Published on Saturday, January 25, 2003 by the Globe & Mail/Canada
Daggers Out as Davos Turns on U.S.
Washington flayed at Swiss summit for its Iraq policies and role in
world

by Alan Freeman

DAVOS, SWITZERLAND -- Harsh criticism of U.S. policy over Iraq and
heated discussion about the United States' role as the world's only
superpower dominated the normally polite seminars of the World Economic
Forum yesterday.


Again and again, world leaders and other participants in the prestigious
five-day talk shop criticized U.S. plans to topple the regime of Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein and they charged the United States with
hypocrisy for its policies on human rights and refusing to sign
international treaties.

It was a dramatic change in the tone of the forum, which has been
dominated in the past by U.S. chief executives, academics and Washington
policy-makers, and whose sessions frequently were used to tout U.S.
solutions to world problems.

Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan criticized Washington for
maintaining its own stock of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons
while insisting that Iraq must stop its development of weapons of mass
destruction.

"No one is interested in eliminating their weapons of mass destruction,"
Mr. Erdogan said. "I mean all the countries in the world, the U.S.
included.

"When you talk about WMD, you cannot [distinguish] between small and
large states."

Earlier, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad warned U.S.
Attorney-General John Ashcroft during a debate that, "if you do start [a
war against Iraq] you will kill a lot of innocent people. You are going
to make a lot of people very angry, certainly a lot of Muslim people."

The Bush administration was also charged repeatedly with fomenting
racism by singling out people from Middle Eastern countries or with dark
complexions for extra screening at airports and border points as part of
its campaign against terrorism.

These kinds of criticisms were too much for Senator Joe Biden, a
Democrat who is frequently critical of U.S. President George W. Bush but
clearly resented repeated criticism of the United States, especially
from Europeans.

"I understand why the resentment exists," he told a forum session on
U.S. foreign policy.

But he added: "We are not as bad as you make us out to be and in
comparison with your own country we're pretty damn good."

Although he said his own views on civil liberties were diametrically
opposed to those of the Bush administration, he lashed out at the French
and Germans for thinking they were a model of how Americans should
behave.

"Tell me about the acceptance of your French Arab brothers in France,"
he said sarcastically.

Mr. Biden also said that if the United States had not decided to
intervene in Bosnia in the mid-1990s, the Europeans would never have
stepped in to stop the genocide.

"All I'm asking for is balance," the senator said. "I'm sick and tired
of the lectures."

Mr. Biden agreed that the United States had to work on its image abroad
and its policies. "But I don't think that anybody likes the big guy on
the block, ever."

Anne-Marie Slaughter, dean of Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson
School of Public Administration, said Washington exacerbates the problem
by constantly reminding others that it is the world's only superpower.

Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, said that what
the United States needed was "better behavior" rather than "a better
sales job."

He said that he could not understand the Bush administration's attitude
on many international issues, including its recent vote against a UN
resolution that called on countries involved in the battle against
terrorism to respect human rights.

"People want a leadership role from America," he said.

In his appearance with Mr. Mahathir, Mr. Ashcroft clashed with fellow
panelists on several occasions.

He took particular exception to a statement from the moderator that "one
man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter."

"I respectfully disagree with the idea that these terrorists should be
endowed with the dignity of freedom fighters," Mr. Ashcroft said.
"Frankly, they're fighting freedom."

He said that the Sept. 11 terrorists hated freedom and did not want
women to take an equal place in society.

"I'm not willing to say that in order to avoid terrorism we have to give
up values that are fundamental and downplay them to appease the
terrorists," Mr. Ashcroft said.

Klaus Schwab, founder of the forum, said he wasn't shocked by the
sometimes anti-American tone of the discussions.

"We cannot hide away different opinions," he said, expressing the hope
that it would create more mutual understanding between Americans and the
rest of the world.

© 2003 Bell Globemedia Interactive Inc

###





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