<http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/09/international/middleeast/09assess.html?th=&pagewanted=print&position=>

The New York Times

March 9, 2005
NEWS ANALYSIS

For Bush, No Boasts, but a Taste of Vindication
 By TODD S. PURDUM


ASHINGTON, March 8 - He has gone out of his way not to crow, or even to
take direct credit. But not quite two years after he began the invasion
that toppled Saddam Hussein, and not quite two months after a second
Inaugural Address in which he spoke of "ending tyranny," President Bush
seems entitled to claim as he did on Tuesday that a "thaw has begun" in the
broader Middle East.

At the very least, Mr. Bush is feeling the glow of the recent flurry of
impulses toward democracy in Iraq, the Palestinian territories, Lebanon and
even Egypt and Saudi Arabia, where events have put him on a bit of a roll
and some of his sharpest critics on the defensive. It now seems just
possible that Mr. Bush and aides like Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D.
Wolfowitz were not wrong to argue that the "status quo of despotism cannot
be ignored or appeased, kept in a box or cut off," as the president put it
in a speech at the National Defense University here.

The failure to find unconventional weapons in Iraq, his administration's
shifting rationales for the war, the lingering insurgency and steady
American casualties there were a drag on Mr. Bush's political fortunes for
most of last year. But a wave of developments since the
better-than-expected Iraqi elections in January - some perhaps related and
others probably not - have brought Mr. Bush a measure of vindication, which
may or may not be sustained by events and his own actions in the months to
come.

"By now it should be clear that decades of excusing and accommodating
tyranny in the pursuit of stability have only led to injustice and
instability and tragedy," Mr. Bush said on Tuesday. "It should be clear
that the advance of democracy leads to peace, because governments that
respect the rights of their people also respect the rights of their
neighbors."

His two predecessors in the Oval Office, his father and Bill Clinton, both
spoke of the latest signs of progress in an appearance at the White House.
The first President Bush was restrained, pronouncing himself "very
pleased," but cautioning that much work remained to be done.

Mr. Clinton was more ebullient, noting that the Iraqi elections "went
better than anyone could have imagined." In Lebanon, he said, "the Syrians
are going to have to get out of there and give the Lebanese their country
back, and I think the fact that the Lebanese are in the street demanding it
is wonderful."

Asked about huge demonstrations on Tuesday, sponsored by Hezbollah, that
demanded just the opposite, Mr. Clinton said: "I find it inconceivable that
most Lebanese wouldn't like it if they had their country back. You know,
they want their country back and they ought to get it."

For his part, Mr. Bush himself again acknowledged that building democracy
in the Middle East will require a "generational commitment."

 One senior White House aide, speaking on condition of anonymity so as not
to overshadow his boss, acknowledged as much. "Obviously, the acts of
courage we've seen in Iraq, Afghanistan, the demonstrations that happened
in the Ukraine and now in Lebanon, these are very inspiring developments
that have obviously caught the notice of the president," he said. "But this
is very complicated stuff, and there are a lot of turns left on this
journey, and the president at every step of the way has always cautioned
it's going to be a difficult road."

Still, even as sharp and consistent a critic of Mr. Bush's foreign policy
as Senator Edward M. Kennedy, the Massachusetts Democrat, gives Mr. Bush
some credit for the latest stirrings of liberty along the eastern
Mediterranean.

 "What's taken place in a number of those countries is enormously
constructive," Mr. Kennedy said on Sunday on the ABC News program "This
Week." "It's a reflection the president has been involved."

Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, Democrat of Connecticut and a frequent ally of
Mr. Bush on national security affairs, was in the audience for his speech
on Tuesday and was more effusive.

"Look, this moment in the Middle East has the feel of Central and Eastern
Europe around the collapse of the Berlin Wall," he said in a telephone
interview. "It's a very different historical and political context, and we
all understand that democracy in the Middle East is in its infancy. But
something is happening."

Mr. Lieberman said Mr. Bush deserved credit for at least two things: the
overthrow of Saddam Hussein and the continued American military presence in
Iraq, which he said showed "the proven willingness of the United States to
put its power behind its principles."

Indeed, Mr. Bush cast the United States' current posture in a long,
bipartisan tradition of American foreign policy, from Woodrow Wilson's
Fourteen Points to Franklin D. Roosevelt's Four Freedoms, Harry S. Truman's
Marshall Plan and Ronald Reagan's unwillingness to accept Soviet hegemony
in Eastern Europe.

Mr. Bush's sharp demand on Tuesday that "all Syrian military forces and
intelligence personnel must withdraw" from Lebanon before the scheduled
elections there in May, if the elections themselves are to be viewed as
fair, was a sign that he has every intention of pressing what he sees as
his advantage in the region and in the court of world opinion - whether he
describes it that way in public or not.

 Still, there are real and practical dangers in the passions recently
unleashed in the Middle East.

 Saudi Arabia's recent limited municipal elections and President Hosni
Mubarak's announcement that he will permit multiparty presidential
elections in Egypt this fall are indisputably encouraging to would-be
reformers here and there.

 But full and genuine democratic elections in either country might well
result in strongly anti-American governments.

Copyright 2
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experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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