the world from President Bush's state of the union speech last week, says it all. After 11 long years in the desert, a decade and some with no serious enemies, the good times are back, and the Bush administration is dedicated above all to prolonging them.

Never mind poverty eradication and all the flaky thinking that goes with such ideas. Never mind a sophisticated analysis of just where the world now sits, why, and what can be done to advance it. Business executives may take these matters up at the World Economic Forum, of all places, but we've got enemies again.

And there is something deep in the American psyche that makes enemies look a little like gold.

Americans are now invited to accept permanent wartime mobilization -- military and civilian -- as well as bloated defense spending approved without serious scrutiny, curtailed civil liberties, and a political discourse that makes suspect any utterance that veers either side of zero by more than a few cautious degrees. We now count our enemies in the tens of thousands -- a good, healthy supply.

It is time to recognize all this for what it is: It is now evident that the Bush administration has elected to manipulate the events of Sept. 11 to its political, diplomatic, and strategic advantage. This is cynicism so deep as to be unforgivable. The question is whether the world accepts it. One hopes not.

Reviewing Bush's speech, Washington commentators find "axis" evocative of Hitler's World War II alliance with Italy and Germany. It's preposterous: There is no such axis. "Evil" is the operative notion in Bush's phrase, the Reaganesque word that should worry the world: It's metaphysical, it's amorphous, and it can be found everywhere always.

Given the extent to which the Bush people seem to make it all up as they go along, we are left to trade in conditional tenses -- "coulds" and "mights." But an imposing set of possibilities lies before us nonetheless.

Rapprochement with North Korea is a bad thing, a good thing, and now an impossible thing. Iran is an enemy, a prodigal friend, and now an enemy again. By commonly accepted estimates, half a million Iraqi children have died as a consequence of a decade's bombs and embargoes. But we have to watch those Iraqis: They're not with us.

That's the axis of evil. We may as well add this to it: A Palestinian state is not on, it is on, and now it's not on -- all in the space of a few months.

A German correspondent in New Delhi and a dear friend of many years recently traveled to Pakistan and returned to describe telling encounters. What is with you Europeans, senior officials in Islamabad wanted to know. You're the ones who can stand up to the Americans, so when are you going to do it? It's a good question, but it's the underlying sentiment that interests me, for it is evident everywhere: silence, nervous smiles, even the occasional bow before an America that has never been more powerful. Look and listen more closely and you discover a worrisome restiveness and a well-laid foundation for future frictions, enmities, and isolation.

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