[Mb-civic] Bush, Speaking Up Against Bigotry - Richard Cohen - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Feb 28 03:50:26 PST 2006
Bush, Speaking Up Against Bigotry
By Richard Cohen
Tuesday, February 28, 2006; A15
There are times when George Bush sorely disappoints. Just when you might
expect him to issue a malapropian explanation, pander to his base or
simply not have a clue about what he is talking about, he does something
so right, so honest and, yes, so commendable, that -- as Arthur Miller
put it in "Death of a Salesman" -- "attention must be paid." Pay
attention to how he has refused to indulge anti-Arab sentiment over the
Dubai ports deal.
Would that anyone could say the same about many of the deal's critics.
Whatever their concerns may be, whatever their fears, they would not
have had them, expressed them or seen them in print had the middle name
of the United Arab Emirates been something else. After all, no one goes
nuts over Germany, the country where some of the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorists lived and attended school.
To overlook the xenophobic element in this controversy is to overlook
the obvious. It is what propelled the squabble and what sustains it.
Bush put his finger on it right away. "What I find interesting is that
it's okay for a British company to manage some ports, but not okay for a
company from a country that is a valuable ally in the war on terror," he
said last week. "The UAE has been a valuable partner in fighting the war
on terror." It is a long way from a terrorist haven.
Somewhere in the White House, a political operative -- maybe the storied
Karl Rove -- must have slapped his head in consternation as Bush made
that remark. The politic thing for a president with a dismal approval
rating (about 40 percent) would have been to join with the critics, get
ahead of the anti-Arab wave and announce that he, too, was concerned
about the deal, which was the fault, now that he thought about it, of
pointy-headed bureaucrats, Democrats and the occasional atheist.
Instead, the White House stuck to its guns, ordering a symbolic retreat
-- more study -- but continuing to back the deal.
That Bush has done this should come as no surprise. As a bigot he leaves
a lot to be desired. He has refused to pander to anti-immigration
forces, and shortly after Sept. 11, if you will remember, he visited
Washington's Islamic Center. He reassured American Muslims and the
worldwide Islamic community that neither America nor its government were
waging war on an entire people.
"The face of terror is not the true faith of Islam," Bush said back then
-- and he has since repeated this message over and over again. That very
year -- in November 2001 -- Bush invited 52 Muslim diplomats to a
traditional Iftar dinner, breaking the daily Ramadan fast, and he has
occasionally cited purported racism as the reason some people doubt the
Muslim world will, as Bush so fervently wishes, make progress toward
democracy. They think people whose skin is "a different color than
white" are incapable of self-government, he has said.
We are in an odd era of symbolic news events. The Dick Cheney shooting
was treated as if it were of cosmic political importance. Some pundits
even called on the vice president to resign, while others merely saw
everything the Bush administration had gotten wrong -- an almost
inexhaustible list -- as distilled in a single bad shot and the
resultant pout. Now it is the port controversy. But if the Cheney story
was about everything else -- including, of course, the taciturn and
slippery Cheney himself -- then this port controversy is really about
security anxiety and a dislike of things and people Arab. The deal may
not be perfect, but it is a long way from a Page One story.
America has many friends in the Arab world. You can go to Saudi Arabia,
for instance, and talk "American" at a dinner party -- banter about the
Washington Redskins or California real estate prices or, of course,
politics. The region is home to many people who have gone to school in
the United States and admire it greatly. They are not the majority by
any means, but they are important and influential -- and they are being
slowly alienated by knee-jerk insults and brainless policies that
reflect panic and prejudice. The true security cost of the Dubai deal
has already been inflicted.
Maybe because Bush is a Bush -- son of a president who got to know many
Arabs -- or maybe because he just naturally recoils from prejudice, his
initial stance on this controversy has been refreshingly admirable.
Whatever the case, the president has done the right thing. Attention
must be paid.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/27/AR2006022701041.html
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