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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, September 28, 2001 |
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U.S. rethink on military action?
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
WASHINGTON, SEPT. 27. The Bush administration is making it clear
that the U.S. will be very careful about how it goes about the
exercise of rooting out terrorism. It is now trying to dispel the
impression that an imminent military action is necessary. The
message is that the war against terrorism is multi-faceted, the
military being only one of the several components.
``I think it cannot be stressed enough that everybody who is
waiting for military action... needs to rethink this thing,'' the
Deputy Secretary of Defence, Mr. Paul Wolfowitz, said in Brussels
after a meeting with Defence Ministers of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organisation.
The President, Mr. George W. Bush, not long ago argued that it
really made no sense for a million dollar Cruise missile to be
chasing ten dollar tents.
There are different aspects to what is taking place here and in
the operational muscle that is being put in place in and around
Afghanistan, mainly in the forward bases of the U.S. in West
Asia, in the Persian Gulf and the Indian Ocean. One view is that
the military operations may have already begun, with the Special
Forces of the U.S. and the U.K. having entered select areas of
Afghanistan.
The expectations of a military strike and perhaps even the
impatience aside, there is no question that the Bush
administration is finding this coalition building a difficult
task. Foreign leaders visiting Washington in the recent past have
had very little problem talking about being on the side of
America on terrorism. However, many want details of Osama bin
Laden and the Al Qaeda's direct involvement in the September 11
terrorist attacks in the U.S. before embarking on any major
military show of force. And the U.S. is not really too keen to
show the ``evidence,'' not because there was none, but out of
fear of exposing its intelligence gathering mechanisms.
But for those nations which really did not have a choice in
backing the U.S. or were desperate to settle regional scores, the
response to any possible military action has not been
forthcoming, from America's allies in Europe and from among the
Arab world. Cooperation from allies has already started on other
fronts, especially in the realm of intelligence and in following
the financial trail.
In terms of the scenarios for Afghanistan, the Bush
administration, while flirting with the Northern Alliance and
almost any group that may have anti-Taliban credentials, is also
exploring the possibility of generating momentum within
Afghanistan so that the Taliban leadership itself would crack,
leaving the more ``moderate'' ones to come out.
Washington does not want to antagonise Islamabad by opening
aligning with the Northern Alliance. The administration is also
quite wary of taking on a nation-building role, something that
Republicans have been too quick to criticise the Clinton
administration.
Politically, the Bush administration has broad bi- partisan
support, but this did not mean that Capitol Hill has given a
blank cheque to the White House to go about the crisis as it
wished. As it is, many senior Democrats are miffed that their
Republican colleagues are not playing their side of
bipartisanship in a fair fashion. And senior Republicans like
Senator John McCain have told the administration to stay focused
- on Afghanistan, and not get carried away into other places like
Iraq.
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