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Title: Former U.S. Secretary of State Baker says the United States must recognize its power is limited
Source: Associated Press
URL Source: [None]
Published: Feb 28, 2007
Author: Associated Press
Post Date: 2007-02-28 12:14:17 by Brian S
Keywords: None
Views: 3278
Comments: 13

WASHINGTON: Former Secretary of State James A. Baker III said Tuesday the United States should be prepared to change course in its foreign policy, and said "We are doing just that in Iraq."

A consistent foreign policy promotes stability, he said. "But when events change, we must be prepared to change with them," he said.

Baker spoke in a lecture series at the Library of Congress just a few hours after the Bush administration, in a reversal, said it would join an Iraq-sponsored "neighbors meeting" with Iran and Syria.

Baker went further in his speech and at a news conference and urged the Bush administration to expand Mideast peacemaking efforts beyond Israel and the Palestinians to include Syria.

Israel needs peace on both fronts, he said, while Syria may be able to influence the Hamas militia to recognize Israel's right to exist, thereby removing a roadblock to peace talks.

At the same time, Baker said Syria must "stop screwing around" in Lebanon and stop transporting weapons to the Hezbollah militants there.

Baker was co-chair of the Iraq Study Group which recommended U.S. dialogue with Iran and Syria, a course the administration at first resisted.

"We need to recognize and accept that the United States will sometimes have to deal with authoritarian states," he said.

In his speech, Baker outlined a policy he called "pragmatic idealism."

He said the United States "must be comfortable using our power" but also recognize that it has its limits.

"We have no alternative," Baker said in a speech. "If the United States does not exercise power, others will."

In a lecture dedicated to former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, who sat in the front row, Baker said other countries depend on U.S. leadership, particularly allies in Europe and east Asia.

But, Baker said, "we need to recognize that even U.S. power is limited" and "We cannot be, even if we wanted to be, the policeman for the world.'

He cited Iraq as an example of the maxim that there are limits to U.S. military strength.

Baker, as secretary of state, organized the military coalition of Euorpean and Arab states that joined U.S. forces in the Gulf War of 1990-91 that liberated Kuwait from Iraqi annexation.

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#2. To: Brian S (#0)

He said the United States "must be comfortable using our power" but also recognize that it has its limits.

"We have no alternative," Baker said in a speech. "If the United States does not exercise power, others will."

To bad the dumbass does not get the fact his boy Bush or any politician for that matter will not do what it takes to win.

Pepper  posted on  2007-02-28   19:23:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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#3. To: Pepper (#2)

To bad the dumbass does not get the fact his boy Bush or any politician for that matter will not do what it takes to win.

Okay, I'll bite...

What do you, Pepper, believe needs to be done to win?

I'm all ears.

scrapper2  posted on  2007-02-28 19:28:06 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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