Tuesday, February 01, 2005

General FlipFlop

Senator Flipper (aka John F. Kerry), is now being joined by Gen. Wesley Clark, who writes an op-ed this morning warning that the situation in Kosovo may be getting unstable.

He opines that the US should take the matter up with the UN, but if the UN fails to act, then the US should take action with a coalition of the willing.

Why does that sound familiar?

It should. That's exactly what President Bush did with respect to Iraq, yet Wesley Clark admonished Bush for taking the action. The Left claimed he was a cowboy and disrespected the UN and our allies.

Why is all this suddenly relevant again? Because Gen. Clark has a very interesting op-ed in this morning's Wall Street Journal. Clark is rightly concerned that the situation in Kosovo is again becoming unstable, and concludes that Serbs and Kosovars could soon be at each other again if action is not taken by the international community. So what's his solution? He writes that the U.S. should ensure that the matter is taken up at the U.N. by the Security Council. BUT, he admonishes: "should resolution of Kosovo's status be blocked in the Security Council, the U.S. should lead a coalition of its European allies to organize the conference; endorse a Kosovo referendum for adoption of the new constitution to go ahead in early 2006; and then give diplomatic recognition and sustained support to Kosovo as a new state."

So then, what does this prominent Democrat, former presidential hopeful and Kerry supporter say we should do about likely U.N. paralysis in a pending crisis? He says we should end-run the Security Council and the U.N., and build an international coalition of willing nations which can then roll up its sleeves and do the work the U.N. is too compromised and dysfunctional to do. Sound familiar? But for this, rest assured, Clark will not be called a "unilateralist" or a "cowboy." With its special exemption for the Balkans -- where, legend has it, President Clinton boldly dared to bomb without Security Council permission, and to the cheers of Democrats everywhere -- the media will no doubt see General Clark as a visionary.
Clark and the UN

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