Today in Iraq: Bush's 'Axis of Evil' Comes Back to Haunt United States

October 10, 2006

Today's Washington Post reports that five years after President Bush warned of an "axis of evil" consisting of Iraq, Iran, and North Korea, his Administration's failed foreign policies in Iraq have destabilized the Middle East region and failed to stop nuclear activities in Iran and North Korea. With the U.S. military overextended and under-equipped from wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, President Bush's stay the course strategy in Iraq has not made America safer. Democrats believe we need a new direction in Iraq and the war on terror that is both tough and smart - not just tough talk around election time.

Bush's 'Axis of Evil' Comes Back to Haunt United States
By Glenn Kessler and Peter Baker
Washington Post
October 10, 2006

"Nearly five years after President Bush introduced the concept of an 'axis of evil' comprising Iraq, Iran and North Korea, the administration has reached a crisis point with each nation: North Korea has claimed it conducted its first nuclear test, Iran refuses to halt its uranium-enrichment program, and Iraq appears to be tipping into a civil war 3 1/2 years after the U.S.-led invasion.

"Each problem appears to feed on the others, making the stakes higher and requiring Bush and his advisers to make difficult calculations, analysts and U.S. officials said. The deteriorating situation in Iraq has undermined U.S. diplomatic credibility and limited the administration's military options, making rogue countries increasingly confident that they can act without serious consequences. Iran, meanwhile, will be watching closely the diplomatic fallout from North Korea's apparent test as a clue to how far it might go with its own nuclear program.

"...James B. Steinberg, President Bill Clinton's deputy national security adviser and now dean of the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin, said the North Korea test will raise a larger question that echoes Ronald Reagan's most famous 1980 campaign line -- 'With respect to the axis of evil,' Steinberg said, 'are you better off today than you were four years ago? . . . It's clear that the answer is we're worse off with respect to the nuclear proliferation problem in both North Korea and Iran than four to six years ago, and I would argue we're worse off in our overall security because of the situation in Iraq.'"

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