The Worst of Friends
While flipping channels this weekend, I heard a pundit discussing George W. Bush’s recent dismal polling numbers, and the difficulty Bush faces in improving those numbers. At the end, he said that about the only thing that could help Bush’s popularity right now would be another terrorist attack.
The pundit didn’t mean to suggest that Bush would actually welcome a new attack. He just wanted to show how tough Bush’s position is right now.
You’d have to search for a while to find someone with a lower opinion of Bush than my own, and even I think the notion that Bush wants a terrorist attack is outrageous. And yet I don’t think we can put that thought completely out of mind, either.
This New York Times editorial says George W. Bush is Iran’s best friend:
At the rate that President Bush is going, Iran will be a global superpower before too long. For all of the axis-of-evil rhetoric that has come out of the White House, the reality is that the Bush administration has done more to empower Iran than its most ambitious ayatollah could have dared to imagine.
In Iraq, Bush has empowered Iranian-aligned Shiite fundamentalists. In India last week, Bush unilaterally abandoned the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and handed Iran a great argument to use when their own nuclear ambitions come before the United Nations.
The Iraq war has given al Qaeda a great recruiting tool and a practical training ground for trying out new terror tactics.
The Dubai ports deal will provide considerable inside knowledge about U.S. port operations and security to a government whose royal family has had friendly relations with the Bush family and with Osama bin Laden.
At what point does incompetence cease to adequately explain this administration’s behavior? Is there some point at which even the most skeptical observer has to acknowledge that there is some malign will at work here?
In some ways, the terrorists have done more than anyone to advance George W. Bush’s fortunes. Whether through ineptitude or malice, his presidency has been helpful to them, too. Their fatal embrace has benefitted both Bush and the terrorists. It’s been very bad for the rest of us.