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12/20/00
1:35 p.m. By Frank J. Gaffney Jr., president of the Center for Security Policy. Gaffney held senior positions in the Reagan defense department |
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This statement follows and presumably reflects the substance of meetings between senior Clinton foreign-policy personnel and Mr. Bush's newly announced secretary of state-designate Colin Powell and his national-security adviser Condoleezza Rice. It could greatly compound the damaging legacy President Clinton will bequeath to his successor. (It is not clear whether the presence of a strong secretary of defense-designate in the mix would have produced different results. But this episode certainly underscores the need for the Bush-Cheney national-security team to be balanced by the presence of an effective and forceful advocate for the defense department's views and responsibilities.) A particularly egregious example of this legacy is the Clinton policy of appeasement towards Stalinist North Korea. It began with a misbegotten 1994 deal whereby Pyongyang was supposed to give up its nuclear-weapons program in exchange for Western financial life support, oil, and two reactors (capable, by the way, of producing vastly more weapons-useable plutonium than the two aging ones they were to replace). There is reason to believe that the North may nonetheless have acquired several atomic weapons and is still covertly working to obtain more. The appeasement of North Korea intensified earlier this year with a Nobel Peace Prize-winning visit to Pyongyang by South Korean president Kim Dae Jong, and a host of concessions by the South unreciprocated by any appreciable diminution of the North's threatening "good-to-go-to-war" military posture. Not to be outdone, the Clinton administration dispatched Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to pay court to Kim Jong Il complete with the appalling spectacle of her applauding tens of thousands of schoolchildren parading Pyongyang's commitment to its nuclear weapons and ballistic-missile programs in the hope of clearing the way for Mr. Clinton to do his own kow-towing pilgrimage to the "Hermit Kingdom." Its purpose? To secure yet another set of phony North Korean promises, this time involving missile production and proliferation. It is not in the U.S. interests or those of its allies in East Asia to perpetuate the notion that unverifiable, unworkable, and unbalanced agreements with dictators like Kim Jong Il, who have no respect for the rule of law either at home or internationally and a track record of ignoring such agreements whenever it suits them. The apparent insouciance about such a prospect on the part of the incoming Bush foreign-policy team is especially worrisome since it is utterly at odds with, and manifestly repudiates, the strong opposition to this initiative expressed by congressional leaders in a letter to Mr. Clinton sent last week. Of even greater concern than the particulars of the deal Mr. Clinton will try to strike if he does go to North Korea and the commitment that accord will inevitably inflict upon his successor and the nation effectively to prop-up Kim Jong Il's odious regime is the idea implicit in Mr. Fleischer's pronouncement: The incoming Bush-Cheney administration seems to be signaling that it is comfortable with the idea of carrying forward not only what have been, at best, the hapless policies, diplomatic initiatives, and international obligations of the Clinton-Gore administration to date, but those the latter might fashion between now and Inauguration Day, as well. Just how ill-advised this sort of "carte blanche" may prove to be is evident from even a cursory look at what the Clinton team has been doing since the election and would like to do before it leaves office:
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