NP - Answers on An Empty Page
David Morris
fqmorris at hotmail.com
Thu Jun 27 09:34:05 CDT 2002
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A52352-2002Jun26.html
By Richard Cohen
Thursday, June 27, 2002; Page A31
On Capitol Hill they tell the story of the senator who was in the habit of
not bothering to read staff-written speeches before he delivered them. One
day the senator grabbed a speech, dashed to his meeting and started reading.
He got down to the bottom of the page where it said, "And now I'd like to
outline my five principles of foreign policy." He turned the page and there,
in large type, it said, "You're on your own, hotshot."
I thought that story had to be apocryphal until I heard President Bush's
speech on the Middle East. It started well, with some richly deserved
denunciations of Palestinian terrorism, and it called for a Palestinian
state sometime down the road, maybe even within three years. Then, in my
mind, Bush turned the page and found . . . nothing.
Bush wants Yasser Arafat gone, and he called for new elections. But what
happens if Arafat, as is likely, is reelected? We don't know. This is on the
blank page.
Israel now has much of the West Bank under military occupation. "Freedom of
movement" is a contradiction in terms. There is none. How do you campaign
for election if you can't go from one town to the next? The answer, it
seems, must be on the blank page.
Bush called for a "provisional state of Palestine." What is that? What are
its borders, provisional or otherwise -- the ones offered at Camp David or
the far less generous ones offered by Ariel Sharon? Will moderate
Palestinians stand up to the terrorists among them and risk their lives in
the cause of a "provisional state"? All these questions are answered on the
blank pages.
[...]
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