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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

House GOP: U.S. Sovereignty or U.N. Dominance?
Wes Vernon
Tuesday, Dec. 19, 2000
A knock-down, drag-out fight for the chairmanship of the House International
Relations Committee (IRC) could determine whether the United States puts its
interests first, as every other nation does. The alternative offered would
put us on a path envisioned by the "one worlders," with American sovereignty
taking a back seat.
This is a philosophical battle that has divided the Republican Party at
several critical junctures in the 20th century.

Carrying the battle for putting U.S. interests first is Rep. Henry Hyde,
R-Ill., whose principled leadership of the House Judiciary Committee made
Bill Clinton the first elected impeached president in history. The fact that
the Senate shirked its duty and refused to convict the president (See "Sell
Out," David Schippers, Regnery) will not alter the fact that Clinton remains
forever impeached for his crimes. And Hyde had much to do with it.

The GOP-imposed term limits rule for House committee chairmen means that he
must step down from the Judiciary chairmanship after serving in that post for
three terms.

The fact that Hyde enjoys stature and the respect of his colleagues would,
under most circumstances, make his bid to head International Relations almost
a given.

But his fellow Illinoisan, House Speaker Dennis Hastert, is hearing from
advisers who believe this is an opportunity for the House leadership to make
friendly overtures to more liberal or "moderate" GOP members by turning
instead to Rep. Doug Bereuter, R-Neb., who is backed by the internationalists
of the party. Hastert is being told that if he picks more "moderate"
committee chairmen, the so-called centrist GOP members will be supportive
when he needs them. Conservatives argue this strategy works better in theory
than in practice.

Rep. Jim Leach, R-Iowa, would also like to assume the helm at IRC. He has
long been considered one of the more liberal Republicans in the House.

At a time when China poses a greater threat to U.S. security than ever
before, Bereuter gets "credit" (or the blame, as conservatives see it) for
crafting a compromise that resulted in permanent normal trade relations with
the Chinese.

This measure was passed at the behest of the Clinton administration, whose
partiality to the communist giant is regarded by many of the president’s
critics as treason. Permanent normal trade relations means the administration
no longer needs to come back every year and fight the politically costly
battle of what used to be called "most favored nation" status for the
Chinese.

That position did not sit well with blue-collar "Reagan Democrats," who
helped elect the Clinton-Gore ticket in 1992, either by "coming home" or by
voting for Ross Perot. Clinton did not want to alienate these people. And
Doug Bereuter was right there to pull the president’s chestnuts out of the
fire on this issue.

On the other hand, Hyde has said if he becomes chairman, the bipartisan Cox
report, which was swept under the rug by the Clinton White House and much of
the media, will be revisited. That volume fully documented Chinese espionage
against the U.S., ironically including the nuclear laboratories at Los
Alamos, N.M., and scene of the Soviet atomic spy scandal of a half century
ago. That case resulted in the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg.

>From the standpoint of those in the party who put U.S. interests on the front
burner, Bereuter has a "terrible record” (to quote one national security
expert) in China and on missile defense.

He is also viewed as being on the wrong side of United Nations "family
planning” schemes, i.e., paying for forced abortions overseas. That forcing
people to have abortions hardly fits the dictionary term of "choice” matters
little to advocates of the leftist agenda who are not bothered by questions
of consistency.

Frank J. Gaffney, Jr., CEO of The Center for Security Policy, criticizes
Leach as being "a Ripon Society Republican, a decidedly liberal lawmaker who
has, during his 12 terms in Congress, proven unreliable on many of the GOP’s
foreign and domestic initiatives.” The Ripon Society symbolizes the Eastern
Seaboard "Rockefeller wing” of the Republican Party.

As for Bereuter, Gaffney defines him as "one of the Clinton-Gore
administration’s most reliable allies on its globalist agenda in general and
appeasement of China in particular.”

Hyde, by contrast, has "become widely recognized as one of the legislative
branch’s most experienced leaders on foreign policy, intelligence and
national security matters.” This would include his many years on the House
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.

Moreover, the veteran Illinois lawmaker has an inside track with the incoming
Republican administration. He is a close ally of former Congressman and now
Vice President-elect Dick Cheney.

"This is important,” says Gaffney, "since the new administration is going to
need an ‘anchor to windward’ — a conservative conscience who cannot be
ignored, despite the pressures from so-called ‘moderates’ and ‘centrists’
in and out of the executive branch who will be pressuring President Bush to
perpetuate failed Clinton-Gore policies.”

That right there is a pivotal consideration. Past Republican presidents
(Eisenhower, Nixon, and the elder Bush come to mind) surrounded themselves
with policy-makers who fought out deep philosophical battles in the early
years of their administrations. In all too many cases, the "moderates” won.

President Reagan had his "moderate” contingent too. But no one could take him
off a steady focus on his long-range goals. A strong chairman of the House
International Relations Committee could help nudge the new president in the
right direction in a dangerous world.

A man of Hyde’s prestige and national reputation could help bring about an
increasing awareness of the shocking fact that, going into the 21st century,
America is without an anti-missile defense system. We are vulnerable to
potential nuclear blackmail threats, thanks to the internationalists who
preach the flawed doctrine that leaving ourselves open to attack will deter
our enemies "once they see we mean them no harm.”

Henry Hyde, says Gaffney, "will not be deterred from removing (the ABM Treaty
signed in 1972 with a country that no longer exists, the Soviet Union).” This
treaty stands in the way of an adequate missile defense, and Hyde stands
ready to remove it even if the Chinese, Russians or others object.

Here again, House Republicans have a choice before them that could determine
whether the U.S. can undo the damage done to our national security in the
Clinton-Gore years.

Although there was some effort to force a vote in this and other contested
House chairmanship battles this past week, it was ultimately decided to put
it off until Congress returns in early January. If the vote is taken after
the race for the top leadership is determined, "that minimizes the
opportunity for retaliation,” says a prominent House Republican.

The House Steering Committee makes the recommendation to the full House
Republican Conference, where all the GOP members vote. But the conference
usually follows the lead of the Steering Committee.

House Speaker Hastert has five votes on the panel. Majority Leader Dick Armey
has two votes. Each of the other Steering Committee members listed below has
one vote each.

You may wish to make your views known to these members during the holidays.
This may be your last chance for input as to foreign policy in the early
years of the new century.


Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill.

House Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas.

House Majority Whip Tom DeLay, R-Texas.

Deputy Majority Whip Roy Blunt, R-Mo.

Conference Chairman J.C. Watts, R-Okla.

Rep. Chris Cox, R-Calif.

Rep. Deborah Pryce, R-Ohio.

Rep. Barbara Cubin, R-Wyo.

Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va.

Rep. Ken Calvert, R-Calif.

Rep. Sonny Callahan, R-Ala.

Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich.

Rep. Tom Latham, R-Iowa.

Rep. Ralph Regula, R-Ohio.

Rep. John McHugh, R-N.Y.

Rep. John Linder, R-Ga.

(Rep. Cass Ballenger, R-N.C.

Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas.

Rep. Bob Stump, R-Ariz.

Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska.

Rep. Jerry Moran, R-Kan.

Rep. John Sweeney, R-N.Y.

Rep. John Culberson, R-Texas.




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