Simply Delaying the Inevitable

Article tools

The U.S. is still likely to go to war against Iraq, although a little less likely than we were a week ago.

And the missile-launch date is no longer days or weeks away - but more likely months.

What a difference a couple of days can make!

Reason no. 1: Hans Blix, the chief UN weapons inspector in Iraq, reported on Thursday that his people have found no "smoking gun," no actual evidence that Saddam Hussein is hiding forbidden weapons.

Ellis Henican Ellis Henican Bio | E-mail | Recent columns

Reason no. 2: The world responded with one loud, "So why the big rush to war?"

Reason no. 3: Our staunchest and only reliable ally, Great Britain, urged the Bush White House, "Please, slow down."

And reason no. 4: All of a sudden, the president described Jan. 27 - not as a drop-dead date for the weapons-hoarder in Baghdad, but as just another day on a vague and distant march toward war.

Whew!

Let's not be naively hopeful here. War with Iraq will probably still happen, despite this little breather. And for the obvious reasons.

The bellicose voices in the Bush administration - Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz - are still out-shouting Colin Powell, the administration's one-man go-slow brigade. And the man whose opinion really matters here, President Bush, still carries the weight of unfinished family business. Whatever happens with the arms inspectors, whatever happens with the allies, whatever happens at the UN, the president is still clearly fixated on finishing off Saddam.

Who needs a "smoking gun," the president seems to ask himself every morning, when Dad's legacy is at stake?

And all the while, more American troops and more American hardware are on their way to the Persian Gulf.

On Friday, it was 7,000 Marines from Camp Lejeune, N.C., as U.S. fighter jets struck five air-defense sites around Tallil, 170 miles southeast of Baghdad.

But the president and his war hawks find themselves in a new box this weekend - and the walls are narrowing in on them. Hans Blix set that in motion.

Oh, the chief inspector had plenty of complaints about the wily Saddam. But the lead to the story of his interim report - especially outside the United States - was that the inspectors hadn't found squat so far.

Javier Solana, the European Union foreign policy coordinator, summed up the prevailing view, a view that makes U.S. hawks like Cheney, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz nearly break out in hives.

"Without proof," Solana shrugged, "it would be very difficult to start a war."

And then Romano Prodi, the European Commission president, drove his own stake through an imminent launch date.

"War is not and must not be inevitable," Prodi said.

You could hear the grinding teeth from the White House.

more in /news/columnists

Would you recommend this?

Rate it:
No Somewhat Neutral Yes Highly

Editorial Cartoons

Walt Handelsman Cartoons Walt Handelsman

Newsday's Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist.

Games & Activities

Crossword | Sudoku | Horoscopes | Comics


 

REAL ESTATE

Competing with neighbors to sell
Search: Find property | Towns | Recent sales

TOP LONG ISLAND DOCTORS

  Choose physicians in a variety of medical specialties.
Find LI top doctors
How they were chosen

Search:Pediatrics | Plastic surgery | More areas

My LI: Reader Photos

Family & Friends | Pets | Youth Sports | Submit
Popular: Voted best | Most popular | Recent


New york City

Best, worst of Costume Institute gala dresses
Check out what Katie Holmes, Jennifer Lopez, Scarlett Johansson and more wore to the Met's annual A-list only event.
Photos | More celebrity photos

Travel

Photo tour: Top 10 Oahu beaches
Where to eat on Oahu | Oahu shopping | Find "Lost" episode sites | Tropical island photos
Travel searches:
 

Long Island Data


LI gas prices
LI sex offenders
Top LI doctors
LI School Stats
Death notices
NY Lottery Results
Recent Long Island Home Sales
LI Fire Departments
LIRR gap info
Foreclosure rates
More Resources
DJIANASDAQSPX

Newsday.com to go

Now you can add Newsday.com headlines to your blog or favorite social networking sites:
Facebook
MySpace
iGoogle
Typepad
Blogger
More applications