EUROPE’S SUPPORT

Stratfor’s George Friedman performs the revealing task of actually counting where European countries stand on war against Saddam. There are three categories: countries that explicitly support the U.S position; countries that support it but wanted a second resolution; and countries that oppose war against Saddam. In the first camp, we have the United Kingdom, Spain, Denmark, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Macedonia, Croatia, Portugal, Bosnia and Montenegro. In the second camp – supportive – we have

the Netherlands, Estonia, the Czech Republic, Slovenia and Slovakia – a bloc of five. But of these, The Netherlands sent Patriot missiles to Turkey before NATO approved the shipment, while the Czechs and Slovaks have sent chemical detection teams to Kuwait.

I’d put those five into the broadly positive column myself. That makes a total of 21 European countries in favor of war. Then we have the neutrals: Ireland, Austria, Finland, Serbia, Switzerland and Norway. And the opponents: France, Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, Sweden and Greece. Friedman therefore notes something that should be borne in mind when you hear NPR, the BBC and others tell you that “Europe” opposes the war. By an overwhelming majority of 21 countries to five, Europe backs war, with five countries neutral. And of those 21, you have the second and fourth largest economies, Britain and Italy, the two biggest emerging powers, Spain and Poland, and the entire former Eastern bloc. It would be a huge majority in the future EU. So why isn’t the story that Germany and France are now isolated on the continent?

SO IT WASN’T THE DELAY

I would say that yesterday’s market rally is pretty good evidence that the New York Times headline of last Friday was pure spin. Bad spin, Howell. Bad spin.

THE LONELINESS: A non-war post. I came across this moving piece published in the Georgetown University paper. It’s by a very orthodox Catholic student – recently graduated – who, while he was a student, backed the university’s fitful attempts to uphold the Catholic Church’s teaching that gay people must never have any sexual or emotional intimacy with someone of the same gender. Then he came to terms with the fact that he too was gay. Now he recants and explains how it felt to be closeted in a straight world:

The loneliness is hard to describe to straight people. It’s the loneliness of seeing straight couples together, and knowing you’ll never know the love of another human being because it’s forbidden. It’s the loneliness of seeing your best friends pair off with their girlfriends to leave you alone to contemplate your solitude. It’s the loneliness of knowing that, no matter how much fun you may be having with your friends today, you know the day will come when they’ll be married, and you’ll be feeling sorry for yourself because you have no love in your life and never will. I’ll never forget the visit of one of my good friends from high school and his girlfriend to the Hilltop. We took a long walk down to the Lincoln Memorial and were having a great time, ostensibly. But I was really torn to pieces, knowing that my friend and his girlfriend could have a future – love and happiness together, while I was condemned to be alone for all my days. I hurt so badly that I went into the restroom at the Lincoln Memorial and cried. I returned to my friend and his girlfriend and put on my happy face again, fearing to tell the pain I felt inside.

The guy is still a Catholic, bearing witness to a Church hierarchy that still won’t listen and refuses to understand.

NPR’S OMBUDSMAN CONCEDES ANTI-WAR BIAS

Money quote from the man deputed to police NPR’s “objectivity”:

[W]hat seems to be missing from other NPR’s commentaries/interviews is the unabashed and unconditional support (and there is lot of it) for the administration. Whenever that opinion is heard on NPR as it did when NPR interviewed Secretary of State Colin Powell, NPR receives e-mails by the score, all asking: “NPR! How could you?”

And that’s when they’re interviewing Powell! Imagine if they asked James Lileks. But then they never would, would they?

“DON’T SUPPORT OUR TROOPS”

A candid headline for the latest piece of “Bush = Hitler” polemics from Ted Rall. Please keep your eyes open for similar expressions of hope that the United States lose this war and that the troops should not be supported if a war starts. It’s important to keep a record of exactly how far the anti-American left has traveled. Money quote from Rall:

The thing is, we don’t really have to win. Losing the Vietnam War sucked, but not fighting it in the first place would have been smarter. Losing to Third Worlders in PJs led Americans to decades of relative humility, self-examination and taking the moral high ground in conflicts such as Haiti and Kosovo. Our withdrawal from Nam was mainly the result of antiwar protests and public disapproval that swayed our elected representatives. It also saved a lot of money that would otherwise gone to save more “domino” dictatorships from godless communism. Most Americans who didn’t actively protest the war at least sat on their hands during Vietnam. We should do the same during Bush’s coming unjust war of aggression. Members of our armed forces don’t deserve insults, but their role in this war doesn’t merit support. Cheering them as they leave and holding parades when they return would certainly be misinterpreted by citizens of other countries as popular support for an inglorious enterprise – and it would make it easier for Bush to send them off again, to Iran or Libya or wherever. Let’s keep our flags under wraps.

