PAT PICKS HIS POISON
Pat Buchanan says he cannot promise to endorse the Republican presidential
nominee because the GOP "has become a Xerox copy, basically, of the
Democratic Party." Buchanan has a point here: Neither party is willing to
tank the world economy as he would have them do. (In his book The Great
Betrayal, Buchanan proposes slapping a 15 percent tariff on imports from
every country in the world except possibly Canada. For a review, see
http://www.TheAmericanEnterprise.org/taeja98f.htm.) But it's not as though
Republican support for free trade and internationalism is some new
development; the party hasn't been isolationist since at least the
Forties.
The most obvious drawback of a Reform Party bid by Buchanan, that he could
tilt the elections to the Democrats, has been much discussed. (Click HERE
for NR's take, from our latest issue.) But it's worth considering the less
likely result-that the polls hold and the Republicans end up winning the
White House without the Buchanan Brigades which would also be disastrous
for conservatives. The conventional wisdom among press and
Republican-party elite alike would be that Republicans could dispense with
conservatives altogether. The president-elect would neither owe nor fear
conservatives very much.
Almost any way you look at it, the conclusion is the same: If Buchanan
runs, he will hurt every cause he has ever fought for or claims to believe
in.
COERCIVE DIPLOMACY
Reports out of Berlin, where five days of discussions between the U.S. and
North Korea recently concluded, suggest that Pyongyang won't test the
Taepo Dong-2 (a long-range missile that could carry a significant payload
as far as Alaska and Hawaii or a lighter one all the way to the contiguous
48 states). In return, the United States will move toward normalized
relations and the eventual end of economic sanctions.
The deal solves an immediate problem. Ever since North Korea tested the
Taepo Dong-1 last year, actually blasting it over Japanese airspace, there
have been concerns about triggering an east Asian arms race that might
pull in China and Taiwan. All summer, security experts have considered a
test shot for Taepo Dong-2 imminent. "Most analysts believe that North
Korea probably will test a Taepo Dong-2 this year, unless delayed for
political reasons," notes the unclassified version of the 1999 National
Intelligence Estimate, released last week.
Now the North Koreans have their political reason, but they're also
behaving exactly the way the NIE predicts they will: Pyongyang will view
its long-range missiles "more as strategic weapons of deterrence and
coercive diplomacy than as weapons of war." Coercive diplomacy is exactly
what produced this deal: specifically, their coercion and our diplomacy.
How long can it last?
SPEAKING OF NUKES. . .
A coalition of leftie outfits seeking ratification of the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty is planning a "National Day of Action" tomorrow. They will
be demonstrating on the Capitol Steps wearing masks of North Carolina
senator Jesse Helms for "his flagrant disrespect for democracy" in not
holding a vote on the treaty. (The quote comes from a fax from Peace
Action, formerly known as Sane/Freeze-presumably they realize that the
"sane" part of their title didn't pass the truth-in-advertising test.) A
quick canvas of the Senate suggests that most Republicans are holding firm
against the treaty, another in a long line of Clinton-era initiatives that
presume that rogue states everywhere will rush to follow our pacific
example. If the Senate votes, Peace Action might not get the result it
wants. Supporters of a strong defense, meanwhile, should collect the
group's masks of Helms-and wear them as a badge of honor.