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Mideast Figures High in Battle Over Bolton
By Jim Lobe
Inter Press Service
July 27, 2006
WASHINGTON, Jul 26 (IPS) - One year after Democrats succeeded in blocking
Senate confirmation of John Bolton as Washington's ambassador to the United
Nations, the White House has once again thrown down the gauntlet, demanding
that its least diplomatic diplomat be confirmed in the post for the balance
of President George W. Bush's term.
And while last year's battle over Bolton's nomination energised Democrats
dispirited by their defeat in the 2004 presidential campaign, the Bush
administration is clearly hoping that a new fight will help mobilise its own
far-right core constituency in advance of the mid-term Congressional
elections in November.
In addition, the White House appears to be trying to take advantage of the
current crisis in the Middle East to gin up support for Bolton, an
aggressive defender of Israel, among Jewish organisations, despite the fact
that most of their members traditionally vote for Democrats.
"This is all about domestic politics," said Steve Clemons, director of the
American Strategy Programme of the New America Foundation, an independent
Washington think tank. "They're appealing above all to two groups: the
Jewish community, and those who associate themselves with the anti-U.N.,
nationalist, anti-government politics of (former Sen.) Jesse Helms."
With Bolton scheduled to testify at his confirmation hearing before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Thursday, the administration is hoping to
get a vote on the Senate floor before the upper chamber takes its August
recess at the end of next week.
But Democrats are determined to delay the process, and most analysts believe
the nomination is unlikely to emerge from the committee until the first or
second week of September.
If, as is now considered likely, the nomination goes to the floor, it still
may face a Democratic filibuster, a procedural mechanism whereby 41 of the
100 members of the Senate can effectively block a nomination. The Senate
currently includes 44 Democrats and one Independent who often votes with
Democrats. Of the eight Democrats on the committee, six have already
announced their opposition to Bolton.
"I'm not expecting this to be a smooth confirmation," said Don Kraus,
executive vice president of Citizens for Global Solutions (CGS), a lobby
group that has strongly criticised Bolton's performance at the U.N.
An outspoken unilateralist and protege of both Helms and Vice President Dick
Cheney who served as the State Department's top arms-control official in
Bush's first term, Bolton was first nominated to the U.N. post in March
2005.
But after a bruising confirmation battle during which Democrats and some of
his former State Department colleagues accused him of a bullying management
style, strong anti-U.N. bias, excessive secrecy and distorting intelligence
to suit his ideological preferences, Bush gave him a "recess appointment," a
rare procedural manoeuvre that enables presidents to appoint individuals to
posts without Senate confirmation.
Unlike a Senate confirmation, which lasts a full presidential term, however,
a "recess appointment" only lasts until the expiration of the Congress in
session at the time. With the current Congress set to expire at year's end,
Bolton will lose his post unless he is confirmed by the Senate or given
another "recess appointment" for which, however, he could not be paid.
The White House decided to renew its call for Bolton's confirmation last
week when the one Republican senator who had opposed his nomination last
year, Ohio Sen. George Voinovich (news, bio, voting record), reversed his
position in a published column in the Washington Post.
"My observations are that while Bolton is not perfect," he wrote, "he has
demonstrated his ability, especially in recent months, to work with others
and to follow the president's lead by working multilaterally."
"Should the president send his re-nomination to the Senate, I will vote to
confirm him, and I call on my Democratic colleagues to keep in mind the
current situation in the Middle East and the rest of the world should the
Senate have an opportunity to vote," he added.
While it remains unclear how closely Voinovich coordinated his statement
with the White House, its publication was followed immediately by the
scheduling of this week's hearing by Foreign Relations Committee Chairman
Richard Lugar and by the dispatch of urgent messages from the White House
liaison to the Jewish community, Jay Zeidman, to major Jewish organisations
calling on them to rally behind Bolton in light of the current crisis and
his staunch support of Israel.
Indeed, according to the strongly pro-Israel New York Sun, the White House
is calculating that Democrats who last year filibustered Bolton's nomination
will be less inclined to do so now given the coincidence of the current
violence in the Middle East and the imminence of the November elections for
which some Democratic candidates--particularly in the Northeast and
Florida--will rely heavily on Jewish financial contributions and votes.
"They got Voinovich, and their strategy now is to suggest that anyone who
votes against (Bolton) is anti-Israel," said Morton Halperin, Washington
director of the Open Society Institute (OSI).
Given Bolton's record at the U.N., however, the administration's concern
about Israel and the current crisis should work against the nominee,
according to Halperin and other critics. "We need a U.N. ambassador who has
the respect of the full Senate and the other U.N. ambassadors, and Bolton
has neither," he told IPS.
Indeed, in an article based on interviews with U.N. ambassadors from more
than 30 countries, most of them close allies of Washington, the New York
Times reported Sunday that Bolton's diplomatic and personal style have
alienated his fellow diplomats and isolated the U.S. at Turtle Bay,
particularly with regard to overhauling the management and governance of the
world body, Bolton's top priority.
"Envoys say he has in fact endangered that effort by alienating traditional
allies," according to the detailed Times article. "They say he combatively
asserts American leadership, contests procedures at the mannerly,
rules-bound United Nations and then shrugs off the organisation when it does
not follow his lead."
"I think the Times article was just the tip of the iceberg," said Halperin.
"My conversations with U.N. ambassadors suggest that they don't trust him as
a negotiating partner, and they don't think he's committed to the U.N."
On two priorities--U.N. management reform and the new U.N. Human Rights
Council--according to Clemons and Kraus, Bolton failed to achieve U.S.
objectives, and in some cases, he took positions without clearing them with
his superiors in the State Department or that were actually at odds with
official Department policy.
"Bolton spent all his time lowering expectations," Clemons said. "He didn't
negotiate; he didn't want to succeed. He was doing everything he could to
sabotage the process so that we can continue to kick the U.N."
"One would think that Israel and members of the American Jewish community
would want someone helping to steward their concerns in the UN who was
actually good at achieving stabilising results that can stand the test of
time," he noted. "Bolton blows things up, and we've had enough of that in
the Middle East."
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