Dialogue with Iran? Syria?
I know. You're just out of your league
Dana Milbank fantasizes in The Washington Post that The White House Gets Neighborly in the Middle East and Steve Clemons is dreaming that Chess Pieces Move: Bush Admin Officials Plan to Meet with Iranian and Syrian Reps in Neighborhood "Block Party," and I just think that the administration is continuing to muddle through and buy time. As I pointed a few months ago:
Indeed, when it comes to the Bush administration's policy towards Iran (and other global problems), much of what the pundits describe as "diplomacy" is actually nothing more than an attempt to "muddle through" one crisis after another; to come up with ad-hoc responses that reflect the existing political pressures at home and the balance of power abroad without advancing a consistent policy that articulates US interests by utilizing available power and selecting the necessary means to advance realistic goals.(read the rest)
I think that part of all this excitement over the "opening" to Iran and Syria reflects the continuing wishful thinking among mainstream pundits that in the Washington drama, "Condi" is the Good Gal that is standing up to Bad, Bad Cheney. I don't buy that, and as readers of this blog know, I'm a long time basher of our chief diplomat. See herecondoleeza-mackinder.html#links and here.
Comments
It's more high school - Condi is like someone in high school who has experienced a rapid and controversial rise in relative popularity due to her associations - both real and perceived - with someone who is officially part of the popular in group - In this case: Dubya.
This leads to many part invites - but much backbiting and resentment too. So Condi happened to notice a party going on among some of the not so popular nations, but she was not really welcome, just unofficially granted access due to her temporary status.
But these less popular nations still dislike and resent her - just as they dislike and resent the Dubya even though they grant him his title.
Condi just hired Elliot Cohen - a man known , as of late, for hoping - in the pages of Vanity Fair (as noted on Leo's blog) for a new President on a white horse.
How do Republicans get away with hiring someone critical like Cohen - without some PR backlash?