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What
Would We Do Without Albania?
by
P.M. Carpenter
The
Bush administration’s pathology of deception continues unabated. Its
most recent outbreak of conning the already conned public is the
claim that the United States' illegal, virtually unilateral and unprovoked
military aggression against Iraq is but a partial expression of widespread
international accord. France, singularly, is made out to be the global
bad guy and martial party pooper; not the world's majority voice of
opposition to America's depraved conduct abroad.
Why
shoot, says the administration, we've got allies up to our eyeballs.
The count has, at times, been a bit fuzzy -- how odd for this customarily
precise White House when it comes to mathematics, especially on fiscal
policy -- with diverse officials spouting diverse numbers. Aside from
today's principal party line of 45 allies (which really means 30, because
one-third, in a display of true solidarity with the U.S., prefer to
pretend they've never heard of us), we have also been treated to allied
counts of 35 and 40. In any case, all the estimates are within a comfortable
33-percent margin of error, a considerable improvement over the administration's
budget forecasts.
Whatever
the actual count, which includes the conveniently anonymously committed,
30 nations have been so bold as to raise their hands and
be named. And a few of them have gone even farther. As we all know,
allied Britain has promised the greatest number of troops -- ultimately
45,000 -- coming in at 12.9 percent of total "coalition" forces expected
in Iraq. That's the good news. The bad news -- as some naysaying leftists
such as columnists Robert Novak and Paul Craig Roberts might characterize
it -- is that after Britain's contribution, 302,548 troops are still
needed.
But
not to worry. The leftover manpower burden doesn't all rest on the
United States' shoulders. Indeed, because Dick, Donnie and Colin
have taken the good time and trouble to amass the redoubtable "Coalition
of the Willing," allies other than Britain are committing 0.00842 percent
of the necessary troop balance, leaving the United States to compensate
for only 99.991 percent of the shortfall. Perhaps these black-and-white
statistics from the U.S. State Department will silence, once and for
all, those whiners critical of the war as mostly an American ballgame.
For
instance our traditional ally, Albania, is sending a contingency
of 70 troops. Poland is anteing 200 troops and Romania, not to be
outdone
by a bunch of Poles, is raising the 200 by 78 more. That's the kind
of good-natured competition and can-do spirit that will see us through
these troubled times.
Australia promises 2000 troops. And that rounds out the Willing Coalition
list; members willing enough, that is, to commit ground forces. Other
much-touted coalition brothers include Spain, where a resounding 14
percent of the population has a favorable image of the U.S. and whose
leadership has offered 0 troops; Turkey, 0; Italy, 0; Denmark, 0; and
powerhouse Bulgaria, 0. Hitler’s foreign policy had better luck attracting
allies.
A few other less-touted coalition members are downright comical in
description and symbolic of just how desperate the Bush administration
has been to inflate its allied support.
Eritrea,
for example, is one of the gang of 30. Its Gross Domestic Product
is 0.00031 percent of the United States', and its per capita
GDP -- you really have to work to accomplish something like this --
is less than Afghanistan's. Though zero Eritreans will be marching
off to the Iraqi War, the little nation devotes a whopping 19.8 percent
of its miniscule GDP to military expenditures (ours is 3.2). Such a
shocking waste of resources is, however, easily explained. Eritrea
is experiencing a frightful territorial dispute with another Willing
Coalition member, Ethiopia, which, hard as it is to imagine, actually
ranks less than Eritrea in per capita GDP. The only reason both nations
bothered to enlist as absentee warriors against Iraq is that both are
currying favor with the U.S. as leverage in a land-conflict resolution.
For
mostly obvious reasons the coalition list excludes America's closest
Middle East ally, Israel; which, by the way, between 1967 and 2000
stood in violation of twice the number of U.N. Security Council resolutions
than Iraq earned for itself in the same period. But again, not to worry,
because George Jr. has a "road map" to a comprehensive Mideast peace.
The first step is a U.S. invasion of a Muslim country. That should
help grease the skids.
Last
week, in a cable-network news interview, a retired U.S. general said
yeah, sure, we call the assault on Iraq a coalition product, but
let's face it, this is America's fight. Just once -- just to break
the monotony of deception, if nothing else -- it would be nice to hear
the administration be as honest. Just once.
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