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Dick on Bill

In his The Washington Post column today, Richard Cohen characterizes a European audiences’ reception to Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol’s foreign policy outline:

Kristol’s War, as it will henceforth be called, was declared after dinner here at the splendid Villa D’Este hotel on Lake Como. He announced a vast U.S. foreign policy agenda, beginning with a war against Iraq and ending with replacing the monarchy in Saudi Arabia. His audience of mostly Europeans at first gasped and then reacted with irritation. “Very provocative,” many of them commented — a polite way of saying that he, and by extension the Bush administration, was totally mad.

[…] Assembled by the Council for the United States and Italy, [Kristol’s audience] included diplomats, Cabinet officials, academics and business leaders from across Italy and America. The Europeans viewed Kristol as a virtual spokesman for the Bush administration — not a government official, certainly, but someone who shares the government’s thinking.

In my capacity as devil’s advocate, I asked Kristol why Iraq and not Iran. After all, Iran clearly fosters and supports terrorism in the Middle East and is considered by Israel to be more of a threat than Iraq. What’s more, nothing but the thinnest of circumstantial evidence links Saddam Hussein either to terrorism in general or al Qaeda in particular. Why strike at Iraq?

The reason, Kristol said, was that there are indications the Iranian regime is moderating. No one can say that about Saddam Hussein. He ruthlessly rules a nation that has twice gone to war against a neighbor — first Iran and then Kuwait. He has been developing biological and chemical weapons, for sure, and probably nuclear weapons as well. America, not to mention the world, cannot tolerate weapons of mass destruction in the hands of a sociopath.

It is a convincing argument and the reason I support the toppling of Hussein — when the time is ripe. January, though, may be too soon. The Middle East is now roiling, and our moderate friends there — Egypt and particularly Jordan — might be endangered by yet more instability in their region. The Arab street may be more myth than reality, but with one-sided coverage of events in the West Bank, popular sentiment cannot be discounted. It is now strongly anti-American.

No one I talked with after Kristol spoke necessarily dissented from what he said about Iraq. Yet for the most part, they could see neither the urgency nor the necessity for dealing with Saddam Hussein. He poses no immediate threat to them, and Europeans are not, as opposed to Americans, much concerned about Israel.

George Bush clearly has his work cut out for him.

[…] Europe cannot be ignored. Whether formally constituted as NATO (with the Russians?) or merely as a community of nations that shares our values, it has a role to play vis-