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Things to Come
By Paul Krugman

The New York Times

March 18, 2003





Of course we'll win on the battlefield, probably with ease. I'm not a
military expert, but I can do the numbers: the most recent U.S.
military budget was $400 billion, while Iraq spent only $1.4 billion.

What frightens me is the aftermath - and I'm not just talking about
the problems of postwar occupation. I'm worried about what will
happen beyond Iraq - in the world at large, and here at home.

The members of the Bush team don't seem bothered by the enormous ill
will they have generated in the rest of the world. They seem to
believe that other countries will change their minds once they see
cheering Iraqis welcome our troops, or that our bombs will shock and
awe the whole world (not just the Iraqis) or that what the world
thinks doesn't matter. They're wrong on all counts.

Victory in Iraq won't end the world's distrust of the United States
because the Bush administration has made it clear, over and over
again, that it doesn't play by the rules. Remember: this
administration told Europe to take a hike on global warming, told
Russia to take a hike on missile defense, told developing countries
to take a hike on trade in lifesaving pharmaceuticals, told Mexico to
take a hike on immigration, mortally insulted the Turks and pulled
out of the International Criminal Court - all in just two years.

Nor, as we've just seen, is military power a substitute for trust.
Apparently the Bush administration thought it could bully the U.N.
Security Council into going along with its plans; it learned
otherwise. "What can the Americans do to us?" one African official
asked. "Are they going to bomb us? Invade us?"

Meanwhile, consider this: we need $400 billion a year of foreign
investment to cover our trade deficit, or the dollar will plunge and
our surging budget deficit will become much harder to finance - and
there are already signs that the flow of foreign investment is drying
up, just when it seems that America may be about to fight a whole
series of wars.

It's a matter of public record that this war with Iraq is largely the
brainchild of a group of neoconservative intellectuals, who view it
as a pilot project. In August a British official close to the Bush
team told Newsweek: "Everyone wants to go to Baghdad. Real men want
to go to Tehran." In February 2003, according to Ha'aretz, an Israeli
newspaper, Under Secretary of State John Bolton told Israeli
officials that after defeating Iraq the United States would "deal
with" Iran, Syria and North Korea.

Will Iraq really be the first of many? It seems all too likely - and
not only because the "Bush doctrine" seems to call for a series of
wars. Regimes that have been targeted, or think they may have been
targeted, aren't likely to sit quietly and wait their turn: they're
going to arm themselves to the teeth, and perhaps strike first.
People who really know what they are talking about have the heebie-
jeebies over North Korea's nuclear program, and view war on the
Korean peninsula as something that could happen at any moment. And at
the rate things are going, it seems we will fight that war, or the
war with Iran, or both at once, all by ourselves.

What scares me most, however, is the home front. Look at how this war
happened. There is a case for getting tough with Iraq; bear in mind
that an exasperated Clinton administration considered a bombing
campaign in 1998. But it's not a case that the Bush administration
ever made. Instead we got assertions about a nuclear program that
turned out to be based on flawed or faked evidence; we got assertions
about a link to Al Qaeda that people inside the intelligence services
regard as nonsense. Yet those serial embarrassments went almost
unreported by our domestic news media. So most Americans have no idea
why the rest of the world doesn't trust the Bush administration's
motives. And once the shooting starts, the already loud chorus that
denounces any criticism as unpatriotic will become deafening.

So now the administration knows that it can make unsubstantiated
claims, without paying a price when those claims prove false, and
that saber rattling gains it votes and silences opposition. Maybe it
will honorably refuse to act on this dangerous knowledge. But I can't
help worrying that in domestic politics, as in foreign policy, this
war will turn out to have been the shape of things to come.

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company
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