Why are Democrats - in the words of Sen. Christopher Dodd -
promising a "bruising" battle over the confirmation of John Bolton as U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations?
Bolton is serving under a recess appointment because Democrats
twice filibustered a vote on his confirmation last year, preventing a full
Senate vote. They were upset that Bolton had made disparaging remarks about
the United Nations and that he was tough on subordinates. They were afraid
he would alienate our allies.
Now they are sure he has done just that. Dodd said, "I'm sorry
the administration wants to go forward with this. The problems still
persist. Many ambassadors at the U.N. feel he hasn't done a good job there.
He has polarized the situation."
There you have your answer. The liberals' opposition to Bolton
lies in their attitude toward the United Nations, which they regard as a
largely positive institution rightly frustrated with the arrogance of
President Bush and the United States.
The New York Times made this very clear in a recent story on
Bolton. The Times wrote, "The Bush administration is not popular in the
United Nations, where it is often perceived as disdainful of diplomacy, and
its policies as heedless of the effects on others and single-minded in the
willful assertion of American interests. By extension, then, many diplomats
say they see Mr. Bolton as a stand-in for the arrogance of the
administration itself."
Does the Times bother to refute this charge that Bolton and the
administration are arrogant and unjustly alienate our "traditional allies"?
Hardly. It's been one of the main critics of President Bush's alleged
"unilateralism" in foreign policy.
Liberals don't like it one bit that Bolton sees his role as
vigorously representing the national interests of the United States, just as
every other U.N. ambassador advocates the positions of his own country. They
don't support Bolton's efforts to reform the United Nations, a corrupt
organization that has consistently mistreated the United States and made a
mockery of human rights - a cause it purports to champion. They cringe when
Bolton exposes U.N. hypocrisy, such as when he pointedly challenged Louise
Arbour, the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, on his threat to charge
Israeli leaders with war crimes.
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They don't like Bolton's unambiguous defense of Israel's actions
in response to Hezbollah's unprovoked attacks, in which they killed and
kidnapped Israeli soldiers and shot missiles indiscriminately into Israeli
civilian populations. They resent Bolton's rejection of the U.N.'s moral
perversion in giving the terrorists a pass for their atrocities and
portraying Israeli acts of self-defense as war crimes.
They shudder at Bolton's moral clarity, such as when he said, "I
think it's important that we not fall into the trap of moral equivalency
here ... What Israel has done in response is act in self-defense. And I don't
quite know what the argument about proportionate force means here. Is Israel
entitled only to kidnap two Hezbollah operatives and fire a couple of
rockets aimlessly into Lebanon?"
Bolton understands the nature of this conflict and its
adversaries. Nothing could better characterize the respective warring forces
than a recent cartoon depicting an armed Israeli soldier positioned
protectively in front of a baby carriage while his terrorist enemy was
holding his weapon behind a baby carriage.
As Bolton knows, it's hard to negotiate with savages of that
mindset. That's why in an interview with Fox News' Brit Hume, Bolton
dismissed Syria's requests for dialogue with the United States. Bolton told
Brit, "Syria doesn't need dialogue to know what they need to do. They need
to lean on Hezbollah to get them to release the two captured Israeli
soldiers and stop the launch of rockets against innocent Israeli civilians."
Exactly.
To put it bluntly, Republicans support Bolton's nomination
precisely because of his clarity of thought and speech -- and his
unapologetic representation of America's interests. Democrats oppose him
because they sympathize with the negative view of Bolton held by foreign
envoys who have anything but the best interests of the United States in
mind.
If it bothers you that we have a staunch defender of America's
interests serving as our ambassador to the United Nations and believe,
instead, that we should routinely subordinate our interests to other nations
openly hostile to us and contemptuous of the very idea of human rights, then
you, too, should join the liberal chorus against confirmation of this fine
public servant.