Rall also comments that “we find ourselves facing the paradox of the ‘good German’ of the ’30s. We’re ruled by an evil, non-elected warlord who ignores both domestic opposition and international condemnation. We don’t want the soldiers fighting his unjustified wars of expansion to win – but we don’t want them to lose either.” Comparing allied soldiers to Nazis is the new level of rhetoric on the anti-war far left. It sickens me.
(Via Bill Herbert.)

BAGHDAD BROADCASTING CORPORATION

The BBC tackles the issue of Libya chairing the U.N.’s Human Rights Commission:

On Monday, the media watchdog group – Reporters Without Borders (RSF) – was suspended after showering the meeting with leaflets criticising Libya’s record. In a statement, RSF said that Libya’s heading of the commission was a “sick joke” that called into question its credibility. Other countries, however, are expected to raise concerns about a possible US violation of human rights over its treatment of prisoners held in Guantanamo Bay. They say the US is holding the prisoners unfairly.

So you see, the issue is really one of parity. If the U.S. is in the U.N., why not Libya?

HOW TO KEEP FRIENDS IN MANHATTAN

If you’re pro-war, there’s only one way to get away with it. David Remnick, the pro-war New Yorker editor, nails it:

Remnick, who’s very soothing on the phone, knows he upset his staff, and takes care to point out that two thirds of the piece was spent “beating up on Bush.”

So if you’re a pro-war liberal, you have to attack the man who’s responsible for carrying this policy out. Or else … no more dinner parties for you. I do think this phenomenon is actually intensifying the demonization of Bush among blue state elites. The one connecting thread is contempt for the president. If you pass that litmus test, you’re allowed some lee-way in your opinions.

WINNING THE ARGUMENT

The latest polling data show something worth remembering as we head into war. USA Today’s poll shows the highest levels supporting an invasion of Iraq – 64 percent – since November 2001, a jump of five points from two weeks ago. 57 percent say that the Bush administration has made a convincing argument for intervention. This is far higher support for war than before the first Gulf War and a remarkable finding, to my mind, given the relentless anti-war propaganda flooding the airwaves. Americans see the danger; and they want to act. Finally, the determination of this country to defend itself is going to be demonstrated. We can only pray now that the war is as successful as possible and as casualty-free on both sides as any such war can be.

THE HOUSE THAT JACQUES BUILT: And part of the credit for firming support for taking down Saddam must surely go to Jacques Chirac. Over the weekend, perhaps sensing his over-played hand, the president of the French Republic backtracked a little. But the damage has been done. USA Today’s polling of American attitudes toward foreign countries reveals how deep the chasm has become. Only 20 percent now think of France as an ally. 40 percent think of France as either “unfriendly” or an “enemy.” 68 percent of Americans believe that France has behaved unreasonably at the Security Council, and blame France primarily for the diplomatic failure. 68 percent think the Bush administration has diplomatically done the best job possible or a fairly good job; compared with 31 percent that thinks it’s done a fairly bad job or completely mishandled the problem. For Blair, the intransigence of the French has been a particular blessing. His parliamentary supporters are putting out the line that the essential decision Britain has to make is whether British foreign policy will be dictated by Paris – not a popular option in Middle Britain. Everything depends now, of course, on the conduct of the war. But if it is successful, France will be more diplomatically isolated and politically weak than at any time in decades. Or maybe that’s too much to hope for.

THE ISRAEL CARD

Peggy Noonan weighs in today. I had my say yesterday.

SADDAM’S LOVE FOR HIS PEOPLE: “I said a long time ago that the best service Saddam Hussein could give his people – and I’m sure that as a leader he loves his people – was to just disappear from the scene.” – Jacques Chirac, revealing yet another card.

STOPPING THE SUITCASE: Fred Hiatt makes a vital case this morning. The Bush administration should listen.