A New Power in the Streets


By PATRICK E. TYLER WASHINGTON, Feb. 16 —

The fracturing of the Western alliance over Iraq
and the huge antiwar demonstrations around the world this weekend are
reminders that there may still be two superpowers on the planet: the
United States and world public opinion.
In his campaign to disarm Iraq, by war if necessary, President Bush
appears to be eyeball to eyeball with a tenacious new adversary:
millions of people who flooded the streets of New York and dozens of
other world cities to say they are against war based on the evidence at
hand.
Mr. Bush's advisers are telling him to ignore them and forge ahead, as
are some leading pro-war Republicans. Senator John McCain, for one, said
today that it was "foolish" for people to protest on behalf of the Iraqi
people, because the Iraqis live under Saddam Hussein "and they will be
far, far better off when they are liberated from his brutal, incredibly
oppressive rule."
That may be true, but it fails to answer the question that France,
Germany and other members of the Security Council have posed: What is
the urgent rationale for war now if there is a chance that continued
inspections under military pressure might accomplish the disarmament of
Iraq peacefully?
The fresh outpouring of antiwar sentiment may not be enough to dissuade
Mr. Bush or his advisers from their resolute preparations for war. But
the sheer number of protesters offers a potent message that any rush to
war may have political consequences for nations that support Mr. Bush's
march into the Tigris and Euphrates valleys.
This may have been the reason that foreign ministers for 22 Arab
nations, meeting in Cairo today, called on all Arab countries to
"refrain from offering any kind of assistance or facilities for any
military action that leads to the threat of Iraq's security, safety and
territorial integrity."
War, like politics, is affected by psychology and momentum. The strong
surge in momentum the Bush administration felt after Secretary of State
Colin L. Powell's Feb. 5 presentation to the Security Council on the
case for war has been undermined by at least four converging negatives.
The most obvious is the rupture in relations between Mr. Bush and some
of his principal partners in Europe: France and Germany, now joined by
Russia, China and a growing list of other countries. Just weeks ago, it
seemed that Mr. Bush was successfully coaxing France and Germany into
the war camp, especially after one of the chief United Nations weapons
inspectors, Hans Blix, delivered a negative report on Jan. 27 on Iraqi
compliance.
But the swell of popular opposition to war across Europe, the second
negative, plus the corrosive effects of the hawkish jibes that Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and others have hurled across the Atlantic,
have only roiled the waters further. Washington discovered just how
deeply Western unity had been sundered when it asked for defensive NATO
deployments to Turkey to protect that front-line state from Iraqi
intimidation — a request that brought opposition and contentious debate
that were resolved today.
The Security Council meeting on Friday that was to be the penultimate
step in laying the groundwork for war, instead produced two significant
negatives. Giving his latest report, Mr. Blix indicated that the
inspectors were making noteworthy progress in forcing Iraq to make
concessions on everything from allied surveillance flights to giving
inspectors greater access to Iraqi weapons scientists. Mr. Blix said
Iraq was still not cooperating like a state that truly wanted to disarm,
but there had been progress, he said.
The implication was that Mr. Blix saw the virtue of taking more time,
though he did not specifically ask for it. But neither was he ready to
tell the Security Council that inspections had failed as a tool for
disarmament.
In another negative, Mr. Powell's performance on Friday appeared to fall
short of public expectations that he would demonstrate that the threat
posed by Iraq under Mr. Hussein was so imminent that the only logical
response was war as soon as possible.
Mr. Powell promised new intelligence on connections between Iraq and Al
Qaeda, but then did not provide it, at least within public view. And he
did not respond to Mr. Blix when the arms inspector challenged one point
of the American intelligence briefing of Feb. 5.
Mr. Blix pointed out that the satellite images Mr. Powell brought before
the Council were shot two weeks apart and did not necessarily show Iraqi
deception. A chemical decontamination truck is present in one photo and
not the other. "Routine" movements were also a possible explanation, Mr.
Blix pointed out, and Mr. Powell nodded.
Though Mr. Powell was nimble as ever in his extemporaneous remarks, the
one thing that his presentation did not provide the Security Council was
an answer to the question that hung over the body: Why war now?
To the rest of the world, it might have seemed necessary that Washington
provide an answer, if only to respond to the argument of the French
foreign minister, Dominique de Villepin. He placed an alternative logic
before the Security Council: Could anyone argue that immediate war would
be shorter and more effective in disarming Iraq than continued United
Nations inspections under the threat of force?
It didn't help Mr. Bush or Mr. Powell that the French said their
intelligence agencies found no support for the American claim of a
strong connection between Baghdad and Osama bin Laden's terrorism
network. It also did not help that Mr. Powell's appearance on Friday
came just days after Prime Minister Tony Blair's latest intelligence
white paper was found to have been plagiarized from Internet sources.
As if to defy the deteriorating support for immediate war, Mr. Bush's
advisers warned against playing "into Saddam Hussein's hands," as
Condoleezza Rice, Mr. Bush's national security adviser, said on Fox News
Sunday this morning.
But the more senior members of Mr. Bush's team, especially Mr. Powell,
live in the shadow of Vietnam, where their careers began and out of
which they brought a determination not to take the country into war
without strong public support. Given Mr. Hussein's record, the actions
of Iraq over the next few weeks could conceivably resurrect that support
and reverse the negative psychology and loss of momentum that the Bush
administration suffered this week.
For the moment, an exceptional phenomenon has appeared on the streets of
world cities. It may not be as profound as the people's revolutions
across Eastern Europe in 1989 or in Europe's class struggles of 1848,
but politicians and leaders are unlikely to ignore it. The Arab states'
declaration in Cairo seems proof of that.

Because I want to find this in the future when I do a search on my web server, Second Superpower - but these words never appeared in the original editorial